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The amyloid-beta rise and gamma-secretase inhibitor potency depend on the level of substrate expression
Authors:Burton Catherine R  Meredith Jere E  Barten Donna M  Goldstein Margi E  Krause Carol M  Kieras Cathy J  Sisk Lisa  Iben Lawrence G  Polson Craig  Thompson Mark W  Lin Xu-Alan  Corsa Jason  Fiedler Tracey  Pierdomenico Maria  Cao Yang  Roach Arthur H  Cantone Joseph L  Ford Michael J  Drexler Dieter M  Olson Richard E  Yang Michael G  Bergstrom Carl P  McElhone Kate E  Bronson Joanne J  Macor John E  Blat Yuval  Grafstrom Robert H  Stern Andrew M  Seiffert Dietmar A  Zaczek Robert  Albright Charles F  Toyn Jeremy H
Institution:Bristol-Myers Squibb Research and Development, Wallingford, Connecticut 06492, USA.
Abstract:The amyloid-beta (Abeta) peptide, which likely plays a key role in Alzheimer disease, is derived from the amyloid-beta precursor protein (APP) through consecutive proteolytic cleavages by beta-site APP-cleaving enzyme and gamma-secretase. Unexpectedly gamma-secretase inhibitors can increase the secretion of Abeta peptides under some circumstances. This "Abeta rise" phenomenon, the same inhibitor causing an increase in Abeta at low concentrations but inhibition at higher concentrations, has been widely observed. Here we show that the Abeta rise depends on the beta-secretase-derived C-terminal fragment of APP (betaCTF) or C99 levels with low levels causing rises. In contrast, the N-terminally truncated form of Abeta, known as "p3," formed by alpha-secretase cleavage, did not exhibit a rise. In addition to the Abeta rise, low betaCTF or C99 expression decreased gamma-secretase inhibitor potency. This "potency shift" may be explained by the relatively high enzyme to substrate ratio under conditions of low substrate because increased concentrations of inhibitor would be necessary to affect substrate turnover. Consistent with this hypothesis, gamma-secretase inhibitor radioligand occupancy studies showed that a high level of occupancy was correlated with inhibition of Abeta under conditions of low substrate expression. The Abeta rise was also observed in rat brain after dosing with the gamma-secretase inhibitor BMS-299897. The Abeta rise and potency shift are therefore relevant factors in the development of gamma-secretase inhibitors and can be evaluated using appropriate choices of animal and cell culture models. Hypothetical mechanisms for the Abeta rise, including the "incomplete processing" and endocytic models, are discussed.
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