Abstract
β-Amyloid accumulates as extracellular aggregates in Alzheimer's-afflicted brain tissue, but it also is secreted by healthy tissue, for reasons not yet established. One possibility is that β-amyloid, which contains a sequence (RHDS) homologous to the cell-binding domain of fibronectin, may modulate integrin function, a possibility supported by previous data from non-neuronal cells (Ghiso et al., Biochem. J., 288 (1992) 1053-1059). The current work shows that functional interaction with β-amyloid peptides is also supported by integrins in neuronal cells. Experiments used the SH-SY5Y human neuroblastoma cell line, which was shown to contain integrins that mediated cell adhesion to substratum-bound fibronectin. Adhesion to fibronectin was partially blocked by synthetic β-amyloid peptides containing the RHDS sequence. β-Amyloid sequences adsorbed to substratum themselves were found to mediate cell adhesion, although less effectively than fibronectin. Anti-integrin blocked the peptide-mediated adhesion, at doses commensurate with those blocking fibronectin-mediated adhesion. The data support the hypothesis that β-amyloid peptides could physiologically, and perhaps pathogenically, modulate the activity of neuronal integrins, important cell surface receptors known to control protein kinase activities, Ca2+ levels, gene expression and organization of the cytoskeleton.
Original language | English |
---|---|
Pages (from-to) | 25-28 |
Number of pages | 4 |
Journal | Neuroscience Letters |
Volume | 184 |
Issue number | 1 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - Jan 16 1995 |
Keywords
- Adhesion
- Alzheimer's
- Amyloid
- Fibronectin
- Laminin
- Neuroblastoma
- SH-SY5Y