Abstract

Increasing evidence suggests that the low density lipoprotein receptor-related protein (LRP) affects the processing of amyloid precursor protein (APP) and amyloid beta (Abeta) protein production as well as mediates the clearance of Abeta from the brain. Recent studies indicate that the cytoplasmic domain of LRP is critical for this modulation of APP processing requiring perhaps a complex between APP, the adaptor protein FE65, and LRP. In this study, we expressed a small LRP domain consisting of the C-terminal 97 amino acids of the cytoplasmic domain, or LRP-soluble tail (LRP-ST), in CHO cells to test the hypothesis that the APP.LRP complex can be disrupted. We anticipated that LRP-ST would inhibit the normal interaction between LRP and APP and therefore perturb APP processing to resemble a LRP-deficient state. Surprisingly, CHO cells expressing LRP-ST demonstrated an increase in both sAPP secretion and Abeta production compared with control CHO cells in a manner reminiscent of the cellular effects of the APP "Swedish mutation." The increase in sAPP secretion consisted mainly of sAPPbeta, consistent with the increase in Abeta release. Further, this effect is LRP-independent, as the same alterations remained when LRP-ST was expressed in LRP-deficient cells but not when the construct was membrane-anchored. Finally, deletion experiments suggested that the last 50 amino acid residues of LRP-ST contain the important domain for altering APP processing and Abeta production. These observations indicate that there are cellular pathways that may suppress Abeta generation but that can be altered to facilitate Abeta production.

Highlights

  • § Present address: Dept. of Molecular Neurodegeneration, Institute for Physiological Chemistry and Pathobiochemistry, University of Mainz, 55099 Mainz, Germany

  • lipoprotein receptor-related protein (LRP) influences multiple steps in amyloid precursor protein (APP) processing to modulate A␤ formation (20 –22). The latter appears to involve an interaction between LRP and APP that is mediated by FE65 as an adaptor molecule linking the respective cytosolic domains to form a functional tripartite complex [24]

  • To further investigate the mechanism by which LRP modulates A␤ generation, we hypothesized that expression of the LRP cytosolic domain, LRP-soluble tail (LRP-ST), should interfere with the APP1⁄7LRP complex and in so doing, perturb normal APP processing to inhibit A␤ generation

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Summary

Introduction

Recent studies indicate that the cytoplasmic domain of LRP is critical for this modulation of APP processing requiring perhaps a complex between APP, the adaptor protein FE65, and LRP. We expressed a small LRP domain consisting of the C-terminal 97 amino acids of the cytoplasmic domain, or LRP-soluble tail (LRP-ST), in CHO cells to test the hypothesis that the APP1⁄7LRP complex can be disrupted.

Results
Conclusion
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