| Literature DB >> 30760601 |
Hao Liu1,2, Nadya Povysheva3, Marie E Rose1,2, Zhiping Mi1,2, Joseph S Banton2, Wenjin Li2, Fenghua Chen2, Daniel P Reay1,2, Germán Barrionuevo3, Feng Zhang4,2, Steven H Graham4,2.
Abstract
Ubiquitin C-terminal hydrolase L1 (UCHL1) is a unique brain-specific deubiquitinating enzyme. Mutations in and aberrant function of UCHL1 have been linked to many neurological disorders. UCHL1 activity protects neurons from hypoxic injury, and binding of stroke-induced reactive lipid species to the cysteine 152 (C152) of UCHL1 unfolds the protein and disrupts its function. To investigate the role of UCHL1 and its adduction by reactive lipids in inhibiting repair and recovery of function following ischemic injury, a knock-in (KI) mouse expressing the UCHL1 C152A mutation was generated. Neurons derived from KI mice had less cell death and neurite injury after hypoxia. UCHL1 C152A KI and WT mice underwent middle cerebral artery occlusion (MCAO) or sham surgery. White matter injury was significantly decreased in KI compared with WT mice 7 d after MCAO. Histological analysis revealed decreased tissue loss at 21 d after injury in KI mice. There was also significantly improved sensorimotor recovery in postischemic KI mice. K63- and K48-linked polyubiquitinated proteins were increased in penumbra of WT mouse brains but not in KI mouse brains at 24 h post MCAO. The UCHL1 C152A mutation preserved excitatory synaptic drive to pyramidal neurons and their excitability in the periinfarct zone; axonal conduction velocity recovered by 21 d post MCAO in KI mice in corpus callosum. These results demonstrate that UCHL1 activity is an important determinant of function after ischemia and further demonstrate that the C152 site of UCHL1 plays a significant role in functional recovery after stroke.Entities:
Keywords: UCHL1; axonal injury; electrophysiology; ischemia; ubiquitin–proteasome pathway
Year: 2019 PMID: 30760601 PMCID: PMC6410860 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1821282116
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205
Fig. 1.The UCHL1 C152A mutation attenuates hypoxia/ischemia-induced neuronal injury and improves behavioral outcome. (A and B) In vitro cell viability and cell death in WT and mutant UCHL1 C152A (KI) primary neuronal culture after OGD (A) and hypoxia (B). (A) Cell viability based on WST-1 assay with MK801 (MK) as 100% survival control and staurosporine (SP; 30 μM) as 100% cell death control 24 h after 15 min OGD. Data are expressed as percent MK (n = 12 wells per group). (B, Upper Left) Cell viability 24 h after 3.5 h hypoxia based on WST-1 assay (n = 18 wells per group). (B, Upper Right) Cell death as measured by percent PI (red) or DAPI (blue) staining (n = 10 wells per group). (Scale bar: 20 μm.) (C) Effects of the C152A mutation on hypoxia-induced neurite damage. Primary neurons from WT or KI mice underwent 2.5 h hypoxia (Hyp) or normoxia (NM) treatment followed by immunohistochemical staining with anti-neurofilament (red) antibody. (Left) Representative confocal images. Yellow arrows indicate neurite fragments; white arrows are intact neurites. (Right) Fragment and intact neurite analysis 24 h post hypoxia (n = 8–15 fields per group). Blue indicates DAPI nuclear stain. (D) The UCHL1 C152A mutation attenuates behavioral deficits after 60 min MCAO. (Left and Center) Four-limb symmetry and forelimb outstretch scores on days 1–5 post ischemia. (Right) Cylinder test scores at days 20–23 post injury (L, ipsilateral; R, contralateral; B, both). (E) Whole-brain tissue loss in WT and KI mice 21 d post injury. (Upper) Representative H&E-stained slices. Dotted line indicates and infarct border. (D and E) n = 8–10 per group. Data are means ± SEM (*P < 0.05 and **P < 0.01, independent-samples t test; ¥P < 0.001, two-way ANOVA with Tamhane’s T2 post hoc test; &P < 0.001, two-way repeated-measures ANOVA with Bonferroni post hoc test; #P < 0.05, ANOVA; ‡P < 0.01, Mann–Whitney U test). Black/gray bars indicate WT; white bars indicate KI.
Fig. 2.The UCHL1 C152A mutation preserves white matter integrity and synaptic structure 7 d post ischemia. UCHL1 C152A KI and WT mice underwent 60 min MCAO or sham surgery. (A) White matter injury in CC. Brain slices at bregma −1.9 mm were immunostained by using anti-MBP (green) and anti-nonphosphorylated SMI-32 (red; at white arrows) antibodies. Fluorescence intensity was measured at infarct in ipsilateral (marked as “i”) and contralateral (“c”) CC (400 μm × 400 μm; black arrows; n = 9–10 per group). (Scale bar: 25 μm.) (B) Representative immunoblots and immunofluoromicrographs using anti-MBP antibody. (Left) Tissue lysates from penumbral cortex and densitometric analysis (n = 7–10 per group). (Right) MBP immunofluorescence intensity at penumbral cortex (area within red dashed line) at bregma 1.0 mm (n = 9–10 per group). (Scale bar: 500 μm.) Data are means ± SEM and are normalized to contralateral (*P < 0.05 and ***P < 0.001, two-way ANOVA with Tukey post hoc analysis; ΨP < 0.05, two-way ANOVA with Tamhane’s T2 post hoc analysis). NS, not significant.
Fig. 3.(A) Position of stimulating and recording electrodes in CC for conduction velocity measurements in B–D. (B) Representative axonal activation recordings in CC. (C and D) Conduction velocity in myelinated and nonmyelinated fibers 7 d (C) and 21 d (D) post ischemia (n = 12–17 per group). (E) Firing frequency in sham and MCAO WT and UCHL1 mice 7 d and 21 d post ischemia (n = 10–14 per group). (F) Representative firing patterns of pyramidal neurons from mouse neocortex elicited by depolarizing current steps in WT (blue), KI (green), and sham surgery mice 7 d post ischemia. (G) Action potential threshold in 7 d (Left) and 21 d (Right) postischemic or sham surgery WT and KI mice (n = 10–13 per group). (H) Representative action potential at 7 d post ischemia in sham (black), MCAO WT (blue), and KI (green) mice. Arrows indicate action potential threshold. (I) sEPSC amplitude and frequency (Left) and representative recordings (Right) 7 d post ischemia with examples at red arrows (n = 9–11 per group). (J) mEPSCs at 7 d post ischemia with examples at red arrows (n = 6–9 per group). (K) Whole-cell electrode placement for sEPSC measurements in I and J. Data are means ± SEM (*P < 0.05 and **P < 0.01, two-way ANOVA with Tukey post hoc test; %P <0.05, two-way ANOVA with least significant difference post hoc test; ΨP < 0.05 and †P < 0.01, two-way ANOVA with Tamhane’s T2 post hoc testing). Black bars indicate WT; white bars indicate KI. Blue recording is WT MCAO; green recording is KI MCAO.
Fig. 4.UCHL1 C152A KI and WT mice underwent MCAO or sham surgery and were killed at 24 h post injury. Brain tissue lysates were prepared from ipsilateral (marked as “i”) and contralateral (“c”) cortical penumbral samples. (A, Left) Representative immunoblots of lysates probed with anti–poly-Ub, poly-Ub K48 (K48), poly-Ub K63 (K63), and monoubiquitinated (mono Ub) antibodies. (A, Right) Densitometric analysis of immunoblots normalized to respective contralateral tissue lysate. (B, Upper) Immunoblot of lysates probed with anti-UCHL1 antibody. (B, Lower) Densitometric analysis of immunoblots of ipsilateral normalized to WT sham ipsilateral (n = 8–10 per group; *P < 0.05 and **P < 0.01, two-way ANOVA with Bonferroni post hoc testing; ΨP < 0.05, two-way ANOVA with Tamhane’s T2 post hoc testing). NS, not significant. Data are means ± SEM, with β-actin as loading control.