Autophagy, a major degradative pathway for proteins and organelles, is essential for survival of mature neurons. Extensive autophagic-lysosomal pathology in Alzheimer's disease brain contributes to Alzheimer's disease pathogenesis, although the underlying mechanisms are not well understood. Here, we identified and characterized marked intraneuronal amyloid-β peptide/amyloid and lysosomal system pathology in the Alzheimer's disease mouse model TgCRND8 similar to that previously described in Alzheimer's disease brains. We further establish that the basis for these pathologies involves defective proteolytic clearance of neuronal autophagic substrates including amyloid-β peptide. To establish the pathogenic significance of these abnormalities, we enhanced lysosomal cathepsin activities and rates of autophagic protein turnover in TgCRND8 mice by genetically deleting cystatin B, an endogenous inhibitor of lysosomal cysteine proteases. Cystatin B deletion rescued autophagic-lysosomal pathology, reduced abnormal accumulations of amyloid-β peptide, ubiquitinated proteins and other autophagic substrates within autolysosomes/lysosomes and reduced intraneuronal amyloid-β peptide. The amelioration of lysosomal function in TgCRND8 markedly decreased extracellular amyloid deposition and total brain amyloid-β peptide 40 and 42 levels, and prevented the development of deficits of learning and memory in fear conditioning and olfactory habituation tests. Our findings support the pathogenic significance of autophagic-lysosomal dysfunction in Alzheimer's disease and indicate the potential value of restoring normal autophagy as an innovative therapeutic strategy for Alzheimer's disease.
Nicastrin is an integral component of the high molecular weight presenilin complexes that control proteolytic processing of the amyloid precursor protein and Notch. We report here that nicastrin is most probably a type 1 transmembrane glycoprotein that is expressed at moderate levels in the brain and in cultured neurons. Immunofluorescence studies demonstrate that nicastrin is localized in the endoplasmic reticulum, Golgi, and a discrete population of vesicles. Glycosidase analyses reveal that endogenous nicastrin undergoes a conventional, trafficking-dependent maturation process. However, when highly expressed in transfected cells, there is a disproportionate accumulation of the endo--N-acetylglucosaminidase H-sensitive, immature form, with no significant increase in the levels of the fully mature species. Immunoprecipitation revealed that presenilin-1 interacts preferentially with mature nicastrin, suggesting that correct trafficking and co-localization of the presenilin complex components are essential for activity. These findings demonstrate that trafficking and post-translational modifications of nicastrin are tightly regulated processes that accompany the assembly of the active presenilin complexes that execute ␥-secretase cleavage. These results also underscore the caveat that simple overexpression of nicastrin in transfected cells may result in the accumulation of large amounts of the immature protein, which is apparently unable to assemble into the active complexes capable of processing amyloid precursor protein and Notch.
Autophagy, the major lysosomal pathway for the turnover of intracellular organelles is markedly impaired in neurons in Alzheimer's disease and Alzheimer mouse models. We have previously reported that severe lysosomal and amyloid neuropathology and associated cognitive deficits in the TgCRND8 Alzheimer mouse model can be ameliorated by restoring lysosomal proteolytic capacity and autophagy flux via genetic deletion of the lysosomal protease inhibitor, cystatin B. Here we present evidence that macroautophagy is a significant pathway for lipid turnover, which is defective in TgCRND8 brain where lipids accumulate as membranous structures and lipid droplets within giant neuronal autolysosomes. Levels of multiple lipid species including several sphingolipids (ceramide, ganglioside GM3, GM2, GM1, GD3 and GD1a), cardiolipin, cholesterol and cholesteryl esters are elevated in autophagic vacuole fractions and lysosomes isolated from TgCRND8 brain. Lipids are localized in autophagosomes and autolysosomes by double immunofluorescence analyses in wild-type mice and colocalization is increased in TgCRND8 mice where abnormally abundant GM2 ganglioside-positive granules are detected in neuronal lysosomes. Cystatin B deletion in TgCRND8 significantly reduces the number of GM2-positive granules and lowers the levels of GM2 and GM3 in lysosomes, decreases lipofuscin-related autofluorescence, and eliminates giant lipid-containing autolysosomes while increasing numbers of normal-sized autolysosomes/lysosomes with reduced content of undigested components. These findings have identified macroautophagy as a previously unappreciated route for delivering membrane lipids to lysosomes for turnover, a function that has so far been considered to be mediated exclusively through the endocytic pathway, and revealed that autophagic-lysosomal dysfunction in TgCRND8 brain impedes lysosomal turnover of lipids as well as proteins. The amelioration of lipid accumulation in TgCRND8 by removing cystatin B inhibition on lysosomal proteases suggests that enhancing lysosomal proteolysis improves the overall environment of the lysosome and its clearance functions, which may be possibly relevant to a broader range of lysosomal disorders beyond Alzheimer's disease.
The ε4 allele of apolipoprotein E (apoE, protein; APOE, gene) is a major risk factor for Alzheimer's disease (AD). Genetically, the frequency of the ε4 allele is enriched in early‐onset sporadic, late‐onset familial, and common late‐onset sporadic AD. ApoE is found in the extracellular amyloid‐β (Aβ) deposits that are characteristic features of AD. In this study, we examined the interaction between Aβ and apoE isoforms. The apoE isoforms used in this study were either produced by stably transfected Chinese hamster ovary cells (CHO) or were from human plasma. We report that when similar concentrations of the apoE isoforms were used, native nonpurified apoE3 from recombinant CHO‐derived sources bound Aβ, but apoE4 did not. In fact, in our system, binding of recombinant apoE4 to Aβ was never detectable, even after incubation for 4 days. Furthermore, using the same assay conditions, native apoE2, like apoE3, binds Aβ avidly. Furthermore, when human plasma apoE isoforms are tested in Aβ binding experiments, apoE3 bound Aβ more avidly than apoE4, and a major apoE/Aβ complex (the 40‐kDa form) was observed with plasma apoE3 but not apoE4. These data extend our understanding of apoE isoform‐dependent binding of Aβ by associating apoE2 with efficient apoE/Aβ complex formation and demonstrate that native apoE3 (whether recombinant or derived from human plasma) forms sodium dodecyl sulfate‐stable apoE/Aβ complexes more readily than native apoE4. The different Aβ‐binding properties of native apoE4 versus native apoE3 provide insight into the molecular mechanisms by which the APOE ε4 allele exerts its risk factor effects in AD.
Numerous missense mutations in the presenilins are associated with the autosomal dominant form of familial Alzheimer disease. Presenilin genes encode polytopic transmembrane proteins, which are processed by proteolytic cleavage and form high-molecular-weight complexes under physiological conditions. The presenilins have been suggested to be functionally involved in developmental morphogenesis, unfolded protein responses and processing of selected proteins including the beta-amyloid precursor protein. Although the underlying mechanism by which presenilin mutations lead to development of Alzheimer disease remains elusive, one consistent mutational effect is an overproduction of long-tailed amyloid beta-peptides. Furthermore, presenilins interact with beta-catenin to form presenilin complexes, and the physiological and mutational effects are also observed in the catenin signal transduction pathway.
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