Title : Lipid rafts and Alzheimer's disease: protein-lipid interactions and perturbation of signaling - Hicks_2012_Front.Physiol_3_189 |
Author(s) : Hicks DA , Nalivaeva NN , Turner AJ |
Ref : Front Physiol , 3 :189 , 2012 |
Abstract :
Lipid rafts are membrane domains, more ordered than the bulk membrane and enriched in cholesterol and sphingolipids. They represent a platform for protein-lipid and protein-protein interactions and for cellular signaling events. In addition to their normal functions, including membrane trafficking, ligand binding (including viruses), axonal development and maintenance of synaptic integrity, rafts have also been implicated in the pathogenesis of several neurodegenerative diseases including Alzheimer's disease (AD). Lipid rafts promote interaction of the amyloid precursor protein (APP) with the secretase (BACE-1) responsible for generation of the amyloid beta peptide, Abeta. Rafts also regulate cholinergic signaling as well as acetylcholinesterase and Abeta interaction. In addition, such major lipid raft components as cholesterol and GM1 ganglioside have been directly implicated in pathogenesis of the disease. Perturbation of lipid raft integrity can also affect various signaling pathways leading to cellular death and AD. In this review, we discuss modulation of APP cleavage by lipid rafts and their components, while also looking at more recent findings on the role of lipid rafts in signaling events. |
PubMedSearch : Hicks_2012_Front.Physiol_3_189 |
PubMedID: 22737128 |
Hicks DA, Nalivaeva NN, Turner AJ (2012)
Lipid rafts and Alzheimer's disease: protein-lipid interactions and perturbation of signaling
Front Physiol
3 :189
Hicks DA, Nalivaeva NN, Turner AJ (2012)
Front Physiol
3 :189