Publications by authors named "K Mendla"

We have recently shown that in utero treatment of guinea pigs with the DNA methylating substance methylazoxymethanol acetate (MAM) results in neocortical microencephalopathy, increased protein kinase C (PKC) activity and altered processing of the amyloid precursor protein (APP) in neocortex of offspring. Here we show that PKCalpha and PKCbeta1 are the key regulators of alpha-secretory APP processing in guinea pig neocortex under these experimental conditions in vivo. This conclusion is based on the selective translocation of PKCalpha and PKCbeta1 isoforms to the cell membrane in MAM-treated guinea pigs, as revealed by Western blot analysis and by immunocytochemistry.

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Whilst it is generally accepted that the activation of protein kinase C (PKC) increases amyloid precursor protein (APP) secretion in vitro, the role of PKC in the regulation of APP processing and beta-amyloid generation in vivo is still not well understood. In order to address this question, we established the animal model of neocortical microencephalopathy in guinea pigs caused by in utero treatment with methylazoxymethanol acetate, a DNA-methylating substance that eliminates proliferating cells of neuroepithelial origin. The induction of this neocortical malformation is accompanied by constitutive overactivation of PKC in the neocortex of the offspring.

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Numerous mutations causing early onset Alzheimer's disease have been identified in the presenilin (PS) genes, particularly the PS1 gene. Like the mutations identified within the beta-amyloid precursor protein gene, PS mutations cause the increased generation of a highly neurotoxic variant of amyloid beta-peptide. PS proteins are proteolytically processed to an N-terminal approximately 30-kDa (NTF) and a C-terminal approximately 20-kDa fragment (CTF20) that form a heterodimeric complex.

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The majority of familial Alzheimer disease mutations are linked to the recently cloned presenilin (PS) genes, which encode two highly homologous proteins (PS-1 and PS-2). It was shown that the full-length PS-2 protein is phosphorylated constitutively within its N-terminal domain by casein kinases, whereas the PS-1 protein is not. Full-length PS proteins undergo endoproteolytic cleavage within their hydrophilic loop domain resulting in the formation of approximately 20-kDa C-terminal fragments (CTF) and approximately 30-kDa N-terminal fragments [Thinakaran, G.

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Consistent pathological hallmarks of Alzheimer's disease (AD) are the formation of brain amyloid and neurofibrillary tangles (NFTs). Levels of the major protein component of NFTs, the microtubule associated protein Tau, were shown to be increased in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) of AD patients as compared to age-matched controls. The presence of apolipoprotein E-epsilon 4 allele (APOE4) is a risk factor for sporadic and familial late-onset AD.

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