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Over‐expression of heat shock factor 1 phenocopies the effect of chronic inhibition of TOR by rapamycin and is sufficient to ameliorate Alzheimer's‐like deficits in mice modeling the disease
Author(s) -
Pierce Anson,
Podlutskaya Natalia,
Halloran Jonathan J.,
Hussong Stacy A.,
Lin PeiYi,
Burbank Raquel,
Hart Matthew J.,
Galvan Veronica
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
journal of neurochemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.75
H-Index - 229
eISSN - 1471-4159
pISSN - 0022-3042
DOI - 10.1111/jnc.12080
Subject(s) - proteostasis , hsf1 , autophagy , heat shock protein , microbiology and biotechnology , biology , genetically modified mouse , heat shock , translation (biology) , chaperone (clinical) , transgene , messenger rna , hsp70 , medicine , genetics , apoptosis , gene , pathology
Rapamycin, an inhibitor of target‐of‐rapamycin, extends lifespan in mice, possibly by delaying aging. We recently showed that rapamycin halts the progression of Alzheimer's (AD)‐like deficits, reduces amyloid‐beta (Aβ) and induces autophagy in the human amyloid precursor protein (PDAPP) mouse model. To delineate the mechanisms by which chronic rapamycin delays AD we determined proteomic signatures in brains of control‐ and rapamycin‐treated PDAPP mice. Proteins with reported chaperone‐like activity were overrepresented among proteins up‐regulated in rapamycin‐fed PDAPP mice and the master regulator of the heat‐shock response, heat‐shock factor 1, was activated. This was accompanied by the up‐regulation of classical chaperones/heat shock proteins (HSPs) in brains of rapamycin‐fed PDAPP mice. The abundance of most HSP mRNAs except for alpha B‐crystallin, however, was unchanged, and the cap‐dependent translation inhibitor 4E‐BP was active, suggesting that increased expression of HSPs and proteins with chaperone activity may result from preferential translation of pre‐existing mRNAs as a consequence of inhibition of cap‐dependent translation. The effects of rapamycin on the reduction of Aβ, up‐regulation of chaperones, and amelioration of AD‐like cognitive deficits were recapitulated by transgenic over‐expression of heat‐shock factor 1 in PDAPP mice. These results suggest that, in addition to inducing autophagy, rapamycin preserves proteostasis by increasing chaperones. We propose that the failure of proteostasis associated with aging may be a key event enabling AD, and that chronic inhibition of target‐of‐rapamycin may delay AD by maintaining proteostasis in brain. Read the Editorial Highlight for this article on doi: 10.1111/jnc.12098 .

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