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Enrichment of presenilin 1 peptides in neuronal large dense-core and somatodendritic clathrin-coated vesicles
Efthimiopoulos, S; Floor, E; Georgakopoulos, A; Shioi, J; Cui, W; Yasothornsrikul, S; Hook, V Y; Wisniewski, T; Buee, L; Robakis, N K
Presenilin 1 is an integral membrane protein specifically cleaved to yield an N-terminal and a C-terminal fragment, both membrane-associated. More than 40 presenilin 1 mutations have been linked to early-onset familial Alzheimer disease, although the mechanism by which these mutations induce the Alzheimer disease neuropathology is not clear. Presenilin 1 is expressed predominantly in neurons, suggesting that the familial Alzheimer disease mutants may compromise or change the neuronal function (s) of the wild-type protein. To elucidate the function of this protein, we studied its expression in neuronal vesicular systems using as models the chromaffin granules of the neuroendocrine chromaffin cells and the major categories of brain neuronal vesicles, including the small clear-core synaptic vesicles, the large dense-core vesicles, and the somatodendritic and nerve terminal clathrin-coated vesicles. Both the N- and C-terminal presenilin 1 proteolytic fragments were greatly enriched in chromaffin granule and neuronal large dense-core vesicle membranes, indicating that these fragments are targeted to these vesicles and may regulate the large dense-core vesicle-mediated secretion of neuropeptides and neurotransmitters at synaptic sites. The presenilin 1 fragments were also enriched in the somatodendritic clathrin-coated vesicle membranes, suggesting that they are targeted to the somatodendritic membrane, where they may regulate constitutive secretion and endocytosis. In contrast, these fragments were not enriched in the small clear-core synaptic vesicle or in the nerve terminal clathrin-coated vesicle membranes. Taken together, our data indicate that presenilin 1 proteolytic fragments are targeted to specific populations of neuronal vesicles where they may regulate vesicular function. Although full-length presenilin 1 was present in crude homogenates, it was not detected in any of the vesicles studied, indicating that, unlike the presenilin fragments, full-length protein may not have a vesicular function.
PMID: 9832134
ISSN: 0022-3042
CID: 878022
Cell-type-specific enhancement of amyloid-beta deposition in a novel presenilin-1 mutation (P117L)
Wegiel J; Wisniewski HM; Kuchna I; Tarnawski M; Badmajew E; Popovitch E; Kulczycki J; Dowjat WK; Wisniewski T
The presenilin-1 (PS1) gene mutation (Pro117Leu), recently identified in a Polish family is characterized by the earliest reported onset (from 24-31 years) of Alzheimer disease (AD) and a very short duration of disease (4-6 years). The neuropathology of 2 subjects with this PS1 mutation (ages at death: 35 and 37 years) was compared to four Down syndrome (DS) patients (mean age at death: 62 years) and 4 sporadic AD patients (mean age at death: 79 years with a mean duration of disease of 18 years). The Polish familial AD (FAD) patients showed a marked increase in the amyloid burden of 2 6-fold in most areas of the brain. The entorhinal cortex was an exception where the amyloid burden was similar in each category of patient. Some brain regions of the Polish FAD patients showed a massive increase of amyloid, such as the molecular layer of the cerebellum where a 7- and 25-fold increase was noted, compared with DS and sporadic AD patients respectively. The cerebellar vessel amyloid burden was also greatly increased in the FAD patients, reflecting a vascular compartment specific increase of amyloid beta deposition. The presence of this PS1 mutation has an even greater effect on both vascular and parenchymal amyloid deposition, than the overexpression of the amyloid beta precursor protein present in DS patients, suggesting that PS mutations can be a critical factor determining amyloid deposition
PMID: 9737546
ISSN: 0022-3069
CID: 7843
The prionoses and other conformational disorders
Wisniewski T; Aucouturier P; Soto C; Frangione B
The basic pathogenesis of numerous neurodegenerative disorders is now thought to be related to abnormal protein conformation. The common theme in all these diseases is the conversion of a normal cellular and/or circulating protein into an insoluble, aggregated, beta-sheet rich form which is deposited in the brain, sometimes in the form of amyloid. These deposits are toxic and produce neuronal dysfunction and death. The most common of these illnesses is Alzheimer's disease (AD), in which a central event is the conversion of the normal soluble amyloid beta (sA beta) peptide to amyloid beta (A beta) within neuritic plaques and cerebral vessels. A unique category of the conformational conditions are prion related diseases (or prionoses), where the etiology is thought to be related to conversion of the normal prion protein, PrPC, into an infectious and pathogenic form, PrPSc. In the case of AD and the prionoses, the conformational change can be influenced by the presence of mutations in various gene products, as well as by chaperone proteins. Apolipoprotein E is thought to act as such a chaperone protein in AD; however, among the prionoses such a protein has been hypothesized to exist only by indirect evidence and is called 'protein X'. Our growing understanding of the mechanisms involved in this category of diseases, raises the possibility of therapeutic approaches based directly on the prevention and reversal of pathologic protein conformation
PMID: 9818059
ISSN: 1350-6129
CID: 7855
Brain structure specific enhancement of amyloidosis beta in a novel presenilin-1 mutation (P117L) [Meeting Abstract]
Wegiel, J; Wisniewski, HM; Kuchna, I; Tarnawski, M; Badmajew, E; Kulczycki, J; Dowjat, KW; Wisniewski, T
ISI:000073611400182
ISSN: 0022-3069
CID: 97620
A novel Polish presenilin-1 mutation (P117L) associated with a very early onset of familial Alzheimer's disease [Meeting Abstract]
Wisniewski, T; Dowjat, WK; Buxbaum, JD; Kulczycki, J; Lojkowska, W; Wegiel, J; Wisniewski, HM; Frangione, B
ISI:000073240900675
ISSN: 0028-3878
CID: 97627
Light and electron microscopic immunolocalization of presenilin 1 in abnormal muscle fibers of patients with sporadic inclusion-body myositis and autosomal-recessive inclusion-body myopathy
Askanas V; Engel WK; Yang CC; Alvarez RB; Lee VM; Wisniewski T
Sporadic inclusion-body myositis (s-IBM) is the most common progressive muscle disease of older persons. The muscle biopsy demonstrates mononuclear cell inflammation and vacuolated muscle fibers containing paired helical filaments and 6- to 10-nm fibrils, both resembling those of Alzheimer disease brain and Congo red positivity. The term hereditary inclusion-body myopathies (h-IBMs) designates autosomal-recessive or autosomal-dominant disorders with muscle biopsies cytopathologically similar to s-IBM but without inflammation. Vacuolated muscle fibers of both s-IBM and the h-IBMs contain accumulations of several 'Alzheimer-characteristic proteins' including beta-amyloid protein and beta-amyloid precursor protein, and their paired helical filaments are composed of phosphorylated tau. We used six well characterized antibodies against several residues of presenilin 1 (PS1) to immunostain muscle biopsies of 12 patients with s-IBM, 5 patients with autosomal-recessive inclusion-body myopathy, and 16 normal and disease controls. Seventy to eighty percent of the vacuolated muscle fibers of both s-IBM and autosomal-recessive inclusion-body myopathy had inclusions that were strongly PS1-immunoreactive, which by immunoelectron microscopy localized mainly to paired helical filaments and 6- to 10-nm filaments. None of the control biopsies had PS1-positive inclusions characteristic of the s- and h-IBM abnormal muscle fibers. Mutations of the newly discovered PS1 gene are responsible for early-onset familial Alzheimer disease (AD), and PS1 is abnormally accumulated in sporadic and familial AD brain. Our study provides the first demonstration of PS1 abnormality in non-neural tissue and in diseases other than AD and suggests that the cytopathogenesis in AD brain and IBM muscle may share similarities
PMCID:1858253
PMID: 9546349
ISSN: 0002-9440
CID: 7491
Alpha B-crystallin is associated with intermediate filaments in astrocytoma cells
Wisniewski T; Goldman JE
Alpha B-crystallin, a major protein of the vertebrate lens and a member of the small heat shock protein family, is expressed in non-lenticular tissues, including the central nervous system, where it is found mainly in glia. In Rosenthal fibers (RF), astrocytic inclusions that accumulate in Alexander's Disease, alpha B-crystallin is found with hsp27 and skeins of intermediate filaments (IF) of the GFAP and vimentin types. We have investigated the association between IF and alpha B-crystallin in a human astrocytoma cell line, U-373MG, which expresses alpha B-crystallin. Cytoskeletal preparations contained alpha B-crystallin, and a filamentous pattern in which alpha B-crystallin co-localized with GFAP and vimentin by double label immunofluorescence. Immuno-electronmicroscopy confirmed the localization to IF. GFAP isolated from bovine brain and re-assembled, was associated with alpha B-crystallin. Thus, a proportion of alpha B-crystallin in astroglia is associated with IF, and this association may be critical in the formation of RF
PMID: 9482251
ISSN: 0364-3190
CID: 7857
A novel Polish presenilin-1 mutation (P117L) is associated with familial Alzheimer's disease and leads to death as early as the age of 28 years
Wisniewski T; Dowjat WK; Buxbaum JD; Khorkova O; Efthimiopoulos S; Kulczycki J; Lojkowska W; Wegiel J; Wisniewski HM; Frangione B
The majority of early-onset familial Alzheimer's disease (FAD) is associated with mutations in the presenilin-1 (PS1) gene. We describe a novel Polish PS1 mutation of Pro117Leu, associated with the earliest average age of onset and death so far reported in a PS-linked, FAD kindred. Human kidney 293 and mouse neuroblastoma N2a cells were stably transfected with wild-type and PS1 P117L. There was a significant increase in the amyloid beta42/40 ratio in the N2a P117L PS1 transfected cells compared with N2a transfected with wild-type PS1. What role PS has in the pathogenesis of AD remains to be determined, however, the severity of the clinical picture associated with this PS1 mutation stresses the importance of presenilin
PMID: 9507958
ISSN: 0959-4965
CID: 7856
Compound heterozygous genotype is associated with protracted juvenile neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis [Case Report]
Wisniewski KE; Zhong N; Kaczmarski W; Kaczmarski A; Kida E; Brown WT; Schwarz KO; Lazzarini AM; Rubin AJ; Stenroos ES; Johnson WG; Wisniewski TM
We present a clinicopathological study and the first molecular genetic analysis of a family with 2 siblings affected by a rare, protracted form of juvenile neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis (JNCL). Molecular genetic studies showed that both siblings, in addition to being heterozygous for the 1.02-kb CLN3 deletion, a common mutation in JNCL, also had a G-to-A missense mutation at nucleotide 1,020 of the CLN3 cDNA sequence on the non-1.02-kb deletion chromosomes. This point mutation resulted in a substitution of glutamic acid by lysine at position 295 of the CLN3 protein. Thus, a single point mutation at residue 295 of the CLN3 protein in protracted JNCL may underlie the phenotype in this form, which differs from that in classic JNCL
PMID: 9450775
ISSN: 0364-5134
CID: 7858
HB-GAM, a novel amyloid associated protein, is present in prion related disorders and other cerebral amyloidoses
Chapter by: Lalowski M; Baumann M; Rauvala H; Frangione B; Wisniewski T
in: Progress in Alzheimer's and Parkinson's diseases by Fischer A [Eds]
New York : Plenum, 1998
pp. 121-131
ISBN: 0306459035
CID: 4982