1. Guinea-pig primary cell cultures provide a model to study expression and amyloidogenic processing of endogenous amyloid precursor protein
- Author
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Thomas Pannicke, S. Kaap, Volker Bigl, Max Holzer, Martina K. Brückner, Michael Beck, and Th. Arendt
- Subjects
Amyloid ,Amyloid beta ,Guinea Pigs ,BACE1-AS ,Amyloid beta-Protein Precursor ,Endopeptidases ,mental disorders ,Amyloid precursor protein ,Animals ,Aspartic Acid Endopeptidases ,RNA, Messenger ,APH-1 ,Cells, Cultured ,Cellular Senescence ,Neurons ,biology ,General Neuroscience ,P3 peptide ,Brain ,Immunohistochemistry ,Biochemistry of Alzheimer's disease ,Biochemistry ,Alpha secretase ,biology.protein ,Amyloid Precursor Protein Secretases ,Protein Processing, Post-Translational ,Amyloid precursor protein secretase - Abstract
Until now guinea-pigs have been rarely used to investigate formation and deposition of Alzheimer's disease-associated amyloid beta peptides despite the sequence identity of human and guinea-pig amyloid beta peptides being known, and the overall similarity of human and guinea-pig amyloid precursor protein. We now describe a primary cell culture system of mixed fetal guinea-pig brain cells, which we have applied to characterize endogenous amyloid precursor protein processing and amyloid beta formation. These cell cultures were established at embryonic day 24 of guinea-pigs after comparison of selected stages of guinea-pig ontogenetic development with the known ontogeny of rats, and were characterized by immunocytochemical detection of neuronal and glial marker proteins. Amyloid precursor protein expression, processing and amyloid beta formation increased in parallel with cellular maturation during cultivation and reached a stable phase after approximately 14 days in vitro therefore providing a suitable time for analysis. Aged cultures display strong neuronal amyloid precursor protein immunoreactivity and an altered profile of amyloid precursor protein isoform messenger RNA expression due to glial proliferation as single neurons were shown to retain their typical pattern of amyloid precursor protein expression. We show that amyloid precursor protein in guinea-pig cells is processed by different protease activities which most likely represent alpha- and beta-secretase, leading to the generation of soluble amyloid precursor protein derivatives. Furthermore, endogenous amyloid precursor protein processing leads to production of substantial amounts of amyloid beta-peptides which accumulate in conditioned culture medium. Amyloid beta was readily detectable by western blot analysis and was shown to consist of approximately 80-90% amyloid beta(1-40). We suggest that primary guinea-pig cell cultures provide a valuable tool in amyloid research that resembles amyloid precursor protein processing under physiological concentrations and, therefore, the situation in humans more closely than current rodent models. It should be especially useful in screening experiments for secretase inhibiting compounds.
- Published
- 1999
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