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Medicine and Health Sciences Commons

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Medical Genetics

Dartmouth Scholarship

2010

Animals

Articles 1 - 2 of 2

Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences

Acat1 Gene Ablation Increases 24(S)-Hydroxycholesterol Content In The Brain And Ameliorates Amyloid Pathology In Mice With Ad, Elena Y. Bryleva, Maximillian A. Rogers, Catherine C. Y. Chang, Floyd Buen Feb 2010

Acat1 Gene Ablation Increases 24(S)-Hydroxycholesterol Content In The Brain And Ameliorates Amyloid Pathology In Mice With Ad, Elena Y. Bryleva, Maximillian A. Rogers, Catherine C. Y. Chang, Floyd Buen

Dartmouth Scholarship

Cholesterol metabolism has been implicated in the pathogenesis of several neurodegenerative diseases, including the abnormal accumulation of amyloid-beta, one of the pathological hallmarks of Alzheimer disease (AD). Acyl-CoA:cholesterol acyltransferases (ACAT1 and ACAT2) are two enzymes that convert free cholesterol to cholesteryl esters. ACAT inhibitors have recently emerged as promising drug candidates for AD therapy. However, how ACAT inhibitors act in the brain has so far remained unclear. Here we show that ACAT1 is the major functional isoenzyme in the mouse brain. ACAT1 gene ablation (A1-) in triple transgenic (i.e., 3XTg-AD) mice leads to more than 60% reduction in full-length human …


Proliferation Of Aneuploid Human Cells Is Limited By A P53-Dependent Mechanism, Sarah L. Thompson, Duane A. Compton Jan 2010

Proliferation Of Aneuploid Human Cells Is Limited By A P53-Dependent Mechanism, Sarah L. Thompson, Duane A. Compton

Dartmouth Scholarship

Most solid tumors are aneuploid, and it has been proposed that aneuploidy is the consequence of an elevated rate of chromosome missegregation in a process called chromosomal instability (CIN). However, the relationship of aneuploidy and CIN is unclear because the proliferation of cultured diploid cells is compromised by chromosome missegregation. The mechanism for this intolerance of nondiploid genomes is unknown. In this study, we show that in otherwise diploid human cells, chromosome missegregation causes a cell cycle delay with nuclear accumulation of the tumor suppressor p53 and the cyclin kinase inhibitor p21. Deletion of the p53 gene permits the accumulation …