Artículo de revista
Production of nerve growth factor by beta-amyloid-stimulated astrocytes induces p75(NTR)-dependent tau hyperphosphorylation in cultured hippocampal neurons
Fecha
2006-10Registro en:
JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE RESEARCH Volume: 84 Issue: 5 Pages: 1098-1106 Published: OCT 2006
0360-4012
Autor
Sáez, Estefanía T.
Pehar, Mariana
Vargas, Marcelo R.
Barbeito, Luis
Maccioni Baraona, Ricardo
Institución
Resumen
Reactive astrocytes surround amyloid depositions and degenerating neurons in Alzheimer's disease (AD). It has been previously shown that P-amyloid peptide induces inflammatory-like responses in astrocytes, leading to neuronal pathology. Reactive astrocytes up-regulate nerve growth factor (NGF), which can modulate neuronal survival by signaling through TrkA or p75(NTR) neurotrophin receptor (p75(NTR)). Here, we analyzed whether soluble A beta pepticle 25-35 (A beta) stimulated astrocytic NGF expression, modulating the survival of cultured embryonic hippocampal neurons. Hippocampal astrocytes incubated with A beta up-regulated NGF expression and release to the culture medium. A beta-stimulated astrocytes increased tau phosphorylation and reduced the survival of cocultured hippocampal neurons. Neuronal death and tau phosphorylation were reproduced by conditioned media from A beta-stimulated astrocytes and prevented by caspase inhibitors or blocking antibodies to NGF or p75(NTR). Moreover, exogenous NGF was sufficient to induce tau hyperphosphorylation and death of hippocampal neurons, a phenomenon that was potentiated by a low steady-state concentration of nitric oxide. Our findings show that A beta-activated astrocytes potently stimulate NGF secretion, which in turn causes the death of p75-expressing hippocampal neurons, through a mechanism regulated by nitric oxide. These results suggest a potential role for astrocyte-derived NGF in the progression of AD.