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Featured researches published by W. Haung Yu.


Cell | 2010

Lysosomal Proteolysis and Autophagy Require Presenilin 1 and Are Disrupted by Alzheimer-Related PS1 Mutations

Ju-Hyun Lee; W. Haung Yu; Asok Kumar; Sooyeon Lee; Panaiyur S. Mohan; Corrinne M. Peterhoff; Devin M. Wolfe; Marta Martinez-Vicente; Ashish C. Massey; Guy Sovak; Yasuo Uchiyama; David Westaway; Ana Maria Cuervo; Ralph A. Nixon

Macroautophagy is a lysosomal degradative pathway essential for neuron survival. Here, we show that macroautophagy requires the Alzheimers disease (AD)-related protein presenilin-1 (PS1). In PS1 null blastocysts, neurons from mice hypomorphic for PS1 or conditionally depleted of PS1, substrate proteolysis and autophagosome clearance during macroautophagy are prevented as a result of a selective impairment of autolysosome acidification and cathepsin activation. These deficits are caused by failed PS1-dependent targeting of the v-ATPase V0a1 subunit to lysosomes. N-glycosylation of the V0a1 subunit, essential for its efficient ER-to-lysosome delivery, requires the selective binding of PS1 holoprotein to the unglycosylated subunit and the Sec61alpha/oligosaccharyltransferase complex. PS1 mutations causing early-onset AD produce a similar lysosomal/autophagy phenotype in fibroblasts from AD patients. PS1 is therefore essential for v-ATPase targeting to lysosomes, lysosome acidification, and proteolysis during autophagy. Defective lysosomal proteolysis represents a basis for pathogenic protein accumulations and neuronal cell death in AD and suggests previously unidentified therapeutic targets.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2007

Insulin Dysfunction Induces In Vivo Tau Hyperphosphorylation through Distinct Mechanisms

Emmanuel Planel; Yoshitaka Tatebayashi; Tomohiro Miyasaka; Li Liu; Lili Wang; Mathieu Herman; W. Haung Yu; Jose A. Luchsinger; Brian E. Wadzinski; Karen Duff; Akihiko Takashima

Hyperphosphorylated tau is the major component of paired helical filaments in neurofibrillary tangles found in Alzheimers disease (AD) brains, and tau hyperphosphorylation is thought to be a critical event in the pathogenesis of the disease. The large majority of AD cases is late onset and sporadic in origin, with aging as the most important risk factor. Insulin resistance, impaired glucose tolerance, and diabetes mellitus (DM) are other common syndromes in the elderly also strongly age dependent, and there is evidence supporting a link between insulin dysfunction and AD. To investigate the possibility that insulin dysfunction might promote tau pathology, we induced insulin deficiency and caused DM in mice with streptozotocin (STZ). A mild hyperphosphorylation of tau could be detected 10, 20, and 30 d after STZ injection, and a massive hyperphosphorylation of tau was observed after 40 d. The robust hyperphosphorylation of tau was localized in the axons and neuropil, and prevented tau binding to microtubules. Neither mild nor massive tau phosphorylation induced tau aggregation. Body temperature of the STZ-treated mice did not differ from control animals during 30 d, but dropped significantly thereafter. No change in β-amyloid (Aβ) precursor protein (APP), APP C-terminal fragments, or Aβ levels were observed in STZ-treated mice; however, cellular protein phosphatase 2A activity was significantly decreased. Together, these data indicate that insulin dysfunction induced abnormal tau hyperphosphorylation through two distinct mechanisms: one was consequent to hypothermia; the other was temperature-independent, inherent to insulin depletion, and probably caused by inhibition of phosphatase activity.


Neurobiology of Disease | 2008

A transgenic rat that develops Alzheimer's disease-like amyloid pathology, deficits in synaptic plasticity and cognitive impairment

Li Liu; Ian J. Orozco; Emmanuel Planel; Yi Wen; Alexis Bretteville; Pavan Krishnamurthy; Lili Wang; Mathieu Herman; Helen Y. Figueroa; W. Haung Yu; Ottavio Arancio; Karen Duff

In the last decade, multiple lines of transgenic APP overexpressing mice have been created that recapitulate certain aspects of Alzheimers disease (AD). However, none of the previously reported transgenic APP overexpressing rat models developed AD-like beta-amyloid (Abeta) deposits, or age-related learning and memory deficits. In the present study, we have characterized a transgenic rat model overexpressing transgenes with three, familial AD mutations (two in APP and one in PS1) that were developed by Flood et al. [Flood, D.G., et al., Abeta deposition in a transgenic rat model of Alzheimers disease. Society for Neuroscience 2003, Washington, DC, 2003]. From the age of 9 months, these rats develop Abeta deposits in both diffuse and compact forms, with the latter being closely associated with activated microglia and reactive astrocytes. Impaired long-term potentiation (LTP) was revealed by electrophysiological recordings performed on hippocampal slices from rats at 7 months of age, which is 2 months before the appearance of amyloid plaques. The deficit in LTP was accompanied by impaired spatial learning and memory in the Morris water maze, which became more pronounced in transgenic rats of 13 months of age. For Tg rats of both ages, there was a trend for cognitive impairment to correlate with total Abeta42 levels in the hippocampus. The rat model therefore recapitulates AD-like amyloid pathology and cognitive impairment. The advantage of the rat model over the available mouse models is that rats provide better opportunities for advanced studies, such as serial CSF sampling, electrophysiology, neuroimaging, cell-based transplant manipulations, and complex behavioral testing.


Neurobiology of Disease | 2011

Age and α-synuclein expression interact to reveal a dependence of dopaminergic axons on endogenous Akt/PKB signaling.

Sang Ryong Kim; Vincent Ries; Hsiao-Chun Cheng; Tatyana Kareva; Tinmarla F. Oo; W. Haung Yu; Karen Duff; Nikolai Kholodilov; Robert E. Burke

The mechanisms underlying the chronic neurodegeneration that occurs in Parkinsons disease (PD) are unknown. One emerging hypothesis is that neural systems deteriorate and eventually degenerate due to a primary failure of either extrinsic neurotrophic support or the intrinsic cellular pathways that mediate such support. One of the cellular pathways that have been often identified in mediating neurotrophic effects is that of PI3K/Akt signaling. In addition, recent observations have suggested a primary failure of PI3K/Akt signaling in animal models and in PD patients. Therefore, to explore the possible role of endogenous Akt signaling in maintaining the viability and functionality of substantia nigra (SN) dopamine neurons, one of the principal systems affected in PD, we have used an adeno-associated viral vector to transduce them with a dominant negative (DN) form of Akt, the pleckstrin homology (PH) domain alone (DN(PH)-Akt). In addition, we have examined the effect of DN(PH)-Akt in murine models of two risk factors for human PD: advanced age and increased expression of α-synuclein. We find that transduction of these neurons in normal adult mice has no effect on any aspect of their morphology at 4 or 7weeks. However, in both aged mice and in transgenic mice with increased expression of human α-synuclein we observe decreased phenotypic expression of the catecholamine synthetic enzyme tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) in dopaminergic axons and terminals in the striatum. In aged transgenic α-synuclein over-expressing mice this reduction was 2-fold as great. We conclude that the two principal risk factors for human PD, advanced age and increased expression of α-synuclein, reveal a dependence of dopaminergic neurons on endogenous Akt signaling for maintenance of axonal phenotype.


Alzheimers & Dementia | 2012

Interaction between the ubiquitin proteasome system, autophagy and progressive tauopathy in vivo

Natura Myeku; W. Haung Yu; Karen Duff


Archive | 2012

METABOLISM, AUTOPHAGY AND NEURODEGENERATION

W. Haung Yu; Karen Duff


Alzheimers & Dementia | 2011

Autophagic-lysosomal dysfunction in glucocerebrosidase-associated dementia with lewy bodies

W. Haung Yu; Li Liu; Chan Robin; Mathieu Herman; Helen Y. Figueroa; Markus R. Wenk; Karen Duff


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2005

Macroautophagy—a novel β-amyloid peptide-generating pathway activated in Alzheimer's disease

W. Haung Yu; Ana Maria Cuervo; Asok Kumar; Corrinne M. Peterhoff; Stephen D. Schmidt; Ju-Hyun Lee; Panaiyur S. Mohan; Marc Mercken; Mark R. Farmery; Lars O. Tjernberg; Ying Jiang; Karen Duff; Yasuo Uchiyama; Jan Näslund; Paul M. Mathews; Anne M. Cataldo; Ralph A. Nixon

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Karen Duff

Columbia University Medical Center

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Li Liu

Columbia University

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Ana Maria Cuervo

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Corrinne M. Peterhoff

Nathan Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research

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Helen Y. Figueroa

Columbia University Medical Center

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