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Withaferin A Targets Intermediate Filaments Glial Fibrillary Acidic Protein and Vimentin in a Model of Retinal Gliosis
Authors:Paola Bargagna-Mohan   Riya R. Paranthan   Adel Hamza   Neviana Dimova   Beatrice Trucchi   Cidambi Srinivasan   Gregory I. Elliott   Chang-Guo Zhan   Daniel L. Lau   Haiyan Zhu   Kousuke Kasahara   Masaki Inagaki   Franca Cambi     Royce Mohan
Affiliation:From the Departments of Ophthalmology & Visual Sciences, ;§Pharmaceutical Sciences, ;Neurology, ;Statistics, ;**Chemistry, and ;‡‡Electrical & Computer Engineering, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky 40536 and ;the §§Division of Biochemistry, Aichi Cancer Center Research Institute, Nagoya 464-8681, Japan
Abstract:Gliosis is a biological process that occurs during injury repair in the central nervous system and is characterized by the overexpression of the intermediate filaments (IFs) glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) and vimentin. A common thread in many retinal diseases is reactive Müller cell gliosis, an untreatable condition that leads to tissue scarring and even blindness. Here, we demonstrate that the vimentin-targeting small molecule withaferin A (WFA) is a novel chemical probe of GFAP. Using molecular modeling studies that build on the x-ray crystal structure of tetrameric vimentin rod 2B domain we reveal that the WFA binding site is conserved in the corresponding domain of tetrameric GFAP. Consequently, we demonstrate that WFA covalently binds soluble recombinant tetrameric human GFAP at cysteine 294. In cultured primary astrocytes, WFA binds to and down-regulates soluble vimentin and GFAP expression to cause cell cycle G0/G1 arrest. Exploiting a chemical injury model that overexpresses vimentin and GFAP in retinal Müller glia, we demonstrate that systemic delivery of WFA down-regulates soluble vimentin and GFAP expression in mouse retinas. This pharmacological knockdown of soluble IFs results in the impairment of GFAP filament assembly and inhibition of cell proliferative response in Müller glia. We further show that a more severe GFAP filament assembly deficit manifests in vimentin-deficient mice, which is partly rescued by WFA. These findings illustrate WFA as a chemical probe of type III IFs and illuminate this class of withanolide as a potential treatment for diverse gliosis-dependent central nervous system traumatic injury conditions and diseases, and for orphan IF-dependent pathologies.
Keywords:Cell Cycle   Drug Action   Intermediate Filaments   Protein Drug Interactions   Protein Self-assembly   GFAP   Gliosis   Natural Product   Retina   Vimentin
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