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Home: Papers of the Week
Annotation


Marcello E, Gardoni F, Mauceri D, Romorini S, Jeromin A, Epis R, Borroni B, Cattabeni F, Sala C, Padovani A, Di Luca M. Synapse-associated protein-97 mediates alpha-secretase ADAM10 trafficking and promotes its activity. J Neurosci. 2007 Feb 14;27(7):1682-91. PubMed Abstract

Comments on Related News
  Related News: Endocytosis Pulls α-Secretase From Synapses

Comment by:  John Cirrito
Submitted 13 May 2013  |  Permalink Posted 13 May 2013

Marcello and colleagues demonstrate that synaptic activity regulates the levels of ADAM10 on the plasma membrane. Long-term potentiation (LTP) induces ADAM10 internalization by clathrin-mediated endocytosis (CME), whereas LTD induces its insertion into the plasma membrane. There is a long history of literature linking CME and Aβ; however, those studies generally revolve around APP internalization and Aβ generation. Work from our group and others shows that synaptic activity causes CME of APP, which increases Aβ production in endosomes. The data in the Marcello paper look at this from a different angle. Here, synaptic activity increases ADAM10 internalization, which decreases its ability to cleave APP; in theory, this would then increase Aβ generation. So taken together, this suggests that synaptic activity and CME may promote Aβ generation by two parallel pathways: 1) increasing amyloidogenic processing of APP within endosomes, and 2) decreasing non-amyloidogenic processing of APP at the plasma membrane.

As with any good study, lots of questions remain. Is ADAM10...  Read more


  Related News: Endocytosis Pulls α-Secretase From Synapses

Comment by:  Paul Saftig
Submitted 13 May 2013  |  Permalink Posted 13 May 2013

A disintegrin and metalloproteinase 10 (ADAM10) is apparently one of the most critical membrane-associated proteases in the central nervous system (CNS). Its prominent role in the embryonic and adult CNS has been revealed by a number of studies. Next to APP, an increasing number of transmembrane proteins, including Notch receptors and ligands, are subject to ADAM10-mediated shedding. These shedding events are of critical importance to modulate postsynaptic function and synaptic plasticity.

Based on their previous work, Monica Di Luca´s group convincingly addressed the post-transcriptional regulation of ADAM10 in neurons. Both its transport to the postsynaptic membrane and its removal are central events to regulate synaptic functions, morphology, and the processing of important substrates, including APP. In the current study, the authors focus on the endocytosis of ADAM10 from the postsynaptic membrane. Using mainly coimmunoprecipitation experiments, they showed that, like other surface molecules, ADAM10 endocytosis depends on binding to the clathrin adaptor AP2. This binding...  Read more


  Related News: Endocytosis Pulls α-Secretase From Synapses

Comment by:  Charles Duyckaerts
Submitted 13 May 2013  |  Permalink Posted 13 May 2013

I read this paper by Marcello et al. with much interest, and I was impressed both by the number of data and the coherence of the hypothesis. It explains the role played by neuronal activity in Aβ secretion. It also sheds new light on the connection between endocytosis and Aβ.

In addition, it opens new research perspectives: The alteration of ADAM10/AP2 association in AD is currently not explained and could be related to changes in the cell membrane itself. We have, in this respect, shown that increases in membrane cholesterol favor endocytosis and production of Aβ (see Marquer et al., 2011; Cossec et al., 2010).

I'd add a word of caution on the neuropathology. Only six cases were examined at Braak stage IV—these were apparently the same cases the authors studied before (see Marcello et al., 2012). Braak stage IV pathology is common in asymptomatic aged persons. The diagnostic probability of Alzheimer's disease is only ranked as intermediate in the current diagnostic criteria (Hyman et al., 2012; Montine et al., 2012). Such cases are, by definition, free from tau pathology...  Read more

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