Understanding the mechanisms that control processing of the amyloid precursor protein (APP) to produce amyloid-β (Aβ) peptide represents a key area of Alzheimer's disease research. Here, we show that siRNA-mediated loss of calsyntenin-1 in cultured neurons alters APP processing to increase production of Aβ. We also show that calsyntenin-1 is reduced in Alzheimer's disease brains and that the extent of this reduction correlates with increased Aβ levels. Calsyntenin-1 is a ligand for kinesin-1 light chains and APP is transported through axons on kinesin-1 molecular motors. Defects in axonal transport are an early pathological feature in Alzheimer's disease and defective APP transport is known to increase Aβ production. We show that calsyntenin-1 and APP are co-transported through axons and that siRNA-induced loss of calsyntenin-1 markedly disrupts axonal transport of APP. Thus, perturbation to axonal transport of APP on calsyntenin-1 containing carriers induces alterations to APP processing that increase production of Aβ. Together, our findings suggest that disruption of calsyntenin-1-associated axonal transport of APP is a pathogenic mechanism in Alzheimer's disease.
Calsyntenin-1 mediates axonal transport of the amyloid precursor protein and regulates Aβ production
Alessio Vagnoni,M. Perkinton,Emma H. Gray,P. Francis,Wendy Noble,Christopher C. J. Miller
Published 2012 in Human Molecular Genetics
ABSTRACT
PUBLICATION RECORD
- Publication year
2012
- Venue
Human Molecular Genetics
- Publication date
2012-03-20
- Fields of study
Biology, Medicine
- Identifiers
- External record
- Source metadata
Semantic Scholar, PubMed
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