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Publication : The role of an astrocytic NADPH oxidase in the neurotoxicity of amyloid beta peptides.

First Author  Abramov AY Year  2005
Journal  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci Volume  360
Issue  1464 Pages  2309-14
PubMed ID  16321801 Mgi Jnum  J:352732
Mgi Id  MGI:6508658 Doi  10.1098/rstb.2005.1766
Citation  Abramov AY, et al. (2005) The role of an astrocytic NADPH oxidase in the neurotoxicity of amyloid beta peptides. Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci 360(1464):2309-14
abstractText  Amyloid beta peptide (Abeta) accumulates in the CNS in Alzheimer's disease. Both the full peptide (1-42) or the 25-35 fragment are toxic to neurons in culture. We have used fluorescence imaging technology to explore the mechanism of neurotoxicity in mixed asytrocyte/neuronal cultures prepared from rat or mouse cortex or hippocampus, and have found that Abeta acts preferentially on astrocytes but causes neuronal death. Abeta causes sporadic transient increases in [Ca2+]c in astrocytes, associated with a calcium dependent increased generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and glutathione depletion. This caused a slow dissipation of mitochondrial potential on which abrupt calcium dependent transient depolarizations were superimposed. The mitochondrial depolarization was reversed by mitochondrial substrates glutamate, pyruvate or methyl succinate, and by NADPH oxidase (NOX) inhibitors, suggesting that it reflects oxidative damage to metabolic pathways upstream of mitochondrial complex I. The Abeta induced increase in ROS and the mitochondrial depolarization were absent in cells cultured from transgenic mice lacking the NOX component, gp91phox. Neuronal death after 24 h of Abeta exposure was dramatically reduced both by NOX inhibitors and in gp91phox knockout mice. Thus, by raising [Ca2+]c in astrocytes, Abeta activates NOX, generating oxidative stress that is transmitted to neurons, causing neuronal death.
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