Alzheimer's Disease is a neurodegenerative disease that affects more than 5 million people per year in the United States alone. One of the hallmarks used to diagnose the disease is the accumulation of senile plaques in the brain, whose major component is a byproduct of amyloid precursor protein (APP) processing. Due to the complexity of the human system, which contains three redundant APP genes, we are studying the Caenorhabditis elegans APP homolog,
apl-1. APL-1 contains the highly conserved E1, E2, and cytoplasmic domains, but, like other family members, does not contain the Ab peptide present in APP. Through a suppressor screen we have identified a new APL-1 interacting protein MOA-1 that encodes a receptor protein tyrosine phosphatase-like domain. MOA-1 is expressed in multiple tissues in both sexes, including the pharynx, neurons, ventral nerve cord, intestines, and hypodermal cells, as well as the hermaphrodite vulva. In addition,
moa-1 has distinctive loss of function (lf) and gain of function (gf) phenotypes. In hermaphrodites, loss of
moa-1 results in the premature termination of gonad arm migration (50%). Vulval development is also affected, leading to an egg-laying defective (Egl) phenotype in 5% of the mutants. In males, the loss of
moa-1 leads to an over-retracted tail phenotype in 5% of the mutants, suggesting that tail tip morphogenesis is impaired and that MOA-1 affects developmental timing through the heterochronic pathway. As there are currently no known extracellular interactors with human APP, this new interaction between
apl-1 and
moa-1 may prove crucial in understanding
apl-1 and APP gene function.