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Cardiovascular Proteins pose a Double Whammy
in Alzheimer’s
Newswise — Researchers have found that two
proteins which work in tandem in the brain’s
blood vessels present a double whammy in
Alzheimer’s disease.
Not only do the proteins lessen blood flow
in the brain, but they also reduce the rate
at which the brain is able to remove amyloid
beta, the protein that builds up in toxic
quantities in the brains of patients with
the disease.
The work, described in a paper published
online Dec. 21 in the journal Nature Cell
Biology, provides hard evidence directly
linking two processes thought to be at play
in Alzheimer’s disease: reduction in blood
flow and the buildup of toxic amyloid beta.
The research makes the interaction between
the two proteins a seductive target for
researchers seeking to address both issues.
Scientists were surprised at the finding,
which puts two proteins known for their role
in the cardiovascular system front and
center in the development of Alzheimer’s
disease.
“This is quite unexpected,” said Berislav
Zlokovic, M.D., Ph.D., a neuroscientist and
a senior author of the study.
“On the other hand, both of these processes
are mediated by the smooth muscle cells
along blood vessel walls, and we know that
those are seriously compromised in patients
with Alzheimer’s disease, so perhaps we
shouldn’t be completely surprised.”
The new findings are the result of a
seven-year collaboration between two
laboratories. Zlokovic heads the Center for
Neurodegenerative and Vascular Brain
Disorders, looking at molecular roots of
diseases like Alzheimer’s.
Several years ago, after he found that
several genes well known to cardiovascular
researchers seemed to be especially affected
in Alzheimer’s patients, he turned to Joseph
Miano, Ph.D. to help analyze the findings.
Miano is interim director of Aab
Cardiovascular Research Institute and
associate professor of Medicine, and he is
senior co-author of the new study.
“To some, it might seem odd that a
cardiovascular group would intersect with a
neuroscience group to study Alzheimer’s
disease,” Miano said.
“But there’s a great deal of evidence to
suggest that Alzheimer’s disease is a
problem having much to do with the vascular
plumbing. And Rochester is the type of
institution where partnerships like these
are easy to strike up.”
For 15 years Zlokovic’s laboratory has
focused on the molecular mechanisms
regulating blood supply and the role of the
blood-brain barrier in the development of
Alzheimer’s disease.
It’s not simply that reduced blood supply
hurts brain cells by causing a shortage of
oxygen and other nutrients. Rather,
deterioration of blood flow seems to gum up
the brain’s ability to remove toxic amyloid
beta.
Normally, amyloid is picked up efficiently
by blood vessels that then whisk the toxic
trash away. But in Alzheimer’s disease, the
system no longer is able to keep up with the
body’s production of the substance.
The molecular trash accumulates, and
Zlokovic and others believe the buildup
kills brain cells.
The current work focuses on two proteins
well known to cardiovascular researchers,
SRF (serum response factor) and myocardin.
The two work together within smooth muscle
cells that line blood vessels to activate
genes that are necessary for smooth muscle
to function properly.
SRF binds to certain snippets of DNA called
CArG boxes and serves as an anchor, while
myocardin piggybacks along and turns on the
genes to which SRF sticks.
Together they act as a master switch that
determines whether smooth muscle cells
contract – one of many ways the body
controls just how much blood is flowing in
the body.
Two years ago, Zlokovic and Miano published
a study showing that the two proteins are
much more active in the blood vessels of
brains of people with Alzheimer’s disease
than in people who do not have the disease.
They showed that when they reduced the
activity of the proteins, blood flow in the
brain increased, and when the genes were
more active, blood flow decreased.
The latest report goes further, implicating
the molecular duo in the slowed removal of
amyloid beta. The team found that SRF and
myocardin working together turn on a
molecule known as SREBP2.
That protein inhibits a molecule known as
LRP-1, which helps the body remove amyloid
beta. In other words, when SRF and myocardin
are active, toxic amyloid beta accumulates.
The findings came primarily from the team’s
studies of brain cells taken from people who
had Alzheimer’s disease and comparing them
to cells from healthy elderly people.
Compared to the smooth muscle cells from
healthy adults, the cells from patients with
Alzheimer’s disease had about five times as
much myocardin and four times as much SRF,
about five times as much SREBP2, and about
60 percent less LRP-1.
That translated into a reduced ability to
remove amyloid beta: Cells taken from
patients with the disease had only about 30
percent of the ability to remove the
substance as cells taken from their healthy
counterparts.
When the team lowered levels of SRF to the
same level that exists in healthy cells, the
cells from Alzheimer’s patients improved in
their ability to remove amyloid beta, doing
it just as well as cells from healthy
individuals.
Conversely, when the team boosted levels of
SRF and myocardin in the healthy cells, the
changes lowered by about 65 percent those
cells’ ability to remove amyloid beta.
In mice, the team found parallel results.
When the team boosted SRF or myocardin in
healthy mice, those mice had about twice as
much SREBP2 in their smooth muscle cells in
the brain’s blood vessels.
They also had 90 percent less LRP-1, three
times as much amyloid beta in their
arteries, and 70 percent more amyloid beta
in their brain tissue.
When the team reduced SRF and myocardin in
mice prone to developing Alzheimer’s
disease, those mice had 60 percent less
SREBP2, about four times as much LRP-1, and
a 50-percent reduction in amyloid beta in
their blood vessels.
The first author of the study is Robert
Bell, a graduate student in Zlokovic’s
laboratory who is in Department of Pathology
and Laboratory Medicine’s graduate program.
He had searched for months, without success,
for evidence of a direct effect on LRP-1 by
SRF/myocardin. A subsequent literature
search turned up findings that the molecules
might affect SREBP2. With that finding, the
team was able to move forward and put the
whole picture together.
Now the team has turned its attention to
studying the role of hypoxia, which seems to
play a role in turning on myocardin, as well
as searching for molecules that block the
hookup between SRF and myocardin.
The work was funded primarily by the
National Institute on Aging.
Other funding came from the National
Institute of Neurological Disorders and
Stroke, and from Socratech Laboratories, a
company founded by Zlokovic that is seeking
to commercialize discoveries related to his
work on Alzheimer’s disease and stroke. Both
Zlokovic and Miano hold a significant equity
stake in the company.
In addition to Bell, Miano and Zlokovic,
other authors of the paper include Rashid
Deane, Ph.D., research professor; Nienwen
Chow, Ph.D., a scientist at Socratech;
Xiaochun Long, Ph.D., research assistant
professor; Abhay Sagare, Ph.D., instructor;
post-doctoral associate Itender Singh,
Ph.D.; Jeffrey Streb, Ph.D., a former
graduate student and now a post-doctoral
researcher at UCLA; Huang Guo, Ph.D.,
research assistant professor; pathologist
Ana Rubio, M.D., Ph.D.; and William Van
Nostrand, Ph.D., of Stony Brook University
Medical Center.
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