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Abstracts
Abortive apoptosis
in Alzheimer's disease.
Acta Neuropathol 2001 (April) 101(4): 305-310
Raina AK, Hochman A, Zhu X, Rottkamp CA, Nunomura A, Siedlak SL,
Boux H, Castellani RJ, Perry G, Smith MA.
Multiple studies suggest that neuronal death in Alzheimer's
disease (AD) is the result of an apoptotic mechanism. However, the
stereotypical manifestations that define the terminal phases of apoptosis, such
as chromatin condensation, apoptotic bodies, and blebbing, are not seen in AD.
In this study, we show that the caspases, such as caspase 6, which cleave
amyloid-beta protein precursor (A beta PP) and presenilins, are localized to
the pathological lesions associated with AD. However, while upstream caspases
such as 8 and 9 are clearly found in association with the intraneuronal
pathology in AD, downstream caspases such as 3, 6 and 7 are present only at
control levels. Given that execution of apoptosis requires amplification of the
caspase-mediated apoptotic signal, our results indicate that in AD there is a
lack of effective apoptotic signal propagation to downstream caspase effectors.
Therefore, while the presence of caspases, especially caspase 6, in association
with extracellular deposits of amyloid-beta, could obviously have important
ramifications on the proteolytic processing of A beta PP and, thereby, on
disease pathogenesis, it seems that AD represents the first in vivo situation
reported in which the initiation of apoptosis does not proceed to
caspase-dependent cell death. This novel phenomenon of apoptotic avoidance,
which we term abortive apoptosis, or abortosis, may represent an exit from the
caspase-induced apoptotic program that leads to neuronal survival in AD.
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