Aβ Secretion and Plaque Formation Depend on Autophagy

Per Nilsson(RIKEN Center for Brain Science), Krishnapriya Loganathan(RIKEN Center for Brain Science), Misaki Sekiguchi(RIKEN Center for Brain Science), Yukio Matsuba(RIKEN Center for Brain Science), Kelvin K. Hui(RIKEN Center for Brain Science), Satoshi Tsubuki(RIKEN Center for Brain Science), Motomasa Tanaka(RIKEN Center for Brain Science), Nobuhisa Iwata(Nagasaki University), Takashi Saito(RIKEN Center for Brain Science), Takaomi C. Saido(RIKEN Center for Brain Science)
Cell Reports
October 1, 2013
Cited by 462Open Access
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Abstract

Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a neurodegenerative disease biochemically characterized by aberrant protein aggregation, including amyloid beta (Aβ) peptide accumulation. Protein aggregates in the cell are cleared by autophagy, a mechanism impaired in AD. To investigate the role of autophagy in Aβ pathology in vivo, we crossed amyloid precursor protein (APP) transgenic mice with mice lacking autophagy in excitatory forebrain neurons obtained by conditional knockout of autophagy-related protein 7. Remarkably, autophagy deficiency drastically reduced extracellular Aβ plaque burden. This reduction of Aβ plaque load was due to inhibition of Aβ secretion, which led to aberrant intraneuronal Aβ accumulation in the perinuclear region. Moreover, autophagy-deficiency-induced neurodegeneration was exacerbated by amyloidosis, which together severely impaired memory. Our results establish a function for autophagy in Aβ metabolism: autophagy influences secretion of Aβ to the extracellular space and thereby directly affects Aβ plaque formation, a pathological hallmark of AD.


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