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Home: Papers of the Week
Annotation


Cohen E, Bieschke J, Perciavalle RM, Kelly JW, Dillin A. Opposing activities protect against age-onset proteotoxicity. Science. 2006 Sep 15;313(5793):1604-10. PubMed Abstract

  
Comments on Paper and Primary News
  Primary News: Aggregation/Disaggregation: Longevity Genes Protect Worms Against Aβ Toxicity

Comment by:  Chris Link
Submitted 12 August 2006  |  Permalink Posted 12 August 2006

This paper attempts to address two important questions that stem from the “amyloid cascade” model of Alzheimer pathology: why is AD age-dependent, and which specific forms of the β amyloid peptide (Aβ) are responsible for the toxicity? The experimental model employed in this study are transgenic Caenorhabditis elegans worms engineered to constitutively express human Aβ1-42 in muscle cells. These transgenic worms accumulate intracellular Aβ and show a progressive paralysis that begins in adulthood. Cohen et al. manipulated two (likely interacting) stress response pathways in C. elegans and examined the effect on Aβ toxicity and the accumulation of Aβ species. One response pathway, which is controlled by the HSF-1 transcription factor, regulates the response to heat shock, and is the major pathway by which cells detoxify misfolded proteins (which are a primary result of heat shock). The other stress response pathway, which is controlled by DAF-2 (a homolog of insulin/IGF receptor) and the downstream transcription factor DAF-16, predominantly controls the worm response...  Read more

  Primary News: Aggregation/Disaggregation: Longevity Genes Protect Worms Against Aβ Toxicity

Comment by:  Mary Reid
Submitted 16 August 2006  |  Permalink Posted 17 August 2006

Is there any evidence of pancreatitis prior to the development of AD which may explain the large weight loss which is reported to occur several years prior to AD? It's of interest that HSF-1 is activated in acute pancreatitis (1) and β-APP is activated by HSF-1 (2). Perhaps AD occurs as a result of a prolonged stress response to pancreatitis. The subsequent increased ornithine decarboxylase activity in response to increased APP expression (3) may be expected to reduce the arginine load; however, the trade-off is the development of AD if this response continues. The study by He and colleagues (4) finding that GSK-3β and ERK MAPK facilitate the inactivation of activated HSF-1 has me wondering whether we may exacerbate pancreatitis as a consequence of GSK-3β inhibition. It's interesting that lithostathine and pancreatitis-associated protein are involved in the early stages of AD (5). Also of interest is that pancreatitis-associated protein (PAP)-like protein is elevated in the early stages of scrapie infection (6).

The study by Wolozin and colleagues, soon to be the subject of...  Read more

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