| Literature DB >> 28163673 |
Susann Ludewig1, Martin Korte2.
Abstract
The amyloid precursor protein (APP) is well known to be involved in the pathophysiology of Alzheimer's disease (AD) via its cleavage product amyloid ß (Aß). However, the physiological role of APP, its various proteolytic products and the amyloid precursor-like proteins 1 and 2 (APLP1/2) are still not fully clarified. Interestingly, it has been shown that learning and memory processes represented by functional and structural changes at synapses are altered in different APP and APLP1/2 mouse mutants. In addition, APP and its fragments are implicated in regulating synaptic strength further reinforcing their modulatory role at the synapse. While APLP2 and APP are functionally redundant, the exclusively CNS expressed APLP1, might have individual roles within the synaptic network. The proteolytic product of non-amyloidogenic APP processing, APPsα, emerged as a neurotrophic peptide that facilitates long-term potentiation (LTP) and restores impairments occurring with age. Interestingly, the newly discovered η-secretase cleavage product, An-α acts in the opposite direction, namely decreasing LTP. In this review we summarize recent findings with emphasis on the physiological role of the APP gene family and its proteolytic products on synaptic function and plasticity, especially during processes of hippocampal LTP. Therefore, we focus on literature that provide electrophysiological data by using different mutant mouse strains either lacking full-length or parts of the APP proteins or that utilized secretase inhibitors as well as secreted APP fragments.Entities:
Keywords: amyloid precursor protein; amyloid precursor-like protein; long-term potentiation; synaptic plasticity
Year: 2017 PMID: 28163673 PMCID: PMC5247455 DOI: 10.3389/fnmol.2016.00161
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Mol Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5099 Impact factor: 5.639
Electrophysiological characteristics of the APP protein family members and their proteolytic domains.
| APPsα | Adult, male Sprague-Dawley rats | (1) Reduction of LTP in DG by up to 50% | Taylor et al., |
| Intrahippocampal infusion of | (2.1) Enhancement of LTP at the PP-DG by 11 nm rec APPsa | ||
| (1) Antibodies targeting endogenous APPsα | (2.2) Increase of NMDA-R EPSC amplitude at PP-DG by 0.03 nm APPsα | ||
| (2) Recombinant APPsα (0.3, 3, 11, 330, 1000, 3300 nm) | (3.1) Reduction of LTP in DG | ||
| (3) α-Secretase inhibitor tapi-1 (500 nm) | (3.2) Reduction of tetanus-evoked NMDA-R currents in DG cells | ||
| Acute hippocampal slices of Sprague-Dawley rats (young = 3–6 months and aged = 24–27 months) | Increases NMDA-R activation in aged animals Rescues age-related LTP deficits No effect on basal synaptic transmission or glutamate release (PPF) | Moreno et al., | |
| Exogenous, recombinant APPsα application (0.1–1–10 nm) | Dose-dependent increase of NMDA-R related ISE | ||
| Rat OHCs treated for up to 24 h with APPsα (0.03–0.1–1–10 nm) | 1 nm appsα reduces NMDA toxicity Facilitation of LTP expression in aged animals by induction of plasticity-associated immediate early genes | Ryan et al., | |
| Acute hippocampal slices of adult, APP/APLP2 conditional DKO mice | Rescue of impaired LTP | Hick et al., | |
| Bath application of recombinant APPsα (10 nm) | No effect on basal synaptic transmission | ||
| APPsß | Acute hippocampal slices of adult, APP/APLP2 conditional DKO mice | No rescue of impaired LTP | Hick et al., |
| Bath application of recombinant APPsß (50 nm) | No effect on basal synaptic transmission | ||
| Aß1–15 | Acute hippocampal slices of adult, c57bl6 mice | fM Aß1–15 enhances PTP and LTP | Lawrence et al., |
| Bath application of aß1-15 (50 fM, 50 pM) | pM Aß1–15 has no effect on PTP or LTP | ||
| Aη-α | Acute hippocampal slices of adult Swiss-mice | Unaltered baseline synaptic transmission | Willem et al., |
| Bath application of recombinant aη-α | Significant reduction of hippocampal LTP | ||
| Aη-ß | Acute hippocampal slices of adult Swiss-mice | Unaltered baseline synaptic transmission | Willem et al., |
| No effect on hippocampal LTP | |||
| Bath application of recombinant Aη-ß | |||
| APP-JCasp domain (NH2 terminal region of APP) | Intracellular delivered to presynaptic terminals of acute hippocampal slices of adult WT and APP KO mice | Strong reduction in basal synaptic transmission in WT, not in APP KO | Fanutza et al., |
| Increases PPF and synaptic frequency facilitation in WT, not in APP KO | |||
| Reduction of the rate of vesicle depletion without affecting vesicle recycling | |||
| AICD | Acute hippocampal slices of APPΔCT15/APLP2-DM: mice lacking the last 15 amino acids of APP including YENPTY motif and APLP2 | Decreased potentiation during PTP and LTP Trend toward decreased L-LTP Increased basal synaptic transmission Unaltered PPF and STP | Klevanski et al., |
| APP | Murine OHCs of P0 APP-KO mice | No difference in I/O characteristic | Weyer et al., |
| Unaltered short term plasticity | |||
| APLP1 | APLP1-deficient adult male mice | Vnencak et al., | |
| Enhanced excitatory transmission | |||
| Decreased paired pulse inhibition of population spikes (decreased network inhibition) | |||
| Unchanged STP and LTP | |||
| APLP2 | Acute hippocampal slices of young (1–2 months) and aged (10–12 months) APLP2 deficient mice | Unchanged input-output characteristics across ages to controls | Midthune et al., |
| Unaffected PPF remains | |||
| No alterations in LTP | |||
| APP/APLP2 | Acute hippocampal slices of conditional adult DKO mice | Pronounced deficit in induction and maintenance of LTP | Hick et al., |
| Impaired PPF | |||
| Unaltered basal synaptic transmission | |||
| Unchanged spontaneous synaptic mEPSCS in CA1 | |||
| No differences in NMDA-r subunit composition | |||
| Acute hippocampal slices of 16–24 days old conventional DKO mice | Increased PPF and synaptic frequency facilitation Decreased mEPSCs frequency and increased MEPSC decay time | Fanutza et al., | |
| ADAM-10 (α-secretase) | (1) Acute hippocampal slices of adult, female, conditional adam-10 KO | (1) Unaltered basic synaptic transmission impaired short-term synaptic plasticity strongly impaired LTP | Prox et al., |
| (2) | (2) Electrographic seizure in one of five mutants |
Figure 1Proteolytic processing of APP. Full-length APP can be processed by α-, ß-, η-, and γ-secretases in three different pathways. The left panel illustrates the η-secretase processing of APP. Initially η-secretase cleavage releases the soluble APPsη, while CTFη remains embedded in the membrane. It is further processed by α- or ß-secretase at the extracellular side generating An-α or An-ß. Shedding of CTFη within the transmembrane domain by γ-secretase yields the APP intracellular domain (AICD) containing the highly conserved interaction motif (YENPTY, yellow box) or the short extracellular peptides Aß seen in the amyloidogenic or p3 within the non-amyloidogenic pathway. The non-amyloidogenic pathway depicted in the middle is driven by the α-secretase liberating APPsα in the extracellular space. Subsequently processing of membrane tethered CTFα by γ-secretase generates the p3 peptide and cytoplasmic AICD. The right panel illustrates APP processing in the amyloidogenic pathway by ß-secretase resulting initially in the release of the APPsß ectodomain. Following γ-secretase shedding of the membrane tethered CTFß the Aß peptide is secreted along with AICD in the cytoplasm.
Figure 2Role of the APP protein family at the synapse. (A) The extracellular domains of APP/APLPs mediate cell-cell adhesion in trans supporting synaptic connectivity. APP and APLP2 are mainly located in the Golgi apparatus and trans Golgi network. When integrated in the plasma membrane, APP and APLP2 show basal adhesive characteristics, while the proportion of plasma membrane APLP1 is higher and it's insertion dynamic. (B) Homodimerized APP might function as a cell-surface G-protein coupled receptor which is recognized by Aß and initiates signaling as well as neurotransmitter release by activation of calcium channels. Aß, Aß1-15, and potential also APPsα induce an AChR-dependent signal facilitating glutamate release via an increase in presynaptic calcium concentration. APP and APLP2 are mainly implicated in presynaptic function and their intracellular domains are associated with proteins of the synaptic vesicle release machinery regulating the vesicle content in the presynaptic active zone. (C) High frequency stimulation increases APP ectodomain shedding that might be linked to the activation of mGluRs or AChRs. High amounts of APPsα facilitate the function of NMDA-Rs by increasing the agonist D-serine or by induction of immediate early genes as well as signaling pathways like that of CamKII to support synaptic plasticity.