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Characterizing and exploiting the amyloid precursor protein-mint1 interaction as an Alzheimer’s disease therapeutic target

The generation of amyloid-β (Aβ) peptides through proteolytic processing of the amyloid precursor protein (APP) is a key pathogenic event in Alzheimer’s disease (AD). Aβ generation begins with APP endocytosis, which is mediated by the endocytic YENPTY sequence located in the cytoplasmic tail of APP. Mints, a family of cytosolic adaptor proteins, directly bind to the YENPTY motif of APP and facilitate APP endocytosis and amyloidogenic processing. In addition, loss of any one of the three Mint proteins decreases Aβ production in aging mouse models of AD, supporting the hypothesis that the APP-Mint interaction may provide a novel therapeutic target to selectively reduce Aβ production in AD.
Characterizing the biochemical and cellular dynamics of the APP-Mint interaction is critical for understanding Aβ generation. Thus, we generated Mint1 mutants that bind with high affinity (Mint1Y633A) or low affinity (Mint1Y549A/F610A) to APP. These Mint1 mutants exhibited profound alterations in cellular localization, APP endocytosis, and Aβ production. Therapeutically, we generated a novel cell-permeable APP mimetic peptide (APPMP) that interferes with the APP-Mint interaction. This APPMP was designed to outcompete endogenous APP binding, with a 46-fold improved affinity to Mint. Treatment of primary neurons from an AD mouse model with several cell permeable APPMP variants reduced Aβ production with minimal cellular toxicity, supporting Mints as a promising novel therapeutic target for AD.
The PTB domain of Mint1 that mediates APP binding is autoinhibited by an adjacent C-terminal α-helix. However, the molecular mechanisms underlying the relief of Mint1 autoinhibition are unclear. Since post-translational modification is one mechanism for alleviating protein autoinhibition, and Mint1 is highly regulated by phosphorylation, we performed mass spectrometry and identified several Mint1 phosphosites. In addition, we found constitutively-active Src kinase, a kinase implicated in Mint phosphorylation, enhanced APP-Mint1 binding. These results suggest that Src kinase-mediated phosphorylation of Mint1 may relieve Mint1 autoinhibition and promote APP-Mint1 interaction. Overall, this work biochemically characterized the Mint-APP interaction and how it affects amyloidogenic processing, provided a proof of concept for targeting the APP-Mint1 interaction as an AD therapeutic target, and suggested a novel mechanism for the relief of Mint1 autoinhibition.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:bu.edu/oai:open.bu.edu:2144/43256
Date02 November 2021
CreatorsHenry, Shawna M.
ContributorsHo, Angela
Source SetsBoston University
Languageen_US
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis/Dissertation

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