| Literature DB >> 29301328 |
Anne Claire Kim1,2, Sungsu Lim3, Yun Kyung Kim4.
Abstract
Amyloid and tau aggregation are implicated in manifold neurodegenerative diseases and serve as two signature pathological hallmarks in Alzheimer's disease (AD). Though aging is considered as a prominent risk factor for AD pathogenesis, substantial evidence suggests that an imbalance of essential biometal ions in the body and exposure to certain metal ions in the environment can potentially induce alterations to AD pathology. Despite their physiological importance in various intracellular processes, biometal ions, when present in excessive or deficient amounts, can serve as a mediating factor for neurotoxicity. Recent studies have also demonstrated the contribution of metal ions found in the environment on mediating AD pathogenesis. In this regard, the neuropathological features associated with biometal ion dyshomeostasis and environmental metal ion exposure have prompted widespread interest by multiple research groups. In this review, we discuss and elaborate on findings from previous studies detailing the possible role of both endogenous and exogenous metal ions specifically on amyloid and tau pathology in AD.Entities:
Keywords: metal; tau; β-amyloid
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29301328 PMCID: PMC5796077 DOI: 10.3390/ijms19010128
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Metal ions effect on amyloid β (Aβ) and tau aggregation. (a) Amyloidogenesis [13]. Under normal conditions, Aβ is rarely produced in the brain, since amyloid precursor protein (APP) is cleaved by α- and γ-secretase. Under pathological conditions, APP is cleaved with β- and γ-secretase, generating neurotoxic Aβ peptide. Once the Aβ peptide is generated and secreted into the extracellular space, it spontaneously transforms into fibrils called amyloid plaques. Zn2+, Cu2+, Fe3+, Mn2+, Pb2+, Cd2+, Hg2+, and Al3+ induce amyloidogenic pathways and Aβ aggregation (red arrow). In contrast, Mg2+, Fe2+, and Li2+ reduce the formation of Aβ (blue arrow); (b) Tau pathology. In a nonpathological condition, tau is constantly phosphorylated and dephosphorylated for the maintenance of neuronal structure and function. Under pathological condition, tau is highly phosphorylated by diverse kinases such as cyclin-dependent kinase 5 (CDK5) [14] and glycogen synthase kinase-3beta (GSK-3β) [15]. Tau hyperphosphorylation could be maintained by a failure of activation of phosphatase like protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A) [16]. Hyper-phosphorylated tau aggregates into neurofibrillary tangles (NFTs). Zn2+, Cu2+, Fe3+, Mg2+, Mn2+, Pb2+, Cd2+, Hg2+, and Al3+ promote tau hyperphosphorylation and induce tau aggregation (red arrow). In contrast, Fe2+, and Li2+ reduce tau hyperphosphorylation (blue arrow). For further details and references on metal ions effect (see Table 1).
Metal ion effects on amyloid beta and tau aggregation.
| Metal Ion | Metal Conc. | Aβ agg. | Study Type | Model | Mechanism | Metal Conc. | Tau agg. | Study Type | Model | Mechanism |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Zn | 100–250 μM | + | In cell | Human tau (1N4R) transfected 1C9 clonal CHO cell [ | Inhibits α-secretase enzyme activity | 100–250 μM | + | In cell | Human tau (1N4R) transfected 1C9 clonal CHO cell [ | Inactivates PP2A/Activates GSK-3β kinase |
| 25–50 μM | + | In vitro | Synthesized human Aβ42 peptide [ | Induces Aβ conformational change and aggregation | 10–300 μM | + | In cell | N2a cell [ | Inactivates PP2A | |
| 100–400 μM | + | In cell | SH-SY5Y cell [ | Induces tau hyperphosphorylation | ||||||
| 20 nM/10 μM | − | In vitro | Synthesized human Aβ42 peptide [ | Inhibits Aβ fibrillization | 50–500 μM | + | In vitro | Rat cortical neurons [ | Activates GSK-3β kinase | |
| 25 μM | + | In vitro | Radiolabeled/unlabeled human Aβ40 peptide [ | Induces Aβ aggregation | 10–100 μM | + | In vitro | Rat hippocampal slices [ | Inactivates PP2A | |
| Cu | 5–200 μM | + | In cell | CHO cell [ | Increases α-secretase enzyme activity | 400 μM | + | In cell | SH-SY5Y cell [ | Activates GSK-3β kinase |
| 250 ppm | + | In vivo | 3xTg-AD mouse [ | Increases APP cleavage activity | 25 μM | + | In vivo | APP/PS1 mouse [ | Activates GSK-3β kinase | |
| 250 ppm | + | In vivo | 3xTg-AD mouse [ | Activates CDK5/p25 | ||||||
| Fe | 1 mM | + | In vitro | Radiolabeled/unlabeled human Aβ40 peptide [ | Induces Aβ aggregation | 50 μM | + | In cell | SH-SY5Y cell [ | Activates CDK5/p25 & GSK-3β kinase |
| 20 μM | − | In cell | Rat hippocampal neurons [ | Disrupts CDK5/p25 | ||||||
| 1 mmol/L | + | In vitro | PHFtau fractions [ | Induces tau aggregation | ||||||
| 1 mM | − | In vivo | Impedes Aβ aggregation | 10 mg/mL | + | In vivo | APP/PS1 tg mouse [ | Activates CDK5/p25 & GSK-3β kinase | ||
| Mg | 0–0.4 mM/1.2–4.0 mM | − | In cell | N2a cell [ | Increases α-secretase enzyme activity | 5 mM | + | In vitro | Sarkosyl-insoluble fractions of PHFtau prepared from post-mortem AD brain [ | Induces PHFtau aggregation |
| 5 mM | − | In cell, In vivo | SH-SY5Y cell [ | Stabilizes γ-secretase enzyme activity | 50–200 mg/kg | + | In vivo | Streptozotocin-induced sporadic AD rat [ | Increases GSK-3β phosphorylation at Ser9 | |
| ~910 mg/kg | − | In vivo | APPswe/PSEN1dE9 tg mouse [ | Reduces β-secretase enzyme activity | ||||||
| Mn | 0–400 μM/60 mg/kg | + | In cell, In vivo | N2a cell, APPswe/PSEN1dE9 tg mouse [ | Decreases Aβ degradation enzyme | 100–500 μM | + | In cell | PC12 cell [ | Activates GSK-3β kinase |
| Pb | 0.2% | + | In vivo | C57BL/6 mouse [ | Increases Aβ protein expression | 0.2% | + | In vivo | C57BL/6 mouse [ | Increases tau hyperphosphorylation |
| 1.5 mg/kg | + | In vivo | Increases CDK5 levels | |||||||
| 200 ppm | + | In vivo | Long-Evans rat [ | Increases | 0.2% | + | In vivo | hTau tg mouse [ | Increases GSK-3β & CDK5 kinase activity | |
| 0.1% | + | In vivo | Wistar rat [ | Increases GSK-3β & CDK5 kinase activity | ||||||
| Cd | 1–100 μM | + | In cell | SN56 cell [ | Increases Aβ deposits | 1–100 μM | + | In cell | SN56 cell [ | Activates GSK-3β kinase |
| 2.5 mg/kg | + | In vivo | APP/PS1 mouse [ | Inhibits α-secretase enzyme activity, Decreases of Aβ degradation enzyme | 3.8 μM | + | In vitro | Tau fragment R3 (third repeat of microtubule -binding domain) [ | Accelerates tau aggregation | |
| 3.75–6 mg/kg | + | In vivo | ICR mouse [ | Activates GSK-3β kinase | ||||||
| Hg | 36 nM–18 μM | + | In cell | SH-SY5Y cell [ | Increased accumulation of Aβ plaques | 36 nM–18 μM | + | In cell | SH-SY5Y cell [ | Induces tau hyper-phosphorylation |
| 5–20 μM | + | In cell | SH-SY5Y cell | Decreases APP levels and reduces Aβ aggregation [ | 2.25–15 μM | + | In vitro | Tau fragment R2 (second repeat of microtubule -binding domain) [ | Induces tau aggregation | |
| Al | 1 mM | + | In vitro | Rat cortical neurons [ | Induces Aβ aggregation | 0.4–1.6 mg/kg | + | In vivo | Wistar rat [ | Inhibits PP2A activity and accelerates tau aggregation |
| 1.88 × 105 mol/L | − | In vitro | Human Aβ40 peptide [ | Induces Aβ aggregation | 100 mg/kg | + | In vivo | Wistar rat [ | Increases CDK5 levels and induces tau aggregation | |
| Li | - | − | In cell | HEK293 cell [ | Reduces Aβ aggregation | 300–600 mg/kg | − | In cell, In vivo | HEK293 swAPP751, PDAPP mouse [ | Reduces tau hyperphosphorylation |
| 0.18 mmol | − | In vivo | APP/PS1 mouse [ | Decreases β-/γ-secretase enzyme activity | 100 mg/mL | − | In vivo | APP/PS1 mouse [ | Phosphorylates GSK-3β kinase |
Metal ion induces (+) or reduces (−) Aβ and tau aggregation.