학술논문

Accumulation of amyloid precursor protein C-terminal fragments triggers mitochondrial structure, function, and mitophagy defects in Alzheimer's disease models and human brains
Original Paper
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Acta Neuropathologica. January 2021, Vol. 141 Issue 1, p39, 27 p.
Subject
Analysis
Health aspects
Brain -- Analysis -- Health aspects
Deferiprone -- Health aspects -- Analysis
Protein C -- Health aspects -- Analysis
EDTA -- Analysis -- Health aspects
Advertising executives -- Analysis -- Health aspects
Alzheimer's disease -- Analysis -- Health aspects
Amyloid beta-protein -- Health aspects -- Analysis
Ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid -- Analysis -- Health aspects
Language
English
ISSN
0001-6322
Abstract
Author(s): Loan Vaillant-Beuchot [sup.1], Arnaud Mary [sup.1], Raphaëlle Pardossi-Piquard [sup.1], Alexandre Bourgeois [sup.1], Inger Lauritzen [sup.1], Fanny Eysert [sup.1], Paula Fernanda Kinoshita [sup.1] [sup.2], Julie Cazareth [sup.1], Céline Badot [sup.1], [...]
Several lines of recent evidence indicate that the amyloid precursor protein-derived C-terminal fragments (APP-CTFs) could correspond to an etiological trigger of Alzheimer's disease (AD) pathology. Altered mitochondrial homeostasis is considered an early event in AD development. However, the specific contribution of APP-CTFs to mitochondrial structure, function, and mitophagy defects remains to be established. Here, we demonstrate in neuroblastoma SH-SY5Y cells expressing either APP Swedish mutations, or the [beta]-secretase-derived APP-CTF fragment (C99) combined with [beta]- and [gamma]-secretase inhibition, that APP-CTFs accumulation independently of A[beta] triggers excessive mitochondrial morphology alteration (i.e., size alteration and cristae disorganization) associated with enhanced mitochondrial reactive oxygen species production. APP-CTFs accumulation also elicit basal mitophagy failure illustrated by enhanced conversion of LC3, accumulation of LC3-I and/or LC3-II, non-degradation of SQSTM1/p62, inconsistent Parkin and PINK1 recruitment to mitochondria, enhanced levels of membrane and matrix mitochondrial proteins, and deficient fusion of mitochondria with lysosomes. We confirm the contribution of APP-CTFs accumulation to morphological mitochondria alteration and impaired basal mitophagy in vivo in young 3xTgAD transgenic mice treated with [gamma]-secretase inhibitor as well as in adeno-associated-virus-C99 injected mice. Comparison of aged 2xTgAD and 3xTgAD mice indicates that, besides APP-CTFs, an additional contribution of A[beta] to late-stage mitophagy activation occurs. Importantly, we report on mitochondrial accumulation of APP-CTFs in human post-mortem sporadic AD brains correlating with mitophagy failure molecular signature. Since defective mitochondria homeostasis plays a pivotal role in AD pathogenesis, targeting mitochondrial dysfunctions and/or mitophagy by counteracting early APP-CTFs accumulation may represent relevant therapeutic interventions in AD.