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Home: Papers of the Week
Annotation


Mohamed A, Saavedra L, Di Pardo A, Sipione S, Posse de Chaves E. β-amyloid inhibits protein prenylation and induces cholesterol sequestration by impairing SREBP-2 cleavage. J Neurosci. 2012 May 9;32(19):6490-500. PubMed Abstract

  
Comments on Paper and Primary News
  Comment by:  Benjamin Wolozin, ARF Advisor (Disclosure)
Submitted 11 May 2012  |  Permalink Posted 11 May 2012

This manuscript presents some novel effects of oligomeric Aβ on neuronal biology. Mohamed et al. show that Aβ inhibits isoprenylation, and suggest that it does so by impairing cholesterol metabolism and SREBP-2 cleavage. The observations presented in the manuscript are quite convincing; however, I disagree with the interpretations.

The authors observe that cholesterol accumulates in the presence of Aβ despite treatment with pravastatin. They use this observation to pursue putative effects of Aβ on SREBP-2. Unfortunately, I'd caution that this assumption defies logic. If cholesterol accumulates despite pravastatin treatment, then the mechanism cannot be SREBP-mediated cholesterol synthesis, because pravastatin inhibits the rate-limiting step, which is HMG-CoA reductase, and this is what is controlled by SREBP. The authors then show that Aβ inhibits SREBP-2 by about 60 percent, and conclude that this accounts for the effects on isoprenylation. Again, I suspect this is not accurate because HMG-CoA reductase must be inhibited by more than 90 percent before one sees significant...  Read more


  Comment by:  Samuel Gandy
Submitted 11 May 2012  |  Permalink Posted 11 May 2012

The cholesterol/ApoE/Aβ connection is one of the most challenging areas in AD research. Studies of statins led to very dramatic benefits in mice that, so far, have not been translatable to humans. Elucidation of statins' effects led many labs, including our own, to investigate the isoprenoid pathway, where we implicated Rho kinase as a tonic physiological antagonist of the α-secretase pathway.

This new paper looks at a different step in the pathway. This group demonstrates that oligomeric Aβ inhibits protein prenylation (e.g., farnesylation, geranylgeranylation) in cultured neurons. This isn't immediately reconcilable with our earlier studies, where farnesylation or geranylgeranylation inhibitors seemed to be a good thing. To be fair, however, the new paper asks a question that is not really predicated on our results, and it is conceivable that both are right. In addition to using different protocols, our groups may be targeting different subcellular compartments. More work is required to put the whole prenylation story together.

Still, in this area, the more important...  Read more


  Primary News: Aβ42 Oligomers Block Cholesterol Synthesis, Protein Prenylation

Comment by:  Amany Mohamed, Elena Posse de Chaves
Submitted 11 May 2012  |  Permalink Posted 15 May 2012
  I recommend this paper

We would like to respond to Dr. Wolozin on his disagreement with the interpretations of our results. His views focus mainly on cholesterol synthesis, when, in fact, our work suggests that changes in cholesterol synthesis are not responsible for the “cholesterol sequestration” phenotype observed in neurons challenged with Aβ during the experimental window. Although the finding that Aβ inhibited cholesterol synthesis seemed paradoxical to the intensive filipin staining, it is not unprecedented since the drug U18666A is a potent inhibitor of cholesterol synthesis and induces a similar pattern of cholesterol sequestration. Our rationale for examining SREBP-2 as the target for Aβ came from the observations that, although both Aβ and pravastatin significantly reduced cholesterol synthesis, pravastatin (at the concentration used in our study) did not cause cholesterol sequestration, nor did it cause apoptosis.

Moreover, in agreement with Dr. Wolozin’s concepts on HMGCoA and prenylation, we did not observe any significant change in protein prenylation in neurons treated with...  Read more

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