| Literature DB >> 31671529 |
Federica Scalia1,2, Antonella Marino Gammazza3,4, Everly Conway de Macario5,6, Alberto J L Macario7,8, Francesco Cappello9,10.
Abstract
The process of axon myelination involves various proteins including molecular chaperones. Myelin alteration is a common feature in neurological diseases due to structural and functional abnormalities of one or more myelin proteins. Genetic proteinopathies may occur either in the presence of a normal chaperoning system, which is unable to assist the defective myelin protein in its folding and migration, or due to mutations in chaperone genes, leading to functional defects in assisting myelin maturation/migration. The latter are a subgroup of genetic chaperonopathies causing demyelination. In this brief review, we describe some paradigmatic examples pertaining to the chaperonins Hsp60 (HSPD1, or HSP60, or Cpn60) and CCT (chaperonin-containing TCP-1). Our aim is to make scientists and physicians aware of the possibility and advantages of classifying patients depending on the presence or absence of a chaperonopathy. In turn, this subclassification will allow the development of novel therapeutic strategies (chaperonotherapy) by using molecular chaperones as agents or targets for treatment.Entities:
Keywords: CCT; Hsp60; chaperonopathies; chaperonotherapy; myelin; myelin pathology; myelinopathies; proteinopathies
Year: 2019 PMID: 31671529 PMCID: PMC6896170 DOI: 10.3390/brainsci9110297
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain Sci ISSN: 2076-3425
Figure 1Hypothetical mechanisms involving chaperones in myelination and myelin pathology. Molecular chaperones (normal: green cylinder; abnormal: pink cylinder with dashed-red borders) assist the folding of myelin proteins (drop-shaped icons; normal, light green; abnormal, pink with dashed-red border) in the cell and their migration toward the myelin sheath, and/or directly in situ in the myelin sheath. In order to perform these tasks, chaperones bind their client proteins (substrate; client myelin polypeptide (CP)). The left panel illustrates a chaperonopathy (chaperone gene mutant, indicated by Mutant), that is, a chaperone deficiency causes incorrect myelination. An abnormal chaperone is the primary cause of myelinopathy: the chaperone’s lack of function, or partial insufficiency (e.g., due to mutation in its gene) cannot correctly fold its client myelin polypeptide (CP) and/or cannot assist its migration to its functional residence (black arrow with forbidden sign). In the right panel, the myelinopathy is caused by a mutation in the gene encoding the myelin protein affected (indicated by Mutant), while the chaperone genes are normal. An indirect chaperone insufficiency may occur if the chaperone cannot bind and interact with its substrate because the latter is abnormal, and thus it cannot be recognized or bound properly by the chaperone (top red truncated arrow); or the normal chaperone can bind the defective protein substrate but cannot fold and transport it to the place in which it functions, for example, the myelin sheath (black arrow with forbidden sign); or the chaperone transports the client protein to the pertinent compartment, but the protein does not correctly function due to mutation (curved red arrow to the right).
Diseases with myelin abnormality associated with chaperone gene mutations.
| Disease | Mutation | Genetic Condition | Clinical-Pathological Features | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Peripheral neuropathy Demyelinating | CCT5-p.His147Arg (consanguineous Moroccan family) | HET | Progressive distal sensory neuropathy of upper and lower limbs leading to mutilating acropathy; abnormality of the lipoprotein profile; severe atrophy of the spinal cord predominantly in the posterior tract (MRI). | [ |
| SPG13 | Hsp60-p.Val98Ile (French family) | HET 1 | Severe functional handicap; decreased vibration sense; urinary urgency; pes cavus; increased reflexes in the lower and upper limbs; loss of Babinski sign. | [ |
| MitCHAP-60 disease Hypomyelinating | Hsp60-p.Asp29Gly (consanguineous Israeli Bedouin kindred) | HOM | Rotatory nystagmus, progressive spastic paraplegia; variable rate of neurological deterioration and regression; severe motor impairment; abnormal head control; profound mental retardation; hypomyelinating leukodystrophy (MRI). | [ |
| Asymptomatic or symptomatic | Hsp60-p.Gln461Glu (Danish HSP patients) | HET | Asymptomatic or symptomatic. Symptomatic cases show: spasticity and weakness in the lower limbs and impaired vibration sense in the toes; normal cerebrum and spinal cord MRI; abnormal motor-evoked and somatosensory evoked potentials; evoked potentials (VEP) abnormal on the left eye. | [ |
| MitCHAP-60 disease Hypomyelinating | Hsp60-p.Asp29Gly (Syrian boy) | HOM | Slow psychomotor development; absence of heat control; hypotonia; nystagmus; limb spasticity; feeding difficulties; no evidence of normal myelination (MRI) | [ |
1 Abbreviations: HET, heterozygosity; HOM: homozygosity; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; HSP: hereditary spastic paraplegia. Note: the list of myelin disorders primarily or secondarily dependent on chaperones that are abnormal due to genetic or acquired defects will most likely increase quite significantly in the near future, if clinicians and pathologists are aware of their existence and look for them.
Chaperonopathies grouped according to the type of chaperone abnormality and pertinent chaperonotherapy modality.
| Chaperonopathy by: | Mechanism, Features | Chaperonotherapy Mode |
|---|---|---|
| Excess | Quantitative, e.g., due to gene dysregulation; upregulation; other. | Negative: Chaperone gene knockdown; inhibition by miRNAs; chaperone-protein blocking (compounds) |
| Qualitative, e.g., gain of function. | Negative: Chaperone gene knockdown; inhibition by miRNAs; chaperone-protein blocking (compounds). | |
| Defect | Quantitative, e.g., gene downregulation; absence or misplacement; sequestration; excessive demand (defect relative to substrate availability); other. | Positive: Chaperone gene/protein replacement; artificial chaperones; chaperone gene induction (e.g., mild harmless stressors); combined. |
| Qualitative, e.g., due to structural defect genetic or acquired (e.g., aberrant post-translational modifications). | Positive: Chaperone gene/protein replacement; artificial chaperones; chaperone function boost (compounds); combined. | |
| Mistake | Normal chaperones (at least as far it can be determined with current methodologies) contribute to disease, e.g., tumors that need chaperones to grow; autoimmune conditions in which a chaperone is the autoantigen and/or induces production of pro-inflammatory cytokines. | Negative: Chaperone gene knockdown; inhibition by miRNAs; chaperone-protein blocking (compounds); combined. |
Modified and updated from [33].
Figure 2Possible pathways to investigate the mechanisms of myelination defects involving chaperones and pertinent chaperonotherapy strategies. Normal and abnormal myelination (green and red rectangles, respectively) are shown within the central oval. Chaperones (cylinders) normal (green) or abnormal (pink with red-dashed borders); pertinent client proteins (CP; drop-shaped icons) may be normal (green) or abnormal (pink with red-dashed borders). The normal mechanism of myelination is represented on the right, while mechanisms involved in abnormal myelination are schematized on the left side of the figure; there are here two possibilities: chaperone failure (top) or client polypeptide (CP) defect (bottom). Chaperone failure is amenable to positive chaperonotherapy consisting of chaperone replacement (gene or protein, or artificial chaperone) or chaperone repair (by means of chaperone-activating compounds). Also shown is the case of a chaperone interfering with the normal process of myelination, that is, chaperonopathy by mistake, which is amenable to negative chaperonotherapy, consisting of blocking/inhibiting the pathogenic chaperone, as shown by the descending black arrow crossed with a forbidden sign. If the client protein is defective (proteinopathy; bottom), it is possible to boost it with chemical chaperones (black cross at the bottom) and reconstitute its function, at least partially.