The "amyloid-β (Aβ) hypothesis" posits that accumulating Aβ peptides (Aβs) produced by neurons cause Alzheimer's disease (AD). However, the Aβs contribution by the more numerous astrocytes remains undetermined. Previously we showed that fibrillar (f)Aβ25-35, an Aβ42 proxy, evokes a surplus endogenous Aβ42 production/accumulation in cortical adult human astrocytes. Here, by using immunocytochemistry, immunoblotting, enzymatic assays, and highly sensitive sandwich ELISA kits, we investigated the effects of fAβ25-35 and soluble (s)Aβ25-35 on Aβ42 and Aβ40 accumulation/secretion by human cortical astrocytes and HCN-1A neurons and, since the calcium-sensing receptor (CaSR) binds Aβs, their modulation by NPS 2143, a CaSR allosteric antagonist (calcilytic). The fAβ25-35-exposed astrocytes and surviving neurons produced, accumulated, and secreted increased amounts of Aβ42, while Aβ40 also accrued but its secretion was unchanged. Accordingly, secreted Aβ42/Aβ40 ratio values rose for astrocytes and neurons. While slightly enhancing Aβ40 secretion by fAβ25-35-treated astrocytes, NPS 2143 specifically suppressed the fAβ25-35-elicited surges of endogenous Aβ42 secretion by astrocytes and neurons. Therefore, NPS 2143 addition always kept Aβ42/Aβ40 values to baseline or lower levels. Mechanistically, NPS 2143 decreased total CaSR protein complement, transiently raised proteasomal chymotrypsin activity, and blocked excess NO production without affecting the ongoing increases in BACE1/β-secretase and γ-secretase activity in fAβ25-35-treated astrocytes. Compared to fAβ25-35, sAβ25-35 also stimulated Aβ42 secretion by astrocytes and neurons and NPS 2143 specifically and wholly suppressed this effect. Therefore, since NPS 2143 thwarts any Aβ/CaSR-induced surplus secretion of endogenous Aβ42 and hence further vicious cycles of Aβ self-induction/secretion/spreading, calcilytics might effectively prevent/stop the progression to full-blown AD.
Evidence has begun emerging for the "contagious" and destructive Aβ42 (amyloid-beta42) oligomers and phosphorylated Tau oligomers as drivers of sporadic Alzheimer's disease (AD), which advances along a pathway starting from the brainstem or entorhinal cortex and leading to cognition-related upper cerebral cortex regions. Seemingly, Aβ42 oligomers trigger the events generating the neurotoxic Tau oligomers, which may even by themselves spread the characteristic AD neuropathology. It has been assumed that only neurons make and spread these toxic drivers, whereas their associated astrocytes are just janitorial bystanders/scavengers. But this view is likely to radically change since normal human astrocytes freshly isolated from adult cerebral cortex can be induced by exogenous Aβ25-35, an Aβ42 proxy, to make and secrete increased amounts of endogenous Aβ42. Thus, it would seem that the steady slow progression of AD neuropathology along specific cognition-relevant brain networks is driven by both Aβ42 and phosphorylated Tau oligomers that are variously released from increasing numbers of "contagion-stricken" members of tightly coupled neuron-astrocyte teams. Hence, we surmise that stopping the oversecretion and spread of the two kinds of "contagious" oligomers by such team members, perhaps via a specific CaSR (Ca(2+)-sensing receptor) antagonist like NPS 2143, might effectively treat AD.
Calcium, in partnership with cyclic AMP, controls the proliferation of non-tumorigenic cells in vitro and in vivo. While it does not seem to be involved in the proliferative activation of cells such as hepatocytes (in vivo) or small lymphocytes (in vitro), it does control two later stages of prereplicative (G1) development. It must be one of the very many regulatory and permissive factors affecting early prereplicative development, because severe calcium deprivation reversibly arrests some types of cell early in the G1 phase of their growth-division cycle in vitro. However, calcium more specifically and much more often regulates a later (mid or late G1) stage of prereplicative development. Thus, regardless of its severity or the type of cell, calcium deprivation in vitro or in vivo reversibly stops proliferative development at that part of the G1 phase in which the cellular cyclic AMP content transiently rises and the synthesis of the four deoxyribonucleotides begins. The evidence points to calcium and the cyclic AMP surge being co-generators of the signal committing the cell to DNA synthesis. The evidence is best explained so far by the cyclic AMP surge causing a surge of calcium ions which combine with molecules of the multi-purpose, calcium-dependent, regulator protein calmodulin (CDR) somewhere between the cell surface and the cytosol. The resulting Ca-calmodulin complexes then stimulate many different (and possibly membrane-associated) enzymes such as protein kinases, one of which produces the DNA-synthetic initiator. Calcium has little or no influence on the proliferation of tumor cells. Some possible explanations of this very important loss of control are considered.
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