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REDD1 Is Involved in Amyloid β-Induced Synaptic Dysfunction and Memory Impairment

Authors :
Dong Hyun Kim
Jee Hyun Yi
Se Jin Park
Minho Moon
Jong Hoon Ryu
Huiyoung Kwon
Young-Choon Lee
Jong Hyun Cho
Ji Woong Choi
Ji-Su Kim
Seungheon Lee
Jeongwon Lee
Eunbi Cho
Mira Jun
Jieun Jeon
Source :
International Journal of Molecular Sciences, International Journal of Molecular Sciences, Vol 21, Iss 9482, p 9482 (2020), Volume 21, Issue 24
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Alzheimer&rsquo<br />s disease (AD) is a neurodegenerative disease characterized by neurological dysfunction, including memory impairment, attributed to the accumulation of amyloid &beta<br />(A&beta<br />) in the brain. Although several studies reported possible mechanisms involved in A&beta<br />pathology, much remains unknown. Previous findings suggested that a protein regulated in development and DNA damage response 1 (REDD1), a stress-coping regulator, is an A&beta<br />responsive gene involved in A&beta<br />cytotoxicity. However, we still do not know how A&beta<br />increases the level of REDD1 and whether REDD1 mediates A&beta<br />induced synaptic dysfunction. To elucidate this, we examined the effect of A&beta<br />on REDD1-expression using acute hippocampal slices from mice, and the effect of REDD1 short hairpin RNA (shRNA) on A&beta<br />induced synaptic dysfunction. Lastly, we observed the effect of REDD1 shRNA on memory deficit in an AD-like mouse model. Through the experiments, we found that A&beta<br />incubated acute hippocampal slices showed increased REDD1 levels. Moreover, A&beta<br />injection into the lateral ventricle increased REDD1 levels in the hippocampus. Anisomycin, but not actinomycin D, blocked A&beta<br />induced increase in REDD1 levels in the acute hippocampal slices, suggesting that A&beta<br />may increase REDD1 translation rather than transcription. A&beta<br />activated Fyn/ERK/S6 cascade, and inhibitors for Fyn/ERK/S6 or mGluR5 blocked A&beta<br />induced REDD1 upregulation. REDD1 inducer, a transcriptional activator, and A&beta<br />blocked synaptic plasticity in the acute hippocampal slices. REDD1 inducer inhibited mTOR/Akt signaling. REDD1 shRNA blocked A&beta<br />induced synaptic deficits. REDD1 shRNA also blocked A&beta<br />induced memory deficits in passive-avoidance and object-recognition tests. Collectively, these results demonstrate that REDD1 participates in A&beta<br />pathology and could be a target for AD therapy.

Details

ISSN :
14220067
Volume :
21
Issue :
24
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
International journal of molecular sciences
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0ae0565be761fa1f50cf878cbb529135