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. 1996 Jan 4;379(6560):74-8.
doi: 10.1038/379074a0.

Activation of K+ channels and suppression of neuronal activity by secreted beta-amyloid-precursor protein

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Activation of K+ channels and suppression of neuronal activity by secreted beta-amyloid-precursor protein

K Furukawa et al. Nature. .

Abstract

The Alzheimer's beta-amyloid precursor protein (beta-APP) is widely expressed in neural cells, and in neurons secreted forms of beta-APP (sAPPs) are released from membrane-spanning holo-beta APP in an activity-dependent manner. Secreted APPs can modulate neurite outgrowth, synaptogenesis, synaptic plasticity and cell survival; a signal transduction mechanism of sAPPs may involve modulation of intracellular calcium levels ([Ca2+]i). Here we use whole-cell perforated patch and single-channel patch-clamp analysis of hippocampal neurons to demonstrate that sAPPs suppress action potentials and hyperpolarize neurons by activating high-conductance, charybdotoxin-sensitive K+ channels. Activation of K+ channels by sAPPs was mimicked by a cyclic GMP analogue and sodium nitroprusside and blocked by an antagonist of cGMP-dependent kinase and a phosphatase inhibitor, suggesting that the effect is mediated by cGMP and protein dephosphorylation. Calcium imaging studies indicate that activation of K+ channels mediates the ability of sAPPs to decrease [Ca2+]i. Modulation of neuronal excitability may be a major mechanism by which beta-APP regulates developmental and synaptic plasticity in the nervous system.

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