| Literature DB >> 28223919 |
Abstract
Entities:
Keywords: APP; FMRP; fragile X syndrome; neurogenesis; secretases
Year: 2017 PMID: 28223919 PMCID: PMC5293769 DOI: 10.3389/fnmol.2017.00029
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Mol Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5099 Impact factor: 5.639
Figure 1The APP Theory of FXS. FXS is a debilitating genetic disorder with no cure and few therapeutic options. Excessive signaling through mGluR5 leads to the increased translation of numerous synaptic proteins and exaggerated long-term depression (LTD) in Fmr1 mice (Huber et al., 2002; Bear et al., 2004). Two of the overexpressed proteins are APP and its metabolite amyloid-beta (Westmark and Malter, 2007), which have been well-studied in Alzheimer's disease (AD). Accumulating evidence suggests that dysregulated levels of APP and its catabolites contribute to FXS pathology. Multiple recent FXS clinical trials have failed on their primary endpoints indicating that there is a compelling need for validated biomarkers and outcome measures in the field. We hypothesize that APP and its metabolites may be viable blood-based biomarkers that are responsive to drug treatment in FXS, and that pharmaceuticals under study for the modulation of APP and amyloid-beta in AD may be viable therapeutic candidates for FXS. In mice, FMRP binds to a guanine-rich region in the coding region of App mRNA and regulates protein translation through mGluR5 signaling (Westmark and Malter, 2007). APP and amyloid-beta levels are elevated in Fmr1 brain (Westmark and Malter, 2007; Liao et al., 2008; Pasciuto et al., 2015); and behavior, dendritic spine, electrophysiology, and seizure phenotypes are rescued after genetic or pharmaceutical modulation of APP levels in Fmr1 mice (Westmark et al., 2011; Pasciuto et al., 2015). These data prompted studies in human samples to determine if APP metabolites may be viable biomarkers for drug efficacy in FXS. In humans, there are altered levels of APP metabolites in FXS blood plasma, lymphoblastoid cells, and brain (Westmark et al., 2011; Pasciuto et al., 2015; Ray et al., 2016); and sAPPα levels are responsive to drug treatment in FXS children (Erickson et al., 2014). FXS is a family of disorders where older premutation carriers can develop fragile X tremor-ataxia syndrome (FXTAS). Elderly FXTAS subjects have elevated APP mRNA in blood and APP and amyloid plaques in brain; aged FXTAS knockin mice exhibit elevated brain APP (Tassone et al., 2012; Mateu-Huertas et al., 2014; Renoux et al., 2014). Findings from the mouse and human studies prompted cell culture experiments. In human neuroblastoma cells, there is dual regulation of APP mRNA translation by the RNA binding proteins hnRNP C and FMRP, which compete for binding the guanine-rich regulatory element in the coding region of the message (Lee et al., 2010). There is increased expression of APP in Fmr1 mouse cortical neurons and mESC; and genetic, lentiviral or pharmaceutical modulation of APP rescues spine morphology and accelerated neurogenesis (Westmark and Malter, 2007; Westmark et al., 2011; Pasciuto et al., 2015; Khalfallah et al., 2017). FMRP depletion in mESC leads to increased expression of APP and Ascl1, which leads to accelerated neuronal differentiation (Khalfallah et al., 2017). Ascl1 is a transcription factor, and of interest, amyloid-beta is a putative transcription factor for APP and BACE1 (Maloney and Lahiri, 2011) and upregulates Ascl1 expression (Uchida et al., 2007). Thus, enhanced transcriptional and translational events mediated by Ascl1, APP and amyloid-beta in the absence of FMRP could drive accelerated neurogenesis in FXS. The FXS mESC model developed by the Bardoni laboratory could be utilized to study cell signaling events at the earliest stage of FXS pathology, including APP synthesis and processing, and be developed into a high throughput assay for drug testing including secretase modulators. Bench-to-bedside plans would need to include validation of identified targets and drugs in future animal and human studies. Overall, this novel mESC model offers a timely tool to study the early events of FXS pathogenesis including the expression and processing of APP.