Abstract

Generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS), leading to oxidative damage and neuronal cell death, plays an important role in the pathogenesis of neurodegenerative disorders, including Alzheimer disease. The present study aimed to examine the mechanism by which the anti-aging protein Klotho exerts neuroprotective effects against neuronal damage associated with neurodegeneration and oxidative stress. Pretreatment of rat primary hippocampal neurons and mouse hippocampal neuronal cell line HT22 with recombinant Klotho protected these cells from glutamate and oligomeric amyloid β (oAβ)-induced cytotoxicity. In addition, primary hippocampal neurons obtained from Klotho-overexpressing mouse embryos were more resistant to both cytotoxic insults, glutamate and oAβ, compared with neurons from wild-type littermates. An antioxidative stress array analysis of neurons treated with Klotho revealed that Klotho significantly enhances the expression of the thioredoxin/peroxiredoxin (Trx/Prx) system with the greatest effect on the induction of Prx-2, an antioxidant enzyme, whose increase was confirmed at the mRNA and protein levels. Klotho-induced phosphorylation of the PI3K/Akt pathway, a pathway important in apoptosis and longevity, was associated with sustained inhibitory phosphorylation of the transcription factor forkhead box O3a (FoxO3a) and was essential for the induction of Prx-2. Down-regulation of Prx-2 expression using a lentivirus harboring shRNA almost completely abolished the ability of Klotho to rescue neurons from glutamate-induced death and significantly, but not completely, inhibited cell death mediated by oAβ, suggesting that Prx-2 is a key modulator of neuroprotection. Thus, our results demonstrate, for the first time, the neuroprotective role of Klotho and reveal a novel mechanism underlying this effect.

Highlights

  • Klotho is an age suppressor protein whose brain function is unknown

  • We show that Klotho protects hippocampal neurons from glutamate and oligomeric A␤-induced cytotoxicity when added exogenously or when hippocampal neurons are exposed to increased endogenous levels of Klotho in KL-OE mice

  • Klotho Protects Hippocampal Neurons against Glutamateinduced Cytotoxicity—To determine whether Klotho can counteract oxidative stress induced in brain-derived cells in vitro, we used glutamate cytotoxicity in rat primary hippocampal neurons as a model for neuronal death by oxidative damage

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Summary

Background

Klotho is an age suppressor protein whose brain function is unknown. Results: Klotho protects hippocampal neurons from glutamate and amyloid ␤-induced oxidative damage through the induction of the thioredoxin/peroxiredoxin system. The present study aimed to examine the mechanism by which the anti-aging protein Klotho exerts neuroprotective effects against neuronal damage associated with neurodegeneration and oxidative stress. The secreted form of Klotho possesses anti-cancer and antioxidative properties through the inhibition of insulin/IGF-1, Wnt [23], and transforming growth factor-␤1 (TGF-␤1) signaling [25], the activation of FoxOs, and induction of manganese superoxide dismutase (Mn-SOD), known as SOD2, expression [26, 27] In line with these properties, Klotho-deficient mice have impaired cognition, which is associated with an increased number of apoptotic pyramidal neurons and levels of oxidized lipid and DNA in the hippocampus [15]. Our data suggest that the neuroprotective effect of Klotho is relevant to neurodegenerative diseases

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