Sindi_2014_Neurobiol.Aging_35_746

Reference

Title : A role for the neurexin-neuroligin complex in Alzheimer's disease - Sindi_2014_Neurobiol.Aging_35_746
Author(s) : Sindi IA , Tannenberg RK , Dodd PR
Ref : Neurobiology of Aging , 35 :746 , 2014
Abstract :

Synaptic damage is a critical hallmark of Alzheimer's disease, and the best correlate with cognitive impairment ante mortem. Synapses, the loci of communication between neurons, are characterized by signature protein combinations arrayed at tightly apposed pre- and post-synaptic sites. The most widely studied trans-synaptic junctional complexes, which direct synaptogenesis and foster the maintenance and stability of the mature terminal, are conjunctions of presynaptic neurexins and postsynaptic neuroligins. Fluctuations in the levels of neuroligins and neurexins can sway the balance between excitatory and inhibitory neurotransmission in the brain, and could lead to damage of synapses and dendrites. This review summarizes current understanding of the roles of neurexins and neuroligins proteolytic processing in synaptic plasticity in the human brain, and outlines their possible roles in beta-amyloid metabolism and function, which are central pathogenic events in Alzheimer's disease progression.

PubMedSearch : Sindi_2014_Neurobiol.Aging_35_746
PubMedID: 24211009

Related information

Citations formats

Sindi IA, Tannenberg RK, Dodd PR (2014)
A role for the neurexin-neuroligin complex in Alzheimer's disease
Neurobiology of Aging 35 :746

Sindi IA, Tannenberg RK, Dodd PR (2014)
Neurobiology of Aging 35 :746