| Literature DB >> 30049645 |
Bing Sun1, Ping Fan1, Meijian Liao1, Yaou Zhang2.
Abstract
Autophagy dysregulation has emerged in age-related neurological diseases (Ulland et al.; Matheoud et al.; Ashkenazi et al.). Alzheimer Disease (AD), the most common progressive neurodegenerative disorder, is characterized by the accumulation of amyloid-β (Aβ) plaques caused by aberrant Aβ metabolism (Qiang et al.; Sevigny et al.; Ittner et al.). Glia constitute the brain immune system and ingest extracellular Aβ for degradation via the autophagy-lysosome machinery (Ries and Sastre; Cho et al.). Here, we model the molecular rationale for this clearance process in glioma cells by showing that miR34a inhibits autophagy-mediated disposal of Aβ fibrils and identifying two novel direct targets of miR34a, endophilin-3 and cathepsin B (CTSB, a previously reported enzyme for Aβ degrading (Sun et al.)). Bioinformatics analyses revealed that endophilin-3 expresses at a significantly lower level in neurodegenerative diseases. Its gain-of-function substantially promotes both uptake and degradation of Aβ while small interfering RNA (siRNA)-mediated endophilin-3 knockdown slowed down Aβ clearance and blocked autolysosome formation. Mechanistically, gene ontology (GO) analysis of the endophilin-3 interactome identified by mass spectrometry uncovered enriched components involved in actin binding (with the highest score). Importantly, we validated that the actin-binding protein phostensin interacted with endophilin-3. Phostensin knockdown restored endophilin-3-mediated up-regulation of Aβ clearance. Thus, our findings indicate that miR34a inhibits Aβ clearance by targeting endophilin-3 and CTSB at multiple steps including uptake and autophagy-mediated degradation.Entities:
Keywords: AD; Autophagy; Endophilin-3; MiR34a; Phostensin
Year: 2018 PMID: 30049645 DOI: 10.1016/j.bbamcr.2018.06.015
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biochim Biophys Acta Mol Cell Res ISSN: 0167-4889 Impact factor: 4.739