Qualitative changes in human γ-secretase underlie familial Alzheimer's disease

  • Maria Szaruga
  • Sarah Veugelen
  • Manasi Benurwar
  • Sam Lismont
  • Diego Sepulveda-Falla
  • Alberto Lleo
  • Natalie S Ryan
  • Tammaryn Lashley
  • Nick C Fox
  • Shigeo Murayama
  • Harrie Gijsen
  • Bart De Strooper
  • Lucía Chávez-Gutiérrez

Related Research units

Abstract

Presenilin (PSEN) pathogenic mutations cause familial Alzheimer's disease (AD [FAD]) in an autosomal-dominant manner. The extent to which the healthy and diseased alleles influence each other to cause neurodegeneration remains unclear. In this study, we assessed γ-secretase activity in brain samples from 15 nondemented subjects, 22 FAD patients harboring nine different mutations in PSEN1, and 11 sporadic AD (SAD) patients. FAD and control brain samples had similar overall γ-secretase activity levels, and therefore, loss of overall (endopeptidase) γ-secretase function cannot be an essential part of the pathogenic mechanism. In contrast, impaired carboxypeptidase-like activity (γ-secretase dysfunction) is a constant feature in all FAD brains. Significantly, we demonstrate that pharmacological activation of the carboxypeptidase-like γ-secretase activity with γ-secretase modulators alleviates the mutant PSEN pathogenic effects. Most SAD cases display normal endo- and carboxypeptidase-like γ-secretase activities. However and interestingly, a few SAD patient samples display γ-secretase dysfunction, suggesting that γ-secretase may play a role in some SAD cases. In conclusion, our study highlights qualitative shifts in amyloid-β (Aβ) profiles as the common denominator in FAD and supports a model in which the healthy allele contributes with normal Aβ products and the diseased allele generates longer aggregation-prone peptides that act as seeds inducing toxic amyloid conformations.

Bibliographical data

Original languageEnglish
ISSN0022-1007
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 19.10.2015
PubMed 26481686