| Literature DB >> 25324717 |
Abstract
Huntington's disease (HD) is a genetic autosomal dominant neurodegenerative disease caused by the expansion of a CAG repeat in the huntingtin (htt) gene. This triplet expansion encodes a polyglutamine stretch (polyQ) in the N-terminus of the high molecular weight (348-kDa) and ubiquitously expressed protein htt. Normal individuals have between 6 and 35 CAG triplets, while expansions longer than 40 repeats lead to HD. The onset and severity of the disease depend on the length of the polyQ tract: the longer the polyglutamine stretch (polyQ) is, the earlier the disease begins and the more severe the symptoms are. One of the main histopathological hallmarks of HD is the presence of intraneuronal proteinaceous inclusion bodies, whose prominent and invariant feature is the presence of ubiquitin (Ub); therefore, they can be detected with anti-ubiquitin and anti-proteasome antibodies. This, together with the observation that mutations in components of the ubiquitin-proteasome system (UPS) give rise to some neurodegenerative diseases, suggests that UPS impairment may be causative of HD. Even though the link between disrupted Ub homeostasis and protein aggregation to HD is undisputed, the functional significance of these correlations and their mechanistic implications remains unresolved. Moreover, there is no consistent evidence documenting an accompanying decrease in levels of free Ub or disruption of Ub pool dynamics in neurodegenerative disease or models thus suggesting that the Ub-conjugate accumulation may be benign and just underlie lesion in 26S function. In this chapter we will elaborate on the different studies that have been performed using different experimental approaches, in order to shed light to this matter.Entities:
Keywords: Huntington’s disease; animal models; degron-fluorescent proteins; inclusion body; ubiquitin–proteasome system
Year: 2014 PMID: 25324717 PMCID: PMC4179678 DOI: 10.3389/fnmol.2014.00077
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Mol Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5099 Impact factor: 5.639
Genetic evidence involving the UPS in neurodegenerative diseases.
| Impaired step | Protein | Mutation | Process | Molecular consequences and Symptoms | Disease | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ubiquitination | Ubiquitin | UBB+1 | Dinucleotide deletion at mRNA level results in a 19-amino-acid C-terminal extension ( | Absence of Gy76 residue which unables it to ubiquitinate other proteins, yet it is itself efficiently ubiquitinated. | UBB+1 refractory to disassembly by DUBs so it is considered as competing with other poliubiquitinated substrates for recognition and degradation by the proteasome. Marked reduction in UPS activity, accumulation of ubiquitinated proteins, and early impairment in contextual memory ( | Tauopathies and polyQ diseases ( |
| E1/E2 | Unkown | Reduction in El and E2 enzyme activities. | Impaired formation of high-molecular-weight ubiquitin-protein conjugates ( | AD ( | ||
| E3 Ligases | Parkin | Punctual mutations or deletions in the PARK2 gene ( | Depending on the mutation they can trigger poor folding, heterogeneity, aggregation, or impaired function. | Disrupted protein interactions with E2 ubiquitin conjugating enzymes, potential substrates or the 19S regulatory subunit S5a which positions parkin and its bound substrates near the degradation machinery ( | ARJP ( | |
| E6-AP | Chromosomal micro deletions and inorganic UBE3A mutations ( | Truncation of E6-AP, leading to haploinsufficiency of the protein ( | Recruitment to Lewy bodies which results in a depletion of functional soluble pool of E6-AP with detrimental consequences for synaptic plasticity. Recruitment to Htt aggregates which decreases the AMPA receptors level and various pre- and post-synaptic proteins ( | AS ( | ||
| NHLRC1 | Punctual mutations or deletions of either EPM2A or EPM2B genes. | Promotion of the K63 chains related poliubiquitilation of the a-synuclein. | Lafora disease. | |||
| CUL4B | X-linked mental retardation. | |||||
| Deubiquitination | USP9X | USP9X levels are significantly lower in cytosolic fractions of PD substantia and DLBD frontal cortex producing the accumulation of aggregate-prone monoubiquitinated a-synuclein. | PD and DLBD. | |||
| UCH-Ll (PARK5) | Missense mutation in UCH-Ll gene resulting in an I93 M substitution which decreases its activity. | Decreased of the DUB activity. Promotion of UCH-Ll dimerization. | Decrease in the free Ubiquitin pool coming from poliUb chains recycling. Accumulation of P-amyloid aggregates but not a-synuclein aggregates in gracile axons. | Gracile axonal dystrophy. | ||
| Ataxin-3 | Abnormal expansion of the polyQ region to more than 53 glutamines in ataxin 3 protein. | Toxic gain of function which triggers htt∗ aggregates. Mutant ataxin-3 is less efficient in substrate binding or proteolysis. Higher global levels of ubiquitination. | SCA3 (also known as MJD). | |||
| Usp-14 | Spontaneous recessive mutation that results in reduced Uspl4 expression. | Abnormalities in neurotransmitter release. Defects in the central and peripheral nervous system development. Severe growth retardation, resting tremor, and hind limb paralysis. | Ataxia J (axJ). | |||
| Substrate delivery | Ubiquilin-1 | Polymorphisms in the UBQLN1 gene. | Modest risk-coferring haplotype for the development of AD. | |||
| Ubiquilin-2 | Mutations in UBQLN2. | UPS dysfunction and possible role in TDP-43-associated neurotoxicity. | Rare dominantly inherited X-linked forms of ALS. | |||
| VCP | Depletion or mutation of VCP. | Impairments in both the UPS and autophagy. Loss of mitochondrial quality control. Depletion of cellular ATP levels. | Sporadic ALS, familial ALS, PD and the rare hereditary disease (TBMPFD). |