Decreased proteolytic activity of the mitochondrial amyloid-β degrading enzyme, PreP peptidasome, in alzheimer's disease brain mitochondria Journal Article


Authors: Alikhani, N.; Guo, L.; Yan, S. ; Du, H.; Pinho, C. M.; Chen, J. X.; Glaser, E.; Yan, S. S.
Article Title: Decreased proteolytic activity of the mitochondrial amyloid-β degrading enzyme, PreP peptidasome, in alzheimer's disease brain mitochondria
Abstract: Accumulation of amyloid-β peptide (Aβ), the neurotoxic peptide implicated in the pathogenesis of Alzheimer's disease (AD), has been shown in brain mitochondria of AD patients and of AD transgenic mouse models. The presence of Aβ in mitochondria leads to free radical generation and neuronal stress. Recently, we identified the presequence protease, PreP, localized in the mitochondrial matrix in mammalian mitochondria as the novel mitochondrial Aβ-degrading enzyme. In the present study, we examined PreP activity in the mitochondrial matrix of the human brain's temporal lobe, an area of the brain highly susceptible to Aβ accumulation and reactive oxygen species (ROS) production. We found significantly lower hPreP activity in AD brains compared with non-AD age-matched controls. By contrast, in the cerebellum, a brain region typically spared from Aβ accumulation, there was no significant difference in hPreP activity when comparing AD samples to non-AD controls. We also found significantly reduced PreP activity in the mitochondrial matrix of AD transgenic mouse brains (Tg mAβPP and Tg mAβPP/ABAD) when compared to non-transgenic aged-matched mice. Furthermore, mitochondrial fractions isolated from AD brains and Tg mAβPP mice had higher levels of 4-hydroxynonenal, an oxidative product, as compared with those from non-AD and nonTg mice. Accordingly, activity of cytochrome c oxidase was significantly reduced in the AD mitochondria. These findings suggest that decreased PreP proteolytic activity, possibly due to enhanced ROS production, contributes to Aβ accumulation in mitochondria leading to the mitochondrial toxicity and neuronal death that is exacerbated in AD. Clearance of mitochondrial Aβ by PreP may thus be of importance in the pathology of AD. © 2011-IOS Press and the authors. All rights reserved.
Keywords: controlled study; human tissue; aged; aged, 80 and over; middle aged; unclassified drug; human cell; case-control studies; nonhuman; animal cell; mouse; animals; mice; animal tissue; cerebellum; protein degradation; age factors; enzyme activity; transgenic mouse; mice, transgenic; serine endopeptidases; brain; temporal lobe; peptide fragments; reactive oxygen metabolite; oxidative stress; disease models, animal; analysis of variance; nerve function; mitochondria; aldehydes; alzheimer disease; enzyme; gene expression regulation, enzymologic; mitochondrial proteins; amyloid beta protein; cytochrome c oxidase; proteolysis; mitochondrial function; presequence protease (prep); 4 hydroxynonenal; prep peptidasome; brain mitochondrion; amyloid beta-peptides; mitochondrial amyloid-?; electron transport complex iv
Journal Title: Journal of Alzheimer's Disease
Volume: 27
Issue: 1
ISSN: 1387-2877
Publisher: IOS Press  
Date Published: 2011-01-01
Start Page: 75
End Page: 87
Language: English
DOI: 10.3233/jad-2011-101716
PROVIDER: scopus
PUBMED: 21750375
PMCID: PMC3381900
DOI/URL:
Notes: --- - "Export Date: 9 December 2011" - "CODEN: JADIF" - "Source: Scopus"
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  1. Xi Chen
    31 Chen