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Home: Papers of the Week
Annotation


Inomata H, Nakamura Y, Hayakawa A, Takata H, Suzuki T, Miyazawa K, Kitamura N. A scaffold protein JIP-1b enhances amyloid precursor protein phosphorylation by JNK and its association with kinesin light chain 1. J Biol Chem. 2003 Jun 20;278(25):22946-55. PubMed Abstract

Comments on Paper and Primary News
  Comment by:  Eddie Koo, ARF Advisor
Submitted 11 April 2003  |  Permalink Posted 11 April 2003

In a detailed and carefully performed study, Inomata and colleagues provide some intriguing new observations about what JIP-1b may be doing when it interacts with AβPP. Last year, several labs reported that AβPP interacts with JIP-1b, the JNK interacting scaffold protein (see Tare et al., 2002; Matsuda et al., 2002). It was never clear what this interaction meant. Now, the authors provide new data to indicate that this interaction facilitates JNK phosphorylation of AβPP, although, parenthetically, JNK does not require JIP-1b to phosphorylate AβPP. More interesting is the second observation in the study: The authors suggest that JIP-1b may be a required intermediate to bring AβPP together with kinesin light chain (KLC1). Goldstein and colleagues reported two years ago that AβPP directly interacts with kinesin light chain 1 (KLC1), and that AβPP may be the molecule that links certain axonal cargo vesicles to the kinesin machinery (see   Read more
Comments on Related News
  Related News: Aβ's Shadowy Sibling—What Becomes of the Intracellular Domain?

Comment by:  Eddie Koo, ARF Advisor
Submitted 5 February 2003  |  Permalink Posted 5 February 2003

In this paper, Scheinfeld and colleagues from the D’Adamio laboratory extended their work on the interaction between JIP-1 and APP. JIP is JNK-interacting protein-1, which several groups, including the D’Adamio lab, last year showed to bind to the cytoplasmic tail of APP. Those labs showed that JIP-1 interacted with APP and that overexpression of JIP-1 altered APP processing and metabolism (principally dealing with APP phosphorylation and secretion and Aβ release).

An area of APP biology that has taken center stage recently is the potential role in nuclear signal transduction. This idea has been too inviting by analogy to Notch signaling ever since γ-secretase was shown to cleave both APP and Notch, the latter to generate the nuclear signaling-competent NICD fragment. Evidence has been building in the last two years that the APP cognate of NICD, coined AID or AICD, indeed has signaling properties. First shown in a reporter system by Cao and Sudhof, this observation was confirmed by the finding of APP translocation into the nucleus, stabilizing of AID/AICD by Fe65, and...  Read more


  Related News: Aβ's Shadowy Sibling—What Becomes of the Intracellular Domain?

Comment by:  Tommaso Russo, ARF Advisor
Submitted 5 February 2003  |  Permalink Posted 5 February 2003

The observation that AICD and Fe65 are nuclear proteins (Minopoli et al., 2001; Kimberly et al., 2001; Cao & Sudhof, 2001; Gao & Pimplikar, 2001) and the similar proteolytic processing of APP and Notch have suggested the hypothesis that APP and its intracellular partners have some role in gene regulation. The paper of Scheinfeld et al. reports elegant data supporting this hypothesis and introducing new possible players in the scenario, namely JIP-1 and JNK. However, the exclusion of JIP-1 from the nucleus renders very unlikely the possibility that JIP-1 regulates transcription by interacting with gene promoters.

I don't think that the extensive use of the experimental approach based on Gal4-dependent transcription of a reporter gene can give enlightening results. In fact, it became evident that a huge amount...  Read more


  Related News: Aβ's Shadowy Sibling—What Becomes of the Intracellular Domain?

Comment by:  Eddie Koo, ARF Advisor
Submitted 11 April 2003  |  Permalink Posted 11 April 2003

In a detailed and carefully performed study, Inomata and colleagues provide some intriguing new observations about what JIP-1b may be doing when it interacts with AβPP. Last year, several labs reported that AβPP interacts with JIP-1b, the JNK interacting scaffold protein (see Tare et al., 2002; Matsuda et al., 2002). It was never clear what this interaction meant. Now, the authors provide new data to indicate that this interaction facilitates JNK phosphorylation of AβPP, although, parenthetically, JNK does not require JIP-1b to phosphorylate AβPP. More interesting is the second observation in the study: The authors suggest that JIP-1b may be a required intermediate to bring AβPP together with kinesin light chain (KLC1). Goldstein and colleagues reported two years ago that AβPP directly interacts with kinesin light chain 1 (KLC1), and that AβPP may be the molecule that links certain axonal cargo vesicles to the kinesin machinery (see   Read more
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