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KMID : 0892920110200020067
Experimental Neurobiology
2011 Volume.20 No. 2 p.67 ~ p.80
The Interface between Cytoskeletal Aberrations and Mitochondrial Dysfunction in Alzheimer¡¯s Disease and Related Disorders
Kang David E.

Roh Seung-Eon
Woo Jung-A
Liu Tian
Bu Jung-Hyun
Jung A-Rong
Lim Yeo-Ry
Abstract
The major defining pathological hallmarks of Alzheimer¡¯s disease (AD) are the accumulations of A¥â in senile plaques and hyperphosphorylated tau in neurofibrillary tangles and neuropil threads. Recent studies indicate that rather than these insoluble lesions, the soluble A¥â oligomers and hyperphosphorylated tau are the toxic agents of AD pathology. Such pathological protein species are accompanied by cytoskeletal changes, mitochondrial dysfunction, Ca2+ dysregulation, and oxidative stress. In this review, we discuss how the binding of A¥â to various integrins, defects in downstream focal adhesion signaling, and activation of cofilin can impact mitochondrial dysfunction, cytoskeletal changes, and tau pathology induced by A¥â oligomers. Such pathological consequences can also feedback to further activate cofilin to promote cofilin pathology. We also suggest that the mechanism of A¥â generation by the endocytosis of APP is mechanistically linked with perturbations in integrin-based focal adhesion signaling, as APP, LRP, and ¥â-integrins are physically associated with each other.
KEYWORD
integrin, focal adhesion, cofilin, amyloid, mitochondria, cytoskeleton
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