Neurotrophin signaling of cholinergic basal forebrain (CBF) neurons is critical for survival and plasticity. Microaspiration of identified CBF neurons from postmortem human brain revealed a shift in balance of neurotrophin receptors toward cell death pathways during the progression of Alzheimer's disease (AD). In this study, transcriptomic data from mouse basal forebrain cholinergic neurons (BFCNs; NCBI GEO GSE13379) were used to derive parameters for a deterministic kinetic model of the nerve growth factor (NGF) signaling pathway from Reactome, with TrkB receptor mechanisms added. This method is called Transcriptome-To-Reactome (TTR)™. The biosimulation was performed using COPASI software and included 11 compartments, 435 species, and 263 reactions; 245 genes were used to determine initial values of species and kinetic values of reactions. The mouse BFCN model was considered baseline and a biosimulation was run with two doses of NGF, 500 μ M and 10 mM, delivered as a bolus and for a 10 and 240 second duration, respectively. This approach tested selectively for p75 NTR and TrkA receptor mediated mechanisms. A second biosimulation test used a combination of 25 μM brain derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) and 10 μ M NGF as a continuous exposure for 60 min duration; this approach evaluated stimulation of p75 NTR, TrkA, and TrkB. Based on the human microarray results demonstrating downregulation of TrkA (50%) and TrkB (60%), the corresponding parameters in the TTR biosimulation were decreased by the same amount. Baseline results were validated from published literature on neuronal calcium levels mediated via the phospholipase C-γ and inositol-3-phosphate pathway at both bolus doses of NGF alone. With the corresponding parameters decreased in the TTR biosimulation, Figure 1: A) The reaction flux for c-RAF1 phosphorylation of MEK1 was delayed to peak value by 1.5 min from exposure, but the peak value was increased to 5 times the baseline value; B) Moreover, a slight shift to the right of the flux over time was observed with the B-RAF phosphorylation of MEK1.
Katharina Brüggen, Martin Dyrba, Frederik Barkhof, Lucrezia Hausner, Massimo Filippi, Peter J. Nestor, Karlheinz Hauenstein, Stefan Klöppel, Michel J. Grothe, Elisabeth Kasper, Stefan Teipel
Ingo Kilimann, Michel J. Grothe, Helmut Heinsen, Till J. Würdemann, Lucrezia Hausner, Andreas Fellgiebel, Massimo Filippi, Karlheinz Hauenstein, Stefan Teipel
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