| Literature DB >> 28579939 |
Erica L Gorenberg1, Sreeganga S Chandra2,3.
Abstract
Synapses must be preserved throughout an organism's lifespan to allow for normal brain function and behavior. Synapse maintenance is challenging given the long distances between the termini and the cell body, reliance on axonal transport for delivery of newly synthesized presynaptic proteins, and high rates of synaptic vesicle exo- and endocytosis. Hence, synapses rely on efficient proteostasis mechanisms to preserve their structure and function. To this end, the synaptic compartment has specific chaperones to support its functions. Without proper synaptic chaperone activity, local proteostasis imbalances lead to neurotransmission deficits, dismantling of synapses, and neurodegeneration. In this review, we address the roles of four synaptic chaperones in the maintenance of the nerve terminal, as well as their genetic links to neurodegenerative disease. Three of these are Hsp40 co-chaperones (DNAJs): Cysteine String Protein alpha (CSPα; DNAJC5), auxilin (DNAJC6), and Receptor-Mediated Endocytosis 8 (RME-8; DNAJC13). These co-chaperones contain a conserved J domain through which they form a complex with heat shock cognate 70 (Hsc70), enhancing the chaperone's ATPase activity. CSPα is a synaptic vesicle protein known to chaperone the t-SNARE SNAP-25 and the endocytic GTPase dynamin-1, thereby regulating synaptic vesicle exocytosis and endocytosis. Auxilin binds assembled clathrin cages, and through its interactions with Hsc70 leads to the uncoating of clathrin-coated vesicles, a process necessary for the regeneration of synaptic vesicles. RME-8 is a co-chaperone on endosomes and may have a role in clathrin-coated vesicle endocytosis on this organelle. These three co-chaperones maintain client function by preserving folding and assembly to prevent client aggregation, but they do not break down aggregates that have already formed. The fourth synaptic chaperone we will discuss is Heat shock protein 110 (Hsp110), which interacts with Hsc70, DNAJAs, and DNAJBs to constitute a disaggregase. Hsp110-related disaggregase activity is present at the synapse and is known to protect against aggregation of proteins such as α-synuclein. Congruent with their importance in the nervous system, mutations of these co-chaperones lead to familial neurodegenerative disease. CSPα mutations cause adult neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis, while auxilin mutations result in early-onset Parkinson's disease, demonstrating their significance in preservation of the nervous system.Entities:
Keywords: HSP70; Hsp110; endocytosis; exocytosis; neurodegeneration; proteostasis; synapse maintenance
Year: 2017 PMID: 28579939 PMCID: PMC5437171 DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2017.00248
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurosci ISSN: 1662-453X Impact factor: 4.677
Summary of chaperones identified at the synapse.
| Hsc71 | 1-D SDS; PPF extraction | Phillips et al., |
| Hsp70 | DIGE; PPF extraction | Phillips et al., |
| Hsc70 | DIGE/iTRAQ; PPF extraction | Phillips et al., |
| Hsp90 | DIGE | Zhang et al., |
| Hsp70-4 | iTRAQ | Zhang et al., |
| Hsp84 | dSDS | Burré et al., |
| Hspa5 | DIGE | Zhang et al., |
| HspA4/A4L | iTRAQ | Zhang et al., |
| Hsp8 | dSDS; PPF extraction | Phillips et al., |
| DNAJC6 (auxilin) | 1-D SDS | Burré et al., |
| DNACJ5 (CSPα) | iTRAQ | Takamori et al., |
| DNAJ homologs | PPF extraction | Phillips et al., |
| Hsp40-3 cognate | PPF extraction | Phillips et al., |
| DNAJA | DIGE/iTRAQ | Zhang et al., |
| Hsp40 (DNAJB1) | Western Blot | Suzuki et al., |
| Chaperonin TriC | DIGE | Zhang et al., |
| Hsp105/110 | iTRAQ | Zhang et al., |
| HSF binding protein 1 | PPF extraction | Phillips et al., |
| Calnexin | 1-D SDS | Burré et al., |
| CCT family | 1-D SDS | Burré et al., |
| FLJ10737 cognate | PPF extraction | Phillips et al., |
| HOP | DIGE | Zhang et al., |
| HIP | DIGE/iTRAQ | Zhang et al., |
Abbreviations: 1-D SDS, One dimensional sodium dodecyl sulfate electrophoresis; PPF, post-synaptic particle fraction; DIGE, 2D fluorescence Difference Gel Electrophoresis; iTRAQ, Isobaric Tag for Relative and Absolute Quantitation.
Figure 1Hsc70/DNAJ co-chaperone cycle. 1. Free clients or those recruited by DNAJ bind Hsc70-ATP. 2. DNAJ stimulates Hsc70's ATPase activity. 3. An Hsc70 nucleotide exchange factor (NEF) binds Hsc70-ADP. 4. NEF stimulates ADP-ATP exchange. 5. Hsc70-ATP releases the client and enters a new round of chaperone activity.
Figure 2Synaptic Co-Chaperones. (A) DNAJ proteins exhibit high homology within the J domain. J domains from E. coli DNAJ, C. elegans DNAJ14 and D. melanogaster, M. musculus, and H. sapiens DNAJC5. Black indicates identical residue. Gray indicates amino acids with conserved properties. The conserved HPD motif is highlighted in red. Sequence alignments generated using T Coffee (Notredame et al., 2000; Di Tommaso et al., 2011). (B) CSPα J domain exhibits conformational shift with phosphorylation at serine 10 (green). Unphosphorylated (left, PDB: 2N05) and phosphorylated (right; PDB: 2N04) CSPα J domain. HPD motif is highlighted in red. See, Patel et al. (2016) for further details. (C) Domain organization of J co-chaperones reviewed in this article: DNAJA1 (PDB: 2M6Y), DNAJB1 (Kampinga and Craig, 2010), DNAJC5 (CSPα; PDB: 2N04 and 2NO5), DNAJC6 (auxilin; PDB: 3N0A), and DNAJC13 (Zhang et al., 2001). Not to scale. See also, Kampinga and Craig (2010). CTD, C-terminal domain; IWN, 90-amino acid conserved motif; PAT, palmitoylacyltransferase recognition region.
Figure 3Auxilin is an Hsc70 co-chaperone for clathrin uncoating. (A) Cartoon depicts structure of a clathrin triskelion. Three clathrin ankle segments cross to form a stable clathrin cage. (B) Assembled clathrin coat containing clathrin heavy chain and clathrin light chain, as determined by electron microscopy (PDB:3IYV; Fotin et al., 2004b). (C) The J domain of auxilin (shades of blue) interacts with the clathrin coat (shades of red and yellow; PDB: 1XI5; Fotin et al., 2004a).
Mutations in auxilin (DNAJC6) associated with Parkinson's disease.
| c.801-2 A>G | Homozygote | -Deletion of aa 268-328 -premature stop | Edvardson et al., |
| Compound heterozygote | Olgiati et al., | ||
| c.2200C>T | Homozygote | p.Q734X | Köroğlu et al., |
| Compound heterozygote | Olgiati et al., | ||
| c.2223A>T | Homozygote | p.Thr741 | Olgiati et al., |
| c.2365C>T | Homozygote | p.Gln789 | Elsayed et al., |
| c.2371C>T | p.Gln791 | ||
| c.2779A>G | Homozygote | p.Arg927Gly | Olgiati et al., |
Bold denotes mutations associated with double heterozygote forms of Parkinson's disease.
Denotes premature stop codon.
Figure 4Co-chaperones regulate distinct steps of the synaptic vesicle cycle. Cartoon depicts synaptic vesicle cycle. CSPα chaperones SNAP-25, a t-SNARE involved in vesicle fusion for neurotransmitter release. CSPα also chaperones dynamin-1, a GTPase necessary for vesicle scission in clathrin-mediated endocytosis. Auxilin acts on clathrin-coated vesicles, uncoating them to generate nascent vesicles that are returned to the recycling pool. RME-8 regulates clathrin uncoating at the early endosome.