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1.
Huntington's disease (HD) is caused by an expansion of the CAG repeat in the HD gene. The repeat is translated to the polyglutamine tract as huntingtin, the product of HD gene. Several studies showed that the expansion of polyglutamine tract leads to formation of cytoplasminc and/or intranuclear aggregates in vivo or in vitro. To understand the molecular mechanism of the aggregate formation, we studied the transient expression of HD exon 1-GFP fusion proteins in COS-7 cells. The fusion protein carrying 77 glutamine repeats aggregated in a time-dependent manner, while the fusion protein carrying 25 glutamine tract remained to be distributed diffusely in the cytoplasm even 72 hours after transfection. Initially, fluorescent signals were diffusely distributed in the COS-7 cells that were transfected with the construct containing the 77 CAG repeats. Approximately 40 hours later after the transfection, large aggregates grew very rapidly in those cells and the diffuse cytoplasmic fluorescence faded out. This process was completed within 40 minutes from the appearance of small aggregates in the perinuclear regions. The addition of cycloheximide reduced the frequencies of aggregate formation. A possibility was discussed that the aggregate formation was via nucleation. The focal concentration of mutated proteins in neurons may trigger the aggregate formation.  相似文献   

2.
Polyglutamine expansion causes the disease proteins to aggregate, resulting in stable insoluble aggregates in the nucleus. The in vitro aggregation and cellular toxicity of polyglutamine proteins are reduced by chaperone heat shock proteins (Hsp). In polyglutamine disease animal models, however, polyglutamine inclusions remain in the nucleus despite the suppression of neurodegeneration by Hsp. Studies using yeast genetic approach revealed that the balance of Hsp is important for regulating protein aggregation in the cytoplasm of yeast cells. Here we report that N-terminal fragments of huntingtin with an expanded polyglutamine tract form aggregates only in the cytoplasm of yeast cells and, when tagged with nuclear localization sequences (NLS), are able to aggregate in the nucleus. Deletion of the Hsp104 gene prevents the aggregation of huntingtin in the cytoplasm but is unable to eliminate the aggregation of NLS-tagged huntingtin in the nucleus. The inhibitory effect of Hsp104 deletion on the cytoplasmic aggregation of huntingtin only occurs in viable yeast cells, as aggregates can be formed in Hsp104 deletion cells that have been frozen for 72 h. Fresh cytosolic extracts of the Hsp104 deletion strain inhibit the aggregation of huntingtin in vitro, suggesting that the deletion of Hsp104 may alter the activities of other cytoplasmic factors to inhibit polyglutamine aggregation in the cytoplasm. We propose that the regulatory effects of chaperones may mainly be restricted to the cytoplasm and have much less influence on polyglutamine-containing aggregates in the nucleus.  相似文献   

3.
Spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy (SBMA) is a neurodegenerative disorder caused by the expansion of a polyglutamine tract in the androgen receptor (AR). The N-terminal fragment of AR containing the expanded polyglutamine tract aggregates in cytoplasm and/or in nucleus and induces cell death. Some chaperones such as Hsp40 and Hsp70 have been identified as important regulators of polyglutamine aggregation and/or cell death in neuronal cells. Recently, Hsp105alpha, expressed at especially high levels in mammalian brain, has been shown to suppress apoptosis in neuronal cells and prevent the aggregation of protein caused by heat shock in vitro. However, its role in polyglutamine-mediated cell death and toxicity has not been studied. In the present study, we examined the effects of Hsp105alpha on the aggregation and cell toxicity caused by expansion of the polyglutamine tract using a cellular model of SBMA. The transient expression of truncated ARs (tARs) containing an expanded polyglutamine tract caused aggregates to form in COS-7 and SK-N-SH cells and concomitantly apoptosis in the cells with the nuclear aggregates. When Hsp105alpha was overexpressed with tAR97 in the cells, Hsp105alpha was colocalized to aggregates of tAR97, and the aggregation and cell toxicity caused by expansion of the polyglutamine tract were markedly reduced. Both beta-sheet and alpha-helix domains, but not the ATPase domain, of Hsp105alpha were necessary to suppress the formation of aggregates in vivo and in vitro. Furthermore, Hsp105alpha was found to localize in nuclear inclusions formed by ARs containing an expanded polyglutamine tract in tissues of patients and transgenic mice with SBMA. These findings suggest that overexpression of Hsp105alpha suppresses cell death caused by expansion of the polyglutamine tract without chaperone activity, and the enhanced expression of the essential domains of Hsp105alpha in brain may provide an effective therapeutic approach for CAG repeat diseases.  相似文献   

4.
Protein aggregation is associated with neurodegeneration. Polyglutamine expansion diseases such as spinobulbar muscular atrophy and Huntington disease feature proteins that are destabilized by an expanded polyglutamine tract in their N-termini. It has previously been reported that intracellular aggregation of these target proteins, the androgen receptor (AR) and huntingtin (Htt), is modulated by actin-regulatory pathways. Sequences that flank the polyglutamine tract of AR and Htt might influence protein aggregation and toxicity through protein-protein interactions, but this has not been studied in detail. Here we have evaluated an N-terminal 127 amino acid fragment of AR and Htt exon 1. The first 50 amino acids of ARN127 and the first 14 amino acids of Htt exon 1 mediate binding to filamentous actin in vitro. Deletion of these actin-binding regions renders the polyglutamine-expanded forms of ARN127 and Htt exon 1 less aggregation-prone, and increases the SDS-solubility of aggregates that do form. These regions thus appear to alter the aggregation frequency and type of polyglutamine-induced aggregation. These findings highlight the importance of flanking sequences in determining the propensity of unstable proteins to misfold.  相似文献   

5.
Huntington’s disease (HD) is a progressive neurodegenerative disorder caused by an expansion of a CAG triplet repeat (encoding for a polyglutamine tract) within the first exon of the huntingtin gene. Expression of the mutant huntingtin (mHTT) protein can result in the production of N-terminal fragments with a robust propensity to form oligomers and aggregates, which may be causally associated with HD pathology. Several lines of evidence indicate that N17 phosphorylation or pseudophosphorylation at any of the residues T3, S13 or S16, alone or in combination, modulates mHTT aggregation, subcellular localization and toxicity. Consequently, increasing N17 phosphorylation has been proposed as a potential therapeutic approach. However, developing genetic/pharmacological tools to quantify these phosphorylation events is necessary in order to subsequently develop tool modulators, which is difficult given the transient and incompletely penetrant nature of such post-translational modifications. Here we describe the first ultrasensitive sandwich immunoassay that quantifies HTT phosphorylated at residue S13 and demonstrate its utility for specific analyte detection in preclinical models of HD.  相似文献   

6.
Neurodegeneration in Huntington disease is described by neuronal loss in which the probability of cell death remains constant with time. However, the quantitative connection between the kinetics of cell death and the molecular mechanism initiating neurodegeneration remains unclear. One hypothesis is that nucleation of protein aggregates containing exon I fragments of the mutant huntingtin protein (mhttex1), which contains an expanded polyglutamine region in patients with the disease, is the explanation for the infrequent but steady occurrence of neuronal death, resulting in adult onset of the disease. Recent in vitro evidence suggests that sufficiently long polyglutamine peptides undergo a unimolecular conformational change to form a nucleus that seeds aggregation. Here we use this nucleation mechanism as the basis to derive a stochastic mathematical model describing the probability of aggregate formation in cells as a function of time and mhttex1 protein concentration, and validate the model experimentally. These findings suggest that therapeutic strategies for Huntington disease predicated on reducing the rate of mhttex1 aggregation need only make modest reductions in huntingtin expression level to substantially increase the delay time until aggregate formation.  相似文献   

7.
Cysteine string protein (CSP), a 34-kDa molecular chaperone, is expressed on synaptic vesicles in neurons and on secretory vesicles in endocrine, neuroendocrine, and exocrine cells. CSP can be found in a complex with two other chaperones, the heat shock cognate protein Hsc70, and small glutamine-rich tetratricopeptide repeat domain protein (SGT). CSP function is vital in synaptic transmission; however, the precise nature of its role remains controversial. We have previously reported interactions of CSP with both heterotrimeric GTP-binding proteins (G proteins) and N-type calcium channels. These associations give rise to a tonic G protein inhibition of the channels. Here we have examined the effects of huntingtin fragments (exon 1) with (huntingtin(exon1/exp)) and without (huntingtin(exon1/nonexp)) expanded polyglutamine (polyQ) tracts on the CSP chaperone system. In vitro huntingtin(exon1/exp) sequestered CSP and blocked the association of CSP with G proteins. In contrast, huntingtin(exon1/nonexp) did not interact with CSP and did not alter the CSP/G protein association. Similarly, co-expression of huntingtin(exon1/exp) with CSP and N-type calcium channels eliminated CSP's tonic G protein inhibition of the channels, while coexpression of huntingtin(exon1/nonexp) did not alter the robust inhibition promoted by CSP. These results indicate that CSP's modulation of G protein inhibition of calcium channel activity is blocked in the presence of a huntingtin fragment with expanded polyglutamine tracts.  相似文献   

8.
Li XJ 《Molecular neurobiology》1999,20(2-3):111-124
Huntington's disease (HD) is an inherited neurodegenerative disorder that affects about one in 10,000 individuals in North America. The genetic defect responsible for the disease is an expansion of a CAG repeat that encodes a polyglutamine tract in the expressed protein, huntingtin. The disease is characterized by involuntary movements, cognitive impairment, and emotional disturbance. Despite the widespread expression of huntingtin, the brains of HD patients show selective neuronal loss in the striatum and the deep layers of the cerebral cortex. Recent studies have shown that polyglutamine expansion causes huntingtin to aggregate, to accumulate in the nucleus, and to interact abnormally with other proteins. Several cellular and animal models for HD have revealed that intranuclear accumulation of mutant huntingtin and the formation of neuropil aggregates precede neurological symptoms and neurodegeneration. Intranuclear huntingtin may affect nuclear function and the expression of genes important for neuronal function, whereas neuropil aggregates may interfere with neuritic transport and function. These early pathological events, which occur in the absence of neurodegeneration, may contribute to the neurological symptoms of HD and ultimately lead to neuronal cell death.  相似文献   

9.
10.
Toxicity in amyloid diseases is intimately linked to the nature of aggregates, with early oligomeric species believed to be more cytotoxic than later fibrillar aggregates. Yet mechanistic understanding of how aggregating species evolve with time is currently lacking. We have explored the aggregation process of a chimera composed of a globular protein (cellular retinoic acid-binding protein, CRABP) and huntingtin exon 1 with polyglutamine tracts either above (Q53) or below (Q20) the pathological threshold using Escherichia coli cells as a model intracellular environment. Previously we showed that fusion of the huntingtin exon 1 sequence with >40Q led to structural perturbation and decreased stability of CRABP (Ignatova, Z., and Gierasch, L. M. (2006) J. Biol. Chem. 281, 12959-12967). Here we report that the Q53 chimera aggregates in cells via a multistep process: early stage aggregates are spherical and detergent-soluble, characteristics of prefibrillar aggregates, and appear to be dominated structurally by CRABP, in that they can promote aggregation of a CRABP variant but not oligoglutamine aggregation, and the CRABP domain is relatively sequestered based on its protection from proteolysis. Late stage aggregates appear to be dominated by polyGln; they are fibrillar, detergent-resistant, capable of seeding aggregation of oligoglutamine but not the CRABP variant, and show relative protection of the polyglutamine-exon1 domain from proteolysis. These results point to an evolution of the dominant sequences in intracellular aggregates and may provide molecular insight into origins of toxic prefibrillar aggregates.  相似文献   

11.
Huntingtin is a widely expressed 350-kDa cytosolic multidomain of unknown function. Aberrant expansion of the polyglutamine tract located in the N-terminal region of huntingtin results in Huntington's disease. The presence of insoluble huntingtin inclusions in the brains of patients is one of the hallmarks of Huntington's disease. Experimentally, both full-length huntingtin and N-terminal fragments of huntingtin with expanded polyglutamine tracts trigger aggregate formation. Here, we report that upon the formation of huntingtin aggregates; endogenous cytosolic huntingtin, Hsc70/Hsp70 (heat shock protein and cognate protein of 70kDa) and syntaxin 1A become aggregate-centered. This redistribution suggests that these proteins are eventually depleted and become unavailable for normal cellular function. These results indicate that the cellular targeting of several key proteins are altered in the presence of mutant huntingtin and suggest that aggregate depletion of these proteins may underlie, in part, the sequence of disease progression.  相似文献   

12.
Deposition of misfolded proteins with a polyglutamine expansion is a hallmark of Huntington disease and other neurodegenerative disorders. Impairment of the proteolytic function of the proteasome has been reported to be both a cause and a consequence of polyglutamine accumulation. Here we found that the proteasomal chaperones that unfold proteins to be degraded by the proteasome but also have non-proteolytic functions co-localized with huntingtin inclusions both in primary neurons and in Huntington disease patients and formed a complex independently of the proteolytic particle. Overexpression of Rpt4 or Rpt6 facilitated aggregation of mutant huntingtin and ataxin-3 without affecting proteasomal degradation. Conversely, reducing Rpt6 or Rpt4 levels decreased the number of inclusions in primary neurons, indicating that endogenous Rpt4 and Rpt6 facilitate inclusion formation. In vitro reconstitution experiments revealed that purified 19S particles promote mutant huntingtin aggregation. When fused to the ornithine decarboxylase destabilizing sequence, proteins with expanded polyglutamine were efficiently degraded and did not aggregate. We propose that aggregation of proteins with expanded polyglutamine is not a consequence of a proteolytic failure of the 20S proteasome. Rather, aggregation is elicited by chaperone subunits of the 19S particle independently of proteolysis.  相似文献   

13.
Huntington's disease (HD) is caused by CAG repeat expansion in exon 1 of a large gene, IT15, possessing 67 exons. Transgenic mice expressing a truncated N-terminal peptide of huntingtin with an expanded polyglutamine tract translated only from exon 1 develop symptoms similar to Huntington's disease. In the present study, a bacterial system (Escherichia coli) was used to express truncated peptides of huntingtin translated from exon 1 of the HD gene. Bacterial death was observed after the induction of peptides with expanded polyglutamine tracts, and both sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-soluble peptides and insoluble aggregated material were detected by immunoblotting in the homogenates of such E. coli. E. coli death was partially reduced by the addition of dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO) or glycerol to the medium, with a consequent decrease in aggregated material and an increase in SDS-soluble peptide in the homogenate. These results suggest that DMSO and glycerol may decrease the toxicity of huntingtin with expanded polyglutamine tracts by acting as chemical chaperones.  相似文献   

14.
Polyglutamine tract expansion in androgen receptor is a recognized cause of spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy (SBMA), an X-linked motor neuronopathy. Similar mutations have been identified in proteins associated with other neurodegenerative diseases. Recent studies have shown that amplified polyglutamine repeat stretches form cellular aggregates that may be markers for these neurodegenerative diseases. Here we describe conditions that lead to aggregate formation by androgen receptor with polyglutamine stretch amplification. In transfection experiments, the mutant, compared with the wild-type receptor, was delayed in its cytoplasmic-nuclear translocation and formed large cytoplasmic aggregates in the presence of androgen. The cytoplasmic environment appears crucial for this aggregation, since retention of both the wild-type and mutant receptors in this cellular compartment by the deletion of their nuclear localization signals resulted in massive aggregation. Conversely, rapid nuclear transport of both receptors brought about by deletion of their ligand binding domains did not result in aggregate formation. However, androgen antagonists that altered the conformation of the ligand binding domain and promoted varying rates of cytoplasmic-nuclear translocation all inhibited aggregate formation. This demonstrates that in addition to the cytoplasmic localization, a distinct contribution of the ligand binding domain of the receptor is necessary for the aggregation. The finding that antiandrogens inhibit aggregate formation may provide the basis for in vivo determination of the role of these structures in SBMA.  相似文献   

15.
Huntington's disease (HD) is a neurodegenerative disorder that affects approximately 1 in 10 000 individuals. The underlying gene mutation was identified as a CAG‐triplet repeat expansion in the gene huntingtin. The CAG sequence codes for glutamine, and in HD, an expansion of the polyglutamine (poly‐Q) stretch above 35 glutamine residues results in pathogenicity. It has been demonstrated in various animal models that only the expression of exon 1 huntingtin, a 67‐amino acid‐long polypeptide plus a variable poly‐Q stretch, is sufficient to cause full HD‐like pathology. Therefore, a deeper understanding of exon 1 huntingtin, its structure, aggregation mechanism and interaction with other proteins is crucial for a better understanding of the disease. Here, we describe the synthesis of a 109‐amino acid‐long exon 1 huntingtin peptide including a poly‐Q stretch of 42 glutamines. This microwave‐assisted solid phase peptide synthesis resulted in milligram amounts of peptide with high purity. We also synthesized a nonpathogenic version of exon 1 huntingtin (90‐amino acid long including a poly‐Q stretch of 23 glutamine residues) using the same strategy. In circular dichroism spectroscopy, both polypeptides showed weak alpha‐helical properties with the longer peptide showing a higher helical degree. These model peptides have great potential for further biomedical analyses, e.g. for large‐scale pre‐screenings for aggregation inhibitors, further structural analyses as well as protein–protein interaction studies. Copyright © 2010 European Peptide Society and John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

16.
An unstable expansion of the polyglutamine repeat within exon 1 of the protein Htt (huntingtin) causes HD (Huntington's disease). Mounting evidence shows that accumulation of N-terminal mutant Htt fragments is the source of disruption of normal cellular processes which ultimately leads to neuronal cell death. Understanding the degradation mechanism of mutant Htt and improving its clearance has emerged as a new direction in developing therapeutic approaches to treat HD. In the present study we show that the brain-enriched adaptor protein FE65 is a novel interacting partner of Htt. The binding is mediated through WW-polyproline interaction and is dependent on the length of the polyglutamine tract. Interestingly, a reduction in mutant Htt protein level was observed in FE65-knockdown cells, and the process requires the UPS (ubiquitin/proteasome system). Moreover, the ubiquitination level of mutant Htt was found to be enhanced when FE65 is knocked down. Immunofluroescence staining revealed that FE65 associates with mutant Htt aggregates. Additionally, we demonstrated that overexpression of FE65 increases mutant Htt-induced cell death both in vitro and in vivo. These results suggest that FE65 facilitates the accumulation of mutant Htt in cells by preventing its degradation via the UPS, and thereby enhances the toxicity of mutant Htt.  相似文献   

17.
Huntington's disease (HD) is caused by a CAG expansion in the huntingtin gene. Expansion of the polyglutamine tract in the huntingtin protein results in massive cell death in the striatum of HD patients. We report that human induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) derived from HD patient fibroblasts can be corrected by the replacement of the expanded CAG repeat with a normal repeat using homologous recombination, and that the correction persists in iPSC differentiation into DARPP-32-positive neurons in vitro and in vivo. Further, correction of the HD-iPSCs normalized pathogenic HD signaling pathways (cadherin, TGF-β, BDNF, and caspase activation) and reversed disease phenotypes such as susceptibility to cell death and altered mitochondrial bioenergetics in neural stem cells. The ability to make patient-specific, genetically corrected iPSCs from HD patients will provide relevant disease models in identical genetic backgrounds and is a critical step for the eventual use of these cells in cell replacement therapy.  相似文献   

18.
19.
Prions are self-propagating infectious protein aggregates of mammals and fungi. The exact mechanism of prion formation is poorly understood. In a recent study, a comparative analysis of the aggregation propensities of chimeric proteins derived from the yeast Sup35p and mouse PrP prion proteins was performed in neuroblastoma cells. The cytosolic expression of the Sup35p domains NM, PrP and fusion proteins thereof revealed that the carboxyterminal domain of PrP (PrP90–230) mediated aggregate formation, while Sup35p N and M domains modulated aggregate size and frequency when fused to the globular domain of PrP. Here we further present co-aggregation studies of chimeric proteins with cytosolic PrP or a huntingtin fragment with an extended polyglutamine tract. Our studies demonstrate that cross-seeding by heterologous proteins requires sequence similarity with the aggregated protein domain. Taken together, these results demonstrate that nucleation and seeding of prion protein aggregates is strongly influenced by dynamic interactions between the aggregate core forming domain and its flanking regions.Key words: prion, Sup35, huntingtin, cross-seeding, co-aggregation  相似文献   

20.
The huntingtin exon 1 proteins with a polyglutamine repeat in the pathological range (51 or 83 glutamines), but not with a polyglutamine tract in the normal range (20 glutamines), form aggresome-like perinuclear inclusions in human 293 Tet-Off cells. These structures contain aggregated, ubiquitinated huntingtin exon 1 protein with a characteristic fibrillar morphology. Inclusion bodies with truncated huntingtin protein are formed at centrosomes and are surrounded by vimentin filaments. Inhibition of proteasome activity resulted in a twofold increase in the amount of ubiquitinated, SDS-resistant aggregates, indicating that inclusion bodies accumulate when the capacity of the ubiquitin-proteasome system to degrade aggregation-prone huntingtin protein is exhausted. Immunofluorescence and electron microscopy with immunogold labeling revealed that the 20S, 19S, and 11S subunits of the 26S proteasome, the molecular chaperones BiP/GRP78, Hsp70, and Hsp40, as well as the RNA-binding protein TIA-1, the potential chaperone 14-3-3, and alpha-synuclein colocalize with the perinuclear inclusions. In 293 Tet-Off cells, inclusion body formation also resulted in cell toxicity and dramatic ultrastructural changes such as indentations and disruption of the nuclear envelope. Concentration of mitochondria around the inclusions and cytoplasmic vacuolation were also observed. Together these findings support the hypothesis that the ATP-dependent ubiquitin-proteasome system is a potential target for therapeutic interventions in glutamine repeat disorders.  相似文献   

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