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Follow the Leader to Higher BACE Levels
1 March 2004. As drug discovery in AD research is shifting from inhibiting the γ-secretase to inhibiting the β-secretase (BACE), interest in the entire life cycle of BACE has grown, concomitantly. In the current online Early Edition of PNAS, Vincent Mauro, George Rogers, and Gerald Edelman at the Scripps Research Institute in La Jolla, California, shine a light on structural features of the BACE1 mRNA that might help explain why levels of the enzyme increase in Alzheimer's disease.

Most evidence to date suggests that the increases in BACE seen in the brains of AD patients arise neither from genetic mutations or polymorphisms, nor from transcriptional changes. (However, see ARF concurrent news story on Li et al., who report increased BACE mRNA levels in AD brain.) Researchers have thus begun to hunt for mechanisms that could increase translation of the protein from its mRNA, or that extend the lifespan or activity of the protein.

Mauro and colleagues have helped to open this new chapter in AD research by focusing on the leader region of the BACE mRNA. For those who haven't cracked their molecular biology texts for a few years, the leader sequence follows the promoter and operator sequences at the 5' end (i.e., the beginning) of the mRNA. By definition, the leader ends at the start codon (AUG), which signals the translational machinery that the next open reading frame (ORF) contains the code for the actual protein. A potential problem is the presence of any upstream AUGs in the leader sequence; the BACE1 mRNA, for example, contains four of the imposter AUGs (though only three ORFS, because one of the AUGs is immediately followed by a stop codon).

Theoretically, these uAUGs have the capacity to trick the ribosome and its associated cogs and gears into starting translation ahead of the actual gene, and such a false start can block translation. (This need not always be a bad thing, as the current study will demonstrate.) However, the translational engine has its own tricks to avoid false starts. Rogers et al. set out to discover what might be at work here to allow increased production of BACE in Alzheimer's disease.

When the researchers transfected the BACE1 leader—in a construct with a reporter gene—into two different cell types (rat B104 neuroblastoma and rat PC12), they found that the gene was relatively efficiently translated, though there were clear differences in the amounts translated in the two cell types. They also demonstrated that the translation was 5' cap-dependent; this indicates that the translation machinery is not assembled at an internal ribosome entry site (IRES), one of the tricks that the translation engine can use to avoid uAUGs. Deleting or mutating some or all of the uAUGs also led to differential changes in translation between the two cell types. These changes were small (two- to fourfold), but they reinforced the notion that certain cellular conditions enable these uAUGs to inhibit BACE1 translation.

Another trick that ribosomes can use to avoid getting snagged on uAUGs is "leaky scanning," whereby the ribosome surveys the nucleotides immediately before and after the AUG, and bypasses sites that look troublesome. The authors found that this was unlikely in the case of BACE, as all four uAUGs were found individually to be efficient initiators of translation when attached to a gene other than BACE1.

How, then, does BACE ever get translated if these uAUGs can hijack the translational engine before it ever reaches the BACE1 AUG? The authors argue that the most likely way is by "shunting," wherein ribosomes simply jump over large stretches of the mRNA. Shunting often occurs in areas where the molecule makes hairpin turns or loops, and could be at work in AD, the scientists propose. "For example, the translation of a uORF might to some extent inhibit BACE1 translation in the normal brain, whereas during Alzheimer’s disease, translation might increase because of a shunting mechanism that enables ribosomes to bypass the upstream AUGs," they write.

One possible mechanism for this shift is that the relative accessibility of the uORFs and the BACE ORF may change in AD, or even during aging, as a function of changes in the three-dimensional structure of the BACE1 mRNA. This hypothesis could be tested in neurons cultured from brain tissue removed from AD patients during surgery for epilepsy, the authors suggest.—Hakon Heimer.

Reference:
Rogers GW Jr, Edelman GM, Mauro VP. Differential utilization of upstream AUGs in the {beta}-secretase mRNA suggests that a shunting mechanism regulates translation. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2004 Feb 23 [Epub ahead of print] Abstract. Abstract

 
Comments on News and Primary Papers
  Comment by:  Michael Irizarry (Disclosure)
Submitted 4 March 2004  |  Permalink Posted 4 March 2004

Elevated BACE at the mRNA, protein, and/or activity levels have been found in the Alzheimer's disease (AD) and aging brain. Clarifying the mechanism of BACE alterations in AD will contribute to identifying therapeutic targets. This rigorous study further elucidates the complex cell biology of BACE, and demonstrates that BACE is susceptible to regulation at the translational level. The authors show that BACE translation is cap-dependent; translation can be inhibited by nucleotides 61-74 and 180-190 in the leader sequence and by the second of four AUG sequences in the 5' UTR, depending on the cell line.

Other factors can affect BACE levels, as well. Promoter sequences in the BACE gene include Sp1-responsive elements that regulate transcription. BACE undergoes alternative splicing, as well as multiple co- and post-translational modifications including N-glycosylation, sulfation, phosphorylation, and furin-mediated cleavage of the prodomain. Alternative BACE substrates, distribution of BACE between secretory and endosomal compartments, and cellular cholesterol metabolism may...  Read more


  Primary Papers: Differential utilization of upstream AUGs in the beta-secretase mRNA suggests that a shunting mechanism regulates translation.

Comment by:  Daniele Zacchetti
Submitted 9 March 2004  |  Permalink Posted 9 March 2004

The Rogers et al. paper (contributed by G.M. Edelman to PNAS) describes a possible mechanism of translational control in rat BACE-1 transcript. We have a paper in press in NAR (submitted September 25th 2003 and accepted March 2nd 2004) dealing with the same issue (De Pietri Tonelli et al., Nucl. Acids Res., 2004, in press). Here we would like to outline substantial differences between our paper and the Rogers et al. one that lead to diverging conclusions.

Our control experiments clearly reveal that human BACE-1 transcript contains a cryptic promoter that is unraveled by standard DNA transfection. To dissect transcriptional from translational contribution, we adopted an expression system that confines transcription to the sole cytosol. Under these conditions we demonstrate a strong inhibition of translation initiation by BACE-1 transcript leader. This result was fully confirmed by in-vitro translation. Both polysomal analysis and controls on transcript stability are in line with this conclusion. It should also pointed out that in November 2000 we submitted the sequence of a...  Read more


  Comment by:  Diana Dominguez
Submitted 9 March 2004  |  Permalink Posted 9 March 2004

Transcriptional regulation is probably the major mode of regulating eukaryotic gene expression; however, post-transcriptional mechanisms also contribute, in many instances, to determine the final amount of a gene product that is present in the cell at a given moment. In particular, the efficiency of translation of certain transcripts can be modulated, and in most cases the signals responsible for this modulation are located in the 5'-untranslated regions of the mRNAs (5'-UTRs or leader sequences, the region of the mRNA that is upstream of the translation initiation codon). The mRNA for BACE1, the enzyme involved in Alzheimer’s disease, seems to belong to this category, according to a paper published in last week’s PNAS, by first author George Rogers and colleagues at The Scripps Research Institute, La Jolla.

In 1989, Marilyn Kozak proposed a mechanism for translation initiation known as scanning model. According to this model, the small ribosomal subunit and some translation initiation factors bind at the cap structure present at the 5'-end of all cellular transcripts, and...  Read more


  Comment by:  Vincent Mauro
Submitted 11 March 2004  |  Permalink Posted 11 March 2004

Response to comment by Daniele Zacchetti
In a recent posting, Daniele Zacchetti and colleagues outlined substantial differences between the results reported in our paper and data from a paper that they have in press. Zacchetti suggests that the BACE1 transcript contains a cryptic promoter. This possibility was considered and addressed experimentally in our studies; however, our results could not be explained by cryptic promoter activity. In our transfection studies, the reporter constructs were transcribed via the strong CMV promoter and the translation efficiency of the reporter constructs containing the BACE1 5' leader was found to be up to approximately 70 percent of that of a reporter construct containing the 5' leader of the efficiently translated β-globin mRNA. In contrast, Zacchetti indicates that the BACE1 5' leader is inhibitory in their system, in which transcription occurs in the cytoplasm. If the high level of translation observed in our study was due to the production of shorter transcripts initiating at a cryptic promoter, they would have to be present at...  Read more

  Comment by:  Martin Citron
Submitted 18 March 2004  |  Permalink Posted 18 March 2004

Over the last two years, several studies have suggested that levels of BACE1 protein are elevated in sporadic Alzheimer’s disease brains (1-4). It is not completely clear if the elevation of BACE1 protein is accompanied by an elevation in BACE1 message (as suggested in 4) or not (1-3). Obviously, based on postmortem studies, one cannot decide if the observed elevation in BACE1 protein is one of numerous biochemical abnormalities in advanced AD, or if it actually contributes to the pathogenesis. Because of the limited number of available studies, we do not know how robust this increase will turn out once a large number of cases are analyzed. With all these caveats in mind, it is nonetheless tempting to speculate that translational regulation of BACE1 could play a role in AD. Along these lines, several laboratories have initiated studies to investigate BACE1 mRNA translation.

Rogers et al. (5) have now performed a detailed study of the complex 5' leader of BACE1 mRNA and how it affects translation efficiency. Analysis of the leader sequence revealed the presence of three...  Read more


  Comment by:  Stefan Lichtenthaler
Submitted 5 April 2004  |  Permalink Posted 6 April 2004
  I recommend the Primary Papers

As mentioned above in the comment posted by Martin Citron (March 18, 2004), we have a paper in EMBO Reports dealing with translational control of BACE1 expression (Lammich et al., 2004). Like Mauro et al. and De Pietri Tonelli et al., we also found that the 5'UTR (but not the 3'UTR) of BACE1 inhibits the translation of a downstream open reading frame in different cell lines. In contrast to the other two studies, we did not rely on luciferase as a reporter gene, but instead, we directly used the human BACE1 cDNA and analyzed BACE1 expression by Western blot and Northern blot analysis. An extensive mutagenesis analysis predicts that the GC-rich region of the 5'UTR forms a constitutive translation barrier, which may prevent the ribosome from efficiently translating the BACE1 mRNA.

View all comments by Stefan Lichtenthaler
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