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A random Abstract
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Our Team
Late endocytic dysfunction as a putative cause of amyloid fibril formation in Alzheimer's disease.
[gm1 gangliosidosis]
The
assembly
of
amyloid
beta
-protein
to
amyloid
fibrils
is
a
critical
event
in
Alzheimer
's
disease
.
Evidence
exists
that
endocytic
pathway
abnormalities
,
including
the
enlargement
of
early
endosomes
,
precede
the
extraneuronal
amyloid
fibril
deposition
in
the
brain
.
We
determined
whether
endocytic
dysfunction
potently
promotes
the
assembly
of
amyloid
beta
-protein
on
the
surface
of
cultured
cells
.
Blocking
the
early
endocytic
pathway
by
clathrin
suppression
,
inactivation
of
small
GTPases
,
removal
of
membrane
cholesterol
,
and
Rab
5
knockdown
did
not
result
in
amyloid
fibril
formation
on
the
cell
surface
from
exogenously
added
soluble
amyloid
beta
-protein
.
In
contrast
,
blocking
the
late
endocytic
pathway
by
Rab
7
suppression
markedly
induced
the
amyloid
fibril
formation
in
addition
to
the
enlargement
of
early
endosomes
.
Notably
,
a
monoclonal
antibody
specific
to
GM
1
-
ganglioside-bound
amyloid
beta
-protein
,
an
endogenous
seed
for
Alzheimer
amyloid
,
completely
blocks
the
amyloid
fibril
formation
.
Our
results
suggest
that
late
but
not
early
endocytic
dysfunction
contributes
to
the
amyloid
fibril
formation
by
facilitating
the
generation
of
amyloid
seed
in
the
Alzheimer
's
brain
.
Diseases
Validation
Diseases presenting
"early endocytic pathway"
symptom
gm1 gangliosidosis
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