Functional Amyloids and their Possible Influence on Alzheimer Disease.

Lau A, Bourkas M, Lu YQQ, Ostrowski LA, Weber-Adrian D, Figueiredo C, Arshad H, Shoaei SZS, Morrone CD, Matan-Lithwick S, Abraham KJ, Wang H, Schmitt-Ulms G
Discoveries (Craiova, Romania) 2017
Open on PubMed

Amyloids play critical roles in human diseases but have increasingly been recognized to also exist naturally. Shared physicochemical characteristics of amyloids and of their smaller oligomeric building blocks offer the prospect of molecular interactions and crosstalk amongst these assemblies, including the propensity to mutually influence aggregation. A case in point might be the recent discovery of an interaction between the amyloid β peptide (Aβ) and somatostatin (SST). Whereas Aβ is best known for its role in Alzheimer disease (AD) as the main constituent of amyloid plaques, SST is intermittently stored in amyloid-form in dense core granules before its regulated release into the synaptic cleft. This review was written to introduce to readers a large body of literature that surrounds these two peptides. After introducing general concepts and recent progress related to our understanding of amyloids and their aggregation, the review focuses separately on the biogenesis and interactions of Aβ and SST, before attempting to assess the likelihood of encounters of the two peptides in the brain, and summarizing key observations linking SST to the pathobiology of AD. While the review focuses on Aβ and SST, it is to be anticipated that crosstalk amongst functional and disease-associated amyloids will emerge as a general theme with much broader significance in the etiology of dementias and other amyloidosis.

5 Figures Extracted
Figure 1
Figure 1 PMC
Fibrillogenesis and the conditions that promote specific Aß42 assemblies A. The general flow of fibrillogenesis begins with monomers, which assemble ...
Figure 2
Figure 2 PMC
Strains, cross-seeding and co-aggregation. Cartoon depicting three related, yet distinct, concepts relevant to protein aggregation phenomena A. The s...
Figure 3
Figure 3 PMC
Discovery and validation of SST-Aβ interaction A. Sequence alignment of preprocortistatin and preprosomatostatin. The signal sequence and the boundar...
Figure 4
Figure 4 PMC
Interactions of cyclic and non-cyclic somatostatin A . The natural state of somatostatin is cyclic (SST14 and SST28), formed by the presence of a dis...
Figure 5
Figure 5 PMC
Widespread distribution of AβPP/Aβ, SST and CST across the human brain Schematic summarizing key brain areas reported to express AβPP/Aβ, SST and CST ...