| Literature DB >> 32457796 |
Gwendolyn E Kaeser1, Jerold Chun1.
Abstract
The recent identification of somatic gene recombination(SGR) in human neurons affecting the well-known Alzheimer's disease (AD) pathogenic gene, amyloid precursor protein (APP), has implications for the normal and the diseased human brain. The amyloid hypothesis has been the prevailing theory for sporadic AD (SAD) pathogenesis since the discovery of APP gene involvement in familial AD and Down syndrome. Yet, despite enormous scientific and clinical effort, no disease-modifying therapy has emerged. SGR offers a novel mechanism to explain AD pathogenesis and the failures of amyloid-related clinical trials, while maintaining consistency with most aspects of the amyloid hypothesis and additionally supporting possible roles for tau, oxidative stress, inflammation, infection, and prions. SGR retro-inserts novel "genomic complementary DNAs" (gencDNAs) into neuronal genomes and becomes dysregulated in SAD, producing numerous mosaic APP variants, including DNA mutations observed in familial AD. Notably, SGR requires gene transcription, DNA strand-breaks, and reverse transcriptase (RT) activity, all of which may be promoted by well-known AD risk factors and provide a framework for the pursuit of new SGR-based therapeutics. In this perspective, we review evidence for APP SGR in AD pathogenesis and discuss its possible relevance to other AD-related dementias. Further, SGR's requirement for RT activity and the relative absence of AD in aged HIV -infected patients exposed to RT inhibitors suggest that these Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved drugs may represent a near-term disease-modifying therapy for AD.Entities:
Keywords: APP; Alzheimer’s disease; amyloid cascade hypothesis; amyloid precursor protein; gencDNA; mosaicism; somatic gene recombination
Year: 2020 PMID: 32457796 PMCID: PMC7221065 DOI: 10.3389/fgene.2020.00390
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Genet ISSN: 1664-8021 Impact factor: 4.599
FIGURE 1Structure of a gencDNA. (A) The APP genomic locus and the exons within a full-length cDNA. (B) Two types of gencDNAs were identified in both RNA and DNA: full-length brain-specific isoforms (APP-751 and APP-695) and truncated sequences with intra-exonic junctions and microhomology domains (R3/16 and R6/18). Known pathogenic SNVs were also identified in some variants (in-frame examples include Australian, London, French, Indiana, and A673V; shown in red). Figure modified from Lee et al. (2018).
FIGURE 2The somatic gene recombination (SGR) hypothesis for SAD. (1) Dysregulated SGR of APP through the insertion of reverse-transcribed mRNA leads to mosaic genomic APP variants that result in variant proteins with a number of downstream effects. Other gene loci may also be impacted by SGR. (2) In keeping with the Aβ-hypothesis, some variants would be transported to the cellular membrane, where wild-type, SNV-containing, and gencDNA variant proteins may or may not be cleaved by the traditional secretase pathways to produce heterogeneous extracellular plaques and altered extracellular signaling pathways. (3) Intracellular variants may also accumulate without the need for secretase cleavage. The accumulation of intraneuronal Aβ variants likely increases cellular (oxidative) stress, leading to an increase in DNA strand breaks, the insertion of gencDNAs, and the production of variants, creating a feed-forward loop that promotes a disease. (4) Variant proteins may also act as “seeds,” which alter the conformation of wild-type APP or other gencDNA variant proteins to create more aggregates. These may be propagated from cell-to-cell and cause prion-like transfer and neurodegeneration through the possible involvement of prion protein receptors (PrP). (5) Various stimuli (e.g., APOE4, infection, and cellular stress) could promote SGR via actions at multiple steps, including increased APP transcription.