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PP2A methylation controls sensitivity and resistance to ß-amyloid-induced cognitive and electrophysiological impairments

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posted on 2025-05-08, 19:43 authored by Russell E. Nicholls, Jean-Marie Sontag, Deqi Yin, Teodoro Bottiglieri, Estelle Sontag, Eric R. Kandel, Ottavio Arancio, Hong Zhang, Agnieszka Staniszewski, Shijun Yan, Carla Y. Kim, Michael Yim, Caitlin M. Woodruff, Erland Arning, Brandi Wasek
Elevated levels of the ß-amyloid peptide (Aß) are thought to contribute to cognitive and behavioral impairments observed in Alzheimer's disease (AD). Protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A) participates in multiple molecular pathways implicated in AD, and its expression and activity are reduced in postmortem brains of AD patients. PP2A is regulated by protein methylation, and impaired PP2A methylation is thought to contribute to increased AD risk in hyperhomocysteinemic individuals. To examine further the link between PP2A and AD, we generated transgenic mice that overexpress the PP2A methylesterase, protein phosphatase methylesterase-1 (PME-1), or the PP2A methyltransferase, leucine carboxylmethyltransferase-1 (LCMT-1), and examined the sensitivity of these animals to behavioral and electrophysiological impairments caused by exogenous Aß exposure. We found that PME-1 overexpression enhanced these impairments, whereas LCMT-1 overexpression protected against Aß-induced impairments. Neither transgene affected Aß production or the electrophysiological response to low concentrations of Aß, suggesting that these manipulations selectively affect the pathological response to elevated Aß levels. Together these data identify a molecular mechanism linking PP2A to the development of AD-related cognitive impairments that might be therapeutically exploited to target selectively the pathological effects caused by elevated Aß levels in AD patients.

History

Journal title

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Volume

113

Issue

12

Pagination

3347-3352

Publisher

National Academy of Sciences

Language

  • en, English

College/Research Centre

Faculty of Health and Medicine

School

School of Biomedical Sciences and Pharmacy

Rights statement

Copyright © 2017 National Academy of Sciences

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