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Featured researches published by Laura Morelli.


Neurochemical Research | 2000

Degradation of Soluble Amyloid β-Peptides 1–40, 1–42, and the Dutch Variant 1–40Q by Insulin Degrading Enzyme from Alzheimer Disease and Control Brains

Adriana Pérez; Laura Morelli; Juan Carlos Cresto; Eduardo M. Castaño

Insulin degrading enzyme (IDE) is a metalloprotease that has been involved in amyloid β peptide (Aβ) degradation in the brain. We analyzed the ability of human brain soluble fraction to degrade Aβ analogs 1–40, 1–42 and the Dutch variant 1–40Q at physiological concentrations (1 nM). The rate of synthetic 125I-Aβ degradation was similar among the Aβ analogs, as demonstrated by trichloroacetic acid precipitation and SDS-PAGE. A 110 kDa protein, corresponding to the molecular mass of IDE, was affinity labeled with either 125I-insulin, 125I-Aβ 1–40 or 125I-Aβ 1–42 and both Aβ degradation and cross-linking were specifically inhibited by an excess of each peptide. Sensitivity to inhibitors was consistent with the reported inhibitor profile of IDE. Taken together, these results suggested that the degradation of Aβ analogs was due to IDE or a closely related protease. The apparent Km, as determined using partially purified IDE from rat liver, were 2.2 ± 0.4, 2.0 ± 0.1 and 2.3 ± 0.3 μM for Aβ 1–40, Aβ 1–42 and Aβ 1–40Q, respectively. Comparison of IDE activity from seven AD brain cytosolic fractions and six age-matched controls revealed a significant decrease in Aβ degrading activity in the first group, supporting the hypothesis that a reduced IDE activity may contribute to Aβ accumulation in the brain.


Journal of Neuroscience Research | 2000

Defective ubiquitination of cerebral proteins in Alzheimer's disease

Mariella Lpez Salon; Laura Morelli; Eduardo M. Castao; Eduardo F. Soto; Juana M. Pasquini

Alzheimers disease (AD) is characterized by the presence of neurofibrillary tangles (NFT), senile plaques, and cerebrovascular deposits of amyloid‐β. Ubiquitin has also been shown to be present in some of the inclusions characteristic of this disease. To obtain further insight into the role played by the ubiquitin pathway in AD, we investigated the capacity of postmortem samples of cerebral cortex from normal and AD patients to form high‐molecular‐weight ubiquitin–protein conjugates. Activity of the ubiquitin‐activating enzyme (E1) and ubiquitin‐conjugating enzymes (E2) involved in the ubiquitin pathway was also determined. In normal samples, the amount of high‐molecular‐weight ubiquitin–protein conjugates (HMW‐UbPC) in cytosol increased with incubation time, whereas, in samples of AD cases, these were almost undetectable. The addition of an adult rat fraction, enriched in ubiquitinating enzymes, restored the capacity of AD brain cytosolic fraction to form conjugates. The trypsin‐like proteolytic activity of the 26S proteasome was found to be decreased in AD cytosol brain. Assay of the activity of E1 and E2 by thiol‐ester formation revealed a significant decrease in AD samples. Moreover, Western blotting using a specific antibody against E1 showed a dramatic drop of this enzyme in the cytosolic fraction, whereas normal levels were found in the particulate fraction, suggesting a possible delocalization of the enzyme. Our results suggest that a failure in the ubiquitination enzymatic system in brain cytosol may contribute to fibrillar pathology in AD. J. Neurosci. Res. 62:302–310, 2000.


Journal of Alzheimer's Disease | 2010

Insulin-Degrading Enzyme Sorting in Exosomes: A Secretory Pathway for a Key Brain Amyloid-β Degrading Protease

Ayelén Bulloj; María C. Leal; Huaxi Xu; Eduardo M. Castaño; Laura Morelli

The accumulation of amyloid-beta (Abeta) peptides in senile plaques is one of the hallmarks of Alzheimers disease (AD) progression. The endocytic pathway has been proposed as a major subcellular site for Abeta generation while the compartments in which Abeta-degrading proteases interact with Abeta are still elusive. It was suggested that extracellular Abeta degradation may take place by plasma-membrane associated proteases or by extracellular proteases, among which insulin-degrading enzyme (IDE) is the most relevant. However, the mechanisms of IDE secretion are poorly understood. In the present study we used N2a cells to explore if IDE is indeed released through exosomes and the effect of exosomes release on extracellular levels of Abeta. We demonstrated that proteolytically-active plasma membrane associated-IDE is routed in living N2a cells to multivesicular bodies and subsequently, a major fraction is sorted to exosomes. We described that extracellular IDE levels decrease if the generation of multivesicular bodies is interfered and may be positively modulated by exosomes release under stress-induced conditions. Our results reinforce the relevance of functional IDE in the catabolism of extracellular Abeta.


Mechanisms of Ageing and Development | 2005

The cell cycle in Alzheimer disease : A unique target for neuropharmacology

Kate M. Webber; Arun K. Raina; Michael W. Marlatt; Xiongwei Zhu; María I. Prat; Laura Morelli; Gemma Casadesus; George Perry; Mark A. Smith

Several hypotheses have been proposed attempting to explain the pathogenesis of Alzheimer disease including, among others, theories involving amyloid deposition, tau phosphorylation, oxidative stress, metal ion dysregulation and inflammation. While there is strong evidence suggesting that each one of these proposed mechanisms contributes to disease pathogenesis, none of these mechanisms are able to account for all the physiological changes that occur during the course of the disease. For this reason, we and others have begun the search for a causative factor that predates known features found in Alzheimer disease, and that might therefore be a fundamental initiator of the pathophysiological cascade. We propose that the dysregulation of the cell cycle that occurs in neurons susceptible to degeneration in the hippocampus during Alzheimer disease is a potential causative factor that, together with oxidative stress, would initiate all known pathological events. Neuronal changes supporting alterations in cell cycle control in the etiology of Alzheimer disease include the ectopic expression of markers of the cell cycle, organelle kinesis and cytoskeletal alterations including tau phosphorylation. Such mitotic alterations are not only one of the earliest neuronal abnormalities in the disease, but as discussed herein, are also intimately linked to all of the other pathological hallmarks of Alzheimer disease including tau protein, amyloid beta protein precursor and oxidative stress, and even risk factors such as mutations in the presenilin genes. Therefore, therapeutic interventions targeted toward ameliorating mitotic changes would be predicted to have a profound and positive impact on Alzheimer disease progression.


Journal of Neuropathology and Experimental Neurology | 2006

Plaque-associated overexpression of insulin-degrading enzyme in the cerebral cortex of aged transgenic tg2576 mice with Alzheimer pathology.

María C. Leal; Verónica Berta Dorfman; Agata C. Fernandez Gamba; Blas Frangione; Thomas Wisniewski; Eduardo M. Castaño; Einar M. Sigurdsson; Laura Morelli

It was proposed that insulin-degrading enzyme (IDE) participates in the clearance of amyloid &bgr; (A&bgr;) in the brain, and its low expression or activity may be relevant for the progression of Alzheimer disease. We performed a longitudinal study of brain level, activity, and distribution of IDE in transgenic mice (Tg2576) expressing the Swedish mutation in human A&bgr; precursor protein. At 16 months of age, Tg2576 showed a significant 2-fold increment in IDE protein level as compared with 4.5- and 11-month-old animals. The peak of IDE was in synchrony with the sharp accumulation of sodium dodecyl sulfate-soluble A&bgr; and massive A&bgr; deposition into plaques. At this stage, IDE appeared surrounding A&bgr; fibrillar deposits within glial fibrillar acidic protein-positive astrocytes, suggesting that it was locally overexpressed during the A&bgr;-mediated inflammation process. When primary astrocytes were exposed to fibrillar A&bgr; in vitro, IDE protein level increased as compared with control, and this effect was reduced by the addition of U0126, a specific inhibitor of the ERK1/2 mitogen-activated protein kinase cascade. We propose that in Tg2576 mice and in contrast to its behavior in Alzheimer brains, active IDE increases with age around plaques as a component of astrocyte activation as a result of A&bgr;-triggered inflammation.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2008

The Catalytic Domain of Insulin-degrading Enzyme Forms a Denaturant-resistant Complex with Amyloid β Peptide IMPLICATIONS FOR ALZHEIMER DISEASE PATHOGENESIS

Ramiro E. Llovera; Matías de Tullio; Leonardo G. Alonso; Malcolm A. Leissring; Sergio B. Kaufman; Alex E. Roher; Laura Morelli; Eduardo M. Castaño

Insulin-degrading enzyme (IDE) is central to the turnover of insulin and degrades amyloid beta (Abeta) in the mammalian brain. Biochemical and genetic data support the notion that IDE may play a role in late onset Alzheimer disease (AD), and recent studies suggest an association between AD and diabetes mellitus type 2. Here we show that a natively folded recombinant IDE was capable of forming a stable complex with Abeta that resisted dissociation after treatment with strong denaturants. This interaction was also observed with rat brain IDE and detected in an SDS-soluble fraction from AD cortical tissue. Abeta sequence 17-27, known to be crucial in amyloid assembly, was sufficient to form a stable complex with IDE. Monomeric as opposed to aggregated Abeta was competent to associate irreversibly with IDE following a very slow kinetics (t(1/2) approximately 45 min). Partial denaturation of IDE as well as preincubation with a 10-fold molar excess of insulin prevented complex formation, suggesting that the irreversible interaction of Abeta takes place with at least part of the substrate binding site of the protease. Limited proteolysis showed that Abeta remained bound to a approximately 25-kDa N-terminal fragment of IDE in an SDS-resistant manner. Mass spectrometry after in gel digestion of the IDE .Abeta complex showed that peptides derived from the region that includes the catalytic site of IDE were recovered with Abeta. Taken together, these results are suggestive of an unprecedented mechanism of conformation-dependent substrate binding that may perturb Abeta clearance, insulin turnover, and promote AD pathogenesis.Insulin-degrading enzyme (IDE) is central to the turnover of insulin and degrades amyloid β (Aβ) in the mammalian brain. Biochemical and genetic data support the notion that IDE may play a role in late onset Alzheimer disease (AD), and recent studies suggest an association between AD and diabetes mellitus type 2. Here we show that a natively folded recombinant IDE was capable of forming a stable complex with Aβ that resisted dissociation after treatment with strong denaturants. This interaction was also observed with rat brain IDE and detected in an SDS-soluble fraction from AD cortical tissue. Aβ sequence 17–27, known to be crucial in amyloid assembly, was sufficient to form a stable complex with IDE. Monomeric as opposed to aggregated Aβ was competent to associate irreversibly with IDE following a very slow kinetics (t½ ∼ 45 min). Partial denaturation of IDE as well as preincubation with a 10-fold molar excess of insulin prevented complex formation, suggesting that the irreversible interaction of Aβ takes place with at least part of the substrate binding site of the protease. Limited proteolysis showed that Aβ remained bound to a ∼25-kDa N-terminal fragment of IDE in an SDS-resistant manner. Mass spectrometry after in gel digestion of the IDE ·Aβ complex showed that peptides derived from the region that includes the catalytic site of IDE were recovered with Aβ. Taken together, these results are suggestive of an unprecedented mechanism of conformation-dependent substrate binding that may perturb Aβ clearance, insulin turnover, and promote AD pathogenesis.


Molecular Neurodegeneration | 2008

Detergent resistant membrane-associated IDE in brain tissue and cultured cells: Relevance to Aβ and insulin degradation

Ayelen Bulloj; María C. Leal; Ezequiel Surace; Xue Zhang; Huaxi Xu; Maria Dolores Ledesma; Eduardo M. Castaño; Laura Morelli

BackgroundInsulin degrading enzyme (IDE) is implicated in the regulation of amyloid β (Aβ) steady-state levels in the brain, and its deficient expression and/or activity may be a risk factor in sporadic Alzheimers disease (AD). Although IDE sub-cellular localization has been well studied, the compartments relevant to Aβ degradation remain to be determined.ResultsOur results of live immunofluorescence, immuno gold electron-microscopy and gradient fractionation concurred to the demonstration that endogenous IDE from brain tissues and cell cultures is, in addition to its other localizations, a detergent-resistant membrane (DRM)-associated metallopeptidase. Our pulse chase experiments were in accordance with the existence of two pools of IDE: the cytosolic one with a longer half-life and the membrane-IDE with a faster turn-over. DRMs-associated IDE co-localized with Aβ and its distribution (DRMs vs. non-DRMs) and activity was sensitive to manipulation of lipid composition in vitro and in vivo. When IDE was mis-located from DRMs by treating cells with methyl-β-cyclodextrin (MβCD), endogenous Aβ accumulated in the extracellular space and exogenous Aβ proteolysis was impaired. We detected a reduced amount of IDE in DRMs of membranes isolated from mice brain with endogenous reduced levels of cholesterol (Chol) due to targeted deletion of one seladin-1 allele. We confirmed that a moderate shift of IDE from DRMs induced a substantial decrement on IDE-mediated insulin and Aβ degradation in vitro.ConclusionOur results support the notion that optimal substrate degradation by IDE may require its association with organized-DRMs. Alternatively, DRMs but not other plasma membrane regions, may act as platforms where Aβ accumulates, due to its hydrophobic properties, reaching local concentration close to its Km for IDE facilitating its clearance. Structural integrity of DRMs may also be required to tightly retain insulin receptor and IDE for insulin proteolysis. The concept that mis-location of Aβ degrading proteases away from DRMs may impair the physiological turn-over of Aβ in vivo deserves further investigation in light of therapeutic strategies based on enhancing Aβ proteolysis in which DRM protease-targeting may need to be taken into account.


Mechanisms of Development | 2001

The Alzheimer-related gene presenilin-1 facilitates sonic hedgehog expression in Xenopus primary neurogenesis

Alejandra R. Paganelli; Oscar H. Ocaña; María I. Prat; Paula G. Franco; Silvia L. López; Laura Morelli; Ana M. Adamo; Martı́n M Riccomagno; Etsuro Matsubara; Mikio Shoji; José L. Affranchino; Eduardo M. Castaño; Andrés E. Carrasco

We analyzed the influence of presenilins on the genetic cascades that control neuronal differentiation in Xenopus embryos. Resembling sonic hedgehog (shh) overexpression, presenilin mRNA injection reduced the number of N-tubulin+ primary neurons and modulated Gli3 and Zic2 according to their roles in activating and repressing primary neurogenesis, respectively. Presenilin increased shh expression within its normal domain, mainly in the floor plate, whereas an antisense X-presenilin-alpha morpholino oligonucleotide reduced shh expression. Both shh and presenilin promoted cell proliferation and apoptosis, but the effects of shh were widely distributed, while those resulting from presenilin injection coincided with the range of shh signaling. We suggest that presenilin may modulate primary neurogenesis, proliferation, and apoptosis in the neural plate, through the enhancement of shh signaling.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2012

Notch signaling proteins HES-1 and Hey-1 bind to insulin degrading enzyme (IDE) proximal promoter and repress its transcription and activity: Implications for cellular Aβ metabolism

María C. Leal; Ezequiel Surace; María P. Holgado; Carina Cintia Ferrari; Rodolfo Tarelli; Fernando Pitossi; Thomas Wisniewski; Eduardo M. Castaño; Laura Morelli

Cerebral amyloid β (Aβ) accumulation is pathogenically associated with sporadic Alzheimers disease (SAD). BACE-1 is involved in Aβ generation while insulin-degrading enzyme (IDE) partakes in Aβ proteolytic clearance. Vulnerable regions in AD brains show increased BACE-1 protein levels and enzymatic activity while the opposite occurs with IDE. Another common feature in SAD brains is Notch1 overexpression. Here we demonstrate an increase in mRNA levels of Hey-1, a Notch target gene, and a decrease of IDE transcripts in the hippocampus of SAD brains as compared to controls. Transient transfection of Notch intracellular domain (NICD) in N2aSW cells, mouse neuroblastoma cells (N2a) stably expressing human amyloid precursor protein (APP) Swedish mutation, reduce IDE mRNA levels, promoting extracellular Aβ accumulation. Also, NICD, HES-1 and Hey-1 overexpression result in decreased IDE proximal promoter activity. This effect was mediated by 2 functional sites located at -379/-372 and -310-303 from the first translation start site in the -575/-19 (556 bp) fragment of IDE proximal promoter. By site-directed mutagenesis of the IDE promoter region we reverted the inhibitory effect mediated by NICD transfection suggesting that these sites are indeed responsible for the Notch-mediated inhibition of the IDE gene expression. Intracranial injection of the Notch ligand JAG-1 in Tg2576 mice, expressing the Swedish mutation in human APP, induced overexpression of HES-1 and Hey-1 and reduction of IDE mRNA levels, respectively. Our results support our theory that a Notch-dependent IDE transcriptional modulation may impact on Aβ metabolism providing a functional link between Notch signaling and the amyloidogenic pathway in SAD.


Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience | 2014

Longitudinal analysis of the behavioral phenotype in a novel transgenic rat model of early stages of Alzheimer's disease

Pablo Galeano; Pamela V. Martino Adami; Sonia Do Carmo; Eduardo Blanco; Cecilia Rotondaro; Francisco Capani; Eduardo M. Castaño; A. Claudio Cuello; Laura Morelli

Intraneuronal accumulation of amyloid β (iAβ) has been linked to mild cognitive impairment that may precede Alzheimers disease (AD) onset. This neuropathological trait was recently mimicked in a novel animal model of AD, the hemizygous transgenic McGill-R-Thy1-APP (Tg+/−) rat. The characterization of the behavioral phenotypes in this animal model could provide a baseline of efficacy for earlier therapeutic interventions. The aim of the present study was to undertake a longitudinal study of Aβ accumulation and a comprehensive behavioral evaluation of this transgenic rat model. We assessed exploratory activity, anxiety-related behaviors, recognition memory, working memory, spatial learning and reference memory at 3, 6, and 12 months of age. In parallel, we measured Aβ by ELISA, Western blots and semiquantitative immunohistochemistry in hippocampal samples. SDS-soluble Aβ peptide accumulated at low levels (~9 pg/mg) without differences among ages. However, Western blots showed SDS-resistant Aβ oligomers (~30 kDa) at 6 and 12 months, but not at 3 months. When compared to wild-type (WT), male Tg+/− rats exhibited a spatial reference memory deficit in the Morris Water Maze (MWM) as early as 3 months of age, which persisted at 6 and 12 months. In addition, Tg+/− rats displayed a working memory impairment in the Y-maze and higher anxiety levels in the Open Field (OF) at 6 and 12 months of age, but not at 3 months. Exploratory activity in the OF was similar to that of WT at all-time points. Spatial learning in the MWM and the recognition memory, as assessed by the Novel Object Recognition Test, were unimpaired at any time point. The data from the present study demonstrate that the hemizygous transgenic McGill-R-Thy1-APP rat has a wide array of behavioral and cognitive impairments from young adulthood to middle-age. The low Aβ burden and early emotional and cognitive deficits in this transgenic rat model supports its potential use for drug discovery purposes in early AD.

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María C. Leal

Fundación Instituto Leloir

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María I. Prat

University of Buenos Aires

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Pablo Galeano

Fundación Instituto Leloir

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Matías de Tullio

Fundación Instituto Leloir

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George Perry

University of Texas at San Antonio

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