| Literature DB >> 25385587 |
Joseph Ochaba1, Tamás Lukacsovich2, George Csikos3, Shuqiu Zheng4, Julia Margulis5, Lisa Salazar6, Kai Mao7, Alice L Lau6, Sylvia Y Yeung6, Sandrine Humbert8, Frédéric Saudou8, Daniel J Klionsky7, Steven Finkbeiner5, Scott O Zeitlin4, J Lawrence Marsh2, David E Housman9, Leslie M Thompson10, Joan S Steffan11.
Abstract
Although dominant gain-of-function triplet repeat expansions in the Huntingtin (HTT) gene are the underlying cause of Huntington disease (HD), understanding the normal functions of nonmutant HTT protein has remained a challenge. We report here findings that suggest that HTT plays a significant role in selective autophagy. Loss of HTT function in Drosophila disrupts starvation-induced autophagy in larvae and conditional knockout of HTT in the mouse CNS causes characteristic cellular hallmarks of disrupted autophagy, including an accumulation of striatal p62/SQSTM1 over time. We observe that specific domains of HTT have structural similarities to yeast Atg proteins that function in selective autophagy, and in particular that the C-terminal domain of HTT shares structural similarity to yeast Atg11, an autophagic scaffold protein. To explore possible functional similarity between HTT and Atg11, we investigated whether the C-terminal domain of HTT interacts with mammalian counterparts of yeast Atg11-interacting proteins. Strikingly, this domain of HTT coimmunoprecipitates with several key Atg11 interactors, including the Atg1/Unc-51-like autophagy activating kinase 1 kinase complex, autophagic receptor proteins, and mammalian Atg8 homologs. Mutation of a phylogenetically conserved WXXL domain in a C-terminal HTT fragment reduces coprecipitation with mammalian Atg8 homolog GABARAPL1, suggesting a direct interaction. Collectively, these data support a possible central role for HTT as an Atg11-like scaffold protein. These findings have relevance to both mechanisms of disease pathogenesis and to therapeutic intervention strategies that reduce levels of both mutant and normal HTT.Entities:
Keywords: Huntingtin; Huntington disease; neurodegeneration; polyglutamine; selective autophagy
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25385587 PMCID: PMC4250109 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1420103111
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205