Title: Mechanisms of Alzheimers Disease Amyloid Precursor Protein APP
1Mechanisms of Alzheimers Disease Amyloid
Precursor Protein (APP)
2What is Alzheimers
- Most common neurodegenerative disease
- Characterized by a difficulty in remembering
names and recent events - 6th most common cause of death in U.S. (as
published by the CDC in 2008) - Projected to see a dramatic increase with all the
baby boomers reaching retirement - CDC estimates 10 million baby boomers will
develop Alzheimers - Medical costs in the billions
- 91 billion in Medicare costs for 2005
- 36.5 billion in indirect costs (caregivers)
- 160 billion projected for 2010
(Alzheimers Association, 2008)
3Comparison of healthy brain and AD brain
- Alzheimers patients exhibit progressive loss of
neurons - Other physical symptoms include plaques and
tangles
4Whats the mechanism behind Alzheimers?
- No known cause of AD
- Three genes implicated in early-onset
Alzheimers - Amyloid precursor protein (APP)
- Presenilin 1
- Presenilin 2
- APP gives rise to ß-amyloid which is found in
plaques - Leads to the idea that mutations in these genes
causes Alzheimers - Other models1
- Results from reduction of cholinergic synthesis
- Results from tau mutation, which leads to
hyperphosphorylation
1(Van Broeck et al., 2007)
(Waring and Rosenberg, 2008)
5(John H and Dennis JS, 2002)
6How does APP give rise to Beta Amyloid?
- APP is an integral membrane protein
- Trophic factor?
- Can be cleaved into smaller parts by secretases
(the scissors in the picture) - BACE is a ß-secretase that cleaves at the
extracellular end - PS1 is a ?-secretase that cleaves inside the
membrane - The product is Beta amyloid, which may be 38-43
amino acids long
(Thinakaran and Koo, 2008)
7APP Binds DR6 and Causes Neuron Death
- Marc Tessier-Lavignes group recently found that
amyloid precursor protein interacts with death
receptor 6 and causes apoptosis of neurons in
vivo and in vitro - Uses caspase 6 instead of normal caspase 3
- Pathway is activated after neurotrophic
deprivation
8APP Binds DR6 and Causes Neuron Death
- In vitro neurite outgrowth assay showing that
anti-DR6.1 axons are are less susceptible to
degeneration - DR6 involved in degeneration of these axons
(sensory axons).
9APP Binds DR6 and Causes Neuron Death
- Vibratome section of the superior colliculus
showing increased axons (mice, P6) - DR6 involved in degeneration of these axons.
10APP Binds DR6 and Causes Neuron Death
- In vitro, Caspase 6 is the main caspase involved
in neuronal cell death. - There are fewer degenerating neurons when caspase
6 is knocked down
(Nikolaev et al., 2009)
11APP Binds DR6 and Causes Neuron Death
- APP protein shown in (h) with cleavage sites
- The pattern of DR6-AP binding in vitro is similar
to the band when only N-APP antibody is used. - C-terminus has a different band
(Nikolaev et al., 2009)
C-terminus
12APP Binds DR6 and Causes Neuron Death
- In vitro, NGF-deprived neurons that have the
anti-N-APP polyclonal antibody exhibit fewer
degenerating axons - Very similar to anti-DR6.1 phenotype
- Supports idea that N-terminus of APP binds DR6
(Nikolaev et al., 2009)
13APP Binds DR6 and Causes Neuron Death
- After trophic factor deprivation, APP is cleaved
by an unclear mechanisms to release the
N-terminus region of APP - This portion (about 300 residues) binds to DR6
and activates the caspase cascade, resulting in
degeneration
(Nikolaev et al., 2009)
14Summary
- Alzheimers Disease continues to afflict millions
around the world - No effective treatment
- Cause of AD still unknown, mechanisms unclear
- Expected to be an even bigger problem with the
baby boomer generation growing older - APP seems to be central to the development of AD
- Recent evidence suggests that APP can bind DR6 to
elicit neuron death.
(Alzheimers Association, 2008)
15Literature Cited
- Nikolaev A, McLaughlin T, OLeary DD,
Tessier-Lavigne M. 2009. APP binds DR6 to trigger
axon pruning and neuron death via distinct
caspases. Nature 457(7232)981-9 - John H and Dennis JS. 2002. The amyloid
hypothesis of Alzheimers Disease progress and
problems on the road to therapeutics. Science
297353-6 - Alzheimers Association, 2008 Alzheimers Disease
Facts and Figures, published in Volume 4, Issue
2. Alzheimer's Dementia - Van Broeck B, Van Broekhoven C, Kumar-Singh S.
2007. Current insights into molecular mechanisms
of Alzheimer disease and their implications for
therapeutic approaches. Neurodegenerative
Disorders 4(5)349-65 - Waring SC, Rosenberg RN. 2008. Genome-wide
association studies in Alzheimers disease. Arch
Neurol 65(3)329-34 - Thinakaran G, Koo EH. 2008. Amyloid precursor
protein trafficking, processing, and function. J
Biol Chem 283(44)29615-9