Abstract
Despite increased neurogenic differentiation markers in the hippocampal CA1 in Alzheimer disease, neurons are not replaced in CA1 and the neocortex in the disease. β-Amyloid (Aβ) might cause deterioration of the brain microenvironment supporting neurogenesis and the survival of immature neurons. To test this possibility, we examined whether Aβ alters the expression of cell fate determinants in cerebral cortical cultures and in an Alzheimer disease mouse model (PrP-APPSW). Upregulation of Mash1 and down-regulation of Olig2 were found in cerebral cortical cultures treated with Aβ-(1-42). Mash1 was expressed in nestin-positive immature cells. The majority of Mash1-positive cells in untreated cortical culture co-expressed Olig2. Aβ increased the proportion of Olig2-negative/Mash1-positive cells.Adecrease in Olig2+ cells was also observed in the cerebral cortex of adult PrP-APP SW mice. Cotransfection experiments with Mash1 cDNA and Olig2 siRNA revealed that overexpression of Mash1 in neurosphere cells retaining Olig2 expression enhanced neural differentiation but accelerated death of Olig2-depleted cells. Growth factor deprivation, which down-regulated Olig2, accelerated death of Mash1-overexpressing neurosphere cells. We conclude that cooperation between Mash1 and Olig2 is necessary for neural stem/progenitor cells to develop into fully mature neurons and that down-regulation of Olig2 by Aβ in Mash1-overexpressing cells switches the cell fate to death. Maintaining Olig2 expression in differentiating cells could have therapeutic potential. © 2007 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.
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CITATION STYLE
Uchida, Y., Nakano, S. I., Gomi, F., & Takahashi, H. (2007). Differential regulation of basic helix-loop-helix factors Mash1 and Olig2 by β-amyloid accelerates both differentiation and death of cultured neural stem/progenitor cells. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 282(27), 19700–19709. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M703099200
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