We need neurogenesis so get your researcher cracking on clinical trials and a stroke protocol.
https://dspace-prod-lib.cc.uic.edu/handle/10027/9149
Amyloid precursor protein (APP) has been studied extensively in the
pathophysiology of Alzheimer’s disease due to the fact that mutations in
APP are causative of familial forms of the disease. However, the
physiological significance of the protein has yet to be fully
elucidated. APP undergoes sequential metabolism through two distinct
pathways involving three enzymatic cleavage events via enzymes termed
α-, β, and γ-secretase. These cleavage events produce a number of
intra- and extra-cellular metabolites that add complexity to the
potential physiological function of APP. α-secretase cleavage produces a
soluble extracellular metabolite, soluble amyloid precursor protein
alpha (sAPPα), that has been previously shown to have trophic
characteristics and contain a cysteine-rich growth factor like domain.
In the adult brain, neural progenitor cells (NPC) represent a
proliferating population of cells that have the ability to form new
neurons in discrete regions. These NPC have been shown to have binding
sites for sAPP. In Alzheimer’s disease and normal aging, there is a
dramatic decline in the adult neurogenesis. We hypothesized that sAPPα
is a growth factor for NPC of the adult brain and alterations in the
metabolism of APP/sAPPα during normal aging or in Alzheimer’s disease
could contribute to stem cell senescence. In this work we show that
sAPPα potently stimulates the proliferation of NPC following α-secretase
inhibition independently of epidermal growth factor or basic fibroblast
growth factor. Further, sAPPα induces phosphorylation of extracellular
signal-regulated kinase (Erk) and transcription of genes associated
with cell cycle, neurogenesis and energy metabolism. The soluble
metabolite derived from the alternative, pathological, cleavage pathway
of APP, sAPPβ, shows only slight proliferative qualities in NPC
suggesting that alterations in the normal cleavage pattern of APP could
underlie neurogenic impairments in Alzheimer’s disease. Finally, we
show that sAPP levels decline with age in a manner that correlates with
the timing of neurogenic decline and that a single
intracerebroventricular injection of sAPPα is sufficient to ameliorate
aging-linked deficits in neurogenesis. Taken together, these results
suggest that sAPPα is a proliferation factor for NPC of the adult brain
whose decline in aging or Alzheimer’s disease could contribute to
neurogenic deficits.
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