| 1999 |
Mint2/X11L colocalizes with APP in primary cortical neurons and transfected CHO cells; Mint2 reorganizes the subcellular distribution of APP and increases steady-state APP levels when co-expressed, consistent with a role in APP trafficking and metabolism. |
Immunofluorescence colocalization in primary neurons and transfected CHO cells; co-transfection with subcellular distribution analysis |
The European journal of neuroscience |
Medium |
10336668
|
| 2000 |
XB51, a novel protein, interacts with the amino-terminal domain of X11L (APBA2/Mint2), inhibits the X11L–APP association through a non-competitive mechanism, and abolishes X11L-mediated suppression of beta-amyloid production. Association with X11L redistributes XB51 from a CHAPS-insoluble to a CHAPS-soluble fraction. |
Yeast two-hybrid screening, co-immunoprecipitation, beta-amyloid production assay, subcellular fractionation |
The Journal of biological chemistry |
Medium |
10833507
|
| 2003 |
hXB51alpha binds X11L to form a tripartite complex (hXB51alpha–X11L–APP) that blocks X11L-mediated suppression of Aβ generation, while hXB51beta binds X11L and inhibits its interaction with APP but suppresses Aβ generation via an X11L-independent mechanism. |
Co-immunoprecipitation, Aβ production assays, isoform-specific expression constructs |
The Biochemical journal |
Medium |
12780348
|
| 2004 |
X11L (APBA2/Mint2) facilitates JNK-mediated phosphorylation of APP at Thr668 and APLP2 at Thr736 in response to cellular stress, elevating phosphorylation levels. Other X11 family members (X11 and X11L2) did not share this activity. |
Cell-based phosphorylation assays under osmotic/stress conditions, immunoprecipitation, kinase identification |
The Journal of biological chemistry |
Medium |
14970211
|
| 2006 |
X11L-deficient (knockout) mice show increased APP C-terminal fragments generated by β-secretase (but not α-secretase) cleavage in the hippocampus, and elevated Aβ levels in aged hippocampus, demonstrating that X11L suppresses amyloidogenic (but not non-amyloidogenic) APP processing in vivo. |
X11L knockout mouse model, biochemical quantification of APP CTFs and Aβ levels in brain tissue |
The Journal of biological chemistry |
High |
17032642
|
| 2007 |
X11L (APBA2) and X11L2 shuttle between the cytoplasm and nucleus; nuclear export is CRM1-dependent (blocked by leptomycin B). FLIP analysis confirmed nucleo-cytoplasmic shuttling. A nuclear export signal (NES) was identified in the N-terminus of X11L2; mutation of this NES caused nuclear accumulation. |
EGFP-fusion localization, leptomycin B treatment, FLIP (fluorescence loss in photobleaching), NES mutagenesis |
Experimental cell research |
Medium |
18201694
|
| 2009 |
Phosphorylation of X11L at Ser236 and Ser238 within the amino-terminal regulatory region (aa 221–250) enhances its interaction with APP under osmotic stress. Alanyl substitution of either serine abolished the stress-enhanced APP association, indicating that this phosphorylation event, outside the PTB domain, modulates APP binding. |
Site-directed mutagenesis (Ser→Ala), co-immunoprecipitation under osmotic stress, phosphorylation site identification by mass spectrometry/mutagenesis |
Journal of neurochemistry |
Medium |
19222704
|
| 2009 |
Mint2 interacts with TrkA through its PTB domain in a phosphorylation- and ligand-independent manner. Endogenous Mint2–TrkA interaction was confirmed in rat tissue. Mint2 overexpression inhibited NGF-induced neurite outgrowth in PC12 cells and DRG neurons; Mint2 knockdown facilitated it. Mechanistically, Mint2 promotes TrkA retention in the Golgi, inhibiting surface sorting. |
Yeast two-hybrid screening, co-immunoprecipitation from rat tissue, immunohistochemistry colocalization, overexpression and siRNA knockdown in PC12 and DRG neurons, Golgi retention assay |
The Journal of biological chemistry |
High |
19265194
|
| 2012 |
Crystal structures of APP peptide-free (2.7 Å) and APP peptide-bound (3.3 Å) Mint2 C-terminal mutants revealed that the ARM domain blocks the PTB domain peptide-binding groove in the closed (unbound) state and swings away in the open (APP-bound) state. Mutants locking Mint2 in open or closed conformations dynamically regulated APP metabolism in vitro and in vivo. |
X-ray crystallography, structure-guided mutagenesis, in vitro APP metabolism assays, in vivo mouse model |
Journal of molecular cell biology |
High |
22730553
|
| 2012 |
Src-mediated phosphorylation of Mint2 regulates APP endocytic sorting: a phosphomimetic Mint2 mutant directed internalized APP toward the autophagic pathway and increased intracellular Aβ accumulation, while the phospho-resistant mutant increased APP recycling to the cell surface and enhanced Aβ42 secretion. APP endocytosis was attenuated in Mint knockout neurons. |
Mint knockout neurons (endocytosis assay), phosphomimetic/phospho-resistant Mint2 mutants, intracellular trafficking pathway analysis, Aβ measurement |
The Journal of neuroscience |
High |
22787047
|
| 2018 |
Systematic characterization of the Mint2 protein-protein interaction network showed that APP and presenilin-1 are bona fide Mint2 interaction partners with defined domain specificities. The last two C-terminal amino acids of Mint2 are required for the intramolecular PDZ1 interaction and for Mint2 stability. |
Peptide binding assays, domain-specific interaction mapping, truncation/deletion analysis |
Chembiochem |
Medium |
29578633
|
| 2019 |
The autism-linked Mint2 N723S mutation (in PDZ2 domain) impairs Nrxn1α stabilization and trafficking to the membrane without affecting direct Nrxn1α binding. The mutant caused more immobile Mint2 puncta in neuronal processes, reduced Nrxn1α at presynaptic terminals, decreased Nrxn-mediated synaptogenesis, and reduced miniature excitatory event frequency. |
Mutation of conserved PDZ2 residue, time-lapse imaging in primary mouse neurons, surface biotinylation/trafficking assays, synaptogenesis assay, electrophysiology (mEPSC recording) |
Scientific reports |
High |
30988517
|
| 2021 |
Disruption of the APP–Mint2 protein-protein interaction, either by an APP-binding-deficient Mint2 variant or by a cell-permeable peptide inhibitor targeting the Mint2 PTB domain, significantly reduced Aβ42 levels in a neuronal in vitro AD model, demonstrating that Mint2 plays a facilitative role in Aβ formation. |
APP-binding-deficient Mint2 mutant, cell-permeable PPI inhibitor peptide, Aβ42 ELISA in neuronal AD model cells |
Journal of the American Chemical Society |
Medium |
33398998
|
| 2007 |
Mint proteins (Mint1 and Mint2) are cleaved by calpain upon neurodegeneration induced by okadaic acid (a PP2A inhibitor) in neurons, and their reduction is followed by an increase in APP levels. Calpain inhibitors prevented Mint cleavage and APP overexpression. |
Okadaic acid neuronal degeneration model, western blot for Mint1/2 and APP, calpain inhibitor treatment |
Neuroreport |
Low |
18007179
|