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Annotation


Nixon RA, Wegiel J, Kumar A, Yu WH, Peterhoff C, Cataldo A, Cuervo AM. Extensive involvement of autophagy in Alzheimer disease: an immuno-electron microscopy study. J Neuropathol Exp Neurol. 2005 Feb;64(2):113-22. PubMed Abstract

Comments on Related News
  Related News: Autophagy Prevents Inclusions, Neurodegeneration

Comment by:  Ralph Nixon
Submitted 24 April 2006  |  Permalink Posted 24 April 2006

The extreme scarcity of autophagic vacuoles in normal brain and their appearance in states of disease have previously led many to assume that autophagy in neurons is mainly an inducible process. Autophagy is solely responsible for organelle turnover, however, and the large cytoplasmic mass of neurons would suggest, therefore, that autophagy might have a significant constitutive component. The two papers by Komatsu et al. and Hara et al. have now provided elegant and definitive evidence in neurons for constitutive autophagy and have demonstrated that it is required for neuron survival. In fact, the results imply that the brain may actually be one of the tissues most vulnerable to a possible impairment of autophagy. These findings, therefore, offer insight into why neurons are preferentially victimized in diseases that disrupt the lysosomal system, even when the disease is a systemic one.

This new evidence for actively ongoing autophagy in neurons, which normally proceeds in the absence of readily detectable morphological intermediates (i.e., autophagic vacuoles), indicates...  Read more


  Related News: Autophagy Prevents Inclusions, Neurodegeneration

Comment by:  Ron Kopito
Submitted 26 April 2006  |  Permalink Posted 26 April 2006

The recent papers by the Mizushima and Tanaka labs provide compelling support of a role for autophagy in the constitutive turnover of cellular material and the importance of this process in maintenance of neuronal health. However, the conclusion that autophagy has no role in the clearance of inclusion bodies is premature. There is now strong evidence from conditional models of polyglutamine disease (e.g., Yamamoto et al., 2000 and Zu et al., 2004) to indicate that neurons can eliminate inclusion bodies and can recover from the toxic effects of aggregated protein—once expression is turned off. While there is no direct evidence yet that autophagy is required for this process, the Mizushima and Tanaka groups are now in an excellent position to test this hypothesis.

View all comments by Ron Kopito

  Related News: Autophagy Prevents Inclusions, Neurodegeneration

Comment by:  Steven Finkbeiner
Submitted 28 April 2006  |  Permalink Posted 28 April 2006

This pair of papers shows that disruption of the autophagy pathway through deletion of the genes that encode critical components of the pathway (i.e., either Atg5 or Atg7) within neurons leads to behavioral abnormalities, neurodegeneration, and inclusion formation. The papers are interesting for several reasons.

First, although features of autophagy are known to be involved in normal protein turnover and may be part of a coping response to nutrient deficiency, it also is believed to be a programmed cell death pathway. Thus, it was unclear whether disruption of this pathway would lead to greater cell death because of impaired protein turnover or greater cell survival as seen when another cell death pathway, apoptosis, is disrupted. The fact that abnormal protein accumulation and greater cell death is seen indicates that autophagy plays a critical role in normal protein turnover in mammalian systems.

Second, ubiquitin immunoreactive inclusions were found in both Atg5- and Atg7-deficient mice, despite the fact that these mice were not known to otherwise harbor...  Read more


  Related News: Death of the Neatnik: Neurons Perish When Trash Clutters Their Space?

Comment by:  Ralph Nixon
Submitted 16 June 2010  |  Permalink Posted 16 June 2010

The results in Jaeger et al. reinforce previous work from their lab (Pickford et al., 2008) showing that autophagy is a significant APP turnover pathway that can be strongly upregulated in cells. During autophagy induction, APP levels decreased somewhat more than Aβ levels, consistent with earlier data that Aβ is generated during autophagy and that efficient lysosomal proteolysis is needed to prevent the intracellular buildup of Aβ in autophagic vacuoles and lysosomes seen in AD. The authors also show that the block in autophagosome clearance in AD and AD mouse models can be exacerbated by beclin deficiency. This may be due to the impairment of early autophagy steps of autophagosome formation, which require beclin, as proposed in the paper, and it could also reflect interference with beclin-dependent late endosome functions, disturbances of which are known to disrupt amphisome formation and clearance through autophagy (1). Interestingly, the resultant buildup of APP and β-CTF in endosomal-related compartments is reminiscent of the...  Read more
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