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Home: Papers of the Week
Annotation


Tu H, Nelson O, Bezprozvanny A, Wang Z, Lee SF, Hao YH, Serneels L, De Strooper B, Yu G, Bezprozvanny I. Presenilins form ER Ca2+ leak channels, a function disrupted by familial Alzheimer's disease-linked mutations. Cell. 2006 Sep 8;126(5):981-93. PubMed Abstract, View on AlzSWAN

  
Comments on Paper and Primary News
  Primary News: Presenilins Open Escape Hatch for ER Calcium

Comment by:  Humbert De Smedt
Submitted 14 September 2006  |  Permalink Posted 14 September 2006

Comment from H. De Smedt and the IP3-team in Leuven

Discrepancies in Two Recent Papers on ER Ca2+-leak Channels in Presenilin1, -2 Double Knockout Cells
This paper describes presenilin (PS)-related mechanisms that affect Ca2+ leak from the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). However, it points to a very different mechanism—Ca2+-channel leak properties of presenilin—to that which we have recently published: upregulation of type 1 inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate receptor (IP3R1) (Kasri et al., 2006). Although these two conclusions are not mutually exclusive, the niggling point is that both papers report very different and even sometimes opposing experimental findings. There is no obvious explanation for these discrepancies, but it is clear that all methodologies currently applied to evaluate ER Ca2+ concentrations and ER Ca2+ leak are imperfect and often lead to contradictory results. This was extensively discussed by Clark Distelhorst and Gordon Shore in their recent review of the conflicting findings regarding the...  Read more


  Primary News: Presenilins Open Escape Hatch for ER Calcium

Comment by:  Grace (Beth) Stutzmann
Submitted 14 September 2006  |  Permalink Posted 14 September 2006

This recent study by Tu et al. (2006) provides a much-needed advance toward understanding how presenilin (PS) mutations can alter ER Ca2+ signaling patterns. Cumulative data over the past several years have clearly shown that cells (both neurons and non-neuronal model systems) display marked increases in evoked Ca2+ release from the ER. However, the mechanism by which presenilin can influence Ca2+ stores has remained utterly elusive. An inherent hurdle has been the level at which the previous studies have been conducted: examining individual ER channel activity in biological preparations such as cell cultures and brain slices is rather intractable (with the exception of work from Kevin Foskett’s lab), while the biochemical and molecular biological approaches are too minimalist.

The planar lipid bilayer approach was, therefore, an ideal preparation to start addressing presenilin function in membranes and its relation to the Ca2+ signaling dysregulation seen with certain AD-linked presenilin mutations. This technique allows one to insert specific channels of interest into a...  Read more


  Primary News: Presenilins Open Escape Hatch for ER Calcium

Comment by:  Giuliano Binetti, Cristina Fasolato, Roberta Ghidoni, Paola Pizzo, Sandro Sorbi
Submitted 15 September 2006  |  Permalink Posted 18 September 2006

The work by Bezprozvanny and colleagues is unquestionably a breath of fresh air in the field of AD, especially for those interested in the “Ca2+ overload” hypothesis for the pathogenesis of this devastating disease. It is particularly interesting given that an increasing number of groups are beginning to address this issue from the point of view of the internal stores. In fact, up until now only two papers focused the reader’s attention on Ca2+ levels inside the stores using direct approaches: one mentioned by Bezprozvanny and colleagues (Kasri et al., 2006), and one coming from our group (Zatti et al., 2006), which was not mentioned. These two papers, however, show results which need to be considered in a open discussion on the Cell’s paper.

The first finding obtained by Bezprozvanny and colleagues, showing that PSs are leak channels, does not contradict our published data: we have repeatedly demonstrated that overexpression of wt-PS2 and, to a lesser extent, also of wt-PS1, reduces the ER Ca2+ level in different cell models (Zatti et al., 2004; Giacomello et al., 2005;...  Read more


  Primary News: Presenilins Open Escape Hatch for ER Calcium

Comment by:  Steven Brenner
Submitted 18 September 2006  |  Permalink Posted 19 September 2006
  I recommend this paper

I was quite interested in the regulation of calcium within the endoplasmic reticulum, and subsequent cell death apparently related to calcium toxicity. It appears the presenilin1 and 2 permit calcium regulation, and familial Alzheimer presenilin1 and 2 are not able to perform this function, probably leading to cell dysfunction and development of familial Alzheimer disease. This certainly is a lead to follow in determining the pathophysiology of sporadic Alzheimer disease. There may be multiple causes of endoplasmic reticulum dysfunction and calcium accumulation.

I performed aluminum neurotoxicity experiments on hippocampal rat neurons several years ago and found dantrolene and dimethylsulfoxide reduced cell death from aluminum toxicity, indicating aluminum toxicity may be mediated through release of calcium from intracellular stores and oxidative stress (1).

There may be multiple mechanisms disrupting calcium metabolism in the endoplasmic reticulum, including metals such as aluminum and other metals potentially capable of oxidation such as copper and iron. Oxidative...  Read more


  Primary News: Presenilins Open Escape Hatch for ER Calcium

Comment by:  Natalia Prevarskaya
Submitted 20 September 2006  |  Permalink Posted 20 September 2006

Presenilin Is a New Endoplasmic Reticulum Membrane Protein Essential for Calcium Leak
A long-standing mystery in the cell biology of calcium homeostasis is the molecular nature and the physiological role of “leak-channels” in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) membrane. Indeed, the ER is the major calcium store, and the Ca2+ filling status of the ER controls many physiological processes ranging from gene expression to apoptosis and proliferation. Furthermore, more and more papers suggest that the abnormal luminal ER calcium concentration ([Ca2+]L) and deranged calcium signaling are associated with severe human pathologies such as cancer and neurodegenerative diseases.

Under resting conditions, steady-state [Ca2+]L is determined by the dynamic equilibrium of two components: an active Ca2+ uptake mediated by ATP-dependent Ca2+ pumps of the SERCA family and passive Ca2+ efflux via leak channels. Even though this pump-leak cycle appears to be a common property of Ca2+-storing organelles, little is known about the proteins controlling the Ca2+ leak pathway. Several...  Read more


  Primary News: Presenilins Open Escape Hatch for ER Calcium

Comment by:  Ilya Bezprozvanny
Submitted 22 September 2006  |  Permalink Posted 27 September 2006
  I recommend this paper

Reply to Giuliano Binetti, Cristina Fasolato, Roberta Ghidoni, Paola Pizzo, and Sandro Sorbi
We are thankful to Giuliano Binetti and his colleagues for the high praise given our paper and for their insightful comments. We apologize for not discussing their highly relevant paper, Zatti et al., 2006 [1], which appeared while our manuscript was in the final stages of review and we did not see it prior to publication of our paper.

Binetti and colleagues raise interesting questions about the effects of presenilin FAD mutations on ER Ca2+ content and on inositol trisphosphate receptor (InsP3R)-mediated Ca2+ release. We attempted to reconcile our results with that of Zatti at al.; however, we ran into significant difficulties in interpreting their data.

Let us consider an example of two PS1 FAD mutants for which extensive datasets are available from several laboratories. Zatti et al. reported that expression of PS1-M146L resulted in reduced Ca2+ response to cyclopiazonic acid (CPA) + histamine (Fig. 1C), no change in response to CPA + bradykinin (BK) (Fig. 1B), ...  Read more


  Primary News: Presenilins Open Escape Hatch for ER Calcium

Comment by:  Massimo Stefani
Submitted 25 September 2006  |  Permalink Posted 27 September 2006
  I recommend this paper

The work by Bezprozvanny and colleagues undoubtedly adds considerably new information about the physiological function of presenilins as well as on their possible roles in AD pathogenesis at the molecular level. These data also add knowledge on the relationship among ER stress, presenilins, Aβ peptides, and derangement of calcium homeostasis in AD.

In my opinion, the research by Bezprozvanny and colleagues emphasizes the importance of the fundamental role of free calcium modifications in cells undergoing biochemical changes underlying AD. While not questioning the key role of Aβ peptides in this disease, the data add another possible dimension to the key role performed by calcium in cellular stress and death following the biochemical modifications characterizing AD. Hence, some presenilin mutations affecting γ-secretase activity can impair cell viability by increasing Aβ peptide production or by shifting the latter towards the more amyloidogenic Aβ42, resulting in Aβ oligomerization and cell membrane(s) permeabilization. Other mutations that do not affect γ-secretase...  Read more


  Comment by:  Ming Chen
Submitted 16 February 2007  |  Permalink Posted 19 February 2007
  I recommend this paper

The puzzle of how presenilin (PS) mutations cause familial AD (FAD) is of great importance because, as many believe, it may relate to the origin of sporadic AD.

Based on my critical analysis of the research data in comparison with AD features, I deduced a hypothesis for the mechanism of sporadic AD in 1998 [1]. This hypothesis, together with the report of the PS molecular structure [2], allowed me to predict that “presenilins most likely act as calcium channels in vivo and that their gene mutations may cause the disease by diminishing the Ca2+ channeling function” [3]. I also predicted that “Functional reconstitution and electrophysiological studies should directly reveal whether or not presenilins in artificial membranes could act as Ca2+ channels, and if so, whether the mutations would diminish the channeling function.” [2] It is thus encouraging to see, 8 years later, the elegant work by Tu et al. [3] showing that PS function as “calcium leak channels.” It has also shown that some FAD-linked mutations reduce the channel’s function [3].

The comments made by various...  Read more

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Western blotting was performed with anti-PS1 (MAB5232, Chemicon) and anti-PS2 mAb.

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