Abstract

While gene mutations in the amyloid precursor protein (APP) and the presenilins lead to an accumulation of the amyloid β-peptide (Aβ) in the brain causing neurodegeneration and familial Alzheimer's disease (AD), over 95% of all AD cases are sporadic. Despite the pathologies being indistinguishable, relatively little is known about the mechanisms affecting generation of Aβ in the sporadic cases. Vascular disorders such as ischaemia and stroke are well established risk factors for the development of neurodegenerative diseases and systemic hypoxic episodes have been shown to increase Aβ production and accumulation. We have previously shown that hypoxia causes a significant decrease in the expression of the major Aβ-degrading enzyme neprilysin (NEP) which might deregulate Aβ clearance. Aβ itself is derived from the transmembrane APP along with several other biologically active metabolites including the C-terminal fragment (CTF) termed the APP intracellular domain (AICD), which regulates the expression of NEP and some other genes in neuronal cells. Here we show that in hypoxia there is a significantly increased expression of caspase-3, 8, and 9 in human neuroblastoma NB7 cells, which can degrade AICD. Using chromatin immunoprecipitation we have revealed that there was also a reduction of AICD bound to the NEP promoter region which underlies the decreased expression and activity of the enzyme under hypoxic conditions. Incubation of the cells with a caspase-3 inhibitor Z-DEVD-FMK could rescue the effect of hypoxia on NEP activity protecting the levels of AICD capable of binding the NEP promoter. These data suggest that activation of caspases might play an important role in regulation of NEP levels in the brain under pathological conditions such as hypoxia and ischaemia leading to a deficit of Aβ clearance and increasing the risk of development of AD.

Highlights

  • Cerebral hypoxia is a condition in which the brain is deprived of oxygen and, as a result, cells elicit a wide range of adaptive responses and major metabolic alterations

  • Hypoxia is an established factor for Alzheimer’s disease (AD) and brain deprivation of oxygen has been associated with an increase in Aβ levels and plaque deposition (Jendroska et al, 1995; Zhang and Le, 2010)

  • The data of the present study report significantly reduced NEP expression and activity in the human neuroblastoma NB7 cell line subjected to hypoxia, which are consistent with other reports

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Summary

Introduction

Cerebral hypoxia is a condition in which the brain is deprived of oxygen and, as a result, cells elicit a wide range of adaptive responses and major metabolic alterations. Several of the main amyloid-degrading enzymes (ADEs) are members of the neprilysin peptidase family: NEP, NEP2 and endothelin converting enzymes (ECE-1 and ECE-2) (Turner, 2003; Marr and Spencer, 2010; Nalivaeva et al, 2012a; Pacheco-Quinto and Eckman, 2013). Another metallopeptidase which plays an important role in Aβ metabolism is insulin-degrading enzyme (IDE) (Qiu and Folstein, 2006; Leissring and Turner, 2013). With aging and under pathological conditions expression levels and activity of these enzymes decline (Nalivaeva et al, 2004; Caccamo et al, 2005; Kochkina et al, 2015) leading to an amyloid clearance deficit, which is considered to be one of the major factors of the sporadic form of AD (Selkoe, 2012; Pluta et al, 2013)

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