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Opposing functions for retromer and Rab11 in extracellular vesicle traffic at presynaptic terminals

Authors :
Berith Isaac
Julia K. Apiki
Cassandra R Blanchette
Anna Yeh
Agata N. Becalska
Kate Koles
So Min Lee
Amy L. Scalera
Avital A. Rodal
Tania Lemos
ShiYu Wang
Matthew J. Zunitch
Rylie B. Walsh
Erica C. Dresselhaus
Source :
The Journal of Cell Biology
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Rockefeller University Press, 2021.

Abstract

Neurons release specific signaling and pathological cargoes in membrane-bound extracellular vesicles. Walsh et al. show that cargo sorting into extracellular vesicles at presynaptic nerve terminals depends on a balance between the Alzheimer’s disease–implicated endosomal retromer complex and Rab11-mediated recycling.<br />Neuronal extracellular vesicles (EVs) play important roles in intercellular communication and pathogenic protein propagation in neurological disease. However, it remains unclear how cargoes are selectively packaged into neuronal EVs. Here, we show that loss of the endosomal retromer complex leads to accumulation of EV cargoes including amyloid precursor protein (APP), synaptotagmin-4 (Syt4), and neuroglian (Nrg) at Drosophila motor neuron presynaptic terminals, resulting in increased release of these cargoes in EVs. By systematically exploring known retromer-dependent trafficking mechanisms, we show that EV regulation is separable from several previously identified roles of neuronal retromer. Conversely, mutations in rab11 and rab4, regulators of endosome-plasma membrane recycling, cause reduced EV cargo levels, and rab11 suppresses cargo accumulation in retromer mutants. Thus, EV traffic reflects a balance between Rab4/Rab11 recycling and retromer-dependent removal from EV precursor compartments. Our data shed light on previous studies implicating Rab11 and retromer in competing pathways in Alzheimer’s disease, and suggest that misregulated EV traffic may be an underlying defect.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15408140 and 00219525
Volume :
220
Issue :
8
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of Cell Biology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....fbd97e0bc4871a32f12d65dcc963e639