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From Protein Trafficking to Episodic Memory: Tracing BDNF Genotypes
30 January 2003. An ambitious attempt to link cognitive tests, functional brain imaging, and cell biological assays implicates a polymorphism in brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) as the source for highly specific memory deficits, alterations in hippocampal activity, and protein processing defects. The study, led by researchers at the National Institutes of Health, appeared in the January 24 Cell.

Beyond its well-documented role in supporting neuronal growth and survival (see related news item), BDNF plays a significant role in hippocampal long-term potentiation (LTP), and in learning and memory (see Lu and Gottschalk, 2000; Poo, 2001). Given the presence of a frequent polymorphism in the human BDNF gene (a valine for methionine substitution), and some evidence of hippocampal dysfunction in schizophrenia patients and their siblings, Daniel Weinberger of the National Institute of Mental Health and Bai Lu of the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, both in Bethesda, Maryland, led a team to test whether BDNF genotype might be a risk factor for hippocampal dysfunction in these groups. The researchers also explored whether BDNF polymorphisms might affect the cellular processing of the peptide.

The cohort (n = 641) for the memory experiments included schizophrenia patients, their unaffected siblings, and normal controls, all drawn from a large sibling study of schizophrenia. The intent of the experiment was to determine whether the BDNF genotype was related to memory dysfunction in schizophrenia, but the researchers found no such correlation. Instead, they found that possession of the met/met genotype was associated with a significant, and similar, episodic memory deficit relative to val/val or val/met in all three patient subgroups. Interestingly, there was no such difference in tests of word recall, semantic memory, or working memory/executive function-memory domains that may depend less upon the hippocampus.

In two imaging experiments, the researchers were able to correlate this suggestion of hippocampal dysfunction with hippocampal activity differences. They used fMRI to monitor brain function in subjects performing the N-back test, a memory trial that involves primarily neocortex while tending to "disengage" the hippocampus. In two independent, small cohorts of normal controls (13 and 17 subjects, respectively), the researchers found that val/val subjects had the expected deactivation of the hippocampi, whereas val/met subjects had an inappropriate overactivation of both hippocampi. (There were not enough met/met subjects to make a valid assessment of this subgroup.)

In the second imaging study, the researchers used MRI spectroscopy to measure n-acetyl-aspartate (NAA), which has been proposed as an indirect marker of neuronal integrity and synaptic abundance (Maier et al., 1995). Again studying all three groups (schizophrenia patients, siblings, and controls), they found that the NAA signal was significantly reduced in the left hippocampus of val/met subjects relative to val/val subjects. In the right hippocampus, the researchers noted only trends in this same direction. Again, the number of met/met subjects was too small to allow direct comparison to the other groups, but a multiple regression analysis yielded a linear reduction in NAA levels in the left hippocampus with an increasing number of met alleles, suggesting an allele dose effect.

The third level of experiments looked at the effects of BDNF genotype on cultured rat hippocampal neurons. Neurons were transfected with either val- or met-BDNF, and the polymorphisms did not appear to affect the production of the protein, or its ability to function as a neurite-inducing growth factor. However, fluorescence and double-labeling techniques indicated that, whereas val-BDNF occurred both in the cell body and on dendrites, met-BDNF was confined to the cell body. Fluorescence analysis suggested that met-BDNF levels were lower than val-BDNF levels, and that the met-BDNF accumulated near the nucleus, whereas the val-BDNF showed a punctate distribution in the cell body and dendrites.

In response to a depolarizing challenge, val-BDNF-transfected, but no met-BDNF-transfected neurons markedly increased their secretion of the protein into the culture medium. In contrast to this activity-dependent secretion, there was no difference in the amounts of regularly (constitutively) secreted protein between the two groups of cells.

Hypothesizing that the met polymorphism may lead to sorting of the protein into the wrong secretory pathways, the researchers examined its subcellular locations. Markers for various intracellular organelles indicated that only val-BDNF is successfully sorted from the Golgi apparatus to secretory vesicles. This would seem to explain why val-BDNF, but not met-BDNF, is found near synapses and is secreted in response to the depolarization challenge.

The accumulated results from this collaboration lead the authors to suggest that these problems with intracellular trafficking and activity-dependent secretion of the met-BDNF could play a role both in the altered hippocampal function seen in imaging scans and the deficits on episodic memory tests. Further, "it is reasonable to speculate that the gene will impact the manifestation of diseases where function of the hippocampus and memory are impaired by the disease. Thus, one can imagine that a condition such as Alzheimer's disease, which destroys the hippocampus, may produce more dramatic effects or have a worse or more rapid course in individuals who have the met-BDNF genes in comparison to individuals with the val form of the gene. Similar phenomena may also occur with normal aging and in depression," said Weinberger in a Cell press release.-Hakon Heimer.

References:
Egan MR, Kojima M, Callicott JH, Goldberg TE, Kolachana BS, Bertolino A, Zaitsev E, Gold B, Goldman D, Dean M, Lu B, Weinberger DR. The BDNF val66met polymorphism affects activity-dependent secretion of BDNF and human memory and hippocampal function. Cell. 2003 Jan 24;112:257-69.Abstract <

 
Comments on News and Primary Papers
  Comment by:  Nicole Berchtold, Carl Cotman, ARF Advisor
Submitted 3 February 2003  |  Permalink Posted 3 February 2003

We were impressed by the research presented in Egan et al., which clinches a decisive role for BDNF in cognitive processes in humans. In animal models there has been an increasingly strong basis supporting an important role of BDNF in cognitive function, and the Egan study has translated this effect to humans. Essentially, the message is that when BDNF is not functioning properly, cognition suffers in the long term. Importantly, the study demonstrates that these cognitive effects occur in young/middle-aged, cognitively intact individuals. It is especially interesting that their cell culture results indicate that the effect is not in the synthesis of BDNF, but rather in the processing and release. The polymorphism is in the proBDNF (thus, on the preprocessed protein rather than in the active protein), and is affecting intracellular trafficking and also activity-dependent release.

View all comments by Nicole Berchtold
View all comments by Carl Cotman

  Comment by:  Michael O'Neill
Submitted 3 February 2003  |  Permalink Posted 3 February 2003

In the present studies, Daniel Weinberger and colleagues have reported that valine (val) substitution to methionine (met) in BDNF was associated with a failure to localize in secretory granules and synapses. The studies using transfected neurons appeared to translate to some degree into the human condition, where the val/met polymorphism was associated with poorer episodic memory.

This is a difficult series of studies and the authors have generated some interesting data. Their imaging data were complicated by the numbers of subjects in the met/met group, but nonetheless, the authors have shown that there was no correlation between BDNF genotype and memory dysfunction in schizophrenia. In addition, the studies indicated that possession of the met/met genotype was associated with a significant episodic memory deficit relative to val/val or val/met in all three patient subgroups.

These data strengthen rodent data indicating that BDNF plays a key role in memory and learning. While the molecular mechanisms of memory formation are complex and the role of long-term potentiaton...  Read more


  Comment by:  Massimo Gennarelli
Submitted 7 February 2003  |  Permalink Posted 7 February 2003

Several lines of evidence show that BDNF is implicated in hippocampal long-term potentiation, learning, and memory in nonhuman species, but until now the involvement of this factor in human memory and hippocampal function has not been examined directly.

In this respect, Egan and colleagues provide evidence that a valine/methionine substitution polymorphism at codon 66 (V66M) in the 5’ pro-region of the human BDNF gene affects intracellular distribution, packaging, and release of BDNF protein in vivo. Furthermore, they elucidated the effect of different genotypes, in human, on verbal episodic memory, hippocampal physiological activation, neuronal integrity and synaptic abundance. The authors did not find evidence that V66M polymorphic system was associated with schizophrenia, but suggest a possible role in other neurological and psychiatric disorders. Last year, several papers reported a genetic association of V66M polymorphism with different neurological diseases. In particular, the val allele has been associated with susceptibility to Alzheimer’s disease (AD) (  Read more


  Comment by:  Margaret Fahnestock
Submitted 7 February 2003  |  Permalink Posted 7 February 2003

The exciting paper by Egan et al. is a far-reaching collection of experiments ranging from cell culture to human behavior that convincingly demonstrate the differing properties of proBDNF molecules carrying val66 or met66 polymorphic substitutions and their role in human episodic memory. It is very clear from the transfection experiments in hippocampal neurons that valBDNF localizes to dendrites, whereas metBDNF localizes to cell bodies. The green fluorescence is of a different character (punctate for valBDNF-GFP, diffuse for metBDNF-GFP), reflecting localization in different subcellular compartments, and only valBDNF, not metBDNF, is released at the synapse by regulated secretion. The authors have made an important discovery, namely, that the polymorphism in the pro region of BDNF is important for intracellular trafficking and activity-dependent release of BDNF. However, the number and size of the proteins, and more importantly their processing to the mature form, are not affected by the polymorphism.

The authors carefully studied the biological activity of the...  Read more


  Comment by:  Volkmar Lessmann
Submitted 12 February 2003  |  Permalink Posted 12 February 2003

The study by Egan and colleagues deserves much attention because it attempts to track the role of BDNF in hippocampal function from human (!) memory traces down to the underlying molecular mechanisms. The observed polymorphism in position 66 of the pro domain, in fact, shows very interesting consequences for hippocampus-related memory tasks and hippocampal metabolism. Besides these very valuable advancements, some additional issues brought up by the authors would be interesting to focus on in future studies. Among these are:

1. During the N-back memory task (which, as the authors mention, primarily relies on neocortical function), this study observes an unsual hyperactivation (i.e., hyperoxygenation) in the hippocampal region, thus indicating increased hippocampal neuronal activity in the met mutants. In contrast, the N-acetyl-aspartate measurements indicate a decreased metabolism of the val/met heterozygotes in the hippocampus. These experiments seem to indicate both increased and decreased BDNF-dependent hippocampal function, depending on the experimental protocol used. It...  Read more


  Comment by:  Susumu Ando
Submitted 13 February 2003  |  Permalink Posted 13 February 2003

Egan et al. have performed an extraordinary study ranging from population to molecular levels. BDNF val66met polymorphism was shown first to affect episodic memory and hippocampal activation. Met-BDNF was revealed to fail in trafficking into secretory vesicles, resulting in the reduction of its release when synapses were depolarized. Thus, this SNP leads to dysfunction of BDNF in synaptic plasticity, causing memory impairment, although the biological activity of met-BDNF itself is as potent as that of val-BDNF.

This story seems to be beautifully verified and convincing. BDNF SNPs have attracted much interest in other stories, too. The val66met polymorphism was reported to occur more frequently in patients with Parkinson’s disease (Momose et al., 2002). Other BDNF polymorphisms, such as 270C/T and 196A/G, were suggested to be associated with Alzheimer’s disease (Riemenschneider et al., 2002;   Read more


  Primary Papers: The BDNF val66met polymorphism affects activity-dependent secretion of BDNF and human memory and hippocampal function.

Comment by:  Douglas Galasko
Submitted 24 February 2003  |  Permalink Posted 24 February 2003
  I recommend this paper
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