HOPS disruption impairs APP trafficking and processing, promoting exosomal secretion of APP-CTFs

Publication date

2026-02

Authors

Draper, Derk
George, Anna E
Veenendaal, TinekeISNI 0000000394529994
van Dijk, Suzanne
Soltani, Elly
Sanzà, Paolo
Verweij, Frederik J
Klumperman, JudithORCID 0000-0003-4835-6228ISNI 0000000396051744
Farías, Ginny G

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Abstract

AbstractAmyloid precursor protein (APP) is a key player in various neuronal functions but also the source for toxic Aβ that accumulates in the brain of Alzheimer patients. APP trafficking and processing depend on the endo-lysosomal system, but the molecular mechanisms that coordinate these processes remain not fully understood. Here, we studied the HOPS complex, a central regulator of endo-lysosomal maturation. We show that HOPS disruption impairs retromer-mediated recycling of APP to the TGN, resulting in the accumulation of APP in late endosomes. In neurons, this accumulation is spatially restricted to somatodendritic endosomes. These APP-containing endosomes are catalytically inactive and lack the γ-secretase subunit PSEN2. However, they do contain BACE1, which contributes to the build-up of toxic APP C-terminal fragments (APP-CTFs). Notably, loss of HOPS function enhances secretion of APP-CTFs by exosomes, suggesting a potential mechanism for disease propagation. Together, our findings establish a mechanistic link between HOPS loss-of-function and aberrant APP processing, with implications for neurodegeneration.

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Journal Article

Citation

Draper, D, George, A E, Veenendaal, T, van Dijk, S, Soltani, E, Sanzà, P, Verweij, F J, Klumperman, J & Farías, G G 2026, 'HOPS disruption impairs APP trafficking and processing, promoting exosomal secretion of APP-CTFs', Neurobiology of Disease, vol. 219, 107269. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nbd.2026.107269