Nováková Jana, Mikasová Lenka, Machová Eva, Lisá Vĕra, Dolezal Vladimír
Institute of Physiology, Czech Academy of Sciences, Department of Neurochemistry, Vídenská 1083, 14220 Prague 4, Czech Republic.
Brain Res. 2005 Nov 16;1062(1-2):101-10. doi: 10.1016/j.brainres.2005.09.021. Epub 2005 Oct 26.
We investigated the influence of the amyloid-beta-peptide(1-42) on hemicholinum-3-sensitive high-affinity choline uptake in NG108-15 cells. RT-PCR analysis revealed the presence of mRNA for a choline transporter-like protein but not for cholinergic high-affinity choline transporter. Differentiation of cells increased both hemicholinum-3-sensitive choline uptake and high-affinity hemicholinium-3 binding. This transport was not influenced by tenfold excess of carnitine. Continuous presence of submicromolar concentrations of amyloid-beta-peptide(1-42) during differentiation resulted in a decrease of both choline uptake and hemicholinium-3 binding. These effects were not present when amyloid-beta-peptide(1-42) was added 5 min prior to measurements. Neither differentiation nor amyloid-beta-peptide(1-42) treatment changed levels of choline transporter-like protein mRNA. Protein kinase C inhibition by staurosporine or its inactivation by continuous presence of tetradecanoyl phorbol acetate prevented the inhibitory effect of amyloid-beta-peptide(1-42) treatment on choline uptake. Activation of protein kinase C by tetradecanoyl phorbol acetate during measurement had inhibitory effect on choline uptake in control but not amyloid-beta-peptide(1-42)-treated cells. The concentration of amyloid-beta-peptide(1-42) maximally effective on hemicholinium-3-sensitive choline uptake had no effect on cell growth, oxidative activity, membrane integrity, number of surface muscarinic receptors, caspase-3 and -8 activities, or uptake of deoxyglucose. Results demonstrate that long-term treatment with non-toxic concentrations of amyloid-beta-peptide(1-42) downregulates choline uptake presumably mediated by a choline transporter-like protein through activation of protein kinase C signaling. The decrease of choline uptake may have relevance to the pathogenesis of Alzheimer's disease.