Transcript lecture 12
12-1
Protein misfolding diseases
Diseases caused by mutations in chaperones
- α-crystallin, MKKS/BBS6 chaperonin
Neurodegenerative diseases
- prions, Huntington’s disease
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Neurodegenerative disorders: prions
pathogenesis of many neurodegenerative disorders is due to abnormal protein
conformation
common theme in diseases is conversion of normal cellular and/or circulating protein into
an insoluble, aggregated, beta-sheet rich form which is deposited in the brain as an amyloid
deposits are toxic and produce neuronal dysfunction and death
prion-related diseases occur when conversion of a normal prion protein, PrP, into an
infectious and pathogenic form, PrPSc (Prion Protein Scrapie). Prion diseases:
Creutzfeld Jacob disease, Kuru, Gerstmann-Straussler-Scheinker disease, Fatal
familial insomnia, Scrapie (sheep), Bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE or ‘mad
cow’), chronic wasting disease (mule deer, elk), feline spongiform encephalopathy
the conversion of PrP into PrPSc is a conformational one; the PrPSc form is more
resistant to proteases and is detergent-insoluble
PrPSc forms amyloid fibrils in the brain; injection of this material into the brains of normal
mice leads to disease
the normal function of PrP is unknown; transgenic mice lacking this protein grow normally
Other proteins unrelated in sequence to PrP have similar properties:
e.g., yeast Sup35, Ure2p
Prion transmission characteristics
harbours hamster PrPSc
contains hamster PrP
(lacks mouse PrP)
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harbours murine PrPSc
contains hamster PrP
(lacks mouse PrP)
Note:
- testing for infectivity with
PrPSc is done by injecting
brain material from an
infected animal into the
brain of another animal
- transgenic mice devoid of
mouse PrP cannot be
infected by mouse PrPSc
Class Presentations
TRiC stands for TCP-1 Ring Complex and is the same eukaryotic
cytosolic chaperonin as CCT (Chaperonin containing TCP-1).
CCT was first thought to assist the folding of only actins and tubulins, but
recently, it has been found to bind ~10% of all cell proteins and is known to
assist the folding of numerous other proteins, including a viral capsid protein,
myosin, luciferase and VHL.
Feldman et al. (1999) Formation of the VHL-Elongin BC
tumor suppressor complex is mediated by the chaperonin
TRiC. Mol. Cell 4, 1051-1061.
there exists a cellular mechanism by which misfolded/aggregated proteins
are sequestered in the cell
such sequestration occurs near the centrosome in an organelle-like
structure commonly termed ‘aggresome’
Johnston et al. (1998) Aggresomes: a cellular response to
misfolded proteins. J. Cell Biol. 143, 1883-98.
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Neurodegenerative disorders:
Huntington’s disease
12-5
Huntington’s disease (HD) is a very common syndrome that affects numerous
people
It is caused by the expansion of CAG trinucleotide repeats (encoding
polyglutamine) within a large protein (350 kDa) termed huntingtin
the function of huntingtin is unclear; evidence points to trafficking (vesicular)
normal and disease forms
unaffected individuals carry between 6 and 39 repeats in exon 1 of
huntingtin
HD patients typically have between 36-180 repeats in exon 1 of huntingtin
mutant forms of huntingtin with expanded repeats form nuclear and
cytoplasmic aggregates in human brain tissue
Huntington’s disease:
in vitro model system
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can express protein fusion with different numbers of CAG repeats and study
Muchowski et al. (2000) PNAS 97, 7841. produced GST-HD proteins (HD20Q and
HD53Q) then cleaved off HD from tag using protease that cleaves between GST and HD;
aggregation was then followed in the presence or absence of chaperones
found that combination of Hsp40 and DnaK were most effective at preventing
aggregation
time course of
aggregation detected by
‘filter trap’ assay
after 8 hours;
aggregation assayed
as in (A)
time course of
aggregation
Huntington’s disease:
in vitro model system
control
Hdj-1
GST-HD proteins were induced to aggregate
by cleavage (as before) in the presence or
absence of chaperones
fibrils/aggregate formation was observed by
electron microscopy
DnaK
Hsp70/ATP
Suppression of HD exon 1 fibril formation by Hsp40
and Hsp70 in vitro. GST-HD fusion protein (3 µM)
was incubated with PreScission protease for 5 h as
in previous slide:
in the absence (A) or presence (B-F) of chaperones
(6 µM)
DnaJ
Hsc70/Hdj-1
(B) DnaK
(C) DnaJ
(D) Hdj-1
(E) Hsc70/ATP
(F) Hsc70/Hdj-1/ATP (Hsc70/Hdj-1 = 2:1). Samples
then were analyzed by EM. (Bar = 100 nm.)
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Huntington’s disease:
in vivo yeast model system
Huntingtin constructs with Exon 1 and
containing 20, 39 or 53 CAG repeats as well
as a c-myc tag (which is recognized by
antibody and can be immunoprecipitated)
were expressed in S. cerevisiae
(A) *=SDS-insoluble aggregates that do not
penetrate the gel
(A) **=degradation product of full-length
protein
(B) filter-trap assay; T=total, S=soluble,
P=pellet after centrifugation
(D) immunoprecipitation of different
proteins with anti Ssa (cytosolic) and Ssb
(ribosome-bound) Hsp70 protein homologues
from yeast, as well as anti-Ydj1 (Hsp40
homologue)
High-level expression of Hsp70/40 in
yeast with HD53Q made the aggregates
SDS-soluble! (not shown)
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Huntington’s disease:
Drosophila model system
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expressed HA-tagged 127 CAG
repeat-protein (127Q) in the eye,
causing abnormalities/polyQ deposits
GMR has 5 tandem copies of a
response element derived from the
rhodopsin 1 gene promoter)
GAL4 is a transcription factor
UAS, ‘Upstream Activating
Sequence’ required for GAL4dependent gene expression
flies carrying GMR-GAL +
UAS127Q were crossed with EPelement insertion strains (7000)
screened for suppression or
enhancement of toxicity
found: dhdJ1, an Hsp40
homologue; dtpr2 is a TPRcontaining protein with J domain
Esfarjani and Benzer (2000) Science 287, 1837.
still see aggregates
(as with the in vitro studies)
GMR GMR GMR GMR GMR
UAS
GAL4
127Q
TRANSGENIC STRAIN CARRYING
GMR PROMOTER-GAL4 CONSTRUCT
(HIGH-LEVEL EXPRESSION IN EYE)
CONTRUCT CROSSED INTO THE ABOVE STRAIN
(UAS ACTIVATED BY GAL4 TO INDUCE HIGHLEVEL EXPRESSION OF 127Q)
α-crystallin and disease
α-crystallin belongs to the class of molecular chaperones collectively termed
small heat-shock proteins
functions include (but is not limited to) maintaining microfilament stability
(e.g., intermediate filaments and perhaps actin and tubulin)
present in all tissue types and ubiquitous in the three domains
mutations in α-crystallin genes A and B cause some major ailments:
cataracts
- function is as a structural protein as well as a molecular chaperone; it
makes up nearly 1/3 of the eye lens protein, while β- and γ-crystallins
make up close to the other 2/3
desmin-related myopathy
- desmin is an intermediate filament; mutation in the chaperone result in
the accumulation of intracellular aggregates of desmin (co-aggregation
with α-crystallin occurs)
Alexander’s disease
- the neurodegenerative Alexander's disease is characterized by GFAP
co-aggregates with α-crystallin; GFAP is closely related to desmin
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α-crystallin-GFAP experiment
R120G α-crystallin mutant is found
in some patients
GFAP
+
wt α -crystallin
GFAP
+
R120G α -crystallin
Association of α-crystallin (wild-type
and mutant) with GFAP at 37ºC
the chaperone activity of the R120G
mutant (located in the highly conserved
α-crystallin domain) is not completely
lost compared to the wild-type
chaperone intact (as judged by
prevention-of-aggregation experiments)
reason why the mutant chaperone
associates more strongly with GFAP
(and desmin) is unclear
specificity of binding causing the
problem?
Perng et al. (1999) J. Biol. Chem. 274, 33235.
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12-12
MKKS/BBS6 mutations cause disease
MKKS/BBS6 is one of 12 genes that cause Bardet-Biedl
Syndrome (i.e., a polygenic disorder)
mapping of BBS genes relied on screening inbred populations
(e.g., Bedoin arabs, Old Order Amish, Newfoundland)
BBS phenotypes: obesity, kidney and liver problems, retinal
degeneration, cardiomyopathy, diabetes, mental retardation,
anosmia, hearing impairment, polydactyly, etc.
MKKS/BBS6 is related to the chaperonin CCT
two other chaperonin-like genes were found: BBS10, BBS12
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MKKS/BBS6 and other BBS alleles
the chaperonin is related to the eukaryotic cytosolic chaperonin CCT
it is found only in vertebrates and ‘more evolved’ organisms
it is highly divergent although it is clearly a Group II chaperonin
E
I
A
P
A
I
BBS4 is involved in microtubule anchoring; it
contains multiple TPR motifs: 34 amino acid repeats of
helix-loop-helix
- TPRs are protein-protein interaction domains
BBS proteins are required for proper cilia function;
BBS is therefore a ciliopathy
improper function of ciliary genes results in
numerous ailments, including retinal degeneration,
polycystic kidneys, skeletal anomalies, etc.
E
E, equatorial domain
A, apical domain
I, intermediate
domain
P, protrusion