Literature DB >> 23608881

4D imaging of protein aggregation in live cells.

Rachel Spokoini1, Maya Shamir, Alma Keness, Daniel Kaganovich.   

Abstract

One of the key tasks of any living cell is maintaining the proper folding of newly synthesized proteins in the face of ever-changing environmental conditions and an intracellular environment that is tightly packed, sticky, and hazardous to protein stability. The ability to dynamically balance protein production, folding and degradation demands highly-specialized quality control machinery, whose absolute necessity is observed best when it malfunctions. Diseases such as ALS, Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, and certain forms of Cystic Fibrosis have a direct link to protein folding quality control components, and therefore future therapeutic development requires a basic understanding of underlying processes. Our experimental challenge is to understand how cells integrate damage signals and mount responses that are tailored to diverse circumstances. The primary reason why protein misfolding represents an existential threat to the cell is the propensity of incorrectly folded proteins to aggregate, thus causing a global perturbation of the crowded and delicate intracellular folding environment. The folding health, or "proteostasis," of the cellular proteome is maintained, even under the duress of aging, stress and oxidative damage, by the coordinated action of different mechanistic units in an elaborate quality control system. A specialized machinery of molecular chaperones can bind non-native polypeptides and promote their folding into the native state, target them for degradation by the ubiquitin-proteasome system, or direct them to protective aggregation inclusions. In eukaryotes, the cytosolic aggregation quality control load is partitioned between two compartments: the juxtanuclear quality control compartment (JUNQ) and the insoluble protein deposit (IPOD) (Figure 1 - model). Proteins that are ubiquitinated by the protein folding quality control machinery are delivered to the JUNQ, where they are processed for degradation by the proteasome. Misfolded proteins that are not ubiquitinated are diverted to the IPOD, where they are actively aggregated in a protective compartment. Up until this point, the methodological paradigm of live-cell fluorescence microscopy has largely been to label proteins and track their locations in the cell at specific time-points and usually in two dimensions. As new technologies have begun to grant experimenters unprecedented access to the submicron scale in living cells, the dynamic architecture of the cytosol has come into view as a challenging new frontier for experimental characterization. We present a method for rapidly monitoring the 3D spatial distributions of multiple fluorescently labeled proteins in the yeast cytosol over time. 3D timelapse (4D imaging) is not merely a technical challenge; rather, it also facilitates a dramatic shift in the conceptual framework used to analyze cellular structure. We utilize a cytosolic folding sensor protein in live yeast to visualize distinct fates for misfolded proteins in cellular aggregation quality control, using rapid 4D fluorescent imaging. The temperature sensitive mutant of the Ubc9 protein (Ubc9(ts)) is extremely effective both as a sensor of cellular proteostasis, and a physiological model for tracking aggregation quality control. As with most ts proteins, Ubc9(ts) is fully folded and functional at permissive temperatures due to active cellular chaperones. Above 30 ° C, or when the cell faces misfolding stress, Ubc9(ts) misfolds and follows the fate of a native globular protein that has been misfolded due to mutation, heat denaturation, or oxidative damage. By fusing it to GFP or other fluorophores, it can be tracked in 3D as it forms Stress Foci, or is directed to JUNQ or IPOD.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 23608881      PMCID: PMC3643230          DOI: 10.3791/50083

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Vis Exp        ISSN: 1940-087X            Impact factor:   1.355


  12 in total

1.  Characterization of a temperature-sensitive mutant of a ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme and its use as a heat-inducible degradation signal.

Authors:  P Tongaonkar; K Beck; U P Shinde; K Madura
Journal:  Anal Biochem       Date:  1999-08-01       Impact factor: 3.365

Review 2.  The ubiquitin system.

Authors:  A Hershko; A Ciechanover
Journal:  Annu Rev Biochem       Date:  1998       Impact factor: 23.643

3.  Confinement to organelle-associated inclusion structures mediates asymmetric inheritance of aggregated protein in budding yeast.

Authors:  Rachel Spokoini; Ofer Moldavski; Yaakov Nahmias; Jeremy L England; Maya Schuldiner; Daniel Kaganovich
Journal:  Cell Rep       Date:  2012-09-27       Impact factor: 9.423

Review 4.  Protein folding in the cell: challenges and progress.

Authors:  Anne Gershenson; Lila M Gierasch
Journal:  Curr Opin Struct Biol       Date:  2010-11-26       Impact factor: 6.809

Review 5.  Cellular strategies for controlling protein aggregation.

Authors:  Jens Tyedmers; Axel Mogk; Bernd Bukau
Journal:  Nat Rev Mol Cell Biol       Date:  2010-10-14       Impact factor: 94.444

6.  A yeast Ubc9 mutant protein with temperature-sensitive in vivo function is subject to conditional proteolysis by a ubiquitin- and proteasome-dependent pathway.

Authors:  J Betting; W Seufert
Journal:  J Biol Chem       Date:  1996-10-18       Impact factor: 5.157

Review 7.  Prions: protein aggregation and infectious diseases.

Authors:  Adriano Aguzzi; Anna Maria Calella
Journal:  Physiol Rev       Date:  2009-10       Impact factor: 37.312

Review 8.  Proteotoxic stress and inducible chaperone networks in neurodegenerative disease and aging.

Authors:  Richard I Morimoto
Journal:  Genes Dev       Date:  2008-06-01       Impact factor: 11.361

9.  Misfolded proteins partition between two distinct quality control compartments.

Authors:  Daniel Kaganovich; Ron Kopito; Judith Frydman
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2008-08-28       Impact factor: 49.962

10.  Amyloid deposits: protection against toxic protein species?

Authors:  Sebastian Treusch; Douglas M Cyr; Susan Lindquist
Journal:  Cell Cycle       Date:  2009-06-20       Impact factor: 4.534

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  4 in total

1.  Imperfect asymmetry: The mechanism governing asymmetric partitioning of damaged cellular components during mitosis.

Authors:  Sundararaghavan Pattabiraman; Daniel Kaganovich
Journal:  Bioarchitecture       Date:  2015-05-05

2.  Dynamic JUNQ inclusion bodies are asymmetrically inherited in mammalian cell lines through the asymmetric partitioning of vimentin.

Authors:  Mikołaj Ogrodnik; Hanna Salmonowicz; Rachel Brown; Joanna Turkowska; Władysław Średniawa; Sundararaghavan Pattabiraman; Triana Amen; Ayelet-chen Abraham; Noam Eichler; Roman Lyakhovetsky; Daniel Kaganovich
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2014-05-19       Impact factor: 11.205

Review 3.  Dynamic droplets: the role of cytoplasmic inclusions in stress, function, and disease.

Authors:  Triana Amen; Daniel Kaganovich
Journal:  Cell Mol Life Sci       Date:  2014-10-05       Impact factor: 9.261

4.  Integrative modules for efficient genome engineering in yeast.

Authors:  Triana Amen; Daniel Kaganovich
Journal:  Microb Cell       Date:  2017-06-05
  4 in total

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