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Home: Papers of the Week
Annotation


Cai D, Netzer WJ, Zhong M, Lin Y, Du G, Frohman M, Foster DA, Sisodia SS, Xu H, Gorelick FS, Greengard P. Presenilin-1 uses phospholipase D1 as a negative regulator of beta-amyloid formation. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2006 Feb 7;103(6):1941-6. PubMed Abstract

  
Comments on Paper and Primary News
  Primary News: AβPP Processing—Limping Along on Lipases

Comment by:  Tobias Hartmann
Submitted 6 February 2006  |  Permalink Posted 6 February 2006

Aβ generation strongly depends on lipids. First of all, APP is a membrane protein, defining its most proximate neighboring molecules; second, substrate turnover of the secretases is regulated by membrane lipid composition; and third, Aβ peptides are signaling molecules involved in cholesterol and sphingolipid homeostasis. Now the Greengard lab adds a new stone to this mosaic. PLD1, a phospholipase, apparently binds to PS1 and absence of PLD1 increases Aβ generation. The story is complex because at least two independent pathways are involved. The first pathway modifies assembly or stability of γ-secretase and is independent of PLD1 enzymatic activity; the other one strictly depends the phospholipase activity, altering APP trafficking in the presence of PS1 and overexpressed PLD1. Moreover, it changes neurite growth, but only in the presence of PS-FAD.

Interestingly, PLD1 affects Aβ generation as much as it affects Notch cleavage. Gopal Thinakaran recently reported that NICD generation in adult cells, unlike Aβ, is produced outside of rafts. Does this indicate a role of PLD1...  Read more


  Comment by:  Tommaso Russo, ARF Advisor
Submitted 6 February 2006  |  Permalink Posted 6 February 2006
  I recommend this paper

  Primary News: AβPP Processing—Limping Along on Lipases

Comment by:  Frédéric Checler
Submitted 10 February 2006  |  Permalink Posted 10 February 2006

Several lines of evidence suggest that presenilins (PS) could contribute to both AβPP processing and trafficking to the membrane, but whether these two functions were related and intimately linked to the proposed catalytic activity of presenilins remained a matter of question. In these two back-to-back papers, the groups of Dr. Paul Greengard and Dr. Huaxi Xu interestingly suggest that phospholipase D1 (PLD1) could interact physically with PS, promote AβPP trafficking, and modulate Aβ production by apparently distinct mechanisms.

First, the group convincingly demonstrates that endogenous PS1 physically interacts with PLD1 but not with other PLD members, and binds to this phospholipase via its cytoplasmic loop domain. Apparently, PS1 recruits PLD1 in the Golgi/TGN, since PLD1 distributes within both cytosolic and Golgi/TGN compartments in wild-type ES cells, while PS1 deficiency triggers diffuse and only cytosolic localization of PLD1. Interestingly, PLD1 overexpression reduced the levels of both secreted and intracellular Aβ and increased βCTF, while PLD1 reduction by...  Read more

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REAGENTS/MATERIAL:

For staining of PLD1, cultured PS1wt or PS1–/– fibroblast cells were incubated with antibody against PLD1 [P1-P4 antibody; 1:2,000 dilution].

Antibodies used for IP and WB were: anti-PLD1 (AE596), anti-mouse PS1 (Chemicon), anti-PEN2 (CR8, Covance), Ab14 PS1 (N-terminal epitope), anti-PS1 (loop), Ab716 (nicastrin C-terminal epitope), APH1 (Zymed); anti-bAPP C-terminal antibody 369, anti-myc (Santa Cruz Biotechnology); 4G8 (Signet Laboratories, Dedham, MA) and MAB348 (Roche).

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