Jope_1997_Neurobiol.Aging_18_111

Reference

Title : Cholinergic activation of phosphoinositide signaling is impaired in Alzheimer's disease brain - Jope_1997_Neurobiol.Aging_18_111
Author(s) : Jope RS , Song L , Powers RE
Ref : Neurobiology of Aging , 18 :111 , 1997
Abstract :

The function of the phosphoinositide signal transduction system was compared in membranes from Alzheimer's disease (AD) and control postmortem brain. [3H]Phosphatidylinositol hydrolysis was concentration-dependently stimulated by GTP[S] and this was 40% lower than controls in AD prefrontal cortical membranes. Carbachol induced a response greater than that of GTP[S] alone, and this response was impaired in AD by 45%. Differential analysis of the receptor-coupled and G-protein contributions to the responses indicated that the G-protein deficit in AD had a predominant influence on the lowered responses to cholinergic agonists. Similar deficits were observed in AD in the responses to five additional cholinergic agonists, including acetylcholine with three different acetylcholinesterase inhibitors. Deficits in stimulated phosphoinositide hydrolysis were regionally selective and these deficits did not correlate directly with reductions in choline acetyltransferase activity in AD tissues. These data demonstrate that in AD there is a brain region-selective, large impairment of cholinergic agonist-induced signal transduction mediated by the phosphoinositide system, which we speculate may impact on amyloid precursor protein processing.

PubMedSearch : Jope_1997_Neurobiol.Aging_18_111
PubMedID: 8983039

Related information

Citations formats

Jope RS, Song L, Powers RE (1997)
Cholinergic activation of phosphoinositide signaling is impaired in Alzheimer's disease brain
Neurobiology of Aging 18 :111

Jope RS, Song L, Powers RE (1997)
Neurobiology of Aging 18 :111