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Home: Papers of the Week
Annotation


Kukar T, Murphy MP, Eriksen JL, Sagi SA, Weggen S, Smith TE, Ladd T, Khan MA, Kache R, Beard J, Dodson M, Merit S, Ozols VV, Anastasiadis PZ, Das P, Fauq A, Koo EH, Golde TE. Diverse compounds mimic Alzheimer disease-causing mutations by augmenting Abeta42 production. Nat Med. 2005 May;11(5):545-50. PubMed Abstract

  
Comments on Paper and Primary News
  Comment by:  Andre Delacourte
Submitted 22 April 2005  |  Permalink Posted 24 April 2005
  I recommend this paper

  Comment by:  Andre Delacourte, ARF Advisor
Submitted 22 April 2005  |  Permalink Posted 24 April 2005
  I recommend this paper

  Primary News: Molecular Economics of AD—Supply, Demand, and the Aβ Glut

Comment by:  Sarah L. Cole, Robert Vassar, ARF Advisor
Submitted 6 May 2005  |  Permalink Posted 6 May 2005

In this interesting paper, Kukar and colleagues report that many NSAIDs and their derivatives selectively raise Aβ42 and lower Aβ38 secretion. These results are surprising, given the group’s original finding that another subset of NSAIDs do just the opposite, namely, reduce Aβ42 and increase Aβ38 production (Weggen et al., 2001). What makes their work even more intriguing is that endogenous isoprenoids, GGPP and FPP, also increase Aβ42 and decrease Aβ38, suggesting that this effect may have physiological relevance. The compounds do not activate RhoA and ROCK, thus excluding protein isoprenylation as a mechanism, but instead appear to act directly on the γ-secretase complex. Importantly, treatment of wild-type and Tg2576 mice with Celecoxib and a novel compound, FT-1, increased cerebral levels of Aβ42 levels but left those of Aβ40 unchanged. Their results raise the potential concern that exposure to similar compounds in the environment may raise Aβ42 in humans and cause AD.

An intriguing aspect of this work is that rather large and diverse sets of compounds...  Read more

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REAGENTS/MATERIAL:

Monoclonal antibodies to Ab were generated by Mayo Clinic Immunology Core facilities.
Ab9 recognizes an epitope in the amino terminus of Ab (Ab1-16).
Ab13.1.1 was raised against Ab35-40.
Ab14.1.1 was raised to Ab27-38 and specifically recognizes Abx-38.
Ab21.3.1 and Ab2.1.3 antibodies were raised against Ab35-42. They are highly selective for Abx-42. Ab21.3.1 is effective as a detection antibody while 2.1.3 is an effective capture antibody in sandwich ELISA formats.

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