Correction
22 Aug 2019: Huang Q, Sun D, Zubair Hussain M, Liu Y, Morozova-Roche LA, et al. (2019) Correction: HEWL interacts with dissipated oleic acid micelles, and decreases oleic acid cytotoxicity. PLOS ONE 14(8): e0221704. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0221704 View correction
Figures
Abstract
Senile plaques are well-known hallmarks of Alzheimer’s Diseases (AD). However, drugs targeting tangles of the protein tau and plaques of β-amyloid have no significant effect on disease progression, and the studies on the underlying mechanism of AD remain in high demand. Growing evidence supports the protective role of senile plaques in local inflammation driven by S100A9. We herein demonstrate that oleic acid (OA) micelles interact with hen egg white lysozyme (HEWL) and promote its amyloid formation. Consequently, SH-SY5Y cell line and mouse neural stem cells are rescued from OA toxicity by co-aggregation of OA and HEWL. Using atomic force microscopy in combination with fluorescence microscopy, we revealed that HEWL forms round-shaped aggregates in the presence of OA micelles instead of protofibrils of HEWL alone. These HEWL amyloids act as a sink for toxic OA micelles and their co-aggregate form large clumps, suggesting a protective function in amyloid and OA cytotoxicity.
Citation: Huang Q, Sun D, Zubair Hussain M, Liu Y, A. Morozova-Roche L, Zhang C (2019) HEWL interacts with dissipated oleic acid micelles, and decreases oleic acid cytotoxicity. PLoS ONE 14(2): e0212648. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0212648
Editor: Eugene A. Permyakov, Russian Academy of Medical Sciences, RUSSIAN FEDERATION
Received: November 30, 2018; Accepted: February 6, 2019; Published: February 22, 2019
Copyright: © 2019 Huang et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
Data Availability: All relevant data are within the manuscript and its Supporting Information files.
Funding: This work was supported by the Chongqing Basic and Frontier Research Program. Project (cstc2015jcyjA10034), Swedish Medical Research Council (2014-3241 to L.A.M.-R.), Insamlingsstiftelsen (FS 2.1.12-1605-14 to L.A.M.-R.), Biochemical Imaging Platform, Umeå University (to L.A.M.-R.). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.
Competing interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
Introduction
For decades, senile plaques and neurofibrillary tangles have been regarded as the hallmarks of Alzheimer’s Diseases (AD). The AD senile plaques are composed of amyloid fibrils of Aβ peptides. In other known to date human diseases, amyloid fibrils are result of protein misfolding and aggregation of other amyloidogenic proteins and peptides, all of which self-assemble into cross-β-sheet containing amyloid fibrils [1–3]. Recent studies indicate that amyloid aggregates (early and late stage of senile plaque) are not the direct cause of dementia [4–7]. The degree of cognitive impairment has only weak correlation with the quantities of aberrant amyloid plaque deposits, which are commonly found in individuals with mild or no sign of cognitive decline [8]. To date, numerous therapeutic studies and clinical trials targeting Aβ amyloid have failed [9–11]. With advanced knowledge of AD underlying mechanism, new "disease modifying" therapeutic strategies have been explored, e.g. targeting neuroinflammation and Ca2+ homeostasis [12, 13].
However, as the brain is an extremely complex system [14, 15], it is difficult to reveal the mechanism of brain disorder by studying any individual contributor. Effect of single component may be inverse depending on the context, e.g. the previously deemed harmful Aβ amyloids may help rescue neurons from acute inflammation. Our previous study revealed that the formation of Aβ amyloids could be a protective response, mediating pro-inflammatory S100A9 neurotoxicity [16].
Half of brain dry weight is lipids, in which fatty acids are the constituting blocks [17]. Growing evidence suggests that neurodegenerative diseases were associated with abnormal fatty acid metabolism [18–23]. Disturbances of fatty acid metabolism in the brain induce neurological disorders, which are responsible for neurodegenerative diseases such as AD [24–27]. Senile plaque formation and neurofibrillary tangle burden are found to be directly associated with the quantities of fatty acids [8]. Experiments with AD transgenic mice demonstrated a protective effect of docosahexaenoic acid (DHA)preventing brain cell death, and positive effects in the inhibition of amyloid formation [28, 29]. The results are, however, contradictory on the effect of fatty acids in inducing coma in experimental animals [30]. As a surfactant, fatty acids are reported to be able to promote amyloid formation and induce large amyloid aggregates, which could be related to senile plaques production in AD [31–33].
To address these seemly contradictory findings, we herein investigated the effect of fatty acids on neuron viability using oleic acid (OA) and hen egg white lysozyme (HEWL) as modeling molecules. Oleic acid is a fatty acid that present naturally in various animal and vegetable fat. It is toxic to Jurkat, macrophage and neuroblastoma cells [34–36]. Structurally, oleic acid has one hydrophobic and one hydrophilic end, and is used as surfactant in many studies [37]. HEWL, due to its amyloid forming capacities and low cost, is often used as an in vitro protein model [38]. The studies on HEWL and OA interaction reveal that OA as surfactant, may initiate protein aggregation and amyloid formation [31–33]. By positioning OA and HEWL mixture under extreme conditions, we observe that OA, in the form of micelles, promotes HEWL amyloid formation. HEWL amyloid self-assembly, which was monitored by Thioflavin-T assay (ThT) and circular dichroism (CD), was initiated by formation of round-shaped aggregates. During prolonged incubation, large protein aggregates (clumps) were formed. The quantity of the aggregates and their amyloid contents were proportional to OA concentration. To investigate the effect of HEWL-OA complexes on cells of neural origin, the viability of SH-SY5Y cell line and mouse neural stem cell was measured. Our results revealed that freshly dissolved HEWL and HEWL clumps were not toxic to neural cells, whereas OA micelles show strong cytotoxicity. Interestingly, OA micelle cytotoxicity was significantly reduced after incubation with HEWL. Thus, our study provides the evidence that excessive OA (over micelle critical concentration) promotes the formation of large HEWL aggregates, which implies that amyloid plaque formation is related to fatty acids and may be the result of a natural protective response.
Materials and methods
Protein samples
HEWL (Aldrich-Sigma) was used without any further purification. All HEWL samples were dissolved in 20 mM glycine buffer, and adjusted to pH 2.3 before mixing with OA. The protein concentration was determined by weight and NanoDrop measurements. Mixtures of HEWL, OA and dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) are named after their contents: P (1.4 mM HEWL); PD (1.4 mM HEWL and 5.6 M DMSO); POA10 (1.4 mM HEWL and 14 mM OA); POA100 (1.4 mM HEWL and 140 mM OA). In order to produce and maintain OA micelles, all samples were subjected to continuous shaking at 800 rpm and 57°C. All chemicals were purchased from Sigma unless mentioned differently.
Amyloid kinetics assay
In amyloid kinetic assay we have measured ThT fluorescence, which increases when dye binds selectively to amyloids. A ThT stock solution was made by dissolving 2.5 mM ThT (Merck-Schuchardt) in phosphate buffer (10 mM phosphate, 150 mM NaCl, pH 7.4) and filtered before use. This stock solution was diluted 50-fold in the phosphate buffer to produce the working solution. 10 μl of protein sample was added to 300 μl of the working ThT solution, and was allowed to bind to ThT for 1 min. ThT fluorescence was measured using a FluoroMax-2 spectrophotometer (Jobin Yvon/Psex Instruments) with excitation and emission wavelengths of 440 and 485 nm, respectively, and a slit width of 5nm. The ThT fluorescence intensities were normalized to the fluorescence of the free dye in solution.
CD Spectroscopy
CD spectra were recorded using a JASCO J-720 spectropolarimeter equipped with a PTC-343 temperature controller. For each sample, 3 spectra were acquired and averaged, using the spectral range of 190 nm to 250 nm, a 5 nm/min scan speed, and 1 nm resolution. The quartz cells had a 1 mm optical path. The contribution from the buffer was subtracted, and the results are presented in relative ellipticity.
Atomic Force Microscopy (AFM)
All imaging experiments were carried out at room temperature in air with a Dimension 3000 AFM, Bruker. Images were acquired in the tapping mode with silicon (Si) cantilevers (spring constant of 20–100 N/m) and operated below their resonance frequency (typically 230–410 kHz). The images were flattened, and the contrast and brightness were adjusted for optimum viewing conditions. Amyloid samples were deposited on the surface of freshly cleaved mica (GoodFellow) for 5 min, washed 3 times with 200 μl of DI water and dried in air at room temperature.
Cell culture
SH-SY5Y (ATCC CRL-2266) were cultured in Dulbecco’s modified Eagle medium supplemented with 10%(v/v) FBS. Neural stem/progenitor cells were prepared from embryonic day 16.5 of rat embryos. Embryonic NSCs with Hes5-GFP and Dcx-RFP reporters were isolated at embryonic day 13.5 from a transgenic mouse carrying Hes5-GFP and Dcx-RFP by using established protocol [39, 40]. The resulting primary cells were verified to carry both Hes5-GFP and Dcx-RFP after isolation and allowed to grow for few passages before subjecting them to the experiments [41]. NSCs were cultured as neurospheres in culture media (DMEM/F12+ Glutamax (Gibco No:31331–028); 10 U/ml penicillin; 10 μg/ml Streptomycin; B27 supplement (1:50); 0.02 μg/ml FGF). As NSCs are sensitive to environmental variations, cell handling protocol before loading into the chip is examined systematically (including dissociation conditions and FACS sorting). To obtain the optimal results, NSCs spheres were collected and loaded into well plates at 24 hours after fresh dissociation, wherein each sphere contained ~7 to 10 cells. To avoid potential artifacts due to prolonged in vitro culture, only NSCs within 10 passages were used in the study. In control experiments, transferring chip-cultured NSCs to a well-plate showed the sphere-forming ability of Hes5-positive cells, validating Hes5 as a self-maintenance marker in our experiments [42].
WST-1 cell viability assay
To evaluate cell viability, 10 μl of WST-1 reagent was added per 100 μl of cell culture and samples were incubated at 37°C for 4 h. The absorbance was measured using an ELISA plate reader (Labsystem Multiscan RC) at 450 nm. Cell viability was evaluated by normalizing the absorbance in wells containing cells treated with amyloid and/or oleic acid to the ones, where cells are maintained in culture medium for the same period of time. Values higher or lower than 100% represent cell proliferation and cell death, respectively. To ensure accurate machine reading, cells with only DMEM were set as the negative control, with Tris-HCL as the buffer control and cells treated with sphingosine as the positive control.
Results
OA micelles induced HEWL oligomerization and fibrillation
HEWL amyloid formation with or without OA micelles was firstly examined by AFM (Fig 1A). To maintain micelle conformation throughout reaction, all samples were subjected to continuous shaking at 800 rpm, pH 2.3 and 57°C for various timespans (Fig 2A). HEWL fibrils sharing a similar height of ca. 5nm were produced after 1 d incubation. No measurable structural difference was observed upon prolonged incubation up to 7 d (Fig 1B). Rapid increase of ThT intensity indicates amyloidogenic nature of these fibrils, which is consistent with transitions in CD spectra (Figs 1C, S1A and S1B). At low OA doses, HEWL fibrils of ~5 nm in height and similar morphology were produced. Round-shaped HEWL aggregates (~5 nm in height) were emerged upon incubation with 14 mM OA (Fig 1A and 1B, middle row). In contrast, large quantities of round-shaped aggregates characterized by an AFM height of ~10 nm and diameters over 90 nm were observed upon incubation in the presence of 140 mM OA after the same duration. These oligomers further associate and form fibrillar structures. Large aggregates with heights ranging from 20 to 60 nm were also observed (Fig 1A and 1B, lower panel). However, an agitation, may not only promote HEWL amyloid formation, but also lead to dissipation of OA into small micelles (ca. 2 μm in diameter). HEWL single molecules and oligomers may accumulate on OA micelles surface, which facilitates HEWL aggregations.
(A) AFM height image of 1.4 mM HEWL only (HEWL, top), 1.4 mM HEWL with 14 mM OA (OA10, middle), and 1.4 mM HEWL with 140 mM OA (OA100, down), after incubation for 1d. Scale bars denote 1000 nm in all images. (B) Height distribution of fibrils obtained by AFM measurement in samples containing only HEWL (HEWL, top), 1.4 mM HEWL with 14 mM OA (OA10, middle) and 1.4 mM HEWL with 140 mM OA (OA100, down). (C) Amyloid formation kinetics of 1.4 mM hen egg white lysozyme (HEWL) with 14mM and 140 mM OA (OA10 and OA100, respectively). (D) Far UV CD spectra of 1.4mM hen egg white lysozyme (HEWL) with OA. All samples are maintained in 20 mM glycine buffer under continuous shaking at 800 rpm, pH 2.3 and 57°C for up to7 days.
(A) Appearance of 1.4 mM HEWL (left), 1.4 mM HEWL with 14 mM OA (middle), and 1.4mM HEWL with 140 mM OA (right), after incubation in 20 mM glycine buffer under continuous shaking at 800 rpm, pH 2.3 and 57°C for 4 d. (B) Fluorescent microscopy images of pre-formed HEWL-OA clumps. Scale bares denote 100 μm in the left panel, and 15 μm in the right panel. (C) Optical images of SH-SY5Y Cells being maintained in DMEM culture medium (Control, left), culture medium containing 400 mM OA (OA,middle), and solution containing 4 μM HEWL and 400 μM OA (OA+HEWL, right). Scale bar denotes 100 μM. The clumps were formed by positioning HEWL and OA mixture (HEWL 1.4 mM and OA 140 mM) under continuous shaking at 800 rpm and 57°C for 4 d.
The kinetics of HEWL amyloid formation with and without the addition of OA was monitored using the ThT-binding assay and CD spectra (Fig 1C). The specific interaction of ThT with cross-β-sheet-containing amyloids leads to an increase in fluorescence emission. During the first 50 h of incubation, HEWL amyloid formation depended primarily on the concentration of OA. As manifested in ThT kinetics, the amyloid formation is a complex process consisting of a lag phase, during which intermediate oligomers were formed, and subsequently, amyloid fibrils emerged from oligomers as seeds, which is reflected in rapid growth phase [43]. OA micelles have shorten the lag-phase and facilitated amyloid formation. During prolonged incubation, ThT intensity of HEWL alone increased significantly higher compared to the HEWL complex with OA. A possible explanation is that OA micelles provide surfaces for HEWL molecule and oligomer aggregation, which stabilizes amyloidogenic oligomers and promotes their further growth. Further aggregation on micellar surfaces leads to lower detectable amyloid contents in solution. The transition in secondary structures during HEWL amyloid formation was monitored by far UV CD (Fig 1C). The CD spectrum of all amyloid samples developed after 7 days of incubation were characterized by a negative peak centered at 217 nm, which is typical for amyloid β-sheet structures. The β-sheet content, manifested in CD ellipticity, was proportional to the concentration of OA. The differences between ThT assay and CD spectrum may be due to the fact that CD spectroscopy measures the differential absorption of left- and right-handed circularly polarized transmitted light. Therefore, it is less sensitive to the effect of large amyloid aggregates.
Effect of HEWL on OA cytotoxicity
The effect of HEWL, OA micelles and their complexes on the viability of SH-SY5Y neuroblastoma cells and neural stem progenitor cells were assessed using the WST-1 assay and real-time microscopic monitoring. In viable cells, WST-1 undergoes reduction by mitochondrial dehydrogenases (succinate-tetrazolium reductase system) to soluble formazan, which serves as an indicator of the number of metabolically active cells. OA micelles were produced by incubating OA solution containing no HEWL under continuous shaking at 57°C 800 rpm for 1 day. The stock emulsion was then diluted using culture medium to desired OA concentrations before being transferred to 96-well plate for cell viability assessment. It is observed that SH-SY5Y cell viability decreased significantly at OA concentration as low as 4 μM, and the toxicity of OA micelles is concentration-dependent (4 and 400 μM OA correspond to 90% and 10% cell viability, respectively) (Fig 3A). DMSO, which is often used as a solvent for OA, is not toxic by itself. OA micelle neurotoxicity is further assessed using mouse neural stem progenitor cells (NSCs). NSCs cells were firstly cultured as neurospheres and transferred to 96-well plates for continuous imaging before adding OA and OA-HEWL complexes (Fig 4). Our results demonstrate that addition of 140 μM OA induces quick NSCs cell death. As compared to control experiments, NSCs died before attached to lamin-coated surface, suggesting strong toxicity (Fig 4A, 4B and 4D).
Measurements of SH-SY5Ycell viability by WST-1 assay in the presence of different concentrations of oleic acid (4 to 400 μM), and (B) HEWL- OA complex. In control experiments the cells were incubated in DMEM cell culture buffer, Tris-HCl buffer, sphingocine and 16 mM DMSO. In DMEM culture medium, cell viability is equal to 100%. In the mixture of OA and DMSO, the OA concentration is 400 μM and DMSO16 mM. All HEWL samples were prepared at HEWL concentration of 1.4 mM (OA is 14 and 140 mM) and aged 1 d in 20 mM glycine buffer under continuous shaking at800 rpm, pH 2.3 and 57°C.
Brightfield images of neural stem cells (NSCs) exposed to (A) culture medium; (B) environmental conditions containing 400 μM OA; (C) 1.4 mM HEWL with 140 mM OA. Scale bar denotes 100 μm.The clumps were formed by positioning HEWL and OA mixture (HEWL 1.4 mM and OA140 mM)) under continuous shaking at 800 rpm and 57°C for 4 d. (D) Measurements of NSCs viability by WST-1 assay in the presence of culture medium, OA and HEWL-OA complex.
OA micelles’ neurotoxicity is mediated by the addition of HEWL. When OA micelles are incubated with 1.4 mM HEWL for 1 d before cell treating, SH-SY5Y cell viability in the presence of 140 μM OA increased from ~15% to ~80% (Fig 3B). Interestingly, freshly dissolved HEWL (without co-incubation) did not rescue SH-SY5Y cell from OA micelles, suggesting the protective role of HEWL amyloids but not of the native protein. The amyloidogenic nature of HEWL-OA complexes and their effect on SH-SY5Y cell were further investigated by using fluorescence microscopy. It is revealed that HEWL clumps were formed after co-incubation with OA micelles (Fig 2B). Using ThT as fluorophore, we demonstrate that HEWL aggregates were composed of large quantities of amyloid fibrils. Additionally, no SH-SY5Y cell death was observed even when they were in contact with HEWL-OA clumps, which were significantly different from samples containing only OA micelles (Fig 2C). Similar rescue effect of HEWL was observed in NSCs. The viability of primary neural stem and progenitor cells increased by more than 50% in the presence of HEWL. In contrast to control groups, where NSCs remained active during 24 h culture incubation, cells migrated at significantly lower speed, which was observed as cell positioning about their original locations as neurospheres (Fig 4C). Limited NSCs activities suggest that HEWL-OA complex clumps may affect cell plasticity.
Discussion
Increasing evidence indicates that intracellular free fatty acids are incorporated into lipid droplets and transported by fatty acid binding proteins (FABPs) [44–46]. Fatty acids can then be released from membrane lipids to act as signaling molecules [47]. Fatty acid as micelles takes parts in a variety of biological activities, e.g. energy metabolism, signaling transduction and structural components synthesis or dissociation [48–50]. We herein studied effect of OA and HEWL-OA complex micelles on cells of neuronal origin, SH-SY5Y cell-line and primary mouse NSCs. It was revealed that OA micelles exert strong cell toxicity, while, HEWL amyloid formation can effectively mediate OA toxicity and rescue both cell types. Complexes of OA with amyloidogenic proteins (e.g. α-lactalbumin and equine lysozyme) have been extensively studied [51–54]. It has been demonstrated at the single molecular level that formation of protein-OA complexes dissembled OA micelles and affected cell viability. The structural and conformational differences of HEWL-OA complexes, which were produced under different experimental conditions, may account for our seemly contradictory results. Our hypothesis is that OA micelles, which were produced by continuous shaking, promoted HEWL amyloid formation by providing hydrophobic binding sites. HEWL accumulation surrounding OA micelles in turn, expedite formation of amyloidogenic sub-structures, which was observed as increase ThT fluorescence intensity at the initial stage (Fig 1C), and the formation of relatively large round-shaped oligomers (Fig 1A and 1B). These oligomers further accumulated and formed HEWL-OA clumps (Fig 2B). Buried amyloidogenic structures led to moderate increase in ThT intensity as compared to HEWL alone samples. In the meanwhile, submerged OA micelles lost their active binding sites, and that resulted in reduced neurotoxicity on SH-SY5Y and NSCs cells. To summarize, OA promoted HEWL aggregation and induced amyloid formation, which in turn consumed toxic OA species. Consequently, increased cell viability was induced by deceased free-diffused OA quantity.
Conclusion
Our studies, for the first time, reveal that production of amyloidogenic structures, which is promoted by fatty acids micelles, may be a natural protective response. Compartmentalization of toxic species, i.e. amyloid protofibrils and fatty acids micelles, can be accompanied simultaneously by formation of senile plaques. Our studies on underlying mechanisms of amyloid formation may help to develop new therapeutic strategies.
Supporting information
S1 Fig. Far UV CD spectra of 10 and 20 mg/ml HEWL with DMSO and OA in 20 mM glycine buffer under continuous shaking at 800 rpm, pH 2.3 and 57°C.
The spectra for different samples are drawn with solid lines to indicate the trend. (a, b) Changes of 10 and 20 mg/ml HEWL CD spectra with time, respectively; (c, d) CD spectra of 10 and 20 mg/ml HEWL respectively, with DMSO and OA after continuous shaking for 3 h; (e, CD spectra of 10 and 20 mg/ml HEWL respectively, with DMSO and OA after continuous shaking for 72 h. The CD spectra were recorded using 1 mm optical path length.
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0212648.s001
(DOCX)
S1 Video. Real-time bright field imaging of NSCs maintained in solutions containing only culture medium (left), 400 μM OA (middle), and 4 μM HEWL and 400 μM OA (right) for 24 hours.
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0212648.s002
(AVI)
References
- 1. Dobson CM. Protein folding and misfolding. Nature. 2003; 426:884–890. pmid:14685248
- 2. Sipe JD, Benson MD, Buxbaum JN, S-i I, Merlini G. Amyloid fibril protein nomenclature: 2012 recommendations from the Nomenclature. Committee of the International Society of Amyloidosis Amyloid.2012; 19:167–170. pmid:23113696
- 3. Riek R. Eisenberg DS. The activities of amyloids from a structural perspective. Nature.2016; 539:227–235. pmid:27830791
- 4. Tugizov S, Berline J, Herrera R, Penaranda ME, Nakagawa M. Inhibition of human papillomavirus type 16 E7 phosphorylation by the S100 MRP-8/14 protein complex. Journal of Virology.2005(79):1099–1112.
- 5. Tan J, Town T, Paris D, Mori T, Suo Z. Microglial Activation Resulting from CD40-CD40L Interaction After β-Amyloid Stimulation. Science. 1999; 286:2352–2355. pmid:10600748
- 6. Aisen PS. Inflammation and Alzheimer’s disease: mechanisms and therapeutic strategies. Gerontology. 2009; 43:143–149.
- 7. Perlmutter LS, Barron E, Chui HC. Morphologic association between microglia and senile plaque amyloid in Alzheimer’s disease. Neuroscience Letters. 1990; 119:32–36. pmid:2097581
- 8. Tarasoffconway JM, Carare RO, Osorio RS, Glodzik L, Butler T. Clearance systems in the brain|implications for Alzheimer disease. Nature Reviews Neurology.2016(12):248.
- 9. Liu J, Yang B, Ke J, Li W, Suen WC. Antibody-Based Drugs and Approaches Against Amyloid-β Species for Alzheimer’s Disease Immunotherapy. Drugs & Aging. 2016; 33:1–13.
- 10. Golde TE. Open questions for Alzheimer’s disease immunotherapy. Alzheimers Research & Therapy.2014(6):7.
- 11. Dyck CHV. Anti-Amyloid-beta Monoclonal Antibodies for Alzheimer’s Disease: Pitfalls and Promise. Biological Psychiatry. 2018; 83:311–319. pmid:28967385
- 12. Krajnak K, Dahl R. A new target for Alzheimer’s disease: A small molecule SERCA activator is neuroprotective in vitro and improves memory and cognition in APP/PS1 mice. Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters. 2018;
- 13. Schappe MS, Szteyn K, Stremska ME, Mendu SK, Downs TK. Chanzyme TRPM7 Mediates the Ca2+ Influx Essential for Lipopolysaccharide-Induced Toll-Like Receptor 4 Endocytosis and Macrophage Activation. Immunity. 2018 (48):59.
- 14. Passingham RE, Stephan KE, Kötter R. The anatomical basis of functional localization in the cortex. Nature Reviews Neuroscience. 2002; 3:606–616. pmid:12154362
- 15. Sporns O, Tononi G, Kötter R. The Human Connectome: A Structural Description of the Human Brain. Plos Computational Biology. 2005; 1:e42. pmid:16201007
- 16. Zhang C, Liu Y, Gilthorpe J. Maarel JRCvd. MRP14 (S100A9) Protein Interacts with Alzheimer Beta-Amyloid Peptide and Induces Its Fibrillization. Plos One. 2012; 7: e32953. pmid:22457725
- 17. Schweiger M, Paar M, Eder C, Brandis J, Moser E. G0/G1 switch gene-2 regulates human adipocyte lipolysis by affecting activity and localization of adipose triglyceride lipase. Journal of Lipid Research.2012(53):2307–2317.
- 18. Ketones CSC. omega-3 fatty acids and the Yin-Yang balance in the brain: insights from infant development and Alzheimer’s disease, and implications for human brain evolution. EDP Sciences.2018.
- 19. Snowden SG, Ebshiana AA, Hye A, An Y, Pletnikova O. Association between fatty acid metabolism in the brain and Alzheimer disease neuropathology and cognitive performance: A nontargeted metabolomic study. Plos Medicine. 2017; 14: e1002266. pmid:28323825
- 20. Podtelezhnikov AA, Tanis KQ, Nebozhyn M, Ray WJ, Stone DJ. Molecular insights into the pathogenesis of Alzheimer’s disease and its relationship to normal aging. Plos One.2011; 6: e29610. pmid:22216330
- 21. Hussain MM, Leung TM, Zhou L, Abu-Merhi S. Regulating intestinal function to reduce atherogenic lipoproteins. Clinical Lipidology. 2013; 8:481–490.
- 22. Fraser PE, Nguyen JT. Mclachlan DR, Abraham CR, Kirschner DA. Alpha 1-antichymotrypsin binding to Alzheimer A beta peptides is sequence specific and induces fibril disaggregation in vitro. Journal of Neurochemistry. 2010; 61:298–305.
- 23. Di SA, Battista N, Biancheri P, Rapino C, Rovedatti L. The endogenous cannabinoid system in the gut of patients with inflammatory bowel disease. Mucosal Immunology. 2011; 4:574–583. pmid:21471961
- 24. Yadav RS, Tiwari NK. Lipid Integration in Neurodegeneration: An Overview of Alzheimer’s Disease. Molecular Neurobiology. 2014; 50:168–176. pmid:24590317
- 25. Hamazaki K, Hamazaki T, Inadera H. Abnormalities in the fatty acid composition of the postmortem entorhinal cortex of patients with schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, and major depressive disorder. Psychiatry Res. 2013; 210:346–350. pmid:23731984
- 26. Grela A, Rachel W, Cole M, Zyss T, Zieba A. Application of fatty acid and lipid measurements in neuropsychiatry. Clinical Chemistry & Laboratory Medicine. 2016; 54:197–206.
- 27. Schneider SA. Pantothenate kinase-associated neurodegeneration. Current Drug. 2017; Targets 13:–.
- 28. Calon F, Lim GP, Yang F, Morihara T, Teter B. Docosahexaenoic acid protects from dendritic pathology in an Alzheimer’s disease mouse model. Neuron. 2004; 43:633–645. pmid:15339646
- 29. Lim GP, Frédéric C, Morihara T, et al. A Diet Enriched with the Omega-3 Fatty Acid Docosahexaenoic Acid Reduces Amyloid Burden in an Aged Alzheimer Mouse Model. Journal of Neuroscience the Official Journal of the Society for Neuroscience.2005(25):3032.
- 30. Lai JC. Cooper AJ. Neurotoxicity of ammonia and fatty acids: differential inhibition of mitochondrial dehydrogenases by ammonia and fatty acyl coenzyme A derivatives. Neurochemical Research. 1991; 16:795–803. pmid:1944769
- 31. Grimm MOW, Rothhaar TL, Grösgen S, Burg VK, Hundsdörfer B. Trans fatty acids enhance amyloidogenic processing of the Alzheimer amyloid precursor protein (APP). Journal of Nutritional Biochemistry.2012(23):1214–1223.
- 32. Wilson DM, Binder LI. Free fatty acids stimulate the polymerization of tau and amyloid beta peptides. In vitro evidence for a common effector of pathogenesis in Alzheimer’s disease. American Journal of Pathology. 1997; 150:2181–2195. pmid:9176408
- 33. Sharon R, Barjoseph I, Frosch MP, Walsh DM, Hamilton JA. The formation of highly soluble oligomers of alpha-synuclein is regulated by fatty acids and enhanced in Parkinson’s disease. Neuron. 2003. 2003;37:583–595. pmid:12597857
- 34. Cury-Boaventura MF, Pomp_eia C, Curi R. Comparative toxicity of oleic acid and linoleic acid on Jurkat cells. Clinical Nutrition. 2004; 23:721–732. pmid:15297111
- 35. Martins DLT, Cury-Boaventura MF, Giannocco G, Nunes MT, Curi R. Comparative toxicity of fatty acids on a macrophage cell line (J774). Clinical Science.2006(111):307.
- 36. Reynolds LM, Dalton CF, Reynolds GP. Phospholipid fatty acids and neurotoxicity in human neuroblastoma SH-SY5Y cells. Neuroscience Letters. 2001; 309:193–196. pmid:11514074
- 37. Guardia P, Batlle-Brugal B, Roca AG, Iglesias O, Morales MP. Surfactant effects in magnetite nanoparticles of controlled size. Journal of Magnetism & Magnetic Materials. 2007; 316: e756–e759.
- 38. Ma B, Fan Z, Wang X, Zhu X. Investigating the inhibitory effects of zinc ions on amyloid fibril formation of hen egg-white lysozyme. International Journal of Biological Macromolecules. 2017; 98:717–722. pmid:28163126
- 39. Sykova E, Forostyak S. Stem cells in regenerative medicine. Laser therapy. 2013; 22:87–92. pmid:24155553
- 40. Behnan J, Grieg Z, Joel M, Ramsness I, Stangeland B. Gene knockdown of CENPA reduces sphere forming ability and stemness of glioblastoma initiating cells. Neuroepigenetics. 2016; 7:6–18.
- 41. Sebastien CD, Beate W, Claudia K, Gudrun L, Peter S. Targeted transgene expression in neuronal precursors: watching young neurons. 2010; 24:1535–1545.
- 42. Onur B, Verdon T. Identification of self-replicating multipotent progenitors in the embryonic nervous system by high Notch activity and Hes5 expression. European Journal of Neuroscience. 2010; 25:1006–1022.
- 43. Abedini A, Raleigh DP. A critical assessment of the role of helical intermediates in amyloid formation by natively unfolded proteins and polypeptides. Protein Engineering Design & Selection.2009(22):453.
- 44.
Hamilton LK, Fernandes KJL. Fate Through Fat: Neutral Lipids as Regulators of Neural Stem Cells. Springer International Publishing. 2017.
- 45. Liu RZ, Mita R, Beaulieu M, Gao Z, Godbout R. Fatty acid binding proteins in brain development and disease. International Journal of Developmental Biology. 2010; 54:1229–1239. pmid:20563994
- 46. Martin S, Porton RG. Lipid droplets: a unified view of a dynamic organelle. Nature Reviews Molecular Cell. Biology. 2006; 7:373–378. pmid:16550215
- 47. Young SG, Zechner R. Biochemistry and pathophysiology of intravascular and intracellular lipolysis. Genes & Development. 2013; 27:459–484.
- 48. Hamilton JA. Transport of fatty acids across membranes by the diffusion mechanism. Prostaglandins Leukot Essent Fatty Acids. 1999; 60:291–297. pmid:10471111
- 49. Mitchell RW, NH O, MRD B, DW M, GM H. Fatty acid transport protein expression in human brain and potential role in fatty acid transport across human brain microvessel endothelial cells. Journal of Neurochemistry. 2011; 117:735–746. pmid:21395585
- 50. Pan Y, Scanlon MJ, Owada Y, Yamamoto Y, Porter CJ. Fatty acid-binding protein 5 facilitates the blood-brain barrier transport of docosahexaenoic acid. Molecular Pharmaceutics. 2015; 12:4375–4385. pmid:26455443
- 51. Svensson M, Håkansson A, Mossberg AK, undefined S. Linse C.Svanborg. Conversion of α-lactalbumin to a protein inducing apoptosis. 2000; 97:4375–4385.
- 52. Lišková K, Kelly AL, O’Brien N, Brodkorb A. Effect of denaturation of α-lactalbumin on the formation of BAMLET (bovine α-lactalbumin made lethal to tumor cells). Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry. 2010; 58:4421–4427. pmid:20232795
- 53. Kamijima T, Ohmura A, Sato T, Akimoto K, Itabashi M, Mizuguchi M, et al. Heat-treatment method for producing fatty acid-bound α-lactalbumin that induces tumor cell death. Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications. 2008; 376:211–214. pmid:18774773
- 54. Fontana A, Spolaore B, L PPD. The biological activities of protein/oleic acid complexes reside in the fatty acid. Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA)—Proteins and Proteomics. 2013; 1834:1125–1143.