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Home: Papers of the Week
Annotation


Ranganathan S, Noyes NC, Migliorini M, Winkles JA, Battey FD, Hyman BT, Smith E, Yepes M, Mikhailenko I, Strickland DK. LRAD3, a novel low-density lipoprotein receptor family member that modulates amyloid precursor protein trafficking. J Neurosci. 2011 Jul 27;31(30):10836-46. PubMed Abstract

  
Comments on Paper and Primary News
  Comment by:  G. William Rebeck
Submitted 1 August 2011  |  Permalink Posted 1 August 2011

This work from Dudley Strickland's lab describes a new protein related to the LDL receptor family, termed LRAD3. This protein shares structural similarities to other members of the family, including domains for the internalization and sorting of (as yet) unidentified ligands. It also shares another interesting characteristic: It interacts with APP and affects its processing. Interactions with APP have already been demonstrated for several members of the LDL receptor family, including LRP1 (Kounnas et al., 1995; Waldron et al., 2008), ApoER2 (Fuentealba et al., 2007), and sorLA (Andersen et al., 2005; Spoelgen et al., 2006). Both families share common adaptor proteins (Fe65, X11, Dab1), and the structure of LRAD3 suggests that it may interact with some of these adaptor proteins as well. These observations are even more interesting, since the functions of...  Read more

  Comment by:  Samuel Gandy
Submitted 1 August 2011  |  Permalink Posted 1 August 2011

This work looks very solid and very interesting. We seem to have moved from the “secretase generation” to the “sortase generation,” what with LRP, vps35, SORL1, and SORCS1 all playing key roles in sorting APP and its C-terminal fragments in and out of Aβ-generating and Aβ-lytic compartments.

This is all well and good, but what we really need is a clinical success. We now know how to lower Aβ with drugs or vaccines, but we don’t yet know whether pre-symptomatic Aβ lowering will prevent dementia, nor do we know how early is early enough. Based on the Dominantly Inherited Alzheimer Network (DIAN) and published data, and the desire not to start too soon the first time, it looks to me as if we have to begin treating people with presenilin-1 mutations at least 20 years before age at onset. Maybe 25 years is early enough.

While waiting for those DIAN data, we need to focus on potential prophylactic interventions with more impeccable safety profiles than we might accept for therapeutics, because we face the prospect of treating...  Read more


  Comment by:  Zoia Muresan, Virgil Muresan
Submitted 2 August 2011  |  Permalink Posted 3 August 2011

There is no question that the complex processing of amyloid-β precursor protein (APP), via at least two intensely studied pathways (α- and β-secretase cleavage) that are relevant to Alzheimer’s disease (AD), occurs during APP’s still insufficiently understood journey within neurons along the secretory, endocytic, and degradative routes. It follows that the mechanisms and proteins that regulate intracellular trafficking of APP are most likely to affect processing of the precursor by altering its targeting into, or out of, different compartments. Based on what is currently known, proteins that regulate APP processing are potential targets for drugs against AD. Ranganathan et al. now add another protein to the plethora of those that bind (directly or indirectly) APP and regulate production of amyloid-β (Aβ). What is important is that the newly identified protein, LRAD3, an LDL receptor family member, participates in endocytic processes. Based on this role, and on the fact that LRAD3 affects APP proteolytic cleavage—an event that mostly occurs along APP’s endocytic route—the authors...  Read more
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