We investigated the differential role of protein kinase C (PKC) isoforms in the regulated proteolytic release of soluble amyloid precursor protein (sAPPa) in SH-SY5Y neuroblastoma cells. We used cells stably transfected with cDNAs encoding either PKCa or PKCe in the antisense orientation, producing a reduction of the expression of PKCa and PKCe, respectively. Reduced expression of PKCa and/or PKCe did not modify the response of the kinase to phorbol ester stimulation, demonstrating translocation of the respective isoforms from the cytosolic fraction to specific intracellular compartments with an interesting differential localization of PKCa to the plasma membrane and PKCe to Golgi-like structures. Reduced expression of PKCa significantly impaired the secretion of sAPPa induced by treatment with phorbol esters. Treatment of PKCadeficient cells with carbachol induced a significant release of sAPPa. These results suggest that the involvement of PKCa in carbachol-induced sAPPa release is negligible. The response to carbachol is instead completely blocked in PKCe-deficient cells suggesting the importance of PKCe in coupling cholinergic receptors with APP metabolism.Keywords: Alzheimer's disease; cholinergic receptors; neuroblastoma; phorbol esters; signal transduction.Alzheimer's disease (AD), the most common type of dementia, is characterized by deposition in the brain of fibrillar aggregates of a peptide named beta-amyloid (Ab), derived from proteolytic processing of a larger precursor called amyloid precursor protein (APP) [1]. APP is metabolized by several alternative pathways: in the secretory pathway, it is cleaved extracellularly within the Ab domain by a-secretase to generate a soluble nonamyloidogenic fragment of APP (sAPPa) that is secreted in the conditioned medium of cell cultures, human plasma and in the cerebrospinal fluid. Other enzymes, b-and c-secretase, cleave APP at the N and C termini of Ab, respectively, releasing the amyloidogenic peptide [2,3].APP processing by a-secretase occurs via a constitutive pathway and by receptor-mediated activation of multiple signal trasduction pathways among which protein kinase C (PKC) is a major player.PKC is a family of at least 12 isoenzymes of serine/ threonine protein kinases, central to many signal transduction pathways [4]. Although these isoenzymes share a similar structural domain organization, differences in their substrate specificity, cofactor requirements, tissue and cellular distribution, and subcellular localization suggest that each of the different PKC isoenzymes plays a specific and distinct regulatory role in cellular signal transduction [4][5][6][7][8].The role of individual PKC isoforms in the regulation of APP proteolytic processing is not yet understood. Recently we demonstrated that PKCa was specifically involved in phorbol ester-induced sAPPa release [9], further supporting a series of reports that pointed to a specific role for PKCa in APP processing in vitro (for review see [2]), and most recently also in vivo [10,11] where constitutive o...