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Preservation of cortical sortilin protein levels in MCI and Alzheimer's disease
Authors:Elliott J. Mufson  Joanne Wuu  Scott E. Counts  Anders Nykjaer
Affiliation:1. Department of Neurological Sciences, Rush University Medical Center, Chicago, IL 60612, USA;2. Department of Neurology, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, GA, USA;3. MIND Center, Department of Medical Biochemistry, Aarhus University, Aarhus, Denmark
Abstract:The nerve growth factor (NGF) precursor protein proNGF is the predominant NGF moiety found in the human neocortex and exhibits pro-apoptotic properties when bound to the p75NTR neurotrophin receptor in the presence of sortilin, a Vps10p domain trafficking protein. Recently studies have shown that proNGF levels increase in the cortex of people who died with early stage Alzheimer's disease (AD) or with mild cognitive impairment (MCI), a putative prodromal AD stage. In contrast, cortical levels of the high-affinity, pro-survival NGF receptor TrkA are reduced in AD despite stable levels of p75NTR. These data suggest a stoichiometric shift in proNGF and its receptors which favors proNGF binding of p75NTR. Whether cortical levels of sortilin are altered during the progression of AD remains unknown. Therefore, we measured sortilin protein levels in postmortem superior frontal and superior temporal cortical tissues derived from Religious Orders Study subjects clinically diagnosed antemortem with no cognitive impairment (NCI), MCI or AD. No changes in frontal or temporal cortical sortilin protein levels occurred across the clinical groups. There was no association between sortilin levels and antemortem cognitive test scores. However, there was a positive association between temporal cortex sortilin levels and severity of neuropathology by Braak and NIA-Reagan diagnoses. The stability of cortical sortilin levels in the face of stable p75NTR, increased proNGF, and reduced TrkA levels may favor pro-apoptotic proNGF:p75NTR:sortilin trimeric interactions within the cortex during the earliest stages of AD. These findings are relevant to the development of NGF drug therapy for the treatment of dementia.
Keywords:Alzheimer's disease   Mild cognitive impairment   proNGF   Receptors   Sortilin
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