The Curious Case of a Heterozygous Loss-of-Function PSEN1 variant associated with Early-Onset Alzheimer's Disease.

与早发性阿尔茨海默病相关的杂合功能丧失型PSEN1变异体的奇特案例

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作者:Ruiz Inmaculada Sanjuan, Serneels Lutgarde, Craessaerts Katleen, Goate Alison, Annaert Wim, Gutierrez Lucia Chavez, Shi Yonggang, Sheikh-Bahaei Nasim, Jen Joanna C, Ramos Eliana Marisa, Campan Mihaela, Ward Pamela M, Magaki Shino, Bartlone Kelly, Vinters Harry V, Craig David W, Ringman John M, Strooper Bart
Background Over 300 mutations in PSEN1 have been identified as causes of early-onset Alzheimer's disease (EOAD). While these include missense mutations and a few insertions, deletions, or duplications, none result in open reading frame shifts, and all alter γ-secretase function to increase the long/short Aβ ratio. Methods We identified a novel heterozygous PSEN1 nonsense variant, c.325A > T, in a patient and his father, both presenting with EOAD, resulting in the substitution of lysine 109 with a premature stop codon at position (p.K109*). This produces a truncated 109 amino acid (aa) N-terminal PSEN1 fragment. Functional characterization was performed using overexpression models and a heterozygous mouse model (Psen1 (K109*/+) ). Results In overexpression models, downstream ATGs serve as alternative starting codons, generating a > 37kDa and a > 27 kDa PSEN1 C-terminal fragment (PSEN1-CTF (A) and PSEN1-CTF (B) , respectively) that retain the two catalytic aspartates of γ-secretase. Heterozygous Psen1 (K109*/+) mice exhibited subtle phenotypic defects, including reduced Pen2 expression and mild APP-CTF accumulation. Notably, aged mice demonstrated significantly increased Psen2 protein expression, potentially contributing to an elevated Aβ42/Aβ38 ratio. Conclusions These findings indicate that PSEN1 c.325A > T (p.K109*) is not a complete loss-of-function mutation. However, to what extent and by what mechanism it contributes to EOAD pathogenesis remains unclear.

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