Abstract

To investigate whether the observed association of intracellular neuronal calcium sensor (NCS) proteins with amyloid plaques and neurofibrillar tangles in Alzheimer brains is linked to a possible neuroprotective or neurotoxic activity of the protein, we performed cytotoxicity tests in PC12 cells transfected with the calcium sensor protein VILIP-1 (visinin-like protein) and the calcium buffer protein calbindin-D28K. Whereas VILIP-1 expression enhanced the neurotoxic effect of ionomycin already at low ionophore concentrations, calbindin-D28K protected against ionomycin-induced cytotoxicity only at high ionomycin and therefore calcium concentrations. However, in double-transfected cells calbindin-D28K rescued VILIP-1-mediated cytotoxicity at low ionomycin concentrations. Since VILIP-1 was found to be associated with fibrillar tangles in Alzheimer brains, we tested whether VILIP-1 has an influence on tau hyperphosphorylation. VILIP-1 expression enhanced hyperphosphorylation of tau protein compared to nontransfected or calbindin-D28K-transfected cells. These results raise the possibility that the observed reduction in VILIP-1-expressing cells may indicate a selective vulnerability of these neurons and that the calcium sensor protein is involved in the pathophysiology of Alzheimer's disease. The calcium sensor protein may influence tau phosphorylation and have a role in calcium-mediated neurotoxicity opposed to the previously discovered protective effect of calcium buffer proteins.

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