Neuronal SphK1 acetylates COX2 and contributes to pathogenesis in a model of Alzheimer's Disease

Ju Youn Lee, Seung Hoon Han, Min Hee Park, Bosung Baek, Im Sook Song, Min Koo Choi, Yoh Takuwa, Hoon Ryu, Seung Hyun Kim, Xingxuan He, Edward H. Schuchman, Jae Sung Bae, Hee Kyung Jin

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

73 Scopus citations

Abstract

Although many reports have revealed the importance of defective microglia-mediated amyloid β phagocytosis in Alzheimer's disease (AD), the underlying mechanism remains to be explored. Here we demonstrate that neurons in the brains of patients with AD and AD mice show reduction of sphingosine kinase1 (SphK1), leading to defective microglial phagocytosis and dysfunction of inflammation resolution due to decreased secretion of specialized proresolving mediators (SPMs). Elevation of SphK1 increased SPMs secretion, especially 15-R-Lipoxin A4, by promoting acetylation of serine residue 565 (S565) of cyclooxygenase2 (COX2) using acetyl-CoA, resulting in improvement of AD-like pathology in APP/PS1 mice. In contrast, conditional SphK1 deficiency in neurons reduced SPMs secretion and abnormal phagocytosis similar to AD. Together, these results uncover a novel mechanism of SphK1 pathogenesis in AD, in which impaired SPMs secretion leads to defective microglial phagocytosis, and suggests that SphK1 in neurons has acetyl-CoA-dependent cytoplasmic acetyltransferase activity towards COX2.

Original languageEnglish
Article number1479
JournalNature Communications
Volume9
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Dec 2018

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Neuronal SphK1 acetylates COX2 and contributes to pathogenesis in a model of Alzheimer's Disease'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this