On the role of v-ATPase V0a1–dependent degradation in Alzheimer Disease

WR Williamson, PR Hiesinger - Communicative & integrative …, 2010 - Taylor & Francis
Communicative & integrative biology, 2010Taylor & Francis
Defective autophagy and lysosomal degradation are hallmarks of numerous
neurodegenerative disorders. Vesicular ATPases are intracellular proton pumps that acidify
autophagosomes and lysosomes. V0a1 is a key component of the v-ATPase that is only
required in neurons in Drosophila melanogaster. We have recently shown that loss of V0a1
in Drosophila photoreceptor neurons leads to slow, adult-onset degeneration. 1
Concurrently, Lee et al. 2 reported that V0a1 fails to localize to lysosomal compartments in …
Defective autophagy and lysosomal degradation are hallmarks of numerous neurodegenerative disorders. Vesicular ATPases are intracellular proton pumps that acidify autophagosomes and lysosomes. V0a1 is a key component of the v-ATPase that is only required in neurons in Drosophila melanogaster. We have recently shown that loss of V0a1 in Drosophila photoreceptor neurons leads to slow, adult-onset degeneration.1 Concurrently, Lee et al.2 reported that V0a1 fails to localize to lysosomal compartments in cells from Presenilin 1 knock-out cells. Together these two reports suggest that a neuronal V0a1-dependent degradation mechanism may be causally linked to Alzheimer pathology. Indeed, we now show that loss of V0a1 makes Drosophila neurons more susceptible to insult with human Alzheimer-related neurotoxic Aβ and tau proteins. Furthermore, we discuss the potential significance of the discovery of the neuron-specific degradation mechanism in Drosophila for intracellular degradation defects in Alzheimer Disease.
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