Back to Search Start Over

Genetic reduction of eEF2 kinase alleviates pathophysiology in Alzheimer’s disease model mice

Authors :
Xueyan Zhou
Tao Ma
Nicole P. Kasica
Brenna C. Beckelman
Wenzhong Yang
Alexey G. Ryazanov
C. Dirk Keene
Helena R. Zimmermann
Source :
Journal of Clinical Investigation. 129:820-833
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
American Society for Clinical Investigation, 2019.

Abstract

Molecular signaling mechanisms underlying Alzheimer’s disease (AD) remain unclear. Maintenance of memory and synaptic plasticity depend on de novo protein synthesis, dysregulation of which is implicated in AD. Recent studies showed AD-associated hyperphosphorylation of mRNA translation factor eukaryotic elongation factor 2 (eEF2), which results in inhibition of protein synthesis. We tested to determine whether suppression of eEF2 phosphorylation could improve protein synthesis capacity and AD-associated cognitive and synaptic impairments. Genetic reduction of the eEF2 kinase (eEF2K) in 2 AD mouse models suppressed AD-associated eEF2 hyperphosphorylation and improved memory deficits and hippocampal long-term potentiation (LTP) impairments without altering brain amyloid β (Aβ) pathology. Furthermore, eEF2K reduction alleviated AD-associated defects in dendritic spine morphology, postsynaptic density formation, de novo protein synthesis, and dendritic polyribosome assembly. Our results link eEF2K/eEF2 signaling dysregulation to AD pathophysiology and therefore offer a feasible therapeutic target.

Details

ISSN :
15588238 and 00219738
Volume :
129
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Clinical Investigation
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0146ce2148e086fc507f5cecc633c74b
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1172/jci122954