Paper
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Cole SL, Grudzien A, Manhart IO, Kelly BL, Oakley H, Vassar R. Statins cause intracellular accumulation of amyloid precursor protein, beta-secretase-cleaved fragments, and amyloid beta-peptide via an isoprenoid-dependent mechanism. J Biol Chem. 2005 May 13;280(19):18755-70. PubMed.
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University of Goettingen
This paper is most remarkable. The authors show that statin treatment, which has long been thought to be beneficial for Alzheimer disease patients, has two independent and diverging effects on APP processing. In a novel in-vitro system, the authors have been able to decipher the cholesterol-dependent and isoprenoid-dependent role of statins. The effects are surprisingly different. While low cholesterol reduced APP processing and Aβ generation, as expected, low isoprenoid levels enhanced intracellular accumulation of APP and its proteolytic products, including Aβ. Several recent studies have implicated a potential role of intraneuronal Aβ as an early pathological hallmark in AD patients. Together with recent reports that intracellular accumulation of Aβ is observed prior to neuronal death in APP/PS1 mouse models, one wonders whether statin treatment is indeed beneficial for Alzheimer disease patients.
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