TY - JOUR
T1 - The cleavage products of amyloid-β precursor protein are sorted to distinct carrier vesicles that are independently transported within neurites
AU - Muresan, Virgil
AU - Varvel, Nicholas H.
AU - Lamb, Bruce T.
AU - Muresan, Zoia
N1 - Funding Information:
S. W. M. acknowledges the support of the Goddard Space Flight Center Solar Data Analysis Center and NASA’s Living With A Star Program and would like to thank the TRACE team for conducting the INO program. We would like to thank Joe Gurman, Stuart Jefferies, and the anonymous referee for making many useful suggestions on the text. SOHO is a project of international cooperation between ESA and NASA. The TRACE project at Lockheed Martin is supported by NASA contract NAS5-38099. This material is based on work supported by NASA under grant NNG04GG34G issued under the Sun-Earth Connection Guest Investigator Program.
PY - 2009/3/18
Y1 - 2009/3/18
N2 - The amyloid-β (Aβ) precursor protein (APP), a transmembrane protein that undergoes proteolytic cleavage into defined fragments, has been implicated in axonal transport. The proposed role of APP as a vesicle receptor for the microtubule motor kinesin-1 has relevance for the pathogenesis of Alzheimer's disease. Nevertheless, this function, which relies on the transport to the cell periphery of full-length APP rather than its cleavage fragments, remains controversial. Other proposed functions of APP, such as regulating transcription, neurogenesis, cell movement, or neurite growth also rely on APP's presence as a full-length protein at the cell surface, implying that APP cleavage occurs after its transport to the cell periphery. To test this hypothesis, we mapped the localization of various APP epitopes in neurons in culture and in the mouse brain. Surprisingly, epitopes from the N-terminal, C-terminal, and central (Aβ) domains of APP each showed a distinct distribution throughout the cell and rarely colocalized. Within neuntes, these epitopes were localized to distinct transport vesicles that associated with different sets of microtubules and, occasionally, actin filaments. C-terminal APP fragments were preferentially transported into neuntes as phosphorylated forms, entered the lamellipodium and filopodia of growth cones, and concentrated in regions of growth cone turning and advancement (unlike the N-terminal and Aβ fragments). We conclude that, under normal conditions, the proteolytic cleavage of APP primarily occurs before its sorting into axonal transport vesicles and the cleaved fragments segregate into separate vesicle populations that reach different destinations, and thus have different functions.
AB - The amyloid-β (Aβ) precursor protein (APP), a transmembrane protein that undergoes proteolytic cleavage into defined fragments, has been implicated in axonal transport. The proposed role of APP as a vesicle receptor for the microtubule motor kinesin-1 has relevance for the pathogenesis of Alzheimer's disease. Nevertheless, this function, which relies on the transport to the cell periphery of full-length APP rather than its cleavage fragments, remains controversial. Other proposed functions of APP, such as regulating transcription, neurogenesis, cell movement, or neurite growth also rely on APP's presence as a full-length protein at the cell surface, implying that APP cleavage occurs after its transport to the cell periphery. To test this hypothesis, we mapped the localization of various APP epitopes in neurons in culture and in the mouse brain. Surprisingly, epitopes from the N-terminal, C-terminal, and central (Aβ) domains of APP each showed a distinct distribution throughout the cell and rarely colocalized. Within neuntes, these epitopes were localized to distinct transport vesicles that associated with different sets of microtubules and, occasionally, actin filaments. C-terminal APP fragments were preferentially transported into neuntes as phosphorylated forms, entered the lamellipodium and filopodia of growth cones, and concentrated in regions of growth cone turning and advancement (unlike the N-terminal and Aβ fragments). We conclude that, under normal conditions, the proteolytic cleavage of APP primarily occurs before its sorting into axonal transport vesicles and the cleaved fragments segregate into separate vesicle populations that reach different destinations, and thus have different functions.
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U2 - 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2558-08.2009
DO - 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2558-08.2009
M3 - Article
C2 - 19295161
AN - SCOPUS:63849105306
SN - 0270-6474
VL - 29
SP - 3565
EP - 3578
JO - Journal of Neuroscience
JF - Journal of Neuroscience
IS - 11
ER -