Molecular characterization of neurohybrid cell death induced by Alzheimer's amyloid-beta peptides via p75NTR/PLAIDD.
Hashimoto. Yuichi Y; Kaneko. Yuka Y; Tsukamoto. Emi E; Frankowski. Harald H; Kouyama. Keisuke K; Kita. Yoshiko Y; Niikura. Takako T; Aiso. Sadakazu S; Bredesen. Dale E DE; Matsuoka. Masaaki M; Nishimoto. Ikuo I
Key Findings
- Amyloid‑beta kills neurons via two distinct p75NTR‑dependent pathways.
- Humanin (HN) blocks both of these amyloid‑beta‑induced death pathways in neuronal hybrid cells.
- Other growth factors (ADNF, IGF‑I, bFGF) also inhibit the same toxic pathways.
Practical Outcomes
- Humanin appears promising as a neuroprotective agent against Alzheimer‑type damage, but current evidence is limited to lab cells. No human dosing or safety data exist yet, so biohackers should treat it as experimental and watch for clinical trials before adding it to protocols.
Summary
The study shows that the peptide humanin can protect nerve cells in a dish from the toxic effects of Alzheimer's‑related amyloid‑beta by blocking two different death pathways that involve the p75 neurotrophin receptor. This suggests humanin has neuroprotective potential, but the work is still early‑stage and done only in cell cultures.
Abstract
One of the most important pathological features of Alzheimer's disease (AD) is extracellular senile plaques, whose major component is amyloid-beta peptides (Abeta). Abeta binds to the extracellular domain of p75NTR (p75 neurotrophin receptor) and induces neuronal cell death. We investigated the molecular mechanism of Abeta-induced neurotoxicity in detail from the standpoint of interaction between p75NTR and its recently identified relative, PLAIDD (p75-like apoptosis-inducing death domain). Using F11 neuronal hybrid cells, we demonstrate that there are two distinct pathways for Abeta-induced toxicity mediated by p75NTR. One pathway that has been previously elucidated, is mediated by p75NTR, Go, JNK, NADPH oxidase and caspase3-related caspases. We found that PLAIDD and Gi proteins, heterotrimeric G proteins, are involved in the alternative Abeta-induced neurotoxicity mediated by p75NTR. The alternative pathway triggered by Abeta is thus mediated by p75NTR, PLAIDD, Gi, JNK, NADPH oxidase and caspase3-related caspases. In addition, we found that HN, ADNF, IGF-I, or bFGF inhibits both pathways of Abeta-induced neurotoxicity mediated by p75NTR.
Study Information
pubmed
2004
2004-08-01T00:00:00.000Z
10.1111/j.1471-4159.2004.02513.x
65
65