排序方式: 共有4条查询结果,搜索用时 55 毫秒
1
1.
Park R Wang'ondu R Heston L Shedd D Miller G 《The Journal of biological chemistry》2011,286(11):9748-9762
Nuclear aggresomes induced by proteins containing an expanded polyglutamine (polyQ) tract are pathologic hallmarks of certain neurodegenerative diseases. Some GFP fusion proteins lacking a polyQ tract may also induce nuclear aggresomes in cultured cells. Here we identify single missense mutations within the basic DNA recognition region of Bam HI Z E B virus replication activator (ZEBRA), an Epstein-Barr virus (EBV)-encoded basic zipper protein without a polyQ tract, that efficiently induced the formation of nuclear aggresomes. Wild-type (WT) ZEBRA was diffusely distributed within the nucleus. Four non-DNA-binding mutants, Z(R179E), Z(R183E), Z(R190E), and Z(K178D) localized to the periphery of large intranuclear spheres, to discrete nuclear aggregates, and to the cytoplasm. Other non-DNA-binding mutants, Z(N182K), Z(N182E), and Z(S186E), did not exhibit this phenotype. The interior of the spheres contained promyelocytic leukemia and HSP70 proteins. ZEBRA mutants directly induced the nuclear aggresome pathway in cells with and without EBV. Specific cellular proteins (SC35 and HDAC6) and viral proteins (WT ZEBRA, Rta, and BMLF1) but not other cellular or viral proteins were recruited to nuclear aggresomes. Co-transfection of WT ZEBRA with aggresome-inducing mutants Z(R183E) and Z(R179E) inhibited late lytic viral protein expression and lytic viral DNA amplification. This is the first reported instance in which nuclear aggresomes are induced by single missense mutations in a viral or cellular protein. We discuss conformational changes in the mutant viral AP-1 proteins that may lead to formation of nuclear aggresomes. 相似文献
2.
Kiyoko Hirano Bruno Guhl Jürgen Roth Martin Ziak 《Histochemistry and cell biology》2009,132(3):293-304
Mallory bodies (MBs) represent keratin-rich inclusion bodies observed in human alcoholic liver disease and in several chronic
non-alcoholic liver diseases. The mechanism of their formation and their relationship to other inclusion bodies such as aggresomes
is incompletely understood. We could induce keratin aggregates typical of MBs in cultured clone 9 rat hepatocytes by transgenic
expression of wild-type and mutant aquaporin2 or α1-antitrypsin and under various forms of other cellular stress. By immunocytochemical
analysis, p62 and poly-ubiquitin, components of classical MBs, could be demonstrated in the keratin aggregates of clone 9
hepatocytes. In addition, histone deacetylase 6, a microtubule-associated deacetylase, was identified as a novel component
of the keratin aggregates. Thus, together with their ultrastructural appearance as randomly oriented, organelle-free aggregates
of keratin filaments, the keratin aggregates in clone 9 hepatocytes correspond to MBs. An imbalance in keratin 8 to18 with
very low levels of keratin 18 appears to be the underlying cause for their formation. The formation of MBs was microtubule-dependent
although not depending on the activity of histone deacetylase 6. Forskolin-induced MBs in clone 9 hepatocytes were reversible
structures which disappeared upon drug withdrawal. The MBs were not related to aggresomes since overexpressed misfolded transgenic
proteins were undetectable in the keratin aggregates and no vimentin fiber cage was detectable, both of which represent hallmarks
of aggresomes. Thus, cultured clone 9 hepatocytes are a useful system to study further aspects of the pathobiology of MBs. 相似文献
3.
Webb JL Ravikumar B Rubinsztein DC 《The international journal of biochemistry & cell biology》2004,36(12):2541-2550
Large cytoplasmic inclusions called aggresomes are seen in many protein conformational diseases including Huntington’s disease and Parkinson’s disease. The roles of inclusions and aggresomes in these diseases are unresolved critical issues that have been vigorously debated. Two recent studies used microtubule disruption with nocodazole to inhibit aggresome formation and observed increased toxicity of expanded polyglutamines in the context of huntingtin exon 1 and a truncated androgen receptor. Increased toxicity of expanded polyglutamines in the presence of nocodazole was correlated with decreased protein turnover, leading the authors to conclude that aggresomes were cytoprotective and that they directly enhanced clearance of the toxic proteins. Here we show that nocodazole has additional effects, which provide a simple alternative explanation for these previous observations. We confirmed aggresome formation in cells expressing proteins with polyalanine and polyglutamine expansions. As expected, we found a reduction in aggresome formation when microtubule function was disrupted using nocodazole. However, in addition to this effect, nocodazole treatment increased the proportions of cells with nuclear inclusions in PC12 cells expressing huntingtin exon 1 with 74 glutamines. This can be explained as nocodazole inhibits autophagosome-lysosome fusion, a key step in mutant huntingtin exon 1 clearance. This effect alone can explain the previous observations with this compound in polyglutamine diseases and raises doubts about the interpretation of some of the data that have been used to argue that aggresomes protect against polyglutamine mutations. 相似文献
4.
1