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Co-expression of β-amyloid precursor protein (βAPP) and apolipoprotein E in cell culture: analysis of βAPP processing
Authors:Anja Leona Biere  Beth Ostaszewski  Hongwei Zhao  Susan Gillespie  Steven G Younkin  Dennis J Selkoe  
Abstract:Apolipoprotein E (ApoE) is the major genetic risk factor for Alzheimer's disease (AD). The ApoE4 allele is associated with earlier disease onset and greater cerebral deposition of the amyloid beta peptide (Aβ), the major constituent of senile (amyloid) plaques. The molecular mechanism underlying these effects of ApoE4 remains unclear; ApoE alleles could have different influences on Aβ production, extracellular aggregation, or clearance. Because the missense mutations on chromosomes 14 and 21 that cause familial forms of AD appear to lead to increased secretion of Aβ, it is important to determine whether ApoE4 has a similar effect. Here, we have examined the effects of all three ApoE alleles on the processing of βAPP and the secretion of Aβ in intact cells. We established neural (HS683 human glioma) and non-neural (Chinese hamster ovary) cell culture systems that constitutively secrete both ApoE and Aβ at concentrations like those in human cerebrospinal fluid. βAPP metabolites, generated in the presence of each ApoE allele, were analysed and quantified by two methods: immunoprecipitation and phosphorimaging, and ELISA. We detected no consistent allele-specific effects of ApoE on βAPP processing in either cell type. Our data suggest that the higher amyloid burden found in AD subjects expressing ApoE4 is not due to increased amyloidogenic processing of βAPP, in contrast to findings in AD linked to chromosome 14 or 21. These co-expressing cell lines will be useful in the further search for the effects of ApoE on Aβ aggregation or clearance under physiologically relevant conditions.
Keywords:Alzheimer's disease  amyloidosis  β  -amyloid peptide  human  lipoprotein  transfection
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