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Moreno-Ortega 2015 Aging Cell

From Bioblast
Publications in the MiPMap
Moreno-Ortega AJ, Buendia I, Mouhid L, Egea J, Lucea S, Ruiz-Nuño A, López MG, Cano-Abad MF (2015) CALHM1 and its polymorphism P86L differentially control Ca2+ homeostasis, mitogen-activated protein kinase signaling, and cell vulnerability upon exposure to amyloid β. Aging Cell 14:1094-102.

» PMID: 26416646 Open Access

Moreno-Ortega AJ, Buendia I, Mouhid L, Egea J, Lucea S, Ruiz-Nuno A, Lopez MG, Cano-Abad MF (2015) Aging Cell

Abstract: The mutated form of the Ca2+ channel CALHM1 (Ca2+ homeostasis modulator 1), P86L-CALHM1, has been correlated with early onset of Alzheimer's disease (AD). P86L-CALHM1 increases production of amyloid beta (Aβ) upon extracellular Ca2+ removal and its subsequent addback. The aim of this study was to investigate the effect of the overexpression of CALHM1 and P86L-CALHM, upon Aβ treatment, on the following: (i) the intracellular Ca2+ signal pathway; (ii) cell survival proteins ERK1/2 and Ca2+ /cAMP response element binding (CREB); and (iii) cell vulnerability after treatment with Aβ. Using aequorins to measure the effect of nuclear Ca2+ concentrations ([Ca2+]n ) and cytosolic Ca2+ concentrations ([Ca2+]c ) on 2+ entry conditions, we observed that baseline [Ca2+]n was higher in CALHM1 and P86L-CALHM1 cells than in control cells. Moreover, exposure to Aβ affected [Ca2+]c levels in HeLa cells overexpressing CALHM1 and P86L-CALHM1 compared with control cells. Treatment with Aβ elicited a significant decrease in the cell survival proteins p-ERK and p-CREB, an increase in the activity of caspases 3 and 7, and more frequent cell death by inducing early apoptosis in P86L-CALHM1-overexpressing cells than in CALHM1 or control cells. These results suggest that in the presence of Aβ, P86L-CALHM1 shifts the balance between neurodegeneration and neuronal survival toward the stimulation of pro-cytotoxic pathways, thus potentially contributing to its deleterious effects in AD.

© 2015 The Authors. Aging Cell published by the Anatomical Society and John Wiley & Sons Ltd. Keywords: Alzheimer's disease, CREB, Ca2+ channel CALHM1, Ca2+ homeostasis, Caspases, Early apoptosis


Labels: Pathology: Alzheimer's 


Tissue;cell: HeLa