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  • Review
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Regulation of distinct pools of amyloid β-protein by multiple cellular proteases

Abstract

Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is a progressive, age-related neurodegenerative disorder characterized by extracellular and intracellular deposition of the amyloid β-protein (Aβ). The study of rare, familial forms of AD has shown that sustained elevations in the production of Aβ (either all forms or specific pathogenic variants thereof) are sufficient to trigger the full spectrum of cognitive and histopathological features of the disease. Although the exact cause or causes remain unknown, emerging evidence suggests that impairments in the clearance of Aβ, after it is produced, may underlie the vast majority of sporadic AD cases. This review focuses on Aβ-degrading proteases (AβDPs), which have emerged as particularly important mediators of Aβ clearance. A wide variety of proteases that – by virtue of their particular regional and subcellular localization profiles – define distinct pools of Aβ have been identified. Different pools of Aβ, in turn, may contribute differentially to the pathogenesis of the disease. The study of individual AβDPs, therefore, promises to offer new insights into the mechanistic basis of AD pathogenesis and, ultimately, may facilitate the development of effective methods for its prevention or treatment or both.

Review

Introduction

A defining feature of Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is the pathological accumulation of proteinaceous deposits, known as amyloid ‘plaques’, in brain regions important for learning, memory, and cognition [1]. The primary constituent of amyloid plaques is the amyloid β-protein (Aβ), a complex mixture of peptides ranging from 37 to 43 amino acids in length [1]. Aβ is a fragment of the amyloid precursor protein (APP) derived by the successive action of two proteolytic activities known as β- and γ-secretase [2]. β-secretase, which effects the first step in Aβ production, cleaves primarily at a single site, thereby determining the N-terminus of Aβ [3]. γ-secretase, by contrast, can cleave at many possible positions, resulting in Aβ peptides of varying length because of heterogeneity at their C-termini [2].

Because excessive Aβ deposition is a strict requirement for a definitive diagnosis of AD, Aβ has quite naturally been proposed to play a causal role in the disease. In formal terms, the ‘amyloid cascade hypothesis’ postulates that Aβ accumulation is sufficient to trigger the full spectrum of neuropathological and cognitive sequelae characterizing AD [4]. The main contours of this hypothesis have been validated by a large body of evidence. However, over time, the amyloid cascade hypothesis has undergone several salient refinements. For example, initially, amyloid plaques per se were considered to be the primary culprits in the pathogenesis of AD. As experimental data accumulated, however, the focus began to shift to other forms of aggregated Aβ, including Aβ fibrils, Aβ protofibrils, and, finally, Aβ oligomers [5]. Likewise, findings from human molecular genetics showed that the relative abundance of longer forms of Aβ (that is, Aβ42), rather than merely the total amount of Aβ, was another critical determinant of AD pathogenesis [6, 7].

In this review, we focus on a further, relatively unexplored refinement of the amyloid cascade hypothesis – namely, the idea that certain pools of Aβ are more relevant than others to the pathogenesis of AD. As we discuss, different pools of Aβ are determined to a large extent by different Aβ-degrading proteases (AβDPs) [8]. Hence, the study of AβDPs offers a unique window into a poorly understood aspect of AD pathogenesis.

Pools of amyloid β-protein are determined by multiple factors

Broadly speaking, a ‘pool’ of Aβ can be defined as a spatially distinct subset of the total population of Aβ molecules [8]. In conceptualizing the factors contributing to a given pool of Aβ, it is instructive to consider the ‘life history’ of individual Aβ molecules. Each will be characterized by a unique time and location of initial production (that is, ‘birth’) and of ultimate destruction or deposition (that is, ‘death’). The time between these two events (that is, ‘life span’) is another key factor, as it is a principal determinant of the extent to which a given Aβ molecule can translocate [8].

Extending this analogy, a pool of Aβ can be likened to the population of a country. Some individuals will be born in the country, some will immigrate from elsewhere. Some individuals will die in the country, others will emigrate and die elsewhere. The country’s total population is thus determined by multiple factors: the relative rates of birth and death, the average life span of individuals who are born and die in the country, the immigration and emigration rates, and the duration of stay of migrants. By analogy, a given pool of Aβ is defined by the rates of production and catabolism (or deposition) of Aβ, by the average life span of resident Aβ molecules, and by the rates of trafficking of Aβ into and out of the pool. Each of these factors is considered, in turn, below.

Amyloid β-protein production

The production of Aβ is arguably the most stable factor contributing to different pools of Aβ. The sites of Aβ production are, by necessity, determined by the colocalization of APP and β- and γ-secretase. As confirmed by a recent study [9], the levels of APP, β-secretase (BACE1), and γ-secretase (presenilin 1) differ only modestly between different brain regions. APP (specifically the amyloidogenic 695 isoform [10]) and BACE1, however, are expressed predominantly in neurons, making neurons the principal locus of Aβ generation [11].

The vast majority of Aβ is produced intracellularly, primarily within early and late endosomes [1114]. Although there is some evidence that Aβ can be produced at the cell surface [15], β- and γ-secretase are both aspartyl proteases with acidic pH optima [2]; thus, the activity of these proteases in non-acidified compartments is likely to be low.

In sum, Aβ production takes place within a limited subset of subcellular compartments, primarily within neurons. As such, the production of Aβ represents an important, albeit relatively homogeneous, determinant of different pools of Aβ.

Trafficking of amyloid β-protein

Whereas the sites of Aβ production are relatively limited, Aβ deposition is known to occur in multiple, diverse loci, including the extracellular space, endosomes, lysosomes, and multivesicular bodies and even within mitochondria and cytosol [16, 17]. Aβ is well established to be secreted into the extracellular space constitutively, via recycling endosomes and, to a lesser extent, via production at the cell surface [14]. A portion of endosomes are normally trafficked to lysosomes, suggesting that a significant fraction of newly generated Aβ is likely directed to this compartment [18].

Accruing evidence suggests that Aβ can also accumulate within mitochondria [19]. Although the exact pathway or pathways taken to reach mitochondria have not been delineated with certainty, it is notable that all components of the presenilin/γ-secretase complex have been detected within mitochondria [20], and recent evidence suggests that some de novo production may occur there [21].

Accumulation of Aβ in the cytosol is another widely reported yet counterintuitive finding [17, 18]. Translocation of Aβ into the cytosol has been proposed to take place via passive leakage from intracellular compartments such as lysosomes [22] or endoplasmic reticulum (ER) vesicles [23]. Although Aβ that reaches the cytosol is expected to be rapidly degraded by insulin-degrading enzyme (IDE) or the proteasome or both [23], this pathway might account for a small but important pool of Aβ that may arise under certain pathological conditions. Supporting this view, several studies in cultured cells indicate that cytosolic Aβ is particularly cytotoxic [24, 25].

Transcellular transport of Aβ is another important topic that is only partially understood. Here, it is important to recognize that very little ‘free’ Aβ exists outside the cell and that most is bound to various Aβ-binding proteins [26]. Among the more important of these are apolipoproteins E and J (ApoE and ApoJ) [26]. ApoE is the strongest known genetic risk factor for AD [27], and a human molecular genetic study recently identified ApoJ as an important factor as well [28], suggesting that transcellular trafficking of Aβ is particularly relevant to AD pathogenesis. Although there are numerous hypotheses about the physiological function or functions of ApoE and ApoJ, there is general agreement that they are involved in the clearance of Aβ, likely by mediating the delivery of extracellular Aβ to intracellular compartments responsible for Aβ degradation (that is, lysosomes) [27].

In conclusion, although the sites of Aβ production are relatively fixed, the peptide can be transported to a wide range of intra- and trans-cellular destinations, both by simple diffusion and by specific trafficking pathways, usually mediated by Aβ-binding molecules.

Amyloid β-protein degradation

Ultimately, all Aβ peptides undergo one of only two possible fates: proteolytic degradation or permanent deposition into plaques or other insoluble aggregates. Since only a tiny fraction of all Aβ becomes permanently deposited, the overwhelming majority is degraded by one protease or another [29]. Proteolytic degradation, therefore, directly determines the life span of most Aβ molecules and, by extension, also determines the extent to which they can be trafficked away from sites of production.

Aβ can be degraded by a large number of proteases, each of which exhibits distinctive regional, cellular, and subcellular localization profiles [8]. The complete list of AβDPs has been reviewed elsewhere [8, 29, 30], but for illustrative purposes, we provide examples of proteases with particularly divergent subcellular localizations in Table 1. In general, more than one AβDP is present within each subcellular compartment [8]. This is particularly evident in the case of the extracellular space, where numerous AβDPs are known to exist [8]. Thus, for a given subcellular compartment, the relative contribution of each protease to the overall level of Aβ will depend on additional factors, such as the relative abundance and specific catalytic efficiencies of each protease.

Table 1 Examples of amyloid β-protein-degrading proteases with distinct localization profiles

Certain AβDPs also have the potential to impact the relative abundance of more pathogenic forms of Aβ (for example, Aβ42) relative to more inert forms (for example, Aβ40). For example, cathepsin B (CatB) exhibits carboxypeptidase activity that enables it to convert Aβ42 to Aβ40 [31], as has also been reported for angiotensin-converting enzyme [32]. Similarly, cathepsin D (CatD) has been shown to degrade Aβ42 and Aβ40 with markedly different kinetics, resulting in elevated cerebral Aβ42/40 ratios in CatD-null mice [33].

When the above factors are taken together, a picture emerges wherein different pools of Aβ are defined by spatially distinct subcellular compartments containing multiple AβDPs acting in concert to regulate the local concentration of Aβ. Diffusion and active transport between compartments also play important roles, such that local levels of Aβ are defined primarily by the joint action of transport and degradation (as opposed to production).

Evidence that specific pools of amyloid β-protein differentially impact the pathogenesis of Alzheimer’s disease

Despite several decades of intensive study of the molecular pathogenesis of AD, remarkably little work has investigated which pools of Aβ are most pathogenic. Several factors appear to have contributed to the relative dearth of information on this topic. The first is the technical matter of detecting distinct pools of Aβ, particularly within distinct intracellular compartments. It is exceptionally difficult to unambiguously detect intracellular pools of Aβ with antibodies, given the problem of cross-reactivity with intracellular APP, the C-terminal fragments of APP, and catabolites of Aβ [17]. Second, extracellular pools of Aβ tend to be so overwhelmingly dominant, particularly when plaques are present, that it complicates the reliable detection of changes in intracellular pools of Aβ. Finally, most studies of AD have been performed either in post-mortem human brain tissue or in mouse models that overexpress full-length APP harboring AD-causing mutations, yet neither of these experimental paradigms involves the selective manipulation of individual pools of Aβ.

Evidence from post-mortem tissues

Notwithstanding the many caveats that apply, the analysis of post-mortem tissues has yielded several insights into the possible relevance of different pools of Aβ to AD pathogenesis. Perhaps the most remarkable is the observation that there are many cognitively normal individuals whose brains are nonetheless replete with extracellular deposits of Aβ [34]. It is difficult to fully assimilate this finding with evidence from animal models showing that extracellular, soluble forms of Aβ (particularly oligomers) can contribute directly to memory deficits that, notably, can be rapidly reversed by antibodies or other Aβ-lowering treatments [35]. Along similar lines, immunotherapies that can be presumed to reduce the extracellular pool of free Aβ have shown little or no evidence of efficacy on cognitive outcomes in clinical trials. These results do not preclude the idea that the extracellular pool of Aβ plays some role in the etiology of AD, but they do cast doubt on the popular notion that elevations in extracellular Aβ are sufficient to produce mnemonic deficits in real time in humans.

Beyond these negative results, a considerable body of work has implicated intracellular pools of Aβ in the pathogenesis of AD-type pathology in post-mortem tissue [17]. For example, intracellular Aβ has been shown to correlate with neurofibrillary tangle-bearing neurons [16, 36]. Accumulation of intracellular Aβ has also been shown to precede extracellular plaque formation in patients with Down syndrome [37], suggesting that it is an early event. Despite extensive evidence for intraneuronal Aβ accumulation in AD and related disorders from post-mortem tissues [17], these studies suffer from several shortcomings. First, there is considerable uncertainty about whether Aβ can be distinguished from APP and Aβ catabolites by immunohistochemical methods. Second, in general, they fail to define the precise sub cellular location of the intracellular Aβ.

Evidence from animal models over expressing different pools of amyloid β-protein

Some of the most compelling evidence supporting the view that particular pools of Aβ can be especially pathogenic comes from comparison of the relatively few animal models that have explicitly directed Aβ exclusively to one compartment. For example, LaFerla and colleagues [38] developed multiple transgenic mouse lines over expressing human Aβ42 exclusively in the cytosol of neurons. The resulting mice exhibited extensive neuronal degeneration, apoptosis, reactive gliosis, and premature lethality. Neurodegeneration and apoptosis have been noticeably absent in most other animal models over expressing APP.

The striking phenotype triggered by over expression of cytosolic Aβ is in contradistinction to other models that have directed Aβ expression to other compartments. McGowan and colleagues [39] developed novel lines of mice capable of selectively producing either Aβ40 or Aβ42 principally in the extracellular space. This was achieved by expressing a fusion protein composed of the British familial dementia-associated BRI gene with the Aβ sequence fused in frame at its C-terminus [40]. The BRI-Aβ fusion protein is then cleaved by furin-like proteases, resulting in the production of Aβ principally within the secretory pathway [40]. These mice show ample amyloid plaque pathology and plaque-associated gliosis [39] but, like most animal models over expressing holo-APP, exhibit no evidence of neurodegeneration. Taken together, the findings emerging from animal models expressing Aβ in distinct compartments strongly support the hypothesis that distinct pools of Aβ differ markedly in their ability to trigger the full complement of pathological features characterizing AD. In general, these finding suggest that intracellular pools of Aβ are more pathogenic than the extracellular pool. However, additional clarity about which intracellular pools of Aβ are pathophysiologically meaningful to AD pathogenesis is needed.

Evidence from animal models targeting spatially distinct amyloid β-protein-degrading proteases

A complementary approach to investigating different pools of Aβ is manipulating AβDPs that are normally localized to or artificially targeted to distinct cellular compartments. For this approach, as for the approach of overexpressing different pools of Aβ, only a limited amount of data are currently available. In addition, the extent to which different compartments – and specific brain regions – can be selectively manipulated depends in large part on the exact localization profiles of the proteases under investigation. A further caveat stems from the fact that all proteases regulate many different substrates besides Aβ, so interpretation of results is not always straightforward. Nevertheless, the few studies taking this approach have already generated several significant findings, and there is strong reason to believe that additional studies of this type will yield additional insights into the role of specific pools of Aβ in the pathogenesis of AD.

Cellular studies

Studies in cultured cells cannot model all or even most features of AD pathology, but they do provide a readily manipulated, reductionistic system with which to study the impact of different AβDPs on distinct pools of Aβ. For example, over expression of either of two spatially distinct AβDPs – IDE or neprilysin (NEP) (Table 1) – in APP-overexpressing cells was found to differentially impact biochemically distinct pools of Aβ [41]. Over expression of IDE resulted in a marked reduction in detergent-soluble pools of intracellular and extracellular Aβ as well as detergent-insoluble (formic acid-extracted) intracellular pools of Aβ [41]. By contrast, expression of NEP reduced the detergent-insoluble pool of Aβ markedly, but only partially reduced extracellular Aβ, and did not affect intracellular soluble Aβ [41]. These results show not only that different pools of Aβ can indeed be selectively targeted by different AβDPs but also that there is some degree of correspondence between traditional biochemical Aβ fractionation methods and different pools of Aβ – even in the absence of amyloid plaque formation.

In another cell-based study, chimeric forms of NEP were engineered to be selectively targeted to different compartments, including ER, trans-Golgi network, early/recycling endosomes, or lipid rafts. Then, after viral infection of primary neurons, the relative impact on extracellular Aβ and on guanidinium-extractable intracellular Aβ was assessed [42]. Wild-type NEP was found to be the most effective at reducing both pools, suggesting that NEP is normally operative in multiple cellular compartments [42]. The ER-targeted NEP chimera was the least effective at degrading the extracellular pool of Aβ, but intracellular pools of Aβ40 were reduced with equal efficiency by all the NEP chimeras. Interestingly, only marginal reductions were observed on intracellular Aβ42 [42]. In light of more recent work showing that NEP is localized primarily at the plasma membrane [43], it may be that extracellular NEP activity can influence intracellular Aβ levels to a certain degree, perhaps during the process of internalization of extracellular Aβ.

Animal models over expressing spatially distinct amyloid β-protein-degrading proteases

As we have seen, in cultured cells, over expressing spatially distinct proteases can result in differential effects on biochemically distinguishable pools of Aβ. What, then, is the impact in vivo? As with so many other approaches we have considered thus far, only a limited number of studies have been conducted to date. Transgenic mice over expressing either IDE or NEP under the control of the same promoter were developed and subsequently crossed to the J20 line of APP transgenic mice [44]. The IDE transgenic line expressed approximately 100% more IDE than wild-type mice, and the APPxIDE double-transgenic line exhibited an approximately 50% reduction in both soluble and insoluble Aβ40 and Aβ42 at 8 to 10 months of age, together with reduced plaque burden and associated microgliosis and astrocytosis. The NEP line, by contrast, expressed approximately 700% more NEP than wild-type mice, and the APPxNEP cross exhibited essentially no amyloid pathology or associated pathology up to 14 months of age, together with an 80% to 95% reduction in soluble and insoluble pools of Aβ at 10 months of age [44]. So, does this study suggest that the pools of Aβ regulated by NEP are more important for AD-type pathology than those regulated by IDE? Unfortunately, the conclusions that can be drawn from this study are complicated by the fact that very different levels of expression of the different proteases were obtained [44].

Beyond this single study, we are aware of no studies that explicitly compare and contrast the effect of overexpressing different AβDPs in animal models of AD. We believe that such studies are warranted and, properly implemented, are likely to yield important insights into the relative impact of different pools of Aβ to AD pathogenesis. However, a lesson to be learned from the aforementioned study is that there is a ‘ceiling’ of protease overexpression beyond which no Aβ deposition will occur; thus, it may be more informative to assess the relative impact of different proteases at lower levels of overexpression.

Animal models with genetic deletion of spatially distinct amyloid β-protein-degrading proteases

The study of animal models with genetic deletion of different AβDPs provides important insights that cannot be derived from overexpression paradigms. Genetic deletion of a protease normally involved in Aβ catabolism can provide relatively quantitative information about the degree to which a protease normally contributes to the overall economy of Aβ [45]. At the same time, the study of knockout mice can also be constrained by such factors as premature lethality, compensatory changes, and/or peripheral consequences that can indirectly impact Aβ metabolism independently of direct effects on Aβ catabolism [45]. Nevertheless, several important lessons have emerged from this category of investigation. The first lesson is that deletion of specific AβDPs can result not only in quantitative effects on the overall economy of Aβ, as would be expected, but also in qualitative differences, both in the kinds of amyloid aggregates that are impacted and in the specific types of pathology that are observed. For example, deletion of NEP in the J9 line of APP transgenic mice resulted not only in a doubling of steady-state Aβ levels, as expected, but also in the emergence of cerebral amyloid angiopathy [46], a pathological feature that was not present in the same line expressing normal levels of NEP. Deletion of NEP in a different APP transgenic line (APP23) resulted in the same doubling of overall Aβ levels, but in this case oligomeric forms of Aβ were found to be increased significantly [47].

Two other AβDPs present in lysosomes –CatB and CatD – have been genetically deleted in animal models of AD and serve as illustrative points of comparison with the latter studies. For example, deletion of CatB in APP transgenic mice resulted in no significant changes in steady-state Aβ levels but nevertheless triggered increased thioflavin-positive plaque formation [31]. It is important to recognize that, although CatB is a lysosomal protease, it is also secreted into the extracellular space and is known to accumulate in amyloid deposits [31].

CatD, by contrast, is perhaps the best example of an AβDP that exclusively regulates a single pool of Aβ. This is so because CatD is an aspartyl protease and therefore active only within the acidic environment present in lysosomes. CatD is the principal acidic AβDP in brain homogenates [48], and genetic deletion of CatD reduces Aβ degradation in soluble brain extracts by more than 95% at pH 4.5 [33]. In the absence of APP over expression, genetic deletion of CatD results in a number of novel consequences. First, whereas diethylamine-extractable (‘soluble’) pools of endogenous Aβ are relatively unchanged, CatD-null mice exhibit large increases in guanidinium-extractable (‘insoluble’) Aβ [33]. The absolute magnitude of the latter increases exceeds those obtained following deletion of IDE, NEP, or even both proteases simultaneously [33]. Deletion of CatD also results in highly consistent increases in the cerebral Aβ42/40 ratio, an effect that is attributable to (aggregation-independent) differential degradation of Aβ42 and Aβ40 monomers [33]. CatD-null mice die prematurely [49], thus limiting the extent to which its role can be studied in animal models of AD. However, deletion of CatD in the Tg2576 line of APP transgenic mice leads to pronounced intracellular deposition of Aβ by 3 weeks of age (MA Leissring, unpublished observations). Moreover, deletion of just one copy of CatD results in a significantly earlier onset of amyloid deposits in Tg2576 mice (MA Leissring, unpublished observations).

Conclusions

We have reviewed multiple lines of evidence that, collectively, strongly support the view that AD pathogenesis is differentially impacted by distinct pools of Aβ. Different pools of Aβ, in turn, are regulated to a substantial extent by proteolytic degradation. Given that a wide array of different AβDPs exist, each with distinctive localization profiles, there is a compelling reason to believe that additional insights into the relative importance of different pools of Aβ will be gained by continued study of specific AβDPs.

Based on the strengths and weaknesses of the studies we have reviewed, several recommendations can be made to help future progress in this area become maximally impactful. First, although studies of individual proteases are helpful, significantly greater insight can be gained from the comparison of different proteases within the same animal model. In the absence of side-by-side comparisons, there will always be ambiguity as to whether observed effects are generalizable. Along these lines, there would appear to be particular value in investigating the consequences of targeting of the same protease to different subcellular compartments in vivo, as was done, for example, in cultured neurons with NEP [47].

A second recommendation is to extend the study of spatially distinct AβDPs to animal models featuring aspects of AD pathology besides amyloid deposition. It seems likely that some pools of Aβ might be differentially important for tau pathology, for instance. Therefore, it would be especially helpful to investigate the consequences of different AβDPs in animal models that develop both amyloid and tau pathology.

Our final recommendation is simply to encourage researchers to continue work in this important area. The proteases involved in Aβ production have been intensively investigated for almost two decades, yet no effective therapeutic agents have emerged from these studies. By contrast, AβDPs have not been investigated to anywhere near the same extent, even though they appear to be far more relevant to the more common, late-onset forms of AD. As we hope this review has made clear, there is abundant evidence that specific pools of Aβ are, indeed, differentially involved in AD pathogenesis; different pools, in turn, are regulated to a large extent by different AβDPs. Future work in this area not only promises to provide further insight into the fundamental mechanisms of AD pathogenesis – an important enough goal to warrant further research – but also is anticipated to directly inform the relative probability of success of future therapies and, furthermore, to identify important factors (for example, protease inhibitors in clinical use) that may modulate risk for AD.

Abbreviations

AD:

Alzheimer’s disease

ApoE:

Apolipoprotein E

ApoJ:

Apolipoprotein J

APP:

Amyloid precursor protein

Aβ:

Amyloid β-protein

AβDP:

Amyloid β-protein-degrading protease

BACE1:

Beta-site APP-cleaving enzyme-1

BRI:

British familial dementia-associated protein

CatB:

Cathepsin B

CatD:

Cathepsin D

ER:

Endoplasmic reticulum

IDE:

Insulin-degrading enzyme

NEP:

Neprilysin.

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Acknowledgments

This work was supported by an Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center Pilot Award (from NIH Grant P50 AG016574) to MAL.

Note

This article is part of a series on Abeta Catabolism, edited by Elizabeth Eckman. Other articles in this series can be found at http://alzres.com/series/Abeta_catabolism

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Correspondence to Malcolm A Leissring.

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Leissring, M.A., Turner, A.J. Regulation of distinct pools of amyloid β-protein by multiple cellular proteases. Alz Res Therapy 5, 37 (2013). https://doi.org/10.1186/alzrt194

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