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SUMO-Wrestling with APP?
15 January 2003. In the January 7 PNAS, researchers from the biopharmaceutical company Scios Inc. reported that sumoylation, the covalent modification of lysine residues by small ubiquitin-like modifier (SUMO) proteins, has a dramatic impact on amyloid β production.

Working with principle investigator Barbara Cordell, first author Yonghong Li et al. discovered the sumoylation effect in a random screen of plasmids that can affect Aβ processing when transfected into human cells expressing Aβ precursor protein (AβPP). Of the roughly 100,000 plasmids harboring cDNA from human fetal brain tissue, one downregulated the expression of the N-terminal fragments produced by β-site cleavage of AβPP (β-NTF), and upregulated production of α-NTFs, the fragments produced by cleavage at the α-site. This plasmid turned out to code for SUMO-3.

When Li et al. further investigated this effect, they found a dose-response relationship between SUMO-3 and AβPP processing. At the highest doses of plasmid, Aβ production shrank by 25 percent, and there were concomitant increases and decreases in levels of α-NTF and β-NTF. In addition, dominant-negative mutants of SUMO-3 led to increased β-NTF and Aβ production, suggesting that endogenous SUMO-3 is involved in keeping these levels low.

While the connection between sumoylation and Aβ production is intriguing, this report raises many questions. For example, what substrates of SUMO-3 are involved in the regulation of AβPP processing? The authors show that neither the precursor, nor the enzyme responsible for the β-site cleavage (BACE), is sumoylated. They also show that SUMO-3 is present in hippocampal neurons and they hint at preliminary observations suggesting altered expression in Alzheimer's brains versus controls. To our knowledge, this is the first time sumoylation has been implicated directly in Alzheimer’s disease, however, there are prior reports suggesting that this form of post-translational protein modification plays a role in polyglutamine repeat diseases (Ueda et al., 2002; Chan et al., 2002).-Tom Fagan.

Reference:
Li Y, Wang H, Wang S, Quon D, Liu Y-W, Cordell B. Positive and negative regulation of APP amyloidogenesis by sumoylation. PNAS 2003 January 7;100:259-264.Abstract

 
Comments on News and Primary Papers
  Comment by:  Weiming Xia
Submitted 21 January 2003  |  Permalink Posted 21 January 2003

The findings by Li et al. on the regulation of APP processing by sumoylation indeed bring a new perspective to the field of AD research. Although the authors documented a lack of direct sumoylation of APP and BACE, they have demonstrated a clear increase of α-NTF (derived from α-secretase cleavage of APP) and a reduction of β-NTF (derived from β-secretase cleavage of APP) when SUMO-3 is overexpressed. When mutant SUMO-3 is overexpressed, all of α-NTF, β-NTF and Aβ are increased. Importantly, overexpressing either wildtype or mutant SUMO-3 leads to increased steady-state levels of APP.

Based on these observations, it will be interesting to search for any effect of sumoylation on α-secretase, which is not discussed in the paper. I would predict an increase of α-secretase activity by sumoylation. Overexpression of wildtype SUMO-3 could lead to enhanced α-secretase, resulting in increased α-NTF levels, reduced β-NTF levels (and subsequently reduced Aβ levels.) On the contrary, overexpression of mutant forms of SUMO-3 may not affect α-secretase activity, and increased levels of...  Read more


  Comment by:  Benjamin Wolozin, ARF Advisor (Disclosure)
Submitted 21 January 2003  |  Permalink Posted 21 January 2003

This article presents a novel regulatory mechanism for APP processing. Li et al. observe that increased expression of SUMO-3 increases production of Aβ and reduces production of APPsα. SUMO (small ubiquitin-like modifier) proteins are small peptides that are added to proteins in a manner similar to ubiquitin, unlike ubiquitin however, they do not target proteins for proteasomal degradation. The function of SUMO is not well understood, but in cases where it has been examined SUMO appears to control localization of proteins within the cell, such as targeting to particular organelles or the nucleus. For instance, herpes virus particles appear to form inclusions by manipulating the SUMO system. Consistent with this model, Li and colleagues do not observe a significant effect of SUMO on the turnover of APP. Since little is known about SUMO, Li’s observation opens up a new chapter in the regulation of APP processing and will likely yield new and interesting findings in the upcoming months and years.

View all comments by Benjamin Wolozin

  Comment by:  Samuel Gandy
Submitted 31 January 2003  |  Permalink Posted 31 January 2003

Posttranslational modification of the cytoplasmic tail of APP has emerged as an important mechanism for controlling APP metabolism and Aβ generation. These phenomena can be divided into two basic cellular phenotypes: modifications that regulate the α- and β-secretase pathways in parallel, and others that regulate the two pathways in a reciprocal fashion. In both cases, the molecular basis appears to be alteration of APP trafficking. Some APP-tail-binding proteins appear to promote retention of APP in the ER, slowing APP flux down both to the α and β pathways. The best known means of regulating the α and β pathways in a reciprocal manner is accomplished by activation of signal transduction pathways, such as those mediated by protein kinase C (PKC) and extracellular signal regulated protein kinase (ERK). To date, no "cellular machinery" has been discovered that is capable of transducing changes in cytoplasmic protein phosphorylation into activation or inhibition of intralumenal proteolysis. Accelerated vesicle biogenesis at the trans-Golgi network (TGN) appears to explain at least...  Read more

  Comment by:  Rachael Neve
Submitted 4 February 2003  |  Permalink Posted 4 February 2003

This paper is groundbreaking in more than one respect. First of all, it presents a novel strategy for identifying modulators of APP processing. The authors screened 100,000 cDNAs from a human brain cDNA expression library. They began with 1,001 pools, each with about 100 plasmids, transfected the DNA pool together with an AβPP expression plasmid into 293 T cells, and assayed the growth medium by ELISA for the level of Aβ, and for the levels of secreted AβPP generated by α-secretase (α-NTF) and β-secretase (β-NTF). They identified a cDNA whose protein product decreased production of Aβ and β-NTF, and increased production of α-NTF. This strategy is not trivial to execute, and represents quite a tour de force.

Remarkably, the authors showed that the cDNA they retrieved encoded the small ubiquitin-like protein SUMO-3. I say "remarkably." because the ubiquitin-like proteins have not yet been implicated in AD, except insofar as our laboratory has reported that APP-BP1, which interacts with the C-terminus of APP, is part of the activating enzyme for the related ubiquitin-like...  Read more

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