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Annotation


Carroll MD, Lacher DA, Sorlie PD, Cleeman JI, Gordon DJ, Wolz M, Grundy SM, Johnson CL. Trends in serum lipids and lipoproteins of adults, 1960-2002. JAMA. 2005 Oct 12;294(14):1773-81. PubMed Abstract

  
Comments on Paper and Primary News
  Primary News: A Better GRIP on the Aβ-Lipid Connection

Comment by:  Luigi Puglielli
Submitted 18 October 2005  |  Permalink Posted 18 October 2005

Several studies have indicated that both cholesterol and sphingomyelin metabolism can affect the generation of Aβ. In this very elegant paper, Tobias Hartmann’s group has decided to go the opposite way and analyze whether Aβ could affect cholesterol and SM metabolism. They have used several genetic and biochemical approaches to reach the unexpected conclusion that the Aβ peptide can stimulate SM hydrolysis and reduce the biosynthesis of both SM and cholesterol. These effects could potentially be explained by perturbation of the lipid bilayer produced by Aβ. However, the fact that Aβ (in physiological concentrations) can stimulate both a purified neutral SMase (nSMase) activity in vitro and the nSMase activity recovered from cell homogenates suggests a direct effect of the peptide on the enzyme rather than on the lipid environment.

It has long been known that sphingomyelin and cholesterol like to go together (1). Increased biosynthesis of cholesterol is accompanied by increased generation of sphingomyelin. Indeed, the same transcriptional machinery (SREBP) regulates both...  Read more


  Primary News: A Better GRIP on the Aβ-Lipid Connection

Comment by:  Alexei R. Koudinov
Submitted 18 October 2005  |  Permalink Posted 21 October 2005

We appreciate the interesting study by Hartmann and colleagues. A decade ago we reported that Aβ peptides modulate the cholesterol esterification rate (1). We later showed that Aβ modulates the metabolism of cholesterol and phospholipids (2-4). We studied Aβ's effects on lipid metabolism in a number of test systems, including hepatic cells (2), cultured nerve cells (3), fetal rat brain model (3), and ex vivo in rat hippocampal slices (4) and found that it is tissue and oxidation level-dependent. This is discussed in detail in our recent publication (5) that explored the effects of Aβ on synaptic plasticity and its interrelation with the neural cholesterol homeostasis modulation by Aβ.

Our early study of Aβ's effect on cholesterol esterification was subsequently confirmed by others (6). In this regard, it is important to note that Aβ is a structure-functional component of lipoproteins (7,8,9). Aβ therefore, can affect the reverse cholesterol transport from neuronal tissue to the periphery in addition to its role in cholesterol synthesis and intracellular dynamics. This is...  Read more


  Primary News: A Better GRIP on the Aβ-Lipid Connection

Comment by:  Dora M. Kovacs, ARF Advisor
Submitted 21 October 2005  |  Permalink Posted 21 October 2005

A wealth of cellular and animal studies indicates that cholesterol regulates Aβ generation. Use of statins is currently being explored as a safe and available strategy that may help protect against Alzheimer disease. While awaiting the outcome of large clinical trials, mechanistic studies are revealing an unexpectedly complex picture of the lipid-Aβ connection. Cholesterol is no longer the only player; cholesteryl-esters, ceramide, sphingomyelin (SM), as well as isoprenoids are among the newest additions to the lipid list. Now, Tobias Hartmann and colleagues add a remarkable twist to the story. Not only do a variety of lipids regulate Aβ generation, but Aβ can also reach back and control cellular cholesterol and SM levels. This provocative conclusion is supported by solid in vitro and in vivo studies, which assign separate functions to Aβ40 (inhibition of HMG-CoA reductase, resulting in decreased cholesterol synthesis) and Aβ42 (activation of SMase, resulting in decreased SM levels). Separate functions of the two peptides are shown in a variety of systems, including in vitro...  Read more
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