Neuronal fibrillogenesis: Amyloid fibrils from primary neuronal cultures impair long-term memory in the crab Chasmagnathus
Amyloid β protein (Aβ) fibrillogenesis is considered one of the crucial steps of Alzheimer's disease (AD) pathogenesis. The effect of endogenous neuronal amyloid fibrils on memory processes is unknown. To investigate this issue, we first characterised the Aβ fibrillar aggregates secreted by cer...
Guardado en:
Autores principales: | , , , , , , |
---|---|
Formato: | JOUR |
Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_01664328_v147_n1-2_p73_Romano |
Aporte de: |
id |
todo:paper_01664328_v147_n1-2_p73_Romano |
---|---|
record_format |
dspace |
spelling |
todo:paper_01664328_v147_n1-2_p73_Romano2023-10-03T15:03:55Z Neuronal fibrillogenesis: Amyloid fibrils from primary neuronal cultures impair long-term memory in the crab Chasmagnathus Romano, A. Serafino, A. Krasnowska, E. Ciotti, M.T. Calissano, P. Ruberti, F. Galli, C. Amyloid β protein Long-term memory Neuronal fibrillogenesis amyloid beta protein monomer thioflavine animal cell apoptosis article cell free system cell secretion conditioning controlled study crab electron microscopy fluorescence granule cell invertebrate learning long term memory memory nerve cell nerve cell culture nerve fiber nonhuman priority journal protein secretion training Amyloid β protein (Aβ) fibrillogenesis is considered one of the crucial steps of Alzheimer's disease (AD) pathogenesis. The effect of endogenous neuronal amyloid fibrils on memory processes is unknown. To investigate this issue, we first characterised the Aβ fibrillar aggregates secreted by cerebellar granule cells and then we evaluated the effect of neuronal fibrils on an invertebrate model of memory. An increase of fibril formation, assessed by Thioflavin T (ThT) fluorescence, was observed in the conditioned medium of apoptotic neurons during 48h of the apoptotic process. Moreover, the depolarisation-stimulated secretion of cerebellar granule cells contains monomers of endogenous Aβ, which undergo cell-free fibrillogenesis over several days of incubation. The pattern of single endogenous fibrils, examined by electron microscopy, was similar to that of synthetic Aβ while a tighter and more complex interfibrillar organization was observed in endogenous fibrils. The biological effect of neuronal fibrils was studied in a long-term memory (LTM) paradigm, namely the context-signal learning of the crab Chasmagnathus. Pre-training injection of neuronal fibril extract (protein concentration, 1μg/ml) induced amnesia in a dose-dependent manner. On the contrary, no effect on retention was observed with the administration of two orders higher doses (100μg/ml) of synthetic Aβ1-40. These results indicate that only naturally secreted fibrils, but not synthetic Aβ, clearly interfere with memory process. © 2003 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved. JOUR info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ar http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_01664328_v147_n1-2_p73_Romano |
institution |
Universidad de Buenos Aires |
institution_str |
I-28 |
repository_str |
R-134 |
collection |
Biblioteca Digital - Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales (UBA) |
topic |
Amyloid β protein Long-term memory Neuronal fibrillogenesis amyloid beta protein monomer thioflavine animal cell apoptosis article cell free system cell secretion conditioning controlled study crab electron microscopy fluorescence granule cell invertebrate learning long term memory memory nerve cell nerve cell culture nerve fiber nonhuman priority journal protein secretion training |
spellingShingle |
Amyloid β protein Long-term memory Neuronal fibrillogenesis amyloid beta protein monomer thioflavine animal cell apoptosis article cell free system cell secretion conditioning controlled study crab electron microscopy fluorescence granule cell invertebrate learning long term memory memory nerve cell nerve cell culture nerve fiber nonhuman priority journal protein secretion training Romano, A. Serafino, A. Krasnowska, E. Ciotti, M.T. Calissano, P. Ruberti, F. Galli, C. Neuronal fibrillogenesis: Amyloid fibrils from primary neuronal cultures impair long-term memory in the crab Chasmagnathus |
topic_facet |
Amyloid β protein Long-term memory Neuronal fibrillogenesis amyloid beta protein monomer thioflavine animal cell apoptosis article cell free system cell secretion conditioning controlled study crab electron microscopy fluorescence granule cell invertebrate learning long term memory memory nerve cell nerve cell culture nerve fiber nonhuman priority journal protein secretion training |
description |
Amyloid β protein (Aβ) fibrillogenesis is considered one of the crucial steps of Alzheimer's disease (AD) pathogenesis. The effect of endogenous neuronal amyloid fibrils on memory processes is unknown. To investigate this issue, we first characterised the Aβ fibrillar aggregates secreted by cerebellar granule cells and then we evaluated the effect of neuronal fibrils on an invertebrate model of memory. An increase of fibril formation, assessed by Thioflavin T (ThT) fluorescence, was observed in the conditioned medium of apoptotic neurons during 48h of the apoptotic process. Moreover, the depolarisation-stimulated secretion of cerebellar granule cells contains monomers of endogenous Aβ, which undergo cell-free fibrillogenesis over several days of incubation. The pattern of single endogenous fibrils, examined by electron microscopy, was similar to that of synthetic Aβ while a tighter and more complex interfibrillar organization was observed in endogenous fibrils. The biological effect of neuronal fibrils was studied in a long-term memory (LTM) paradigm, namely the context-signal learning of the crab Chasmagnathus. Pre-training injection of neuronal fibril extract (protein concentration, 1μg/ml) induced amnesia in a dose-dependent manner. On the contrary, no effect on retention was observed with the administration of two orders higher doses (100μg/ml) of synthetic Aβ1-40. These results indicate that only naturally secreted fibrils, but not synthetic Aβ, clearly interfere with memory process. © 2003 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved. |
format |
JOUR |
author |
Romano, A. Serafino, A. Krasnowska, E. Ciotti, M.T. Calissano, P. Ruberti, F. Galli, C. |
author_facet |
Romano, A. Serafino, A. Krasnowska, E. Ciotti, M.T. Calissano, P. Ruberti, F. Galli, C. |
author_sort |
Romano, A. |
title |
Neuronal fibrillogenesis: Amyloid fibrils from primary neuronal cultures impair long-term memory in the crab Chasmagnathus |
title_short |
Neuronal fibrillogenesis: Amyloid fibrils from primary neuronal cultures impair long-term memory in the crab Chasmagnathus |
title_full |
Neuronal fibrillogenesis: Amyloid fibrils from primary neuronal cultures impair long-term memory in the crab Chasmagnathus |
title_fullStr |
Neuronal fibrillogenesis: Amyloid fibrils from primary neuronal cultures impair long-term memory in the crab Chasmagnathus |
title_full_unstemmed |
Neuronal fibrillogenesis: Amyloid fibrils from primary neuronal cultures impair long-term memory in the crab Chasmagnathus |
title_sort |
neuronal fibrillogenesis: amyloid fibrils from primary neuronal cultures impair long-term memory in the crab chasmagnathus |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_01664328_v147_n1-2_p73_Romano |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT romanoa neuronalfibrillogenesisamyloidfibrilsfromprimaryneuronalculturesimpairlongtermmemoryinthecrabchasmagnathus AT serafinoa neuronalfibrillogenesisamyloidfibrilsfromprimaryneuronalculturesimpairlongtermmemoryinthecrabchasmagnathus AT krasnowskae neuronalfibrillogenesisamyloidfibrilsfromprimaryneuronalculturesimpairlongtermmemoryinthecrabchasmagnathus AT ciottimt neuronalfibrillogenesisamyloidfibrilsfromprimaryneuronalculturesimpairlongtermmemoryinthecrabchasmagnathus AT calissanop neuronalfibrillogenesisamyloidfibrilsfromprimaryneuronalculturesimpairlongtermmemoryinthecrabchasmagnathus AT rubertif neuronalfibrillogenesisamyloidfibrilsfromprimaryneuronalculturesimpairlongtermmemoryinthecrabchasmagnathus AT gallic neuronalfibrillogenesisamyloidfibrilsfromprimaryneuronalculturesimpairlongtermmemoryinthecrabchasmagnathus |
_version_ |
1807316551345373184 |