The neuronal sortilin-related receptor SORL1 is genetically associated with Alzheimer disease.

  • Ekaterina Rogaeva
  • Yan Meng
  • Joseph H Lee
  • Yongjun Gu
  • Toshitaka Kawarai
  • Fanggeng Zou
  • Taiichi Katayama
  • Clinton T Baldwin
  • Rong Cheng
  • Hiroshi Hasegawa
  • Fusheng Chen
  • Nobuto Shibata
  • Kathryn L Lunetta
  • Raphaelle Pardossi-Piquard
  • Christopher Bohm
  • Yosuke Wakutani
  • L Adrienne Cupples
  • Karen T Cuenco
  • Robert C Green
  • Lorenzo Pinessi
  • Innocenzo Rainero
  • Sandro Sorbi
  • Amalia Bruni
  • Ranjan Duara
  • Robert P Friedland
  • Rivka Inzelberg
  • Wolfgang Hampe
  • Hideaki Bujo
  • You-Qiang Song
  • Olav M Andersen
  • Thomas E Willnow
  • Neill Graff-Radford
  • Ronald C Petersen
  • Dennis Dickson
  • Sandy D Der
  • Paul E Fraser
  • Gerold Schmitt-Ulms
  • Steven Younkin
  • Richard Mayeux
  • Lindsay A Farrer
  • St George-Hyslop Peter

Abstract

The recycling of the amyloid precursor protein (APP) from the cell surface via the endocytic pathways plays a key role in the generation of amyloid beta peptide (Abeta) in Alzheimer disease. We report here that inherited variants in the SORL1 neuronal sorting receptor are associated with late-onset Alzheimer disease. These variants, which occur in at least two different clusters of intronic sequences within the SORL1 gene (also known as LR11 or SORLA) may regulate tissue-specific expression of SORL1. We also show that SORL1 directs trafficking of APP into recycling pathways and that when SORL1 is underexpressed, APP is sorted into Abeta-generating compartments. These data suggest that inherited or acquired changes in SORL1 expression or function are mechanistically involved in causing Alzheimer disease.

Bibliographical data

Original languageGerman
Article number2
ISSN1061-4036
Publication statusPublished - 2007
pubmed 17220890