| Literature DB >> 33306168 |
Kaifan Zhang1,2, Yan Wang3, Tianda Fan2, Cheng Zeng1,4, Zhong Sheng Sun5,6,7,8.
Abstract
The serine/threonine p21-activated kinases (PAKs), as main effectors of the Rho GTPases Cdc42 and Rac, represent a group of important molecular switches linking the complex cytoskeletal networks to broad neural activity. PAKs show wide expression in the brain, but they differ in specific cell types, brain regions, and developmental stages. PAKs play an essential and differential role in controlling neural cytoskeletal remodeling and are related to the development and fate of neurons as well as the structural and functional plasticity of dendritic spines. PAK-mediated actin signaling and interacting functional networks represent a common pathway frequently affected in multiple neurodevelopmental and neurodegenerative disorders. Considering specific small-molecule agonists and inhibitors for PAKs have been developed in cancer treatment, comprehensive knowledge about the role of PAKs in neural cytoskeletal remodeling will promote our understanding of the complex mechanisms underlying neurological diseases, which may also represent potential therapeutic targets of these diseases.Entities:
Keywords: expression pattern; neurological diseases; neuronal function; p21-activated kinases; synaptic cytoskeletal remodeling
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33306168 PMCID: PMC8776968 DOI: 10.1007/s13238-020-00812-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Protein Cell ISSN: 1674-800X Impact factor: 14.870
Figure 1Domains and structural features of PAKs. (A) Schematic representation of domains of PAKs; PAKs are classified into two group, group I PAKs and group II PAKs. All members of PAKs contain a conserved N-terminal p21-binding domain (PBD) and a C-terminal kinase domain (KD). (B) Protein structure of PBD and KD in PAK1. PBD binds Cdc42/Rac1. (C) Protein structure of PBD and KD in PAK4
Figure 2show a differential expressional pattern from the fetal period to after birth in the human and mouse brain. We downloaded transcriptome expression data profiling in the HBT database, with the transcriptome data read by R package “oligo”. (A) Scatter plot representation of PAKs expression using transcriptome data. DFC, dorsolateral prefrontal cortex; HIP, hippocampus; AMY, amygdaloid complex; MD, mediodorsal nucleus of thalamus; CBC, cerebellar cortex; STR, striatum. (B) Heatmap presents the expression of each Pak in adult mouse brain in the sagittal plane. OLF, olfactory areas; HPF, hippocampal formation; CTXsp, cortical subplate; STR, striatum; PAL, pallidum; TH, thalamus; HY, hypothalamus; MB, midbrain; P, pons; MY, medulla; CB, cerebellum
Figure 3The expression of PAKs in specific cell type and brain region. (A) Heatmap shows the cell number of each PAK in five specific cell types in the human brain using the R package “pheatmap”. FB, fibroblast; MCPY, motor cortex pyramidal neurons; PBMC, peripheral blood mononuclear cells; TCPY, temporal cortex pyramidal neurons; SNDA, substantia nigra dopamine neurons. (B) Violin plotting shows the expression level of each Pak in seven cell types in the mouse brain. The Y-axis represents the expression level of cell type. (C) Dot plotting shows the mean expression and fraction levels of each Pak in seven cell types in the mouse brain. (D)Violin plotting shows the expression level of each Pak in 20 specific cell types in the mouse brain using the Python package ‘scanpy’ versions 1.6.0 and 1.5.1. MSN, medium spiny neurons. (E) Dot plotting shows the mean expression and fraction levels of each Pak in 20 specific cell types in the mouse brain. MSN, medium spiny neurons
Functions of PAKs in diverse neural development processes
| Functions | Species | PAK1 | PAK2 | PAK3 | PAK4 | PAK5 | PAK6 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Neuronal migration | Mouse | Cortical neurons (Zhong et al., | Cortical neuron (Wang et al., | Cortical neurons;GABAergic Ins (Liu et al., | Spinal cord MNs; ventral Ins (Qu et al., | – | GABAergic interneurons (Pensold et al., |
| Hermaphrodite-specific neurons (Lin et al., | – | – | – | – | – | ||
| Xenopus | – | – | Neural plate neurons (Souopgui et al., | – | – | – | |
| Neurite outgrowth | Mouse | Cortical neurons (Li et al., | – | MGE-derived Ins (Cobos et al., | – | – | POA-derived cells; cortical neurons (Pensold et al., |
| Neuronal polarity and positioning | Rat | Primary granule neurons (de la Torre-Ubieta et al., | – | – | – | – | – |
| Drosophila | MNs (Kamiyama et al., | – | – | – | – | – | |
| Axonal development | Mouse | Hippocampal neurons (Li et al., | – | – | Neural progenitors (Qu et al., | – | – |
| C. elegans | MNs (Lucanic et al., | – | – | – | – | – | |
| Drosophila | Photoreceptor cells (Hing et al., | – | – | – | – | – | |
| Neuronal differentiation/Cell Fate determination | Mouse | Cortical neurons (Li et al., | – | GABAergic INs; OD precursors (Cobos et al., | Spinal cord MNs; ventral Ins (Qu et al., | – | – |
| Xenopus | – | – | Neural progenitors (Souopgui et al., | – | – | – |
Notes: –, not determined; INs, interneurons; OD, oligodendrocyte; MNs, motor neurons
PAK Mutations identified in patients with diverse neurological diseases
| Chr. | Position | Alleles | Origin | Consequence | Diseases/Phenotypes | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PAK1 | Chr11 | 77336213 | T>C | Missense | ID with macrocephaly, seizures, speech delay | Harms et al., | |
| 77379288 | T>C | ||||||
| 77474957 | G>A / G>T | – | Intron variant | SCZ | Jiang et al., 2017 | ||
| 77322663 | A>C / A>G | 3′ UTR variant | |||||
| Chr3 | q29 | Deletion | – | 3q29 microdeletion syndrome | Willatt et al., | ||
| 196554151 | C>T | Nonsense | Autism | Wang et al., | |||
| 196555271 | C>T | Maternal inherited | Missense | ||||
| 196555271 | G>A | Paternal inherited | |||||
| ChrX | 111142119 | C>T | – | Missense | X-Linked MR, ID | Bienvenu et al., | |
| 111194402 | C>A | Paternal inherited | Gedeon et al., | ||||
| 111196488 | C>T | – | Nonsense | Allen et al., | |||
| 111196570 | G>C | Inherited | Missense | Peippo et al., | |||
| 111142200 | A>G | Splice region variant | Rejeb et al., |
Notes: –, not determined; MR, mental retardation; SCZ, schizophrenia; ID, intellectual disability; Chr, chromosome
Figure 4Graphic models of PAK signaling pathways in synaptic plasticity. The upstream activators of PAKs include Cdc42, Rac1, Dock, p75NTR, DAF-16 and PIX/GIT1 and the downstream factors contain GPM6A, GluA1 and LIMK (Henderson and Johnson, 2001; Kennedy et al., 2013; Li et al., 2013; Murata and Constantine-Paton, 2013; Gu et al., 2014; Hussain et al., 2015; Kamiyama et al., 2015; Ramos et al., 2015; Byrne et al., 2016; Kim et al., 2017; Santini et al., 2017; Leung et al., 2018; Feng et al., 2019). The main effect of PAKs is to regulate the formation of the cytoskeleton by activation of the LIMK-Cofilin pathway. The disruption of PAKs-related pathways is closely associated with diverse neurological disorders
Rodent models of Pak members
| Genotype | Features | Phenotypes | Impaired Signals | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| A part of the ATG exon and adjacent upstream intronic sequence were replaced by a PGK-NRG cassette | Deficit in E/I balance, deficit in LTP | ↓synaptic COX-2 levels, ↑tonic AEA signaling, ↓p-CFL | Xia et al., | |
| Lethal at E8.5 | – | C.H., Z. M. Jaffer and J.C., unpublished | ||
| A poly-A and a PGK promoter were inserted before the exon 2 of | Autism-related behaviors | ↓pLIMK1/CFL | Wang et al., | |
| A part of the coding and adjacent downstream intronic sequence were replaced by a PGK-NRG cassette | Defects in LM, myelin defects in CC | – | Meng et al., | |
| DKO | LM defects; hyperactivity | ↓p-CFL | Huang et al., | |
| The exon 1 was replaced with a PGK-NPG cassette flanked with 5’ and 3’ homology regions. | Lethal at E10.5; heart and neural tube defects | – | Qu et al., | |
| DKO | Impaired learning and locomotion | – | Nekrasova et al., |
Note: PGK-NRG, PGK-neomycin resistant gene; E/I, excitation and inhibition; LTP, long-term potentiation; CC, corpus callosum; LM, learning & memory; E, embryonic day; p-CFL, phospho-cofilin; DKO, double knockout; –, not determined