Abstract

Apolipoprotein-E (apoE) is a glycoprotein highly expressed in the brain, where it appears to play a role in lipid transport, β-amyloid clearance, and neuronal signaling. ApoE proteolytic fragments are also present in the brain, but the enzymes responsible for apoE fragmentation are unknown, and the biological activity of specific apoE fragments remains to be determined. Here we utilized SK-N-SH neuroblastoma cells differentiated into neurons with all-trans-retinoic acid (ATRA) to study extracellular apoE proteolysis. ApoE fragments were detectable in culture supernatants after 3 days, and their levels were increased for up to 9 days in the presence of ATRA. The concentration of apoE fragments was positively correlated with levels of the neuronal maturation markers (PSD95 and SMI32). The most abundant apoE fragments were 25- and 28-kDa N-terminal fragments that both contained sialylated glycosylation and bound to heparin. We detected apoE fragments only in the extracellular milieu and not in cell lysates, suggesting that an extracellular protease contributes to apoE fragmentation. Of note, siRNA-mediated knockdown of high-temperature requirement serine peptidase A1 (HtrA1) and a specific HtrA1 inhibitor reduced apoE 25-kDa fragment formation by 41 and 86%, respectively. Recombinant 25-kDa fragment apoE and full-length apoE both stimulated neuritogenesis in vitro, increasing neuroblastoma neurite growth by more than 2-fold over a 6-day period. This study provides a cellular model for assessing apoE proteolysis, indicates that HtrA1 regulates apoE 25-kDa fragment formation under physiological conditions, and reveals a new neurotrophic function for the apoE 25-kDa fragment.

Highlights

  • Apolipoprotein-E is a glycoprotein highly expressed in the brain, where it appears to play a role in lipid transport, ␤-amyloid clearance, and neuronal signaling

  • We examined the secretion of apoE from SK-N-SH cells and the possible influence of all-trans-retinoic acid (ATRA)-mediated neuronal differentiation

  • Analysis of the apoE size distribution profiles indicated that apoE fragments at 25 and 28 kDa were produced at high levels with ATRA treatment (Fig. 1)

Read more

Summary

ARTICLE cro

It may be possible that neurons secrete apoE along with a protease that together result in extracellular apoE fragmentation or that apoE that is normally constitutively secreted by astrocytes (or microglia) is cleaved by a secreted neuronal protease Consistent with the latter idea, rat hippocampal neurons secrete a serine protease that generates apoE proteolytic fragments with a very similar Mr profile to the fragments seen in human post-mortem brain samples [9]. The identity of the secreted enzyme responsible for the production of apoE proteolytic fragments by rat hippocampal neurons was not identified [9], a serine protease, high-temperature requirement serine peptidase A1 (HtrA1) has recently been shown to cleave recombinant apoE into fragments, including a predominant N-terminal apoE 25-kDa fragment [22], which again is remarkably similar to the apoE fragmentation pattern seen in human post-mortem brain samples [9, 14]. This study provides a cellular model to assess apoE proteolysis, shows that HtrA1 regulates apoE 25-kDa fragment formation under physiological conditions, and reveals a new neurotrophic function for the apoE 25-kDa fragment

Results
Discussion
Cell culture and treatments
Western blotting
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.