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Home: Papers of the Week
Annotation


Coen K, Flannagan RS, Baron S, Carraro-Lacroix LR, Wang D, Vermeire W, Michiels C, Munck S, Baert V, Sugita S, Wuytack F, Hiesinger PR, Grinstein S, Annaert W. Lysosomal calcium homeostasis defects, not proton pump defects, cause endo-lysosomal dysfunction in PSEN-deficient cells. J Cell Biol. 2012 Jul 9;198(1):23-35. PubMed Abstract

  
Comments on Paper and Primary News
  Primary News: Presenilins and Calcium: A Lysosomal Stew With Acid Controversy

Comment by:  Philipp Jaeger
Submitted 10 July 2012  |  Permalink Posted 10 July 2012

When Lee et al. published their study in 2010, it made a big impact in the field because it described a novel role for PS1 in lysosomal acidification and—even more importantly—suggested that mutations in PS1 attributed to familial AD (FAD) can cause similar defects in patients' fibroblasts. This finding would have nicely tied together PS mutations in FAD, Aβ formation, and pathologically observed lysosomal and autophagosomal deficits (Pickford et al., 2008; Nixon et al., 2005; Boland et al., 2008).

In 2011, Neely et al. published a study that explored the role of PS on autophagosomal-lysosomal degradation. It found that PS1 and PS2 are "important for overall degradation through autophagy in multiple cell types and indicate that presenilins are key regulators of autophagolysosome formation or lysosome function." However, the authors did not find signs of altered lysosomal acidification and conclude "presenilins might function at the lysosome in another manner besides lysosome acidification." Given the high-profile nature of the study by Lee et al. and the potential...  Read more


  Primary News: Presenilins and Calcium: A Lysosomal Stew With Acid Controversy

Comment by:  Ju-hyun Lee, Ralph Nixon, Devin Wolfe
Submitted 15 July 2012  |  Permalink Posted 15 July 2012

Controversy makes for better news than consensus but we need to keep in mind that there is considerable agreement about the links between PS1 and autophagy defects in AD. Four different lab groups agree that autophagy is disrupted by PS-deletion and/or PS1FAD mutations (1-4). Each of these groups also implicates defects in lysosomal function directly or indirectly as a basis for autophagy dysfunction. The one exception is the report from a fifth group led by Sam Sisodia, which concluded that PS has no role in autophagy at all (5). A careful look at that report will show that no direct assessment of autophagic protein turnover was actually made in the Zhang et al. study. The points of agreement among the four different labs are of paramount importance for AD pathogenesis and therapy since autophagy, particularly the proteolytic clearance steps, are clearly disrupted in all forms of AD and AD models (6-8). Selectively enhancing lysosomal function in AD mouse models by any of several mechanisms has been shown to have marked therapeutic effects on amyloid and lysosome pathology,...  Read more

  Primary News: Presenilins and Calcium: A Lysosomal Stew With Acid Controversy

Comment by:  Ronald Flannagan, Sergio Grinstein
Submitted 15 August 2012  |  Permalink Posted 17 August 2012
  I recommend this paper


In 2010. Lee et al. (Lee et al., 2010) reported that, as a consequence of presenilin deficiency, lysosomes fail to acidify. In their view, presenilin 1 is required for proper glycosylation of the Voa1 subunit of the vATPase, and improper glycosylation in presenilin-deficient cells precludes delivery of the vATPase to lysosomes. This is an attractive model, but the notion that single cells, let alone multicellular organisms (like people), can exist without functional lysosomes needs to be examined very carefully. Indeed, a number of groups—including our own—tested the model, but failed to replicate the findings of Nixon’s group (Coen et al., 2012; Zhang et al., 2012; Neely et al., 2011).

In a recent submission to Alzforum, Nixon and colleagues summarily dismiss these more recent findings, stating that “these groups did not actually measure lysosomal pH.” This statement is inaccurate and ill informed. In addressing our work, Nixon et al. state that we not only used the wrong...  Read more


  Primary News: Presenilins and Calcium: A Lysosomal Stew With Acid Controversy

Comment by:  Wim Annaert, Katrijn Coen
Submitted 28 August 2012  |  Permalink Posted 28 August 2012

We would like to continue this collegial, public discussion of why our respective studies are at odds. We believe such discussion is important as numerous labs independently attempt to replicate and build on published work, so that the field as a whole develops robust advances. We agree with Nixon and coworkers that "controversy makes for better news than consensus." On the other hand, some controversy is truly needed to prevent dogma. After all, the first level where consensus can be reached is the scientific data, not necessarily the interpretation of those data. Collectively, we should be able to agree at least on the scientific data at hand.

We point out here that in their comment on the three independent studies that failed to reproduce their original data (Lee et al., 2010), Nixon and coworkers make errors both in interpreting consensus and in their critique of the science.

We and others have shown that PSEN1 regulates (in a γ-secretase-independent way) organelle and protein turnover (1,2), but stating that this function is linked to autophagy defects in AD is...  Read more


  Primary News: Presenilins and Calcium: A Lysosomal Stew With Acid Controversy

Comment by:  Ju-hyun Lee, Ralph Nixon, Devin Wolfe
Submitted 13 September 2012  |  Permalink Posted 13 September 2012

We appreciate the responses of Annaert and colleagues. We believe disagreement centers on the definition of autophagy. We would respectfully submit that Annaert and Coen misunderstand fundamental concepts of autophagy and the essential role of successful lysosomal proteolysis in this process. This leads them (and Zhang et al. [3]) to believe that autophagy is completed upon formation of the autophagosome (AP) rather than after autophagosomes and their contents are digested in autolysosomes and the lysosomes are reformed (4,5). Their view of autophagy is at odds with the consensus view of the autophagy community reflected in guidelines on autophagy coauthored by 1,270 investigators in the field (6). When correctly defined as being a much broader, lysosomal degradative process, there is considerable consensus among labs that initial steps in autophagy such as autophagosome formation are normal in PS1 deficiency, but that autophagolysosome clearance by lysosomes is compromised. We reported this (1), and Neeley et al. (2) confirmed.

The main unresolved issue...  Read more

Comments on Related Papers
  Related Paper: Lysosomal proteolysis and autophagy require presenilin 1 and are disrupted by Alzheimer-related PS1 mutations.

Comment by:  Philipp Jaeger
Submitted 16 June 2010  |  Permalink Posted 16 June 2010

In this study, Lee and colleagues describe a novel function of presenilin-1 (PS1), a protein previously found and best characterized as being involved in γ-secretase cleavage of amyloid precursor protein (APP) and Notch. The authors report that PS1 knockout cells exhibit a marked reduction in autolysosomal protein degradation in response to autophagy activation induced by serum starvation. On the subcellular level, these PS1 knockout cells present a phenotype that resembles histopathological changes in Alzheimer disease brains: the accumulation of numerous membrane-bound vesicles of the autolysosomal pathway (autophagosomes, early and late autolysosomes) that are filled with amorphous, undigested, electron-dense material.

Furthermore, the authors provide evidence for impaired maturation of cathepsin D, an important lysosomal protease, in the PS1 knockout cells. They show that this deficiency is due to reduced acidification of the lysosomal lumen. In a comprehensive attempt to identify the underlying mechanistic defects, Lee and colleagues discovered the involvement of PS1 in...  Read more


  Related Paper: Lysosomal proteolysis and autophagy require presenilin 1 and are disrupted by Alzheimer-related PS1 mutations.

Comment by:  Eliezer Masliah
Submitted 16 June 2010  |  Permalink Posted 16 June 2010

The recent report from Randy Nixon and colleagues is an interesting development in the story of familial Alzheimer disease (FAD) and its molecular roots. It is established that autophagy is deficient in the neurons of Alzheimer disease patients and that increased or induced autophagy can reverse these deficits. However, until now, the underlying mechanism of the deficient autophagy has not been clear. Nixon and colleagues have identified a defect in the acidification of the lysosome organelle specifically associated with mutations in PS1 found in FAD. While PS1 mutations have long been associated with increases in Aβ, this paper identifies a function for the holoprotein as a chaperone in the ER. Furthermore, the researchers were able to identify the ATPase complex that is dissociated in PS1 mutants. These important findings could lead to new avenues of therapies that target the ATPase complex by targeting the chaperone function of PS1.

View all comments by Eliezer Masliah

  Related Paper: Lysosomal proteolysis and autophagy require presenilin 1 and are disrupted by Alzheimer-related PS1 mutations.

Comment by:  Toshiyuki Nakagawa
Submitted 16 June 2010  |  Permalink Posted 16 June 2010

Nixon and colleagues show the involvement of PS1 in autophagy/lysosomal function, and indicate that PS1 mutations in familial AD cause its impairment. We believe that the autophagic/lysosomal pathway is a key therapeutic target, and it is important to investigate further if improving its function would be beneficial for decreasing amyloid-β production in vivo.

View all comments by Toshiyuki Nakagawa

  Related Paper: Lysosomal proteolysis and autophagy require presenilin 1 and are disrupted by Alzheimer-related PS1 mutations.

Comment by:  Tony Wyss-Coray
Submitted 16 June 2010  |  Permalink Posted 16 June 2010

The study by Nixon and colleagues is an absolutely gorgeous paper. It is cell biology at its best. It is interesting that our studies manipulating beclin-1 arrive at a very similar pathology as the lack of presenilin, both in vivo and in cell culture, causing an abnormal accumulation of lysosomes and autolysosomes (see also Pickford et al., 2008). Indeed, beclin-1 may have a role not only in the initiation of autophagy, but as an increasing number of studies suggest, in vesicle trafficking as well. Whether beclin-1 and presenilins interact at some level will be interesting to explore in the future.

However, we could have a friendly debate about whether autophagy really requires presenilin as stated in the title, since the study does not actually manipulate the autophagy process. Rather, it interferes with the final degradative step and shows very nicely that presenilins are necessary for lysosomal degradation.

If autophagy is the process of manufacturing garbage bags, filling them with trash, and hauling them to the dump,...  Read more


  Related Paper: Lysosomal proteolysis and autophagy require presenilin 1 and are disrupted by Alzheimer-related PS1 mutations.

Comment by:  Ana Maria Cuervo, Ralph Nixon
Submitted 24 June 2010  |  Permalink Posted 24 June 2010

Reply to comment by Tony Wyss-Coray
Since its very early descriptions, autophagy has been defined as the lysosomal digestion of a cell’s own cytoplasmic material and not simply the sequestration of these components. Implied by this definition, and generally accepted in the autophagy field, is the central concept that lysosomal proteolysis is required to complete autophagy. This is a critical point, especially because autophagy failure in disease states, as measured by the diminished turnover of specific autophagy substrates, can result from failure of substrate sequestration, autophagosome formation, fusion of autophagosomes with a lysosome, or digestion of the substrate. Distinguishing which step in autophagy is defective in different neurodegenerative diseases has become important and usually involves evaluating not only autophagosome formation, but also autophagic flux, which reflects the balance between substrate sequestration and proteolytic clearance (1). Narrowly defining autophagy as only the sequestration step during autophagy, as proposed by Tony...  Read more
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