Amyloid plaques and neurofibrillary tangles are key pathological features of Alzheimer's disease. Alzheimer's disease pathology is also characterized by neuroinflammation and neuronal degeneration, with the proteins associated with inflammatory responses being found in tight association with the plaques. One such protein is the serine protease inhibitor alpha-1-antichymotrypsin (ACT). ACT has been shown to promote Abeta polymerization in vitro and in vivo, and levels of ACT protein in plasma and cerebrospinal fluid from Alzheimer's patients have been found to correlate with progression of dementia. Here we investigated the possible involvement of ACT in tau phosphorylation and tangle formation. As was previously found for Alzheimer's disease, brains from patients with non-Alzheimer's tauopathies exhibited an enhanced expression of ACT, which correlated with the level of tau hyperphosphorylation. Transgenic mice expressing human ACT alone or ACT along with mutant human amyloid precursor protein (APP) showed a significant increase in tau phosphorylation, suggesting that this inflammatory protein can induce tau hyperphosphorylation. The increase in phosphorylation was observed at PHF-1 (P-Ser396/P-Thr404), P-Ser202 and P-Thr231 sites on tau, the P-tau epitopes that are associated with tangles in the patients. This result was further confirmed by the finding that addition of purified ACT induced the same Alzheimer's disease-related tau hyperphosphorylation in cortical neurons cultured in vitro. This correlated with an increase in extracellular signal regulated kinase (ERK) and glycogen synthase kinase-3 activation, indicating their involvement in ACT-induced tau phosphorylation. The ACT-treated neurons showed neurite loss and subsequently underwent apoptosis. Approximately 40-50% of neurons were TUNEL positive by 6 and at 24 h >70% of the neurons showed staining suggesting that ACT was inducing apoptosis in these neurons. These findings indicate that inappropriate inflammatory responses are a potential threat to the brain and that intervention directed at inhibiting the expression or function of ACT could be of therapeutic value in neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer's and other tauopathies.
Endothelial dysfunction associated with elevated serum levels of TNF-alpha observed in diabetes, obesity, and congenital heart disease results, in part, from the impaired production of endothelial nitric oxide (NO). Cellular NO production depends absolutely on the availability of arginine, substrate of endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS). In this report, evidence is provided demonstrating that treatment with TNF-alpha (10 ng/ml) suppresses not only eNOS expression but also the availability of arginine via the coordinate suppression of argininosuccinate synthase (AS) expression in aortic endothelial cells. Western blot and real-time RT-PCR demonstrated a significant and dose-dependent reduction of AS protein and mRNA when treated with TNF-alpha with a corresponding decrease in NO production. Reporter gene analysis demonstrated that TNF-alpha suppresses the AS proximal promoter, and EMSA analysis showed reduced binding to three essential Sp1 elements. Inhibitor studies suggested that the repression of AS expression by TNF-alpha may be mediated, in part, via the NF-kappaB signaling pathway. These findings demonstrate that TNF-alpha coordinately downregulates eNOS and AS expression, resulting in a severely impaired citrulline-NO cycle. The downregulation of AS by TNF-alpha is an added insult to endothelial function because of its important role in NO production and in endothelial viability.
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