Novakova_2005_Brain.Res_1062_101

Reference

Title : Chronic treatment with amyloid beta(1-42) inhibits non-cholinergic high-affinity choline transport in NG108-15 cells through protein kinase C signaling - Novakova_2005_Brain.Res_1062_101
Author(s) : Novakova J , Mikasova L , Machova E , Lisa V , Dolezal V
Ref : Brain Research , 1062 :101 , 2005
Abstract :

We investigated the influence of the amyloid-beta-peptide(1-42) on hemicholinum-3-sensitive high-affinity choline uptake in NG108-15 cells. RT-PCR analysis revealed the presence of mRNA for a choline transporter-like protein but not for cholinergic high-affinity choline transporter. Differentiation of cells increased both hemicholinum-3-sensitive choline uptake and high-affinity hemicholinium-3 binding. This transport was not influenced by tenfold excess of carnitine. Continuous presence of submicromolar concentrations of amyloid-beta-peptide(1-42) during differentiation resulted in a decrease of both choline uptake and hemicholinium-3 binding. These effects were not present when amyloid-beta-peptide(1-42) was added 5 min prior to measurements. Neither differentiation nor amyloid-beta-peptide(1-42) treatment changed levels of choline transporter-like protein mRNA. Protein kinase C inhibition by staurosporine or its inactivation by continuous presence of tetradecanoyl phorbol acetate prevented the inhibitory effect of amyloid-beta-peptide(1-42) treatment on choline uptake. Activation of protein kinase C by tetradecanoyl phorbol acetate during measurement had inhibitory effect on choline uptake in control but not amyloid-beta-peptide(1-42)-treated cells. The concentration of amyloid-beta-peptide(1-42) maximally effective on hemicholinium-3-sensitive choline uptake had no effect on cell growth, oxidative activity, membrane integrity, number of surface muscarinic receptors, caspase-3 and -8 activities, or uptake of deoxyglucose. Results demonstrate that long-term treatment with non-toxic concentrations of amyloid-beta-peptide(1-42) downregulates choline uptake presumably mediated by a choline transporter-like protein through activation of protein kinase C signaling. The decrease of choline uptake may have relevance to the pathogenesis of Alzheimer's disease.

PubMedSearch : Novakova_2005_Brain.Res_1062_101
PubMedID: 16256077

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Citations formats

Novakova J, Mikasova L, Machova E, Lisa V, Dolezal V (2005)
Chronic treatment with amyloid beta(1-42) inhibits non-cholinergic high-affinity choline transport in NG108-15 cells through protein kinase C signaling
Brain Research 1062 :101

Novakova J, Mikasova L, Machova E, Lisa V, Dolezal V (2005)
Brain Research 1062 :101