| Literature DB >> 33815086 |
Maria Iuliano1, Connor Seeley1, Ellen Sapp1, Erin L Jones1, Callie Martin1, Xueyi Li1, Marian DiFiglia1, Kimberly B Kegel-Gleason1.
Abstract
Dysfunction at synapses is thought to be an early change contributing to cognitive, psychiatric and motor dical">pan class="Chemical">sturbances in Huntington's disease (HD). In neurons, mutant Huntingtin collects in aggregates and distributes to the same sites as wild-type Huntingtin including on membranes and in synapses. In this study, we investigated the biochemical integrity of synapses in HD mouse striatum. We performed subcellular fractionation of striatal tissue from 2 and 6-month old knock-in Q175/Q7 HD and Q7/Q7 mice. Compared to striata of Q7/Q7 mice, proteins including GLUT3, Na+/K+ ATPase, NMDAR 2b, PSD95, and VGLUT1 had altered distribution in Q175/Q7 HD striata of 6-month old mice but not 2-month old mice. These proteins are found on plasma membranes and pre- and postsynaptic membranes supporting hypotheses that functional changes at synapses contribute to cognitive and behavioral symptoms of HD. Lipidomic analysis of mouse fractions indicated that compared to those of wild-type, fractions 1 and 2 of 6 months Q175/Q7 HD had altered levels of two species of PIP2, a phospholipid involved in synaptic signaling, increased levels of cholesterol ester and decreased cardiolipin species. At 2 months, increased levels of species of acylcarnitine, phosphatidic acid and sphingomyelin were measured. EM analysis showed that the contents of fractions 1 and 2 of Q7/Q7 and Q175/Q7 HD striata had a mix of isolated synaptic vesicles, vesicle filled axon terminals singly or in clusters, and ER and endosome-like membranes. However, those of Q175/Q7 striata contained significantly fewer and larger clumps of particles compared to those of Q7/Q7. Human HD postmortem putamen showed differences from control putamen in subcellular distribution of two proteins (Calnexin and GLUT3). Our biochemical, lipidomic and EM analysis show that the presence of the HD mutation conferred age dependent disruption of localization of synaptic proteins and lipids important for synaptic function. Our data demonstrate concrete biochemical changes suggesting altered integrity of synaptic compartments in HD mice that may mirror changes in HD patients and presage cognitive and psychiatric changes that occur in premanifest HD.Entities:
Keywords: Huntingtin; PIP2; cholesteryl ester; density gradient centrifugation; electron microscopy; lipidomics; neurotransmitter receptors; synapse
Year: 2021 PMID: 33815086 PMCID: PMC8013775 DOI: 10.3389/fnsyn.2021.618391
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Synaptic Neurosci ISSN: 1663-3563
FIGURE 1Subcellular fractionation by continuous iodixanol density gradient ultracentrifugation of 6-month old Q7/Q7 and Q175/Q7 HD mouse striatum. (A) Striata were fractionated as described in section “Materials and Methods.” Picture at left shows ultracentrifugation tube after equilibration of compartments by centrifugation; banding pattern indicates successful fractionation of cellular components. Fractions 1–16 were removed from top to bottom as indicated. Fractions were assessed by SDS-PAGE and western blot analysis using the cell compartment markers indicated at top right to ensure complete separation. Equal volumes of each fraction were loaded per lane. (B) Representative images of western blots detecting Huntingtin (HTT) (WT and mutant (arrowhead)), GLUT3, and SNAP25. HTT distributes to light fractions 1–5 and co-fractionates with a marker of pre-synaptic compartment, SNAP25 and to dense fractions 14–16. GLUT3 co-fractionates in fractions 1–4 and shows a marked shift in the peak signal intensity between Q7/Q7 and Q175/Q7 HD resulting in an increase in signal for GLUT3 in Q175/Q7 in fraction 1 and a reduction in fractions 2–4. (C) Pixel intensity analysis of western blots for WT HTT. Bar graph shows mean percent ± SD of WT HTT in each of 16 fractions as a percent of total WT HTT signal summed across all fractions (1–16). White bars show WT HTT in Q7/Q7 mice and black bars show WT HTT in Q175/Q7 striata. There was no significant difference in WT HTT signal as percent of total signal between Q7/Q7 and Q175/Q7 mice for any fraction. (D) Pixel intensity analysis of western blots for mutant HTT and WT HTT in fractions from Q175/Q7 striata. Bar graph shows percent ± SD of WT HTT (white bars) and mutant HTT (black bars) signal in each of 16 fractions as a percent of total WT and mutant HTT signal summed across all fractions (1–16) in Q175/Q7 6-month old mice. There is a significant difference between WT and mutant HTT signal as a percent of total signal in fraction 4 (*p = 0.0266, unpaired t-test, N = 7).
FIGURE 2GLUT3, VGLUT1, Na+/K+ ATPase, NMDAR 2b, and PSD95 from 6-month old Q175/Q7 striata show altered distribution after fractionation compared to that of Q7/Q7 mouse striata. Equal volumes of fractions 1–3 from Figure 1 were run on large format SDS-PAGE gels and analyzed by western blot and ECL for proteins indicated. We performed both film and digital readouts for the many of proteins detected. We selected exposure times for quantification where the most intense signal among the fractions was not saturated. Signal for each fraction was standardized as a percentage of the total signal for all fractions and not based on absolute magnitude. Pixel intensity quantification was performed using ImageJ software (NIH) and graphed as percent of total signal summed for each protein in fractions 1–3 shown as a percentage of 100% Q7 or a percentage of Q175 100% (N = 9 mice per group, *p < 0.05, **p < 0.01, unpaired t-test). Graphs show Tukey-style box plots where the lower and upper hinges correspond to the first and third quartiles (the 25th and 75th percentiles) as described in section “Materials and Methods.” Data beyond the end of the whiskers are called “outlying” points and are plotted individually. The outlying values are included in the statistical analyses. Proteins with altered subcellular distribution include GLUT3, Na+/K+ ATPase, NMDAR 2b, PSD95 and VGLUT1. See Supplementary Figure 2B for representative western blot images.
Statistical analysis for protein detection in fractions 1–3.
Altered lipid classes.
FIGURE 3Levels of selected individual species of lipids detected by LC-MS/MS in fractions 1 and 2 of continuous density gradients of fractionated 6 months old Q175/Q7 and Q7/Q7 striata. Graphs show Tukey-style box plots where the lower and upper hinges correspond to the first and third quartiles (the 25th and 75th percentiles) as described in section “Materials and Methods.” Data beyond the end of the whiskers are called “outlying” points and are plotted individually. Outliers were not removed from statistical analysis. NOT DETECTED indicates species was not detected using the modified 80% rule (Yang et al., 2015). Changes at 6 months are shown for specific species of (A) lyso-phosphoinositol (LPI), (B) Cholesterol ester, (C) Cardiolipin (CL), and (D) Sphingomyelin, phytosphingosine (phSM). All significant changes are shown in Supplementary Tables 1–8. Comparisons were made between genotype for each fraction (∗p < 0.05, unpaired t-test, N = 9 per group).
FIGURE 4Levels of PIP2 species detected by LC-MS/MS in fractions 1 and 2 of continuous density gradients of fractionated Q175/Q7 and Q7/Q7 striata. Graphs show Tukey-style box plots where the lower and upper hinges correspond to the first and third quartiles (the 25th and 75th percentiles) as described in section “Materials and Methods.” Data beyond the end of the whiskers are called “outlying” points and are plotted individually. Outliers were not removed from statistical analysis. NOT DETECTED, indicates species was not detected using the modified 80% rule (Yang et al., 2015). (A,B) Levels of the two PIP2 species detected at 6 months in fractions 1 and 2. In (A), there was a significant increase in PIP2 species #1 (C44 H84 O18 N0 P3) in fraction 2 between Q7/Q7 and Q175/Q7 (∗p < 0.05, unpaired t-test, N = 9 per group), whereas there was no significant difference in the second species in either fraction between genotypes (B). (C) Levels of PIP2 species #2 (C46 H88 O18 N0 P3) detected in fractions 1 and 2 at 2 months. This was the sole species detected at 2 months and was only detected in fraction 1 from Q7/Q7 striata.
FIGURE 5Levels of selected individual species of lipids detected by LC-MS/MS in fractions 1 and 2 of continuous density gradients of fractionated 2 months old Q175/Q7 and Q7/Q7 striata. Graphs show Tukey-style box plots where the lower and upper hinges correspond to the first and third quartiles (the 25th and 75th percentiles) as described in section “Materials and Methods.” Data beyond the end of the whiskers are called “outlying” points and are plotted individually. Outliers were not removed from statistical analysis. Changes at 2 months are shown for specific species of (A) Acyl Carnitine (Acca), (B) Phosphatidic acid (PA), and (C) Sphingomyelin (SM). Cholesteryl ester species was not detected by LC-MS/MS in the 2-month samples. All significant changes are shown in Supplementary Tables 1–8. Comparisons were made between genotype for each fraction (∗p < 0.05, unpaired t-test, N = 9 per group).
FIGURE 6Electron microscopic analysis of subcellular morphology and particle sizes and numbers in fractions 1 and 2. (A–H) EM images of fractions 1 and 2. Specimens for EM analysis were prepared and analyzed as described in section “Materials and Methods.” Sv, synaptic vesicle; at, axon terminal; arrowheads, tubular-vesicular membranes that may be ER or endosomes (B,E,H); arrows, preterminal axons and axon branches. Note that axon terminals (at) appear in groups in (A,C,F), some are filled (axon terminals in A) or partly filled with vesicles (lower axon terminal in F) or overlap and appear electron dense (top axon terminal in F). Synaptic vesicles (sv) appear inside the axon terminals and scattered outside the terminals (A,G). Note in (G) that axon terminals have irregular shapes, electron dense cytoplasm, and some larger irregular shaped vesicles. Scale bar in A = 0.5 μm and applies to all images. (I–K) Analysis of particle sizes and number in fractions 1 and 2. (I) shows representative electron microscope images of fractions 1 and 2 taken at 5,000× that were used for quantification. Scale bar = 40 μm and applies to all images. Data in (J,K) were obtained using ImageJ. Threshold was set for images on automatic settings using Renyi entropy method. Particles were excluded that were only 1 pixel. Students t-test was performed on N = 9 animals for each genotype. Bar graph in (J) shows mean particle size ± SD per mouse for Q7/Q7 and Q175/Q7 samples for fractions 1 and 2 (∗p < 0.05, unpaired t-test, N = 9 mice, 7–45 images per mouse). There are significantly larger particles in Q175/Q7 samples compared to Q7/Q7 in fraction 1 and fraction 2. Bar graph in (K) shows number of particles ± SD per field for Q7/Q7 and Q175/Q7 samples for fractions 1 and 3 (N = 9 mice, 7–45 image per mouse). There are significantly fewer particles in Q175/Q7 samples compared to Q7/Q7 in fraction 1 and fraction 2.
FIGURE 7Subcellular fractionation by density gradient ultracentrifugation of human putamen. Dorsal putamen was fractionated as described in section “Materials and Methods.” Fractions were assessed by SDS-PAGE and western blot analysis using different cell compartment markers. Fractions 1–16 were removed from top to bottom. Equal volumes of each fraction were loaded per lane. (A) Diagram at left shows approximate distribution of proteins representative of different subcellular compartments in the control putamen. (B) Shown are representative images of western blots detecting GLUT3 and SNAP25 in control and HD putamen. (C) Shown are WB images of Huntingtin (HTT) and mutant HTT (mHTT) signals in 16 fractions from all human putamen samples. mHTT was detected with 1C2 which recognizes the expanded polyQ region in mutant HTT but not HTT in control samples. (D) Bar graph shows mean percent ± SD of HTT signal obtained with antibody Ab1 in control and HD human putamen in each of 16 fractions as a percent of total HTT signal summed across all fractions. There was no significant difference in HTT signal between control and HD in any of the fractions (N = 3). (E) Fractions 3–8 were analyzed in pairs and run on the same gel to eliminate variability due to different runs. These fractions were chosen because most proteins tested had peaks in this range. Seven probes were analyzed by western blot for each gel (Calnexin, GLUT3, Na+/K+ ATPase, NMDAR 2b, PSD95, SNAP25, and XK). Band intensity for each fraction was standardized to sum of intensities for bands in fractions 3–8. Line graphs show mean percent of total signal ± SD obtained in fractions 3–8 for each fraction (N = 3). There was a significant difference in percent of total signal in fractions 3–8 in fraction 3 for Calnexin (**p = 0.0052, N = 3, unpaired t-test for all analyses) and GLUT3 (*p = 0.047). (F) Representative images of western blots for Calnexin and GLUT3 in control and HD putamen related to the data shown. See Supplementary Figure 5 for other line graphs.