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Publication : Kidins220 accumulates with tau in human Alzheimer's disease and related models: modulation of its calpain-processing by GSK3β/PP1 imbalance.

First Author  López-Menéndez C Year  2013
Journal  Hum Mol Genet Volume  22
Issue  3 Pages  466-82
PubMed ID  23118350 Mgi Jnum  J:191216
Mgi Id  MGI:5461261 Doi  10.1093/hmg/dds446
Citation  Lopez-Menendez C, et al. (2013) Kidins220 accumulates with tau in human Alzheimer's disease and related models: modulation of its calpain-processing by GSK3beta/PP1 imbalance. Hum Mol Genet 22(3):466-82
abstractText  Failures in neurotrophic support and signalling play key roles in Alzheimer's disease (AD) pathogenesis. We previously demonstrated that downregulation of the neurotrophin effector Kinase D interacting substrate (Kidins220) by excitotoxicity and cerebral ischaemia contributed to neuronal death. This downregulation, triggered through overactivation of N-methyl-d-aspartate receptors (NMDARs), involved proteolysis of Kidins220 by calpain and transcriptional inhibition. As excitotoxicity is at the basis of AD aetiology, we hypothesized that Kidins220 might also be downregulated in this disease. Unexpectedly, Kidins220 is augmented in necropsies from AD patients where it accumulates with hyperphosphorylated tau. This increase correlates with enhanced Kidins220 resistance to calpain processing but no higher gene transcription. Using AD brain necropsies, glycogen synthase kinase 3-beta (GSK3beta)-transgenic mice and cell models of AD-related neurodegeneration, we show that GSK3beta phosphorylation decreases Kidins220 susceptibility to calpain proteolysis, while protein phosphatase 1 (PP1) action has the opposite effect. As altered activities of GSK3beta and phosphatases are involved in tau aggregation and constitute hallmarks in AD, a GSK3beta/PP1 imbalance may also contribute to Kidins220 decreased clearance, accumulation and hampered neurotrophin signalling from early stages of the disease pathogenesis. These results encourage searches for mutations in Kidins220 gene and their possible associations to dementias. Finally, our data support a model where the effects of excitotoxicity drastically differ when occurring in cerebral ischaemia versus progressively sustained toxicity along AD progression. The striking differences in Kidins220 stability resulting from chronic versus acute brain damage may also have important implications for the therapeutic intervention of neurodegenerative disorders.
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