Cytosolic prion protein (PrP) is not toxic in N2a cells and primary neurons expressing pathogenic PrP mutations

被引:97
作者
Fioriti, L
Dossena, S
Stewart, LR
Stewart, RS
Harris, DA
Forloni, G
Chiesa, R
机构
[1] Dulbecco Telethon Inst, I-20157 Milan, Italy
[2] Ist Ric Farmacol Mario Negri, Dept Neurosci, I-20157 Milan, Italy
[3] Washington Univ, Sch Med, Dept Cell Biol & Physiol, St Louis, MO 63110 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1074/jbc.M412441200
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
Inherited prion diseases are linked to mutations in the prion protein (PrP) gene, which favor conversion of PrP into a conformationally altered, pathogenic isoform. The cellular mechanism by which this process causes neurological dysfunction is unknown. It has been proposed that neuronal death can be triggered by accumulation of PrP in the cytosol because of impairment of proteasomal degradation of misfolded PrP molecules retrotranslocated from the endoplasmic reticulum (Ma, J., Wollmann, R., and Lindquist, S. (2002) Science 298, 1781-1785). To test whether this neurotoxic mechanism is operative in inherited prion diseases, we evaluated the effect of proteasome inhibitors on the viability of transfected N2a cells and primary neurons expressing mouse PrP homologues of the D178N and nine octapeptide mutations. We found that the inhibitors caused accumulation of an unglycosylated, aggregated form of PrP exclusively in transfected N2a expressing PrP from the cytomegalovirus promoter. This form contained an uncleaved signal peptide, indicating that it represented polypeptide chains that had failed to translocate into the ER lumen during synthesis, rather than retrogradely translocated PrP. Quantification of N2a viability in the presence of proteasome inhibitors demonstrated that accumulation of this form was not toxic. No evidence of cytosolic PrP was found in cerebellar granule neurons from transgenic mice expressing wild-type or mutant PrPs from the endogenous promoter, nor were these neurons more susceptible to proteasome inhibitor toxicity than neurons from PrP knock-out mice. Our analysis fails to confirm the previous observation that mislocation of PrP in the cytosol is neurotoxic, and argues against the hypothesis that perturbation of PrP metabolism through the proteasomal pathway plays a pathogenic role in prion diseases.
引用
收藏
页码:11320 / 11328
页数:9
相关论文
共 60 条
  • [1] Pathogenic human prion protein rescues PrP null phenotype in transgenic mice
    Asante, EA
    Li, YG
    Gowland, I
    Jefferys, JGR
    Collinge, J
    [J]. NEUROSCIENCE LETTERS, 2004, 360 (1-2) : 33 - 36
  • [2] GFP-tagged prion protein is correctly localized and functionally active in the brains of transgenic mice
    Barmada, S
    Piccardo, P
    Yamaguchi, K
    Ghetti, B
    Harris, DA
    [J]. NEUROBIOLOGY OF DISEASE, 2004, 16 (03) : 527 - 537
  • [3] Proteasome inhibition and aggregation in Parkinson's disease: a comparative study in untransfected and transfected cells
    Biasini, E
    Fioriti, L
    Ceglia, I
    Invernizzi, R
    Bertoli, A
    Chiesa, R
    Forloni, G
    [J]. JOURNAL OF NEUROCHEMISTRY, 2004, 88 (03) : 545 - 553
  • [4] Prion protein protects human neurons against Bax-mediated apoptosis
    Bounhar, Y
    Zhang, Y
    Goodyer, CG
    LeBlanc, A
    [J]. JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY, 2001, 276 (42) : 39145 - 39149
  • [5] Prion protein-deficient cells show altered response to oxidative stress due to decreased SOD-1 activity
    Brown, DR
    SchulzSchaeffer, WJ
    Schmidt, B
    Kretzschmar, HA
    [J]. EXPERIMENTAL NEUROLOGY, 1997, 146 (01) : 104 - 112
  • [6] NORMAL DEVELOPMENT AND BEHAVIOR OF MICE LACKING THE NEURONAL CELL-SURFACE PRP PROTEIN
    BUELER, H
    FISCHER, M
    LANG, Y
    BLUETHMANN, H
    LIPP, HP
    DEARMOND, SJ
    PRUSINER, SB
    AGUET, M
    WEISSMANN, C
    [J]. NATURE, 1992, 356 (6370) : 577 - 582
  • [7] Bush KT, 1997, J BIOL CHEM, V272, P9086
  • [8] Effect of the E200K mutation on prion protein metabolism - Comparative study of a cell model and human brain
    Capellari, S
    Parchi, P
    Russo, CM
    Sanford, J
    Sy, MS
    Gambetti, P
    Petersen, RB
    [J]. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PATHOLOGY, 2000, 157 (02) : 613 - 622
  • [9] Cellular prion protein transduces neuroprotective signals
    Chiarini, LB
    Freitas, ARO
    Zanata, SM
    Brentani, RR
    Martins, VR
    Linden, R
    [J]. EMBO JOURNAL, 2002, 21 (13) : 3317 - 3326
  • [10] Nerve growth factor-induced differentiation does not alter the biochemical properties of a mutant prion protein expressed in PC12 cells
    Chiesa, R
    Harris, DA
    [J]. JOURNAL OF NEUROCHEMISTRY, 2000, 75 (01) : 72 - 80