Expression of an alternatively spliced variant of SORL1 in neuronal dendrites is decreased in patients with Alzheimer’s disease

Author:

Monti Giulia,Kjolby Mads,Jensen Anne Mette G.,Allen Mariet,Reiche Juliane,Møller Peter L.,Comaposada-Baró Raquel,Zolkowski Bartlomiej E.,Vieira Cármen,Jørgensen Margarita Melnikova,Holm Ida E.,Valdmanis Paul N.,Wellner Niels,Vægter Christian B.,Lincoln Sarah J.,Nykjær Anders,Ertekin-Taner Nilüfer,Young Jessica E.,Nyegaard Mette,Andersen Olav M.ORCID

Abstract

AbstractSORL1 is strongly associated with both sporadic and familial forms of Alzheimer’s disease (AD), but a lack of information about alternatively spliced transcripts currently limits our understanding of the role of SORL1 in AD. Here, we describe a SORL1 transcript (SORL1-38b) characterized by inclusion of a novel exon (E38b) that encodes a truncated protein. We identified E38b-containing transcripts in several brain regions, with the highest expression in the cerebellum and showed that SORL1-38b is largely located in neuronal dendrites, which is in contrast to the somatic distribution of transcripts encoding the full-length SORLA protein (SORL1-fl). SORL1-38b transcript levels were significantly reduced in AD cerebellum in three independent cohorts of postmortem brains, whereas no changes were observed for SORL1-fl. A trend of lower 38b transcript level in cerebellum was found for individuals carrying the risk variant at rs2282649 (known as SNP24), although not reaching statistical significance. These findings suggest synaptic functions for SORL1-38b in the brain, uncovering novel aspects of SORL1 that can be further explored in AD research.

Funder

CurePSP

Danish Alzheimer Research Foundation

Maersk-Moller Foundation

Jascha Fonden

Aarhus University Graduate School of Health

PROMEMO

Alzheimer's Disease Research Center

Adult Changes in Thought Study

Pacific Udall Center

DOD

NIA

NINDS

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Neurology (clinical),Pathology and Forensic Medicine

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