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Iron-Export Ferroxidase Activity of β-Amyloid Precursor Protein Is Inhibited by Zinc in Alzheimer's Disease
Author(s) -
James A. Duce,
Andrew Tsatsanis,
Michael A. Cater,
Simon James,
Elysia Robb,
Krutika Wikhe,
Su Ling Leong,
Keyla Perez,
Timothy Johanssen,
Mark Greenough,
Hyun-Hee Cho,
Denise Galatis,
Robert D. Moir,
Colin L. Masters,
Catriona McLean,
Rudolph E. Tanzi,
Roberto Cappai,
Kevin J. Barnham,
Giuseppe D. Ciccotosto,
Jack T. Rogers,
Ashley I. Bush
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
cell
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 26.304
H-Index - 776
eISSN - 1097-4172
pISSN - 0092-8674
DOI - 10.1016/j.cell.2010.08.014
Subject(s) - ceruloplasmin , ferroportin , ferritin , extracellular , amyloid (mycology) , biology , transferrin , amyloid precursor protein , biochemistry , oxidative stress , cerebral amyloid angiopathy , microbiology and biotechnology , alzheimer's disease , metabolism , medicine , disease , dementia , botany , iron homeostasis
Alzheimer's Disease (AD) is complicated by pro-oxidant intraneuronal Fe(2+) elevation as well as extracellular Zn(2+) accumulation within amyloid plaque. We found that the AD β-amyloid protein precursor (APP) possesses ferroxidase activity mediated by a conserved H-ferritin-like active site, which is inhibited specifically by Zn(2+). Like ceruloplasmin, APP catalytically oxidizes Fe(2+), loads Fe(3+) into transferrin, and has a major interaction with ferroportin in HEK293T cells (that lack ceruloplasmin) and in human cortical tissue. Ablation of APP in HEK293T cells and primary neurons induces marked iron retention, whereas increasing APP695 promotes iron export. Unlike normal mice, APP(-/-) mice are vulnerable to dietary iron exposure, which causes Fe(2+) accumulation and oxidative stress in cortical neurons. Paralleling iron accumulation, APP ferroxidase activity in AD postmortem neocortex is inhibited by endogenous Zn(2+), which we demonstrate can originate from Zn(2+)-laden amyloid aggregates and correlates with Aβ burden. Abnormal exchange of cortical zinc may link amyloid pathology with neuronal iron accumulation in AD.

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