Cell Reports (Oct 2015)

Apolipoprotein E Regulates Amyloid Formation within Endosomes of Pigment Cells

  • Guillaume van Niel,
  • Ptissam Bergam,
  • Aurelie Di Cicco,
  • Ilse Hurbain,
  • Alessandra Lo Cicero,
  • Florent Dingli,
  • Roberta Palmulli,
  • Cecile Fort,
  • Marie Claude Potier,
  • Leon J. Schurgers,
  • Damarys Loew,
  • Daniel Levy,
  • Graça Raposo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2015.08.057
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
pp. 43 – 51

Abstract

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Accumulation of toxic amyloid oligomers is a key feature in the pathogenesis of amyloid-related diseases. Formation of mature amyloid fibrils is one defense mechanism to neutralize toxic prefibrillar oligomers. This mechanism is notably influenced by apolipoprotein E variants. Cells that produce mature amyloid fibrils to serve physiological functions must exploit specific mechanisms to avoid potential accumulation of toxic species. Pigment cells have tuned their endosomes to maximize the formation of functional amyloid from the protein PMEL. Here, we show that ApoE is associated with intraluminal vesicles (ILV) within endosomes and remain associated with ILVs when they are secreted as exosomes. ApoE functions in the ESCRT-independent sorting mechanism of PMEL onto ILVs and regulates the endosomal formation of PMEL amyloid fibrils in vitro and in vivo. This process secures the physiological formation of amyloid fibrils by exploiting ILVs as amyloid nucleating platforms.