Amyloid-beta modulates low-threshold activated voltage-gated L-type calcium channels of arcuate neuropeptide Y neurons leading to calcium dysregulation and hypothalamic dysfunction.

TitleAmyloid-beta modulates low-threshold activated voltage-gated L-type calcium channels of arcuate neuropeptide Y neurons leading to calcium dysregulation and hypothalamic dysfunction.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2019
AuthorsIshii M, Hiller AJ, Pham L, McGuire MJ, Iadecola C, Wang G
JournalJ Neurosci
Date Published2019 Sep 19
ISSN1529-2401
Abstract

Weight loss is an early manifestation of Alzheimer's disease that can precede the cognitive decline, raising the possibility that amyloid-beta (Aβ) disrupts hypothalamic neurons critical for the regulation of body weight. We previously reported that in young transgenic mice overexpressing mutated amyloid precursor protein (Tg2576) Aβ causes dysfunction in neuropeptide Y (NPY)-expressing hypothalamic arcuate neurons prior to plaque formation. In this study, we examined whether Aβ causes arcuate NPY neuronal dysfunction by disrupting intracellular Ca homeostasis. Here, we found that the L-type Ca channel blocker nimodipine could hyperpolarize the membrane potential, decrease the spontaneous activity, and reduce the intracellular Ca levels in arcuate NPY neurons from Tg2576 brain slices. In these neurons, there was a shift from high to low voltage-threshold activated L-type Ca currents resulting in increased Ca influx closer to the resting membrane potential, an effect recapitulated by Aβ and reversed by nimodipine. These low voltage-threshold activated L-type Ca currents were dependent in part on calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II and IP pathways. Furthermore, the effects on intracellular Ca signaling by both a positive (ghrelin) and negative (leptin) modulator were blunted in these neurons. Nimodipine pre-treatment restored the response to ghrelin-mediated feeding in young (3-5 months) but not older (10 months) female Tg2576 mice, suggesting that intracellular Ca dysregulation is only reversible early in Aβ pathology. Collectively, these findings provide evidence for a key role of low-threshold activated voltage gated L-type Ca channels in Aβ-mediated neuronal dysfunction and in the regulation of body weight.Weight loss is one of the earliest manifestations of Alzheimer's disease (AD), but the underlying cellular mechanisms remain unknown. Disruption of intracellular Ca homeostasis by amyloid-beta is hypothesized to be critical for the early neuronal dysfunction driving AD pathogenesis. Here, we demonstrate that amyloid-beta causes a shift from high to low voltage-threshold activated L-type Ca currents in arcuate neuropeptide Y neurons. This leads to increased Ca influx closer to the resting membrane potential resulting in intracellular Ca dyshomeostasis and neuronal dysfunction, an effect reversible by the L-type Ca channel blocker nimodipine early in amyloid-beta pathology. These findings highlight a novel mechanism of amyloid-beta-mediated neuronal dysfunction through L-type Cachannels and the importance of these channels in the regulation of body weight.

DOI10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0617-19.2019
Alternate JournalJ. Neurosci.
PubMed ID31537707