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Home: Papers of the Week
Annotation


Lleó A, Berezovska O, Herl L, Raju S, Deng A, Bacskai BJ, Frosch MP, Irizarry M, Hyman BT. Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs lower Abeta42 and change presenilin 1 conformation. Nat Med. 2004 Oct;10(10):1065-6. PubMed Abstract, View on AlzSWAN

  
Comments on Paper and Primary News
  Primary News: FRETting Pays off—NSAIDs Target Presenilins, Reduce Aβ42

Comment by:  Todd E. Golde
Submitted 30 September 2004  |  Permalink Posted 30 September 2004

The findings are significant for three main reasons:

First: They provide strong evidence that NSAIDs bind to and modulate γ-secretase function in the brain. This extends findings from Dr. Koo's and my laboratories (Weggen et al., Eriksen et al. references in paper), Greg Cole's laboratory (Lim et al.), Dave Morgan's Lab (Jantzen et al.), and Neill Kowall's laboratory (Yan et al.) that show that some NSAIDs 1) reduce Aβ deposition in transgenic mice, 2) acutely lower Aβ42 levels in the brain, and 3) appear to target γ-secretase.

Second: What this study appears to show is that despite concentrations in the brain that are well below the levels needed to lower Aβ42 in cell culture (Eriksen et al.), certain NSAIDs appear capable of altering PS conformation in the brain. This would support the notion that NSAIDs are concentrated in the compartments in the brain where γ-secretase resides. This provides direct evidence that certain NSIADs could lower Aβ42 in the brain.

Third: They utilize the FLIM technique to show that the drugs bind and induce a conformational change in...  Read more


  Primary News: FRETting Pays off—NSAIDs Target Presenilins, Reduce Aβ42

Comment by:  Dominic Walsh, ARF Advisor
Submitted 1 October 2004  |  Permalink Posted 1 October 2004
  I recommend this paper

Allosteric modulation of γ-secretase activity offers a new avenue for specific inhibition of Aβ42 production
Using fluorescence lifetime imaging (FLIM), the authors demonstrate that certain NSAIDs known to specifically reduce Aβ42 levels without altering total Aβ induce a structural rearrangement in the catalytic center of γ-secretase (presenilin, PS). Binding of these compounds also alters the interaction between PS1 and APP, thus suggesting that the allosteric rearrangement of PS allows APP to be cleaved at an alternate site. These findings are supported by recent enzyme kinetic studies that demonstrate that sulindac sulfide and R-flurbiprofen act as allosteric modulators of γ-secretase (Beher et al., 2004).

Identification of the allosteric site at which NSAIDs bind should facilitate the generation of highly specific inhibitors of Aβ42 generation and thus minimize unwanted inhibition of the γ-secretase processing of other important substrates.

Reference:
Beher D, Clarke EE, Wrigley JD, Martin AC, Nadin A, Churcher I, Shearman MS. Selected non-steroidal...  Read more


  Primary News: FRETting Pays off—NSAIDs Target Presenilins, Reduce Aβ42

Comment by:  Vincent Marchesi, ARF Advisor
Submitted 28 November 2004  |  Permalink Posted 29 November 2004

I agree that this is a very impressive attempt to use the power of energy transfer techniques to study the effects of NSAIDs on the organization of the presenilin/γ-secretase complex. I am concerned that the fluorophores used to measure lifetimes could conceivably be two antibody lengths away from the target antigens of the presenilin molecules, since each fluorophore was attached to secondary antibodies that were then bound to primary anti-PS1 antibodies. Since there were differences in response as a result of exposure to specific NSAIDs, something interesting is going on, but the changes in PSI conformation proposed by the authors are only one of many possible explanations.

View all comments by Vincent Marchesi
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REAGENTS/MATERIAL:

For ELISA used antibody BNT77 as capture ab and HRP-BA27 and HRP-BC05 for detection; capture antibody BAN50 and HRP-BNT77 (gift of Takeda) as detection antibody. BACE activity was measured using a sensitive BACE-specific activity assay.

Western blots were probed with APP C8 antibody, mouse actin (Sigma)or rabbit BACE1 (Calbiochem).

Immunofluoresecent staining used APP C8 and PS1 loop antibody (Chemicon), NT X81 (gift of Dr. Selkoe), CT (R&D Systems), NT and CT S182 (Sigma) and CT 4627.

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