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Publication : Alzheimer's disease-causing proline substitutions lead to presenilin 1 aggregation and malfunction.

First Author  Ben-Gedalya T Year  2015
Journal  EMBO J Volume  34
Issue  22 Pages  2820-39
PubMed ID  26438723 Mgi Jnum  J:227775
Mgi Id  MGI:5702795 Doi  10.15252/embj.201592042
Citation  Ben-Gedalya T, et al. (2015) Alzheimer's disease-causing proline substitutions lead to presenilin 1 aggregation and malfunction. EMBO J 34(22):2820-39
abstractText  Do different neurodegenerative maladies emanate from the failure of a mutual protein folding mechanism? We have addressed this question by comparing mutational patterns that are linked to the manifestation of distinct neurodegenerative disorders and identified similar neurodegeneration-linked proline substitutions in the prion protein and in presenilin 1 that underlie the development of a prion disorder and of familial Alzheimer's disease (fAD), respectively. These substitutions were found to prevent the endoplasmic reticulum (ER)-resident chaperone, cyclophilin B, from assisting presenilin 1 to fold properly, leading to its aggregation, deposition in the ER, reduction of gamma-secretase activity, and impaired mitochondrial distribution and function. Similarly, reduced quantities of the processed, active presenilin 1 were observed in brains of cyclophilin B knockout mice. These discoveries imply that reduced cyclophilin activity contributes to the development of distinct neurodegenerative disorders, propose a novel mechanism for the development of certain fAD cases, and support the emerging theme that this disorder can stem from aberrant presenilin 1 function. This study also points at ER chaperones as targets for the development of counter-neurodegeneration therapies.
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