Generation of Amyloid A Protein by the Cell Lines from Amyloid-Susceptible and -Resistant Mice

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Abstract

It has been proposed that impaired degradation is the cause of amyloid A (AA) formation in reactive amyloidosis (Ham et al., Scand J Immunol 1997; 45: 354-60). The current SDS-PAGE of the culture medium showed that the macrophage cell line from the amyloid-susceptible mouse strain (ANA1) degraded amyloid precursor protein serum amyloid A into the AA-like amyloidogenic product of approximately 8.6 kDa but went no further, whereas cells from the resistant strain (A/J10) cleared the AA-like derivates proceeding to approximately 7.7 kDa products within the incubation period. Degradation occurred in the chemically defined medium at a slower rate than in the medium with serum. This may imply that a lack of the serum components as well as impaired degradation could contribute to the development of amyloidosis.

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Ham, D., & Skoryna, S. C. (2004). Generation of Amyloid A Protein by the Cell Lines from Amyloid-Susceptible and -Resistant Mice. Scandinavian Journal of Immunology, 59(2), 117–122. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.0300-9475.2004.01361.x

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