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65 Publications visible to you, out of a total of 65

Abstract (Expand)

The beta-secretase BACE1 is a central drug target for Alzheimer's disease. Clinically tested, BACE1-directed inhibitors also block the homologous protease BACE2. Yet, little is known about physiological BACE2 substrates and functions in vivo. Here, we identify BACE2 as the protease shedding the lymphangiogenic vascular endothelial growth factor receptor 3 (VEGFR3). Inactivation of BACE2, but not BACE1, inhibited shedding of VEGFR3 from primary human lymphatic endothelial cells (LECs) and reduced release of the shed, soluble VEGFR3 (sVEGFR3) ectodomain into the blood of mice, non-human primates and humans. Functionally, BACE2 inactivation increased full-length VEGFR3 and enhanced VEGFR3 signaling in LECs and also in vivo in zebrafish, where enhanced migration of LECs was observed. Thus, this study identifies BACE2 as a modulator of lymphangiogenic VEGFR3 signaling and demonstrates the utility of sVEGFR3 as a pharmacodynamic plasma marker for BACE2 activity in vivo, a prerequisite for developing BACE1-selective inhibitors for a safer prevention of Alzheimer's disease.

Authors: A. Schmidt, B. Hrupka, F. van Bebber, S. Sunil Kumar, X. Feng, S. K. Tschirner, M. Assfalg, S. A. Muller, L. S. Hilger, L. I. Hofmann, M. Pigoni, G. Jocher, I. Voytyuk, E. L. Self, M. Ito, K. Hyakkoku, A. Yoshimura, N. Horiguchi, R. Feederle, B. De Strooper, S. Schulte-Merker, E. Lammert, D. Moechars, B. Schmid, S. F. Lichtenthaler

Date Published: 18th Jun 2024

Publication Type: Journal

Abstract (Expand)

Proteins delivered by endocytosis or autophagy to lysosomes are degraded by exo- and endoproteases. In humans 15 lysosomal cathepsins (CTS) act as important physiological regulators. The cysteine proteases CTSB and CTSL and the aspartic protease CTSD are the most abundant and functional important lysosomal proteinases. Whereas their general functions in proteolysis in the lysosome, their individual substrate, cleavage specificity, and their possible sequential action on substrate proteins have been previously studied, their functional redundancy is still poorly understood. To address a possible common role of highly expressed and functional important CTS proteases, we generated CTSB-, CTSD-, CTSL-, and CTSBDL-triple deficient (KO) human neuroblastoma-derived SH-SY5Y cells and CTSB-, CTSD-, CTSL-, CTSZ and CTSBDLZ-quadruple deficient (KO) HeLa cells. These cells with a combined cathepsin deficiency exhibited enlarged lysosomes and accumulated lipofuscin-like storage material. The lack of the three (SH-SY5Y) or four (HeLa) major CTSs caused an impaired autophagic flux and reduced degradation of endocytosed albumin. Proteome analyses of parental and CTS-depleted cells revealed an enrichment of cleaved peptides, lysosome/autophagy-associated proteins, and potentially endocytosed membrane proteins like the amyloid precursor protein (APP), which can be subject to endocytic degradation. Amino- and carboxyterminal APP fragments accumulated in the multiple CTS-deficient cells, suggesting that multiple CTS-mediated cleavage events regularly process APP. In summary, our analyses support the idea that different lysosomal cathepsins act in concert, have at least partially and functionally redundant substrates, regulate protein degradation in autophagy, and control cellular proteostasis, as exemplified by their involvement in the degradation of APP fragments.

Authors: Lisa Gallwitz, Florian Bleibaum, Matthias Voss, Michaela Schweizer, Katharina Spengler, Dominic Winter, Frederic Zöphel, Stephan Müller, Stefan Lichtenthaler, Markus Damme, Paul Saftig

Date Published: 22nd May 2024

Publication Type: Journal

Abstract (Expand)

Heterozygous mutations in the TBK1 gene can cause amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and frontotemporal dementia (FTD). The majority of TBK1-ALS/FTD patients carry deleterious loss-of-expression mutations, and it is still unclear which TBK1 function leads to neurodegeneration. We investigated the impact of the pathogenic TBK1 missense variant p.E696K, which does not abolish protein expression, but leads to a selective loss of TBK1 binding to the autophagy adaptor protein and TBK1 substrate optineurin. Using organelle-specific proteomics, we found that in a knock-in mouse model and human iPSC-derived motor neurons, the p.E696K mutation causes presymptomatic onset of autophagolysosomal dysfunction in neurons precipitating the accumulation of damaged lysosomes. This is followed by a progressive, age-dependent motor neuron disease. Contrary to the phenotype of mice with full Tbk1 knock-out, RIPK/TNF-alpha-dependent hepatic, neuronal necroptosis, and overt autoinflammation were not detected. Our in vivo results indicate autophagolysosomal dysfunction as a trigger for neurodegeneration and a promising therapeutic target in TBK1-ALS/FTD.

Authors: D. Brenner, K. Sieverding, J. Srinidhi, S. Zellner, C. Secker, R. Yilmaz, J. Dyckow, S. Amr, A. Ponomarenko, E. Tunaboylu, Y. Douahem, J. S. Schlag, L. Rodriguez Martinez, G. Kislinger, C. Niemann, K. Nalbach, W. P. Ruf, J. Uhl, J. Hollenbeck, L. Schirmer, A. Catanese, C. S. Lobsiger, K. M. Danzer, D. Yilmazer-Hanke, C. Munch, P. Koch, A. Freischmidt, M. Fetting, C. Behrends, R. Parlato, J. H. Weishaupt

Date Published: 6th May 2024

Publication Type: Journal

Abstract (Expand)

Age-related decline in brain endothelial cell (BEC) function contributes critically to neurological disease. Comprehensive atlases of the BEC transcriptome have become available, but results from proteomic profiling are lacking. To gain insights into endothelial pathways affected by aging, we developed a magnetic-activated cell sorting-based mouse BEC enrichment protocol compatible with proteomics and resolved the profiles of protein abundance changes during aging. Unsupervised cluster analysis revealed a segregation of age-related protein dynamics with biological functions, including a downregulation of vesicle-mediated transport. We found a dysregulation of key regulators of endocytosis and receptor recycling (most prominently Arf6), macropinocytosis and lysosomal degradation. In gene deletion and overexpression experiments, Arf6 affected endocytosis pathways in endothelial cells. Our approach uncovered changes not picked up by transcriptomic studies, such as accumulation of vesicle cargo and receptor ligands, including Apoe. Proteomic analysis of BECs from Apoe-deficient mice revealed a signature of accelerated aging. Our findings provide a resource for analysing BEC function during aging.

Authors: K. Todorov-Volgyi, J. Gonzalez-Gallego, S. A. Muller, N. Beaufort, R. Malik, M. Schifferer, M. I. Todorov, D. Crusius, S. Robinson, A. Schmidt, J. Korbelin, F. Bareyre, A. Erturk, C. Haass, M. Simons, D. Paquet, S. F. Lichtenthaler, M. Dichgans

Date Published: 22nd Apr 2024

Publication Type: Journal

Abstract (Expand)

Cells respond to lysosomal membrane permeabilization by membrane repair or selective macroautophagy of damaged lysosomes, termed lysophagy, but it is not fully understood how this decision is made. Here, we uncover a pathway in human cells that detects lipid bilayer perturbations in the limiting membrane of compromised lysosomes, which fail to be repaired, and then initiates ubiquitin-triggered lysophagy. We find that SPG20 binds the repair factor IST1 on damaged lysosomes and, importantly, integrates that with the detection of damage-associated lipid-packing defects of the lysosomal membrane. Detection occurs via sensory amphipathic helices in SPG20 before rupture of the membrane. If lipid-packing defects are extensive, such as during lipid peroxidation, SPG20 recruits and activates ITCH, which marks the damaged lysosome with lysine-63-linked ubiquitin chains to initiate lysophagy and thus triages the lysosome for destruction. With SPG20 being linked to neurodegeneration, these findings highlight the relevance of a coordinated lysosomal damage response for cellular homeostasis.

Authors: Pinki Gahlot, Bojana Kravic, Giulia Rota, Johannes van den Boom, Sophie Levantovsky, Nina Schulze, Elena Maspero, Simona Polo, Christian Behrends, Hemmo Meyer

Date Published: 18th Apr 2024

Publication Type: Journal

Abstract (Expand)

The glial environment influences neurological disease progression, yet much of our knowledge still relies on preclinical animal studies, especially regarding astrocyte heterogeneity. In murine models of traumatic brain injury, beneficial functions of proliferating reactive astrocytes on disease outcome have been unraveled, but little is known regarding if and when they are present in human brain pathology. Here we examined a broad spectrum of pathologies with and without intracerebral hemorrhage and found a striking correlation between lesions involving blood-brain barrier rupture and astrocyte proliferation that was further corroborated in an assay probing for neural stem cell potential. Most importantly, proteomic analysis unraveled a crucial signaling pathway regulating this astrocyte plasticity with GALECTIN3 as a novel marker for proliferating astrocytes and the GALECTIN3-binding protein LGALS3BP as a functional hub mediating astrocyte proliferation and neurosphere formation. Taken together, this work identifies a therapeutically relevant astrocyte response and their molecular regulators in different pathologies affecting the human cerebral cortex.

Authors: Swetlana Sirko, Christian Schichor, Patrizia Della Vecchia, Fabian Metzger, Giovanna Sonsalla, Tatiana Simon, Martina Bürkle, Sofia Kalpazidou, Jovica Ninkovic, Giacomo Masserdotti, Jean-Frederic Sauniere, Valentina Iacobelli, Stefano Iacobelli, Claire Delbridge, Stefanie M Hauck, Jörg-Christian Tonn, Magdalena Götz

Date Published: 8th Dec 2023

Publication Type: Journal

Abstract (Expand)

Various cellular sources hamper interpretation of positron emission tomography (PET) biomarkers in the tumor microenvironment (TME). We developed an approach of immunomagnetic cell sorting after in vivo radiotracer injection (scRadiotracing) with three-dimensional (3D) histology to dissect the cellular allocation of PET signals in the TME. In mice with implanted glioblastoma, translocator protein (TSPO) radiotracer uptake per tumor cell was higher compared to tumor-associated microglia/macrophages (TAMs), validated by protein levels. Translation of in vitro scRadiotracing to patients with glioma immediately after tumor resection confirmed higher single-cell TSPO tracer uptake of tumor cells compared to immune cells. Across species, cellular radiotracer uptake explained the heterogeneity of individual TSPO-PET signals. In consideration of cellular tracer uptake and cell type abundance, tumor cells were the main contributor to TSPO enrichment in glioblastoma; however, proteomics identified potential PET targets highly specific for TAMs. Combining cellular tracer uptake measures with 3D histology facilitates precise allocation of PET signals and serves to validate emerging novel TAM-specific radioligands.

Authors: L. M. Bartos, S. V. Kirchleitner, Z. I. Kolabas, S. Quach, A. Beck, J. Lorenz, J. Blobner, S. A. Mueller, S. Ulukaya, L. Hoeher, I. Horvath, K. Wind-Mark, A. Holzgreve, V. C. Ruf, L. Gold, L. H. Kunze, S. T. Kunte, P. Beumers, H. E. Park, M. Antons, A. Zatcepin, N. Briel, L. Hoermann, R. Schaefer, D. Messerer, P. Bartenstein, M. J. Riemenschneider, S. Lindner, S. Ziegler, J. Herms, S. F. Lichtenthaler, A. Erturk, J. C. Tonn, L. von Baumgarten, N. L. Albert, M. Brendel

Date Published: 27th Oct 2023

Publication Type: Journal

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