| Literature DB >> 22333271 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: An array of experimental models have been developed in the small model organisms C. elegans, S. cerevisiae and D. melanogaster for the study of various neurodegenerative diseases including Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, and expanded polyglutamine diseases as exemplified by Huntington's disease (HD) and related ataxias. Genetic approaches to determine the nature of regulators of the disease phenotypes have ranged from small scale to essentially whole genome screens. The published data covers distinct models in all three organisms and one important question is the extent to which shared genetic factors can be uncovered that affect several or all disease models. Surprisingly it has appeared that there may be relatively little overlap and that many of the regulators may be organism or disease-specific. There is, however, a need for a fully integrated analysis of the available genetic data based on careful comparison of orthologues across the species to determine the real extent of overlap.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22333271 PMCID: PMC3292922 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2164-13-71
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Genomics ISSN: 1471-2164 Impact factor: 3.969
Figure 1Steps in the integrated analysis of genetic regulators identified from genetic approaches in model organisms.
Genetic studies for the identification of regulators of neurodegeneration models in C.elegans, S. cerevisiae and D. melanogaster
| Study Number | Primary model Organism | Disease model | Expressed construct | Screen | Number of Genetic modifiers | Orthologues in C. elegans | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | P | Htt-Q0, Q24, Q33, Q35, and Q40 | Genome-wide RNAi | 186 | 186 | [ | |
| 2 | SOD | G85R SOD | Genome-wide RNAi | 81 | 81 | [ | |
| 3 | S | WT α-synuclein | Genome-wide RNAi | 82 | 82 | [ | |
| 4 | T | Tau P301L and V337M | Genome-wide RNAi | 75 | 75 | [ | |
| 5 | S | WT α-synuclein | Hypothesis-driven RNAi | 20 | 20 | [ | |
| 6 | P | Htt-Q150 | Candidate genes | 12 | 12 | [ | |
| 7 | S | WT α-synuclein | Systematic RNAi screen | 11 | 11 | [ | |
| 8 | P | Htt-Q128 | Candidate genes | 4 | 4 | [ | |
| 9 | Aβ | Aβ1-42 | Candidate genes | 2 | 2 | [ | |
| 10 | T | Tau P301L and V337M | Forward genetic | 2 | 2 | [ | |
| 11 | T | Tau V337M | Candidate genes | 2 | 2 | [ | |
| 12 | P | Htt-Q32, Q40, Q56, Q79 | Candidate genes | 2 | 2 | [ | |
| 13 | P | Htt-Q2 and Q150 | Candidate genes | 1 | 1 | [ | |
| 14 | P and S | Htt-Q20, Htt-Q53, A53T α-synuclein | Genome-wide genetic | 138 | 41 | [ | |
| 15 | S | α-synuclein | Selected genetic screen | 77 | 20 | [ | |
| 16 | Aβ | Aβ1-42 | Genome-wide genetic | 40 | 11 | [ | |
| 17 | P | Htt-Q103 | Genome-wide loss-of-function suppressor | 30 | 5 | [ | |
| 18 | S | WT α-synuclein | Genome-wide overexpression | 22 | 7 | [ | |
| 19 | S | WT α-synuclein | Candidate genes | 5 | 1 | [ | |
| 20 | T | Tau V337M | Large-scale genetic | 30 | 14 | [ | |
| 21 | P | Htt-Q128 | protein interaction and selected genetic screen | 32 | 34 | [ | |
| 22 | P | Selective genetic modifier screen | 24 | 20 | [ | ||
| 23 | T | Tau V337M | Large-scale genetic | 24 | 10 | [ | |
| 24 | P | Htt-Q127 | Selective genetic modifier screen | 10 | 2 | [ | |
| 25 | P | SCA3trQ78 | Genome-wide screen | 18 | 17 | [ | |
| 26 | P | SCA1 30Q and 82Q | Large-scale genetic | 17 | 11 | [ | |
| 27 | P | Htt-Q127 | Genome-wide screen | 2 | 1 | [ | |
| 28 | S | A30P and A53T α-synuclein | Candidate gene | 1 | 1 | [ | |
| Total | 950 | 675 |
The number of regulators of neurodegeneration that were identified in each study is shown along with the number of these genes with orthologues in C elegans. The disease models include organisms expressing forms of β-amyloid (AB), polyQ expansions (P), wild type or mutant α-synuclein (S), mutant superoxide dismutase (SOD), or mutant tau (T).
Figure 2Functional profiling of genetic modifiers identified in diverse screens. Comparative analysis of modifiers identified in worm (Ce) models of polyQ, tau, SOD and α-synuclein aggregation, yeast (Sc) models of misfolded α-synuclein and Htt toxicity and fly (Dm) models of misfolded tau and polyQ toxicity from diverse screens reveals that the identified modifier genes function in a wide variety of biological processes as defined in the original studies. The blue filled box indicates that one or more genes in this category were identified. The number of the study indicated refers to the numbering in Table 1.
Overlapping genetic regulators of neurodegeneration with orthologues in C.elegans
| Sequence Name | Gene name | Description | Organism | Disease model | Expression in neurons |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Y53C10A.12 | Heat-shock transcription factor | worm | Aβ, P, S, SOD, T | yes | |
| F26D10.3 | HSP70 protein family | fly, worm | P, T, S | yes | |
| F54D5.8 | Molecular chaperone (DnaJ) | fly | P, T | ? | |
| K01C8.10 | Chaperone containing TCP-1 | worm | P, SOD | yes | |
| C07G2.3 | Chaperone containing TCP-1 | worm | P, SOD | ? | |
| T09B4.10 | C-term of HSP-70 interacting protein (E3 ubiquitin ligase) | fly, worm | P, T | yes | |
| Y94H6A.6 | Ubiquitin conjugating enzyme | fly, yeast | P, S | ? | |
| M7.1 | E2 Ubiquitin conjugating enzyme | fly | P | yes | |
| C06A1.1 | AAA ATPase, functions as a ubiquitin-related chaperone | worm | P | Yes | |
| F52D10.3, M117.2 | 14-3-3 family | fly | P | yes | |
| C39F7.4 | Small Ras-like GTPase Rab1 | fly, yeast, worm | P, S | yes | |
| B0361.10 | SNARE protein YKT6 | yeast | S | ? | |
| C54H2.5 | SURF-4 related to cargo transport protein ERV29 | worm, yeast | S | yes | |
| Y54E2A.12 | Predicted GTPase activator protein | yeast | S | ? | |
| R11A8.4 | NAD-dependent histone deacetylase | fly, worm | P, S | Yes | |
| C53A5.3 | Histone deacetylase 1 | fly, worm | P, S | No? | |
| F02E9.4 | SIN3 family of histone deacetylase subunits | fly | P, S | yes | |
| F59F4.1 | - | Acyl-CoA oxidase | fly, yeast, worm | P, S, T | ? |
| ZK256.1a | Golgi P-type ATPase Ca2+ -pump | yeast | S | yes | |
| W08D2.5, | Predicted lysosomal P-type ATPase | worm, yeast | S | ? | |
| Y43F4B.4 | Nuclear pore complex protein | fly | P | yes | |
| F49E10.5 | Transcriptional co-repressor homolog | fly | P | ? | |
| K08F8.6 | Transcriptional cofactor | fly | P | yes | |
| T17E9.1 | Serine-threonine protein kinase | fly, worm | P, T | yes | |
| H18N23.2 | - | Protein phosphatase, regulatory subunit PPP1R3C/D | fly, worm | P, SOD | ? |
| T14F9.1 | Vacuolar ATPase subunit H | worm | P, S | Yes | |
| T21E12.4 | Dynein heavy chain | fly, worm | P | Yes | |
| Y113G7B.18 | MeDiaTor | worm | S, SOD | ? | |
| Y116A8C.35 | U2AF splicing factor | worm | P, S | Yes | |
| F56C11.1 | Homologue of dual oxidase | worm | P, SOD | No | |
| C32E8.10c | Clathrin-adaptor protein AP180 | worm, yeast | Aβ, P | Yes | |
| JC8.10b | Synaptojanin | worm, yeast | Aβ, P | Yes | |
| ZK742.1a | Exportin-1 | Fly, yeast | Aβ, P | ? | |
| C05C8.7 | Mannose-6-phosphate isomerase | worm | P, SOD | No |
The genes were included if they were identified in more than one genetic screen. The disease models included organisms expressing forms of β-amyloid (AB), polyQ expansions (P), wild type or mutant α-synuclein (S), mutant superoxide dismutase (SOD), or mutant tau (T). Under expression in neurons a question mark indicates that no data are available in Wormbase.
Biological processes associated with the identified overlapping genetic regulators of neurodegeneration.
| Biological process | Genes |
|---|---|
| Heat shock transcription factor | |
| Molecular chaperones | |
| Ubiquitin related | |
| Histone deacetylases | |
| Signalling/chaperone | |
| Transcriptional cofactor/regulator | |
| Nucleopore/nuclear export | |
| Vesicular transport | |
| Endocytosis | |
| Transport ATPase | |
| Protein phosphorylation | |
| Other cellular processes |
Figure 3The diagram shows known binary protein-protein interactions between the molecular chaperone and ubiquitin-related overlapping regulators in Table 2. The interactions are included if they were identified between orthologues of the proteins from any species and are shown labelled with the names of the human orthologues with those involved in protein folding (chaperones) in blue and those in ubiquitin-related pathways in red. The human orthologues and their corresponding C. elegans orthologues are as follows: HSF1, hsf-1; Hsc70, hsp-1; DnaJB5, dnj-13; CHIP, chn-1; p97, cdc-48.1; Ube2D2, let-70.