Abstract
The cerebral deposition of amyloid β-peptide (Aβ) is a histopathological characteristic of Alzheimer's disease. Because an impaired clearance of Aβ might be involved in the disease, we investigated the proteolytic degradation of synthetic Aβ (40-residue peptide) in cultures of glial cells and characterized a protease involved. Whereas rat astrocytes had a very low degradation capacity, cultivated rat microglia cells cleaved Aβ. Microglia activity was considerably enhanced by stimulation with lipopolysaccharide and to a lesser extent by phorbol esters. Most of the Aβ- degrading activity was released into the medium. By use of selective inhibitors the protease was characterized as a metalloprotease of ~200 kDa that was different from neutral endopeptidase (a neuropeptide-degrading enzyme), matrix metalloproteases, or macrophage elastase. Its activity was efficiently reduced by four hydroxamic acid-based zinc-metalloprotease inhibitors that have been shown to inhibit membrane protein secretases (disintegrins). We conclude that activated microglia cells might impair amyloid plaque formation by release of a metalloprotease that degrades soluble Aβ before polymerization.
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Mentlein, R., Ludwig, R., & Martensen, I. (1998). Proteolytic degradation of Alzheimer’s disease amyloid β-peptide by a metalloproteinase from microglia cells. Journal of Neurochemistry, 70(2), 721–726. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1471-4159.1998.70020721.x
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