Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12202/8258
Title: A Preliminary Study on the Effects of LPS Stimulation on ERK Phosphorylation and DUSP4 Expression in BV2 Cells
Authors: Katz, Amanda
Fink, Bailey
Keywords: Alzheimer’s Disease (AD)
terminal neurodegenerative condition
Aducanumab
VGF
LPS stimulation
BV2
ERK/DUSP4 relationship
Issue Date: 12-May-2022
Publisher: Yeshiva University
Citation: Fink, B. (2022, May 12). Alzheimer’s Disease (AD), a terminal neurodegenerative condition which causes progressive memory loss and cognitive impairment, affects tens of millions of patients worldwide and their families. There is currently no cure, and treatments are largely palliative. The condition may be inherited in an autosomal-dominant manner, but the vast majority of cases result from a complex mix of genetic and environmental factors. AD is characterized by amyloid beta plaques and tau neurofibrillary tangles in affected areas of the brain. These lesions interact with the signaling networks in the neural environment to drive pathogenesis. A new drug, aducanumab, was granted accelerated approval last year by the FDA, largely on the basis of its ability to reduce amyloid plaque burden. However, amyloidosis is only part of AD pathogenesis. New directions, including the identification of VGF and its genetic network as a key driver of AD, allow for a more integrated approach to AD. Of note is the presence of DUSP4, a regulator of the MAP kinase group of major signaling pathways in the VGF network. The current study investigates the effect of LPS stimulation on BV2, a murine microglial line, on MAP kinase ERK signaling and DUSP4 expression. LPS was found to induce ERK phosphorylation in under 1 hour. The data on DUSP4 protein expression are inconclusive. However, further investigation of the ERK/DUSP4 relationship in microglia may lead to elucidation of the complex mechanisms underlying AD. Undergraduate honors thesis, Yeshiva University.
Series/Report no.: S. Daniel Abraham Honors Student Theses;May 12, 2022
Abstract: Alzheimer’s Disease (AD), a terminal neurodegenerative condition which causes progressive memory loss and cognitive impairment, affects tens of millions of patients worldwide and their families. There is currently no cure, and treatments are largely palliative. The condition may be inherited in an autosomal-dominant manner, but the vast majority of cases result from a complex mix of genetic and environmental factors. AD is characterized by amyloid beta plaques and tau neurofibrillary tangles in affected areas of the brain. These lesions interact with the signaling networks in the neural environment to drive pathogenesis. A new drug, aducanumab, was granted accelerated approval last year by the FDA, largely on the basis of its ability to reduce amyloid plaque burden. However, amyloidosis is only part of AD pathogenesis. New directions, including the identification of VGF and its genetic network as a key driver of AD, allow for a more integrated approach to AD. Of note is the presence of DUSP4, a regulator of the MAP kinase group of major signaling pathways in the VGF network. The current study investigates the effect of LPS stimulation on BV2, a murine microglial line, on MAP kinase ERK signaling and DUSP4 expression. LPS was found to induce ERK phosphorylation in under 1 hour. The data on DUSP4 protein expression are inconclusive. However, further investigation of the ERK/DUSP4 relationship in microglia may lead to elucidation of the complex mechanisms underlying AD.
Description: Undergraduate honors thesis / YU only
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12202/8258
Appears in Collections:S. Daniel Abraham Honors Student Theses

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