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Home: Papers of the Week
Annotation


Goodger ZV, Rajendran L, Trutzel A, Kohli BM, Nitsch RM, Konietzko U. Nuclear signaling by the APP intracellular domain occurs predominantly through the amyloidogenic processing pathway. J Cell Sci. 2009 Oct 15;122(Pt 20):3703-14. PubMed Abstract

  
Comments on Paper and Primary News
  Comment by:  Andre Delacourte
Submitted 28 September 2009  |  Permalink Posted 28 September 2009
  I recommend this paper

  Primary News: The AICD Test? Transgenic Mice Show Neurodegeneration

Comment by:  Andre Delacourte, ARF Advisor
Submitted 16 October 2009  |  Permalink Posted 16 October 2009

AICD as a Therapeutic Target?
AD research has produced more than 50,000 papers devoted to the clinical and molecular aspects of the disease, and a dominant theory, almost an ideology, named the amyloid cascade hypothesis. Failures of therapeutic trials based upon a modulation of Aβ secretion or Aβ polymers dissociation have raised some doubt about this hypothesis. However, the number of trials tested today is low compared to the different possibilities to control or destroy Aβ and its polymers.

This year we have observed several interesting papers showing that APP is not only the precursor of Aβ, but also a protein with powerful neurotrophic properties. Involved in these properties are different regions of the protein, at the N-terminal part (Nikolaev et al., 2009), close to the cytoplasmic membrane (Lourenco et al., 2009), and inside the cytosol, namely AICD (APP intracellular domain) (this paper). AICD is very intriguing in that the equivalent NICD from Notch has a clear function in the control of cell division, via nuclear signaling. According to some teams,...  Read more


  Primary News: The AICD Test? Transgenic Mice Show Neurodegeneration

Comment by:  Sascha Weggen
Submitted 16 October 2009  |  Permalink Posted 16 October 2009

The role and significance of the APP intracellular domain (AICD) has remained puzzling to many researchers. Eight years have passed since it was shown that the AICD domain could induce expression of heterologous reporter genes (Gao and Pimplikar, 2001; Cao and Südhof, 2001). Probably innumerable microarray gene expression screens have been performed in between. However, even today we do not have generally accepted target genes. Putative target genes such as KAI1, glycogen synthase kinase-3β (GSK3β) and neprilysin have been confirmed by some groups and vigorously disputed by others. Many groups have demonstrated nuclear translocation of AICD but this does not prove a function in transcription. Furthermore, the mechanism of transcriptional activation by AICD and the role of FE65 remain unclear, as well. AICD by itself does seem to be a weak transcriptional activator. On the other hand, it has been shown that FE65 alone can activate promoters of genes that have been claimed to be AICD target...  Read more

  Primary News: The AICD Test? Transgenic Mice Show Neurodegeneration

Comment by:  Sebastien S. Hebert
Submitted 16 October 2009  |  Permalink Posted 16 October 2009

The Debate Is (Still) On: Is AICD-mediated Signaling Relevant to AD?
Since the initial publication from Cao and Sudhof almost nine years ago (Cao and Sudhof, 2001), the AICD field has been filled with hopes, questions and contradictions.

Sanjay Pimplikar’s group provides an interesting follow-up study addressing the role of AICD in vivo. Here, the authors take advantage of their Fe65/AICD C59 transgenic mice that express, under control of the α-CamKII promoter, approximately two- 10-fold more AICD (depending on cellular fractions). They previously showed that by 2 months of age, these mice display increased GSK3β phosphorylation and Kai1 expression. Notably, no changes in GSK3β mRNA and protein levels were observed in these mice, arguing against a direct role of AICD in the gene transcription regulation of GSK3-beta.

Here, the authors propose a model where increased AICD (and Fe65) expression, through sustained GSK3β phosphorylation, causes abnormal tau hyperphosphorylation, aggregation and, ultimately, cell death. The GSK3β-tau connection per se is well...  Read more

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