High levels of APP-BP1 (white), as found in Alzheimer's patients (right), kills neurons.

The consequences of amyloid formation by the amyloid precursor protein (APP) in Alzheimer's disease (AD) have been the focus of many studies, yet little is known about the nonpathogenic function of APP. On page 27, some progress is made in this direction by Chen et al., who show that APP induces a suicide pathway in neurons.

APP initiates this death-inducing cascade when it encounters the binding protein APP-BP1. High levels of APP in neurons, or the APP mutant version associated with AD, promoted the recruitment of APP-BP1 to lipid rafts and activated its death-inducing activity. Past in vitro work has shown that APP-BP1 activates the ubiquitin-like protein NEDD8. NEDD8 conjugation of proteins such as Cullin (part of the SCF complex) drives entry into the cell cycle. In neurons, this push into...

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