The conversion of peptides or proteins from their soluble native states into intractable amyloid deposits is associated with a wide range of human disorders. Misfolded protein oligomers formed during the process of aggregation have been identified as the primary pathogenic agents in many such conditions. Here, we show the existence of a quantitative relationship between the degree of binding to neuronal cells of different types of oligomers formed from a model protein, HypF-N, and the GM1 content of the plasma membranes. In addition, remarkably similar behavior is observed for oligomers of the Aβ42 peptide associated with Alzheimer’s disease. Further analysis has revealed the existence of a linear correlation between the level of the influx of Ca2+ across neuronal membranes that triggers cellular damage, and the fraction of oligomeric species bound to the membrane. Our findings indicate that the susceptibility of neuronal cells to different types of misfolded oligomeric assemblies is directly related to the extent of binding of such oligomers to the cellular membrane.
SummaryIncreasing evidence suggests that the interaction of misfolded protein oligomers with cell membranes is a primary event resulting in the cytotoxicity associated with many protein-misfolding diseases, including neurodegenerative disorders. We describe here the results of a study on the relative contributions to toxicity of the physicochemical properties of protein oligomers and the cell membrane with which they interact. We altered the amount of cholesterol and the ganglioside GM1 in membranes of SH-SY5Y cells. We then exposed the cells to two types of oligomers of the prokaryotic protein HypF-N with different ultrastructural and cytotoxicity properties, and to oligomers formed by the amyloid-b peptide associated with Alzheimer's disease. We identified that the degree of toxicity of the oligomeric species is the result of a complex interplay between the structural and physicochemical features of both the oligomers and the cell membrane.
Peptides and proteins can convert from their soluble forms into highly ordered fibrillar aggregates, giving rise to pathological conditions ranging from neurodegenerative disorders to systemic amyloidoses. It is increasingly recognized that protein oligomers forming early in the process of fibril aggregation represent the pathogenic species in protein deposition diseases. The N-terminal domain of the HypF protein from Escherichia coli (HypF-N) has previously been shown to form, under distinct conditions, two types of HypF-N oligomers with indistinguishable morphologies but distinct structural features at the molecular level. Only the oligomer type exposing hydrophobic surfaces and possessing sufficient structural plasticity is toxic (type A), whereas the other type is benign to cultured cells (type B). Here we show that only type A oligomers are able to induce a Ca2+ influx from the cell medium to the cytosol, to penetrate the plasma membrane, to increase intracellular reactive oxygen species production, lipid peroxidation and release of intracellular calcein, resulting in the activation of the apoptotic pathway. Remarkably, these oligomers can also induce a loss of cholinergic neurons when injected into rat brains. By contrast, markers of cellular stress and viability were unaffected in cultured and rat neuronal cells exposed to type B oligomers. The analysis of the time scales of such effects indicates that the difference of toxicity between the two oligomer types involve the early events of the toxicity cascade, shedding new light on the mechanism of action of protein oligomers and on the molecular targets for the therapeutic intervention against protein deposition diseases.
Abstract. An altered distribution of membrane gangliosides (GM), including GM1, has recently been reported in the brains of Alzheimer's disease (AD) patients. Moreover, amyloid-positive synaptosomes obtained from AD brains were found to contain high-density GM1 clusters, suggesting a pathological significance of GM1 increase at presynaptic neuritic terminals in AD. Here, we show that membrane GM1 specifically recruits small soluble oligomers of the 42-residue form of amyloid- peptide (A 42 ), with intracellular flux of Ca 2+ ions in primary rat hippocampal neurons and in human neuroblastoma cells. Specific membrane proteins appear to be involved in the early and transient influx of Ca 2+ ions induced by A 42 oligomers with high solvent-exposed hydrophobicity (A+), but not in the sustained late influx of the same oligomers and in that induced by A 42 oligomers with low solvent-exposed hydrophobicity (A−) in GM1-enriched cells. In addition, A+ oligomers accumulate in proximity of membrane NMDA and AMPA receptors, inducing the early and transient Ca 2+ influx, although FRET shows that the interaction is not direct. These results suggest that age-dependent clustering of GM1 within neuronal membranes could induce neurodegeneration in elderly people as a consequence of an increased ability of the lipid bilayers to recruit membrane-permeabilizing oligomers. We also show that both lipid and protein components of the plasma membrane can contribute to neuronal dysfunction, thus expanding the molecular targets for therapeutic intervention in AD.
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a progressive neurodegenerative disorder characterised by cognitive decline, formation of the extracellular amyloid β (Aβ42) plaques, neuronal and synapse loss, and activated microglia and astrocytes. Extracellular chaperones, which are known to inhibit amyloid fibril formation and promote clearance of misfolded aggregates, have recently been shown to reduce efficiently the toxicity of HypF-N misfolded oligomers to immortalised cell lines, by binding and clustering them into large species. However, the role of extracellular chaperones on Aβ oligomer toxicity remains unclear, with reports often appearing contradictory. In this study we microinjected into the hippocampus of rat brains Aβ42 oligomers pre-incubated for 1h with two extracellular chaperones, namely clusterin and α2-macroglobulin. The chaperones were found to prevent Aβ42-induced learning and memory impairments, as assessed by the Morris Water Maze test, and reduce Aβ42-induced glia inflammation and neuronal degeneration in rat brains, as probed by fluorescent immunohistochemical analyses. Moreover, the chaperones were able to prevent Aβ42 colocalisation with PSD-95 at post-synaptic terminals of rat primary neurons, suppressing oligomer cytotoxicity. All such effects were not effective by adding pre-formed oligomers and chaperones without preincubation. Molecular chaperones have therefore the potential to prevent the early symptoms of AD, not just by inhibiting Aβ42 aggregation, as previously demonstrated, but also by suppressing the toxicity of Aβ42 oligomers after they are formed. These findings elect them as novel neuroprotectors against amyloid-induced injury and excellent candidates for the design of therapeutic strategies against AD.
Increasing evidence supports the idea that the initial events of A beta oligomerization and cytotoxicity in Alzheimer's disease involve the interaction of amyloid A beta-derived diffusible ligands (ADDLs) with the cell membrane. This also indicates lipid rafts, ordered membrane microdomains enriched in cholesterol, sphingolipids and gangliosides, as likely primary interaction sites of ADDLs. To shed further light on the relation between ADDL-cell membrane interaction and oligomer cytotoxicity, we investigated the dependence of ADDLs binding to lipid rafts on membrane cholesterol content in human SH-SY5Y neuroblastoma cells. Confocal laser microscopy showed that A beta 1-42 oligomers markedly interact with membrane rafts and that a moderate enrichment of membrane cholesterol prevents their association with the monosialoganglioside GM1. Moreover, anisotropy fluorescence measurements of flotillin-1-positive rafts purified by sucrose density gradient suggested that the content of membrane cholesterol and membrane perturbation by ADDLs are inversely correlated. Finally, contact mode atomic force microscope images of lipid rafts in liquid showed that ADDLs induce changes in raft morphology with the appearance of large cavities whose size and depth were significantly reduced in similarly treated cholesterol-enriched rafts. Our data suggest that cholesterol reduces amyloid-induced membrane modifications at the lipid raft level by altering raft physicochemical features
A growing body of evidence implicates low membrane cholesterol in the pathogenesis of Alzheimer's disease (AD). Here we show that Aβ42 soluble oligomers accumulate more slowly and in reduced amount at the plasma membranes of PS-1L392V and APPV717I fibroblasts from familial AD (FAD) patients enriched in cholesterol content than at the counterpart membranes. The Aβ42-induced production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and the increase in membrane lipoperoxidation were also prevented by high membrane cholesterol, thus resulting in a higher resistance to amyloid toxicity with respect to control fibroblasts. On the other hand, the recruitment of amyloid assemblies to the plasma membrane of cholesterol-depleted fibroblasts was significantly increased, thus triggering an earlier and sharper production of ROS and a higher membrane oxidative injury. These results identify membrane cholesterol as being key to Aβ42 oligomer accumulation at the cell surfaces and to the following Aβ42-induced cell death in AD neurons.
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