BDNF inhibits neurodegenerative disease-associated asparaginyl endopeptidase activity via phosphorylation by AKT
Document Type
Article
Abstract
AEP is an age-dependent lysosomal asparaginyl endopeptidase that cleaves numerous substrates including tau and α-synuclein and mediates their pathological roles in neurodegenerative diseases. However, the molecular mechanism regulating this critical protease remains incompletely understood. Here, we show that Akt phosphorylates AEP on residue T322 upon brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) treatment and triggers its lysosomal translocation and inactivation. When BDNF levels are reduced in neurodegenerative diseases, AEP T322 phosphorylation is attenuated. Consequently, AEP is activated and translocates into the cytoplasm, where it cleaves both tau and α-synuclein. Remarkably, the unphosphorylated T322A mutant increases tau or α-synuclein cleavage by AEP and augments cell death, whereas phosphorylation mimetic T322E mutant represses these effects. Interestingly, viral injection of T322E into Tau P301S mice antagonizes tau N368 cleavage and tau pathologies, rescuing synaptic dysfunction and cognitive deficits. By contrast, viral administration of T322A into young α-SNCA mice elicits α-synuclein N103 cleavage and promotes dopaminergic neuronal loss, facilitating motor defects. Therefore, our findings support the notion that BDNF contributes to the pathogenesis of neurodegenerative diseases by suppressing AEP via Akt phosphorylation.
Keywords
Cell Biology, Molecular pathology, Neurodegeneration, Neuroscience
Publication Date
8-23-2018
Publication Title
JCI insight
E-ISSN
23793708
Volume
3
Issue
16
PubMed ID
30135302
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
10.1172/jci.insight.99007
Recommended Citation
Wang, Zhi Hao; Wu, Wanqiang; Kang, Seong Su; Liu, Xia; Wu, Zhiping; Peng, Junmin; Yu, Shan Ping; Manfredsson, Fredric P.; Sandoval, Ivette M.; Liu, Xuebo; Wang, Jian Zhi; and Ye, Keqiang, "BDNF inhibits neurodegenerative disease-associated asparaginyl endopeptidase activity via phosphorylation by AKT" (2018). Translational Neuroscience. 1406.
https://scholar.barrowneuro.org/neurobiology/1406