| Literature DB >> 18047739 |
Janet E Davies1, Sovan Sarkar, David C Rubinsztein.
Abstract
Huntington's disease and several of the spinocerebellar ataxias are caused by the abnormal expansion of a CAG repeat within the coding region of the disease gene. This results in the production of a mutant protein with an abnormally expanded polyglutamine tract. Although these disorders have a clear monogenic cause, each polyglutamine expansion mutation is likely to cause the dysfunction of many pathways and processes within the cell. It has been proposed that the ubiquitin proteasome system is impaired in polyglutamine expansion disorders and that this contributes to pathology. However, this is controversial with some groups demonstrating decreased proteasome activity in polyglutamine expansion disorders, some showing no change in activity and others demonstrating an increase in proteasome activity. It remains unknown whether the ubiquitin proteasome system is a feasible therapeutic target in these disorders. Here we review the conflicting results obtained from different assays performed in a variety of different systems. Publication history: Republished from Current BioData's Targeted Proteins database (TPdb; http://www.targetedproteinsdb.com).Entities:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 18047739 PMCID: PMC2106366 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2091-8-S1-S2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Biochem ISSN: 1471-2091 Impact factor: 4.059
Assays used to study UPS function in polyglutamine expansion disorders. See text for further details.
| Fluorogenic substrate peptides | 20S proteasome activity | Direct measure of chymotrypsin-like, trypsin-like or peptidyl-glutamyl activity of the 20S proteasome | Quantitative analysis of proteolytic activity in cell and tissue lysates | Does not measure ubiquitylation, substrate interaction, unfolding or effects on other components of the UPS other than proteasome activity | [14, 15, 25, 30, 32, 33] |
| Degron-tagged fluorescent proteins | Levels of fluorescent reporter protein tagged with a signal targeting it for proteasome degradation | Proteasome activity and targeting to proteasome | Functional analysis of UPS system in vivo | Does not measure all aspects of UPS function | [13, 14, 29, 37, 38] |
| Levels of endogenous UPS substrates | Degradation of well characterised, endogenous UPS substrates e.g. p53 | Ubiquitylation, proteasome activity, chaperones | Functional analysis of entire UPS system. Substrate expressed at endogenous levels | Levels of endogenous substrate may be altered due to effects of the polyglutamine expansion independent of the UPS | [15] |
| Yeast two-hybrid assay | Interaction of polyglutamine-containing proteins with UPS components | Proteasome subunits and components that interact with polyglutamine proteins | Shows direct interactions | Does not give functional data | [26-28] |
| In vitro assay of proteasome activity | Effect of synthetic peptides, purifed aggregates and fibrillar species on activity of purified proteasomes | Activity of purified proteasomes | Shows direct effects of poly-glutamine containing proteins on proteasome activity | Does not measure other components of the UPS | [14, 23-25] |
Model systems used to study UPS function in polyglutamine expansion disorders. See text for further details.
| Human post mortem brain | Immunocytochemistry, assay of proteasome activity in lysates using fluorescent substrates | [3, 20, 30] | |
| Human patient skin fibroblasts | Proteasome activity using fluorescent substrates | [30] | |
| R6/2 transgenic mouse model of HD | Proteasome activity, immunocytochemistry, | R6/2 mouse generated by Mangiarini et al. [60] | [21, 34] |
| R6/1 transgenic mouse model of HD | Proteasome activity | R6/1 mouse generated by Mangiarini et al. [60] | [15] |
| HD94 conditional mouse model of HD | Chymotrypsin-like, trypsin-like or peptidyl-glutamyl activity in lysates | HD94 conditional mouse generated by Yamamoto et al. [61] | [33] |
| SCA 7 knock-in mouse model | Crossed to a transgenic mouse expressing an EGFP–degron reporter | SCA 7 transgenic mouse generated by Yoo et al. [62] | [31] |
| Transgenic Drosophila models of polyglutamine expansion disorders | Genetic screens | [56] | |
| Cell models of HD and SCA, stable cell lines and transient expression of mutant constructs. Inducible or constitutive transgene expression | Immunocytochemistry, assay of proteasome activity in lysates using fluorescent substrates, co-expression of construct with fluorescent–degron reporter. | [13-15, 20, 29, 32] | |
| C. elegans models | Co-expression of mutant ataxin-3 and a ubiquitin-conjugated dsRed reporter | [37] |