Cristina Cecchi

Università degli Studi di Firenze, Florence, Tuscany, Italy

Are you Cristina Cecchi?

Claim your profile

Publications (34)143.91 Total impact

  • Article: Extracellular chaperones prevent aβ42-induced toxicity in rat brains.
    [show abstract] [hide abstract]
    ABSTRACT: Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a progressive neurodegenerative disorder characterised by cognitive decline, formation of the extracellular amyloid β (Aβ42) plaques, neuronal and synapse loss, and activated microglia and astrocytes. Extracellular chaperones, which are known to inhibit amyloid fibril formation and promote clearance of misfolded aggregates, have recently been shown to reduce efficiently the toxicity of HypF-N misfolded oligomers to immortalized cell lines, by binding and clustering them into large species. However, the role of extracellular chaperones on Aβ oligomer toxicity remains unclear, with reports often appearing contradictory. In this study we microinjected into the hippocampus of rat brains Aβ42 oligomers pre-incubated for 1h with two extracellular chaperones, namely clusterin and α2-macroglobulin. The chaperones were found to prevent Aβ42-induced learning and memory impairments, as assessed by the Morris Water Maze test, and reduce Aβ42-induced glia inflammation and neuronal degeneration in rat brains, as probed by fluorescent immunohistochemical analyses. Moreover, the chaperones were able to prevent Aβ42 colocalization with PSD-95 at post-synaptic terminals of rat primary neurons, suppressing oligomer cytotoxicity. All such effects were not effective by adding pre-formed oligomers and chaperones without preincubation. Molecular chaperones have therefore the potential to prevent the early symptoms of AD, not just by inhibiting Aβ42 aggregation, as previously demonstrated, but also by suppressing the toxicity of Aβ42 oligomers after they are formed. These findings elect them as novel neuroprotectors against amyloid-induced injury and excellent candidates for the design of therapeutic strategies against AD.
    Biochimica et Biophysica Acta 04/2013; · 4.66 Impact Factor
  • Article: Protective Properties of Novel S-Acyl-Glutathione Thioesters Against Ultraviolet-induced Oxidative Stress.
    [show abstract] [hide abstract]
    ABSTRACT: UV-induced toxicity is characterized by marked oxidative stress, accompanied by the depletion of key cellular antioxidants, particularly glutathione (GSH). Replenishing cellular GSH may represent a means of counteracting UV-induced toxicity: however, treatment with free GSH is not therapeutically effective due to its unfavorable pharmacokinetic properties. In this study, we show that S-acyl-glutathione (acyl-SG) derivatives, which consist of an acyl chain (of variable length and saturation) linked via a thioester bond to GSH, increase intracellular levels of reduced GSH in primary skin fibroblasts, adenocarcinoma HeLa and neuroblastoma SH-SY5Y cells. Consistent with this, acyl-SG derivatives protect against UV-induced reactive oxygen species (ROS) production and UV-B/C-mediated lipid peroxidation and caspase-3 activation in the analyzed cell lines, with unsaturated thioesters displaying a significantly greater protective effect. Taken together, our findings suggest that acyl-SG thioesters may be therapeutically effective in the treatment of UV-related skin disorders and oxidative stress-mediated conditions in general.
    Photochemistry and Photobiology 08/2012; · 2.41 Impact Factor
  • Source
    Article: Molecular mechanisms used by chaperones to reduce the toxicity of aberrant protein oligomers.
    [show abstract] [hide abstract]
    ABSTRACT: Chaperones are the primary regulators of the proteostasis network and are known to facilitate protein folding, inhibit protein aggregation, and promote disaggregation and clearance of misfolded aggregates inside cells. We have tested the effects of five chaperones on the toxicity of misfolded oligomers preformed from three different proteins added extracellularly to cultured cells. All the chaperones were found to decrease oligomer toxicity significantly, even at very low chaperone/protein molar ratios, provided that they were added extracellularly rather than being overexpressed in the cytosol. Infrared spectroscopy and site-directed labeling experiments using pyrene ruled out structural reorganizations within the discrete oligomers. Rather, confocal microscopy, SDS-PAGE, and intrinsic fluorescence measurements indicated tight binding between oligomers and chaperones. Moreover, atomic force microscopy imaging indicated that larger assemblies of oligomers are formed in the presence of the chaperones. This suggests that the chaperones bind to the oligomers and promote their assembly into larger species, with consequent shielding of the reactive surfaces and a decrease in their diffusional mobility. Overall, the data indicate a generic ability of chaperones to neutralize extracellular misfolded oligomers efficiently and reveal that further assembly of protein oligomers into larger species can be an effective strategy to neutralize such extracellular species.
    Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 07/2012; 109(31):12479-84. · 9.68 Impact Factor
  • Article: Membrane lipid composition and its physicochemical properties define cell vulnerability to aberrant protein oligomers.
    [show abstract] [hide abstract]
    ABSTRACT: Increasing evidence suggests that the interaction of misfolded protein oligomers with cell membranes is a primary event resulting in the cytotoxicity associated with many protein-misfolding diseases, including neurodegenerative disorders. We describe here the results of a study on the relative contributions to toxicity of the physicochemical properties of protein oligomers and the cell membrane with which they interact. We altered the amount of cholesterol and the ganglioside GM1 in membranes of SH-SY5Y cells. We then exposed the cells to two types of oligomers of the prokaryotic protein HypF-N with different ultrastructural and cytotoxicity properties, and to oligomers formed by the amyloid-β peptide associated with Alzheimer's disease. We identified that the degree of toxicity of the oligomeric species is the result of a complex interplay between the structural and physicochemical features of both the oligomers and the cell membrane.
    Journal of Cell Science 02/2012; 125(Pt 10):2416-27. · 6.11 Impact Factor
  • Article: Glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) suppress the toxicity of HypF-N prefibrillar aggregates.
    [show abstract] [hide abstract]
    ABSTRACT: A group of diverse human pathologies is associated with proteins unable to retain their native state and convert into prefibrillar and fibrillar amyloid aggregates that are then deposited in the extracellular space. Glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) have been found to physically associate with these deposits and also to promote their formation in vitro. However, the effect of GAGs on the toxicity of these aggregates has been investigated in only one protein system, the amyloid β peptide associated with Alzheimer's disease. In this study, we investigate whether GAGs affect the toxicity of the N-terminal domain of Escherichia coli HypF (HypF-N) oligomers on Chinese hamster ovarian cells and the mechanism by which such suppression is mediated. The results show that heparin and other GAGs inhibit the toxicity observed by HypF-N oligomers in a dose-dependent manner. GAGs were not found to bind preformed HypF-N oligomers, change their morphological and structural characteristics or disaggregate them. Nevertheless, they were found to bind to the cells' surface and prevent the interaction of the oligomers with the cells. Overall, the results indicate that GAGs have a generic ability to inhibit the toxicity of aberrant protein oligomers and that such toxicity suppression can occur through different mechanisms, such as through binding to the oligomers with consequent loss of interaction of the oligomers to the GAGs present on the cell surface, as proposed previously for amyloid β aggregates, or through mechanisms independent of direct GAG-oligomer binding, as shown here for HypF-N aggregates.
    Journal of Molecular Biology 02/2012; 421(4-5):616-30. · 4.00 Impact Factor
  • Article: SIRT1 modulates MAPK pathways in ischemic-reperfused cardiomyocytes.
    [show abstract] [hide abstract]
    ABSTRACT: SIRT1, an ubiquitous NAD(+)-dependent deacetylase that plays a role in biological processes such as longevity and stress response, is significantly activated in response to reactive oxygen species (ROS) production. Resveratrol (Resv), an important activator of SIRT1, has been shown to exert major health benefits in diseases associated with oxidative stress. In ischemia-reperfusion (IR) injury, a major role has been attributed to the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathway, which is upregulated in response to a variety of stress stimuli, including oxidative stress. In neonatal rat ventricular cardiomyocytes subjected to simulated IR, the effect of Resv-induced SIRT1 activation and the relationships with the MAPK pathway were investigated. Resv-induced SIRT1 overexpression protected cardiomyocytes from oxidative injury, mitochondrial dysfunction, and cell death induced by IR. For the first time, we demonstrate that SIRT1 overexpression positively affects the MAPK pathway-via Akt/ASK1 signaling-by reducing p38 and JNK phosphorylation and increasing ERK phosphorylation. These results reveal a new protective mechanism elicited by Resv-induced SIRT1 activation in IR tissues and suggest novel potential therapeutic targets to manage IR-induced cardiac dysfunction.
    Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences CMLS 02/2012; 69(13):2245-60. · 6.57 Impact Factor
  • Article: Novel S-acyl glutathione derivatives prevent amyloid oxidative stress and cholinergic dysfunction in Alzheimer disease models.
    [show abstract] [hide abstract]
    ABSTRACT: Oxidative stress-mediated neuronal death may be initiated by a decrease in glutathione (GSH), whose levels are reduced in mitochondrial and synaptosomal fractions of specific CNS regions in Alzheimer disease (AD) patients. Currently, the use of GSH as a therapeutic agent is limited by its unfavorable pharmacokinetic properties. In this study, we designed the synthesis of new S-acyl glutathione (acyl-SG) thioesters of fatty acids via N-acyl benzotriazole-intermediate production and investigated their potential for targeted delivery of the parent GSH and free fatty acid to amyloid-exposed fibroblasts from familial AD patients and human SH-SY5Y neuroblastoma cells. Cell culture supplementation with acyl-SG derivatives triggers a significant decrease in lipid peroxidation and mitochondrial dysfunction in a fatty acid unsaturation degree-dependent fashion. Acyl-SG thioesters also protect cholinergic neurons against Aβ-induced damage and reduce glial reaction in rat brains. Collectively, these findings suggest that acyl-SG thioesters could prove useful as a tool for controlling AD-induced cerebral deterioration.
    Free radical biology & medicine 01/2012; 52(8):1362-71. · 5.42 Impact Factor
  • Article: Neuronal differentiation of human mesenchymal stromal cells increases their resistance to Aβ42 aggregate toxicity.
    [show abstract] [hide abstract]
    ABSTRACT: Cell therapy is a promising approach for the treatment of neurodegenerative conditions such as Alzheimer's and Parkinson's diseases. However, the presence of toxic aggregates in tissue raises the question of whether grafted stem cells are susceptible to amyloid toxicity before they differentiate into mature neurons. To address this question, we investigated the relative vulnerability of human mesenchymal stromal cells and their neuronally differentiated counterparts to Aβ(42) oligomers and whether susceptibility correlates with membrane GM1 content, a key player in oligomer toxicity. We found that our cell model was highly susceptible to aggregate toxicity, whereas neuronal differentiation induced resistance to amyloid species. This data correlated well with the content of membrane GM1, levels of which decreased considerably in differentiated cells. These findings extend our knowledge of stem cell vulnerability to amyloid species, which remains a controversial issue, and confirm that amyloid-GM1 interactions play an important role in cell impairment.
    Journal of Alzheimer's disease: JAD 08/2011; 27(3):651-64. · 3.74 Impact Factor
  • Article: A comparison of the biochemical modifications caused by toxic and non-toxic protein oligomers in cells.
    [show abstract] [hide abstract]
    ABSTRACT: Peptides and proteins can convert from their soluble forms into highly ordered fibrillar aggregates, giving rise to pathological conditions ranging from neurodegenerative disorders to systemic amyloidoses. It is increasingly recognized that protein oligomers forming early in the process of fibril aggregation represent the pathogenic species in protein deposition diseases. The N-terminal domain of the HypF protein from Escherichia coli (HypF-N) has previously been shown to form, under distinct conditions, two types of HypF-N oligomers with indistinguishable morphologies but distinct structural features at the molecular level. Only the oligomer type exposing hydrophobic surfaces and possessing sufficient structural plasticity is toxic (type A), whereas the other type is benign to cultured cells (type B). Here we show that only type A oligomers are able to induce a Ca(2+) influx from the cell medium to the cytosol, to penetrate the plasma membrane, to increase intracellular reactive oxygen species production, lipid peroxidation and release of intracellular calcein, resulting in the activation of the apoptotic pathway. Remarkably, these oligomers can also induce a loss of cholinergic neurons when injected into rat brains. By contrast, markers of cellular stress and viability were unaffected in cultured and rat neuronal cells exposed to type B oligomers. The analysis of the time scales of such effects indicates that the difference of toxicity between the two oligomer types involve the early events of the toxicity cascade, shedding new light on the mechanism of action of protein oligomers and on the molecular targets for the therapeutic intervention against protein deposition diseases.
    Journal of Cellular and Molecular Medicine 12/2010; 15(10):2106-16. · 4.13 Impact Factor
  • Article: Lipid rafts are primary mediators of amyloid oxidative attack on plasma membrane.
    [show abstract] [hide abstract]
    ABSTRACT: Increasing evidence indicates that cell surfaces are early interaction sites for Abeta-derived diffusible ligands (ADDLs) and neurons in Alzheimer's disease (AD) pathogenesis. Our previous data showed significant oxidative damage at the plasma membrane in fibroblasts from familial AD patients with enhanced Abeta production. Here, we report that lipid rafts, ordered membrane microdomains, are chronic mediators of Abeta-induced lipid peroxidation in SH-SY5Y human neuroblastoma cells overexpressing amyloid precursor protein (APPwt) and APPV717G genes and in fibroblasts bearing the APPV717I gene mutation. Confocal microscope analysis showed that Abeta-oxidised rafts recruit more ADDLs than corresponding domains in control cells, triggering a further increase in membrane lipid peroxidation and loss of membrane integrity. Moreover, amyloid pickup at the oxidative-damaged domains was prevented by enhanced cholesterol levels, anti-ganglioside (GM1) antibodies, the B subunit of cholera toxin and lipid raft structure alteration. An enhanced structural rigidity of the detergent-resistant domains, isolated from APPwt and APPV717G cells and exposed to ADDLs, indicates a specific perturbation of raft physicochemical features in cells facing increased amyloid assembly at the membrane surface. These data identify lipid rafts as key mediators of oxidative damage as a result of their ability to recruit aggregates to the cell surface.
    Journal of Molecular Medicine 03/2010; 88(6):597-608. · 4.67 Impact Factor
  • Article: A causative link between the structure of aberrant protein oligomers and their toxicity.
    [show abstract] [hide abstract]
    ABSTRACT: The aberrant assembly of peptides and proteins into fibrillar aggregates proceeds through oligomeric intermediates that are thought to be the primary pathogenic species in many protein deposition diseases. We describe two types of oligomers formed by the HypF-N protein that are morphologically and tinctorially similar, as detected with atomic force microscopy and thioflavin T assays, though one is benign when added to cell cultures whereas the other is toxic. Structural investigation at a residue-specific level using site-directed labeling with pyrene indicated differences in the packing of the hydrophobic interactions between adjacent protein molecules in the oligomers. The lower degree of hydrophobic packing was found to correlate with a higher ability to penetrate the cell membrane and cause an influx of Ca(2+) ions. Our findings suggest that structural flexibility and hydrophobic exposure are primary determinants of the ability of oligomeric assemblies to cause cellular dysfunction and its consequences, such as neurodegeneration.
    Nature Chemical Biology 02/2010; 6(2):140-7. · 14.69 Impact Factor
  • Article: Biological membranes as protein aggregation matrices and targets of amyloid toxicity.
    Monica Bucciantini, Cristina Cecchi
    [show abstract] [hide abstract]
    ABSTRACT: Aberrantly folded proteins and peptides are hallmarks of amyloid diseases. A deeper knowledge of the pathways leading to the formation of amyloid protein aggregates and of the mechanisms of their cytotoxicity is fundamental for a better understanding of several human diseases with amyloid deposition. Increasing evidence indicates that amyloids arising from different peptides and proteins behave similarly as for their cytotoxic effects. In general, different cell susceptibility to toxic protein aggregates depends on the efficiency of different cell types to accumulate amyloid precursors at their plasma membrane with subsequent growth of pre-fibrillar and fibrillar entities, resulting in membrane perturbation and cell damage. Actually, protein-lipid interaction displays a twofold aspect: on the one hand, the presence of a lipid membrane may influence protein unfolding and the aggregation process; on the other hand, protein aggregates may modify membrane structure and permeability. Understanding the molecular basis of the membrane-protein interaction (but, more extensively, of the surface-protein interaction) may help elucidating some of the factors affecting protein misfolding and aggregation in vivo. This topic has been investigated by a variety of techniques such as atomic force microscopy, transmission electron microscopy, confocal laser microscopy and flow cytometric analysis. In this overview, such techniques will be reviewed with special emphasis to their use in protein aggregation studies.
    Methods in molecular biology (Clifton, N.J.) 01/2010; 648:231-43.
  • Article: Generation of reactive oxygen species by beta amyloid fibrils and oligomers involves different intra/extracellular pathways.
    Amino Acids 10/2009; · 3.25 Impact Factor
  • Article: Generation of reactive oxygen species by beta amyloid fibrils and oligomers involves different intra/extracellular pathways.
    [show abstract] [hide abstract]
    ABSTRACT: A neuropathological characteristic of Alzheimer's disease is the extracellular accumulation of amyloid beta peptide (Abeta) in neuritic plaques. Recent evidences suggested that soluble Abeta oligomers are the predominant neurotoxic species for neurons. Thus, considerable attention has been paid to discriminate the cytotoxic pathways of Abeta pre-fibrillar aggregates and mature fibrils. We showed that the mechanisms by which Abeta oligomers and fibrils generated reactive oxygen species differ in terms of site of production and kinetics, suggesting the involvement of different intra/extracellular pathways.
    Amino Acids 08/2009; 38(4):1101-6. · 3.25 Impact Factor
  • Article: A protective role for lipid raft cholesterol against amyloid-induced membrane damage in human neuroblastoma cells.
    [show abstract] [hide abstract]
    ABSTRACT: Increasing evidence supports the idea that the initial events of Abeta oligomerization and cytotoxicity in Alzheimer's disease involve the interaction of amyloid Abeta-derived diffusible ligands (ADDLs) with the cell membrane. This also indicates lipid rafts, ordered membrane microdomains enriched in cholesterol, sphingolipids and gangliosides, as likely primary interaction sites of ADDLs. To shed further light on the relation between ADDL-cell membrane interaction and oligomer cytotoxicity, we investigated the dependence of ADDLs binding to lipid rafts on membrane cholesterol content in human SH-SY5Y neuroblastoma cells. Confocal laser microscopy showed that Abeta1-42 oligomers markedly interact with membrane rafts and that a moderate enrichment of membrane cholesterol prevents their association with the monosialoganglioside GM1. Moreover, anisotropy fluorescence measurements of flotillin-1-positive rafts purified by sucrose density gradient suggested that the content of membrane cholesterol and membrane perturbation by ADDLs are inversely correlated. Finally, contact mode atomic force microscope images of lipid rafts in liquid showed that ADDLs induce changes in raft morphology with the appearance of large cavities whose size and depth were significantly reduced in similarly treated cholesterol-enriched rafts. Our data suggest that cholesterol reduces amyloid-induced membrane modifications at the lipid raft level by altering raft physicochemical features.
    Biochimica et Biophysica Acta 08/2009; 1788(10):2204-16. · 4.66 Impact Factor
  • Article: Membrane cholesterol enrichment prevents Aβ-induced oxidative stress in Alzheimer's fibroblasts.
    [show abstract] [hide abstract]
    ABSTRACT: A growing body of evidence implicates low membrane cholesterol in the pathogenesis of Alzheimer's disease (AD). Here we show that Aβ42 soluble oligomers accumulate more slowly and in reduced amount at the plasma membranes of PS-1L392V and APPV717I fibroblasts from familial AD (FAD) patients enriched in cholesterol content than at the counterpart membranes. The Aβ42-induced production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and the increase in membrane lipoperoxidation were also prevented by high membrane cholesterol, thus resulting in a higher resistance to amyloid toxicity with respect to control fibroblasts. On the other hand, the recruitment of amyloid assemblies to the plasma membrane of cholesterol-depleted fibroblasts was significantly increased, thus triggering an earlier and sharper production of ROS and a higher membrane oxidative injury. These results identify membrane cholesterol as being key to Aβ42 oligomer accumulation at the cell surfaces and to the following Aβ42-induced cell death in AD neurons.
    Neurobiology of aging 04/2009; 32(2):210-22. · 5.94 Impact Factor
  • Article: Curcumin protects cardiac cells against ischemia-reperfusion injury: effects on oxidative stress, NF-kappaB, and JNK pathways.
    [show abstract] [hide abstract]
    ABSTRACT: In this study we explored the effects of curcumin in cardiac cells subjected to a protocol simulating ischemia-reperfusion (IR). Curcumin (10 microM) was administered before ischemia (pretreatment) or at the moment of reperfusion (posttreatment) and its effects were compared to those produced by a reference antioxidant (Trolox) with an equal antioxidant capacity. IR cardiac cells showed clear signs of oxidative stress, impaired mitochondrial activity, and a marked development of both necrotic and apoptotic processes; at the same time, increases in NF-kappaB nuclear translocation and JNK phosphorylation were observed. Curcumin pretreatment was revealed to be the most effective in attenuating all these modifications and, in particular, in reducing the death of IR cells. This confirms that the protective effect of curcumin is not related simply to its antioxidant properties but involves other mechanisms, notably interactions in the NF-kappaB and JNK pathways. These findings suggest that curcumin administration, in particular before the hypoxic challenge, represents a promising approach to protecting cardiac cells against IR injury. In this scenario our results point out the importance of the chronology for the outcome of the treatment and provide a differential valuation of the degree of protection that curcumin can exert by its antioxidant activity or by other mechanisms.
    Free Radical Biology and Medicine 09/2008; 45(6):839-46. · 5.42 Impact Factor
  • Article: Protective effect of new S-acylglutathione derivatives against amyloid-induced oxidative stress.
    [show abstract] [hide abstract]
    ABSTRACT: Recent data support the role of oxidative stress in the pathogenesis of Alzheimer disease (AD). In particular, glutathione (GSH) metabolism is altered and its levels are decreased in affected brain regions and peripheral cells from AD patients and in experimental models of AD. In the past decade, interest in the protective effects of various antioxidants aimed at increasing intracellular GSH content has been growing. Because much experimental evidence suggests a possible protective role of unsaturated fatty acids in age-related diseases, we designed the synthesis of new S-acylglutathione (acyl-SG) thioesters. S-Lauroylglutathione (lauroyl-SG) and S-palmitoleoylglutathione (palmitoleoyl-SG) were easily internalized into the cells and they significantly reduced Abeta42-induced oxidative stress in human neurotypic SH-SY5Y cells. In particular, acyl-SG thioesters can prevent the impairment of intracellular ROS scavengers, intracellular ROS accumulation, lipid peroxidation, and apoptotic pathway activation. Palmitoleoyl-SG seemed more effective in cellular protection against Abeta-induced oxidative damage than lauroyl-SG, suggesting a valuable role for the monounsaturated fatty acid. In this study, we demonstrate that acyl-SG derivatives completely avoid the sharp lipoperoxidation in primary fibroblasts from familial AD patients occurring after exposure to Abeta42 aggregates. Hence, we put forward these derivatives as new antioxidant compounds which could be excellent candidates for therapeutic treatment of AD and other oxidative stress-related diseases.
    Free Radical Biology and Medicine 05/2008; 44(8):1624-36. · 5.42 Impact Factor
  • Source
    Article: Replicating neuroblastoma cells in different cell cycle phases display different vulnerability to amyloid toxicity.
    [show abstract] [hide abstract]
    ABSTRACT: A key role of mitotic activation in neuronal cell death in early stages of Alzheimer's disease (AD) has been suggested. Apparently, terminally differentiated neurons are precluded from mitotic division, yet some phenotypic markers of cell cycling are present in AD-vulnerable brain areas. In this paper, we investigated whether dividing human neuroblastoma cells are preferentially vulnerable to amyloid aggregate toxicity in some specific cell cycle stage(s). Our data indicate that Abeta1-40/42 aggregates added to the cell culture media bind to the plasma membrane and are internalized faster in the S than in the G2/M and G1 cells possibly as a result of a lower content in membrane cholesterol in the former. Earlier and sharper increases in reactive oxygen species production triggered a membrane oxidative injury and a significant impairment of antioxidant capacity, eventually culminating with apoptotic activation in S and, to a lesser extent, in G2/M exposed cells. G1 cells appeared more resistant to the amyloid-induced oxidative attack possibly because of their higher antioxidant capacity. The high vulnerability of S cells to aggregate toxicity extends previous data suggesting that neuronal loss in AD could result from mitotic reactivation of terminally differentiated neurons with arrest in the S phase.
    Journal of Molecular Medicine 03/2008; 86(2):197-209. · 4.67 Impact Factor
  • Article: Differentiation increases the resistance of neuronal cells to amyloid toxicity.
    [show abstract] [hide abstract]
    ABSTRACT: A substantial lack of information is recognized on the features underlying the variable susceptibility to amyloid aggregate toxicity of cells with different phenotypes. Recently, we showed that different cell types are variously affected by early aggregates of a prokaryotic hydrogenase domain (HypF-N). In the present study we investigated whether differentiation affects cell susceptibility to amyloid injury using a human neurotypic SH-SY5Y cell differentiation model. We found that retinoic acid-differentiated cells were significantly more resistant against Abeta1-40, Abeta1-42 and HypF-N prefibrillar aggregate toxicity respect to undifferentiated cells treated similarly. Earlier and sharper increases in cytosolic Ca(2+) and ROS with marked lipid peroxidation and mitochondrial dysfunction were also detected in exposed undifferentiated cells resulting in apoptosis activation. The reduced vulnerability of differentiated cells matched a more efficient Ca(2+)-ATPase equipment and a higher total antioxidant capacity. Finally, increasing the content of membrane cholesterol resulted in a remarkable reduction of vulnerability and ability to bind the aggregates in either undifferentiated and differentiated cells.
    Neurochemical Research 03/2008; 33(12):2516-31. · 2.24 Impact Factor