Defective tumor necrosis factor-alpha-dependent control of astrocyte glutamate release in a transgenic mouse model of Alzheimer disease.


Autoria(s): Rossi D.; Brambilla L.; Valori C.F.; Crugnola A.; Giaccone G.; Capobianco R.; Mangieri M.; Kingston A.E.; Bloc A.; Bezzi P.; Volterra A.
Data(s)

2005

Resumo

The cytokine tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNFalpha) induces Ca2+-dependent glutamate release from astrocytes via the downstream action of prostaglandin (PG) E2. By this process, astrocytes may participate in intercellular communication and neuromodulation. Acute inflammation in vitro, induced by adding reactive microglia to astrocyte cultures, enhances TNFalpha production and amplifies glutamate release, switching the pathway into a neurodamaging cascade (Bezzi, P., Domercq, M., Brambilla, L., Galli, R., Schols, D., De Clercq, E., Vescovi, A., Bagetta, G., Kollias, G., Meldolesi, J., and Volterra, A. (2001) Nat. Neurosci. 4, 702-710). Because glial inflammation is a component of Alzheimer disease (AD) and TNFalpha is overexpressed in AD brains, we investigated possible alterations of the cytokine-dependent pathway in PDAPP mice, a transgenic model of AD. Glutamate release was measured in acute hippocampal and cerebellar slices from mice at early (4-month-old) and late (12-month-old) disease stages in comparison with age-matched controls. Surprisingly, TNFalpha-evoked glutamate release, normal in 4-month-old PDAPP mice, was dramatically reduced in the hippocampus of 12-month-old animals. This defect correlated with the presence of numerous beta-amyloid deposits and hypertrophic astrocytes. In contrast, release was normal in cerebellum, a region devoid of beta-amyloid deposition and astrocytosis. The Ca2+-dependent process by which TNFalpha evokes glutamate release in acute slices is distinct from synaptic release and displays properties identical to those observed in cultured astrocytes, notably PG dependence. However, prostaglandin E2 induced normal glutamate release responses in 12-month-old PDAPP mice, suggesting that the pathology-associated defect involves the TNFalpha-dependent control of secretion rather than the secretory process itself. Reduced expression of DENN/MADD, a mediator of TNFalpha-PG coupling, might account for the defect. Alteration of this neuromodulatory astrocytic pathway is described here for the first time in relation to Alzheimer disease.

Identificador

http://serval.unil.ch/?id=serval:BIB_B36A3276D4B5

isbn:0021-9258 (Print)

pmid:16253995

doi:10.1074/jbc.M504124200

isiid:000233992700035

Idioma(s)

en

Fonte

Journal of Biological Chemistry, vol. 280, no. 51, pp. 42088-42096

Palavras-Chave #Alzheimer Disease/metabolism; Alzheimer Disease/pathology; Amyloid beta-Peptides/metabolism; Animals; Astrocytes/metabolism; Base Sequence; DNA Primers; Disease Models, Animal; Gliosis; Glutamic Acid/metabolism; Hippocampus/metabolism; Hippocampus/pathology; Immunohistochemistry; Mice; Mice, Transgenic; Signal Transduction; Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha/physiology
Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/article

article