AMYLOID PRECURSOR PROTEIN IN NORMAL/DEMENTIA PLATELETS
Project Number5R01AG011526-02
Former Number1R01HL049565-01
Contact PI/Project LeaderDAVIES, THERESA A
Awardee OrganizationBOSTON UNIVERSITY MEDICAL CAMPUS
Description
Abstract Text
The characteristic deposits of beta-amyloid protein (beta-A4) in the
brain and vasculature of Alzheimer's Disease (AD) patients were described
many years ago. There is a strong indication that the beta-A4 originates
from the amyloid precursor protein (beta-APP) which is present in many
cells including megakaryocytes and the alpha-granules of platelets.
Platelet activation by thrombin leads to secretion of granule contents,
including beta-APP (known to inhibit Factor XIa), which participate in
normal thrombosis and hemostasis. The mechanism of precursor release
from platelets from AD, non-AD dementias and Downs Syndrome (DS) patients
may differ from that of normal controls and has yet to be examined.
Alternatively, the activation process and the beta-APP release may be
normal in platelets from these patients but proteolysis of the precursor
into the beta-A4 may be abnormal.
It has already been shown that beta-APP is identical in non-familial AD
and in normal individuals but differences in its secretion from platelets
from AD and other dementias patients are only now being investigated.
Furthermore, the proteolytic processing to form the amyloid peptide, and
possibly the targeting of the peptide to specific tissues, may be
different in dementias. Additionally, abnormalities in platelet function
and morphology have been reported in AD, Parkinsons Disease (PSD) and DS
which suggest further that disease-specific differences in the brain
could be linked to platelet function.
We hypothesize that beta-APP from platelets from patients with varying
dementias may be characterizable by an abnormality in either the
localization of, the form of, or the proteolytic products of beta-APP.
Based on our extensive experience in the study of early platelet
responses to agonists, including degranulation, we propose to investigate
the quantity of, the form of, the release of, and the processing of
beta-APP from AD, non-AD dementias, and DS platelets, in comparison to
those individuals of comparable age.
The proposed research aims are (1) to use a human megakaryocyte leukemic
cell line (Dami) to examine the production, processing, and release
characteristics of beta-APP from these cells; (2) to investigate
differences in the size and quantity of the beta-amyloid precursor
protein (beta-APP) released upon thrombin stimulation from platelets from
patients with AD, DS, and other non-Alzheimer dementias and (3) to
localize the beta-APP within the platelet by examining subcellular
platelet fractions from patients with AD, DS, and other non-Alzheimer's
dementias. We hope that our studies will help to delineate differences
in the released beta-APP from AD, non-AD dementias and DS platelets and
will lead to major insights into the role of platelet-contained beta-APP
not only in dementias marked by amyloid deposits but also normal
platelets, and hence in thrombosis and hemostasis.
Public Health Relevance Statement
Data not available.
NIH Spending Category
No NIH Spending Category available.
Project Terms
Alzheimer's diseaseDowns syndromeSDS polyacrylamide gel electrophoresisamyloid proteinsbiological signal transductionclone cellsdementiahuman subjectintracellularneoplastic cell culture for noncancer researchnucleic acid sequenceplateletsprotein biosynthesissecretionthrombinwestern blottings
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