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Impaired JIP3-dependent axonal lysosome transport promotes amyloid plaque pathology.

Citation
Gowrishankar, S., et al. “Impaired Jip3-Dependent Axonal Lysosome Transport Promotes Amyloid Plaque Pathology.”. The Journal Of Cell Biology, pp. 3291-3305.
Center Yale University
Author Swetha Gowrishankar, Yumei Wu, Shawn M Ferguson
Abstract

Lysosomes robustly accumulate within axonal swellings at Alzheimer's disease (AD) amyloid plaques. However, the underlying mechanisms and disease relevance of such lysosome accumulations are not well understood. Motivated by these problems, we identified JNK-interacting protein 3 (JIP3) as an important regulator of axonal lysosome transport and maturation. JIP3 knockout mouse neuron primary cultures accumulate lysosomes within focal axonal swellings that resemble the dystrophic axons at amyloid plaques. These swellings contain high levels of amyloid precursor protein processing enzymes (BACE1 and presenilin 2) and are accompanied by elevated Aβ peptide levels. The in vivo importance of the JIP3-dependent regulation of axonal lysosomes was revealed by the worsening of the amyloid plaque pathology arising from JIP3 haploinsufficiency in a mouse model of AD. These results establish the critical role of JIP3-dependent axonal lysosome transport in regulating amyloidogenic amyloid precursor protein processing and support a model wherein Aβ production is amplified by plaque-induced axonal lysosome transport defects.

Year of Publication
2017
Journal
The Journal of cell biology
Volume
216
Issue
10
Number of Pages
3291-3305
Date Published
12/2017
ISSN Number
1540-8140
DOI
10.1083/jcb.201612148
Alternate Journal
J. Cell Biol.
PMID
28784610
PMCID
PMC5626538
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