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1.
Annu Rev Cell Dev Biol ; 34: 545-568, 2018 10 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30044648

ABSTRACT

Most neurodegenerative diseases are characterized by the accumulation of protein aggregates, some of which are toxic to cells. Mounting evidence demonstrates that in several diseases, protein aggregates can pass from neuron to neuron along connected networks, although the role of this spreading phenomenon in disease pathogenesis is not completely understood. Here we briefly review the molecular and histopathological features of protein aggregation in neurodegenerative disease, we summarize the evidence for release of proteins from donor cells into the extracellular space, and we highlight some other mechanisms by which protein aggregates might be transmitted to recipient cells. We also discuss the evidence that supports a role for spreading of protein aggregates in neurodegenerative disease pathogenesis and some limitations of this model. Finally, we consider potential therapeutic strategies to target spreading of protein aggregates in the treatment of neurodegenerative diseases.


Subject(s)
Neurodegenerative Diseases/genetics , Neurons/metabolism , Protein Aggregates/genetics , Protein Aggregation, Pathological/genetics , Alzheimer Disease/genetics , Alzheimer Disease/pathology , Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis/genetics , Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis/pathology , Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy/genetics , Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy/pathology , Frontotemporal Dementia/genetics , Frontotemporal Dementia/pathology , Humans , Huntington Disease/genetics , Huntington Disease/pathology , Neurodegenerative Diseases/classification , Neurodegenerative Diseases/pathology , Neurons/pathology , Parkinson Disease/genetics , Parkinson Disease/pathology , Prion Diseases/genetics , Prion Diseases/pathology , Protein Aggregation, Pathological/pathology
2.
Annu Rev Genet ; 53: 117-147, 2019 12 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31537104

ABSTRACT

Mammalian prion diseases are a group of neurodegenerative conditions caused by infection of the central nervous system with proteinaceous agents called prions, including sporadic, variant, and iatrogenic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease; kuru; inherited prion disease; sheep scrapie; bovine spongiform encephalopathy; and chronic wasting disease. Prions are composed of misfolded and multimeric forms of the normal cellular prion protein (PrP). Prion diseases require host expression of the prion protein gene (PRNP) and a range of other cellular functions to support their propagation and toxicity. Inherited forms of prion disease are caused by mutation of PRNP, whereas acquired and sporadically occurring mammalian prion diseases are controlled by powerful genetic risk and modifying factors. Whereas some PrP amino acid variants cause the disease, others confer protection, dramatically altered incubation times, or changes in the clinical phenotype. Multiple mechanisms, including interference with homotypic protein interactions and the selection of the permissible prion strains in a host, play a role. Several non-PRNP factors have now been uncovered that provide insights into pathways of disease susceptibility or neurotoxicity.


Subject(s)
Mammals/genetics , Prion Diseases/genetics , Prion Proteins/genetics , Animals , Cattle , Disease Models, Animal , Genetic Association Studies , Genetic Predisposition to Disease , Genetic Testing , Goats/genetics , Humans , Mice , Polymorphism, Genetic , Prion Diseases/etiology , Prion Proteins/metabolism , Selection, Genetic , Sheep/genetics
3.
EMBO J ; 41(23): e112338, 2022 12 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36254605

ABSTRACT

A defining characteristic of mammalian prions is their capacity for self-sustained propagation. Theoretical considerations and experimental evidence suggest that prion propagation is modulated by cell-autonomous and non-autonomous modifiers. Using a novel quantitative phospholipase protection assay (QUIPPER) for high-throughput prion measurements, we performed an arrayed genome-wide RNA interference (RNAi) screen aimed at detecting cellular host-factors that can modify prion propagation. We exposed prion-infected cells in high-density microplates to 35,364 ternary pools of 52,746 siRNAs targeting 17,582 genes representing the majority of the mouse protein-coding transcriptome. We identified 1,191 modulators of prion propagation. While 1,151 modified the expression of both the pathological prion protein, PrPSc , and its cellular counterpart, PrPC , 40 genes selectively affected PrPSc . Of the latter 40 genes, 20 augmented prion production when suppressed. A prominent limiter of prion propagation was the heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein Hnrnpk. Psammaplysene A (PSA), which binds Hnrnpk, reduced prion levels in cultured cells and protected them from cytotoxicity. PSA also reduced prion levels in infected cerebellar organotypic slices and alleviated locomotor deficits in prion-infected Drosophila melanogaster expressing ovine PrPC . Hence, genome-wide QUIPPER-based perturbations can discover actionable cellular pathways involved in prion propagation. Further, the unexpected identification of a prion-controlling ribonucleoprotein suggests a role for RNA in the generation of infectious prions.


Subject(s)
Prion Diseases , Prions , Mice , Animals , Sheep/genetics , Prions/genetics , Prions/metabolism , Drosophila melanogaster/genetics , Ribonucleoproteins/metabolism , RNA Interference , RNA, Small Interfering/metabolism , Prion Diseases/genetics , Prion Diseases/pathology , Mammals/genetics
4.
PLoS Pathog ; 20(7): e1012370, 2024 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38976748

ABSTRACT

Prions can exist as different strains that consist of conformational variants of the misfolded, pathogenic prion protein isoform PrPSc. Defined by stably transmissible biological and biochemical properties, strains have been identified in a spectrum of prion diseases, including chronic wasting disease (CWD) of wild and farmed cervids. CWD is highly contagious and spreads via direct and indirect transmission involving extraneural sites of infection, peripheral replication and neuroinvasion of prions. Here, we investigated the impact of infection route on CWD prion conformational selection and propagation. We used gene-targeted mouse models expressing deer PrP for intracerebral or intraperitoneal inoculation with fractionated or unfractionated brain homogenates from white-tailed deer, harboring CWD strains Wisc-1 or 116AG. Upon intracerebral inoculation, Wisc-1 and 116AG-inoculated mice differed in conformational stability of PrPSc. In brains of mice infected intraperitoneally with either inoculum, PrPSc propagated with identical conformational stability and fewer PrPSc deposits in most brain regions than intracerebrally inoculated animals. For either inoculum, PrPSc conformational stability in brain and spinal cord was similar upon intracerebral infection but significantly higher in spinal cords of intraperitoneally infected animals. Inoculation with fractionated brain homogenates resulted in lower variance of survival times upon intraperitoneal compared to intracerebral infection. In summary, we demonstrate that extraneural infection mitigates the impact of PrPSc quaternary structure on infection and reduces conformational variability of PrPSc propagated in the brain. These findings provide new insights into the evolution of stable CWD strains in natural, extraneural transmissions.


Subject(s)
Brain , Deer , PrPSc Proteins , Wasting Disease, Chronic , Animals , Mice , Wasting Disease, Chronic/transmission , Brain/metabolism , Brain/pathology , PrPSc Proteins/metabolism , Protein Conformation , Prions/metabolism , Prions/pathogenicity , Prion Diseases/transmission , Prion Diseases/pathology , Prion Diseases/metabolism , Mice, Transgenic
5.
PLoS Pathog ; 20(4): e1012087, 2024 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38557815

ABSTRACT

Prion diseases uniquely manifest in three distinct forms: inherited, sporadic, and infectious. Wild-type prions are responsible for the sporadic and infectious versions, while mutant prions cause inherited variants like fatal familial insomnia (FFI) and familial Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (fCJD). Although some drugs can prolong prion incubation times up to four-fold in rodent models of infectious prion diseases, no effective treatments for FFI and fCJD have been found. In this study, we evaluated the efficacy of various anti-prion drugs on newly-developed knock-in mouse models for FFI and fCJD. These models express bank vole prion protein (PrP) with the pathogenic D178N and E200K mutations. We applied various drug regimens known to be highly effective against wild-type prions in vivo as well as a brain-penetrant compound that inhibits mutant PrPSc propagation in vitro. None of the regimens tested (Anle138b, IND24, Anle138b + IND24, cellulose ether, and PSCMA) significantly extended disease-free survival or prevented mutant PrPSc accumulation in either knock-in mouse model, despite their ability to induce strain adaptation of mutant prions. Our results show that anti-prion drugs originally developed to treat infectious prion diseases do not necessarily work for inherited prion diseases, and that the recombinant sPMCA is not a reliable platform for identifying compounds that target mutant prions. This work underscores the need to develop therapies and validate screening assays specifically for mutant prions, as well as anti-prion strategies that are not strain-dependent.


Subject(s)
Creutzfeldt-Jakob Syndrome , Prion Diseases , Prions , Animals , Mice , Prions/metabolism , Prion Diseases/drug therapy , Prion Diseases/genetics , Prion Diseases/metabolism , Creutzfeldt-Jakob Syndrome/drug therapy , Creutzfeldt-Jakob Syndrome/genetics , Creutzfeldt-Jakob Syndrome/metabolism , Prion Proteins/genetics , Prion Proteins/metabolism , Brain/pathology , Arvicolinae/metabolism
6.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 120(15): e2221060120, 2023 04 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37014866

ABSTRACT

Prions are proteinaceous infectious particles that replicate by structural conversion of the host-encoded cellular prion protein (PrPC), causing fatal neurodegenerative diseases in mammals. Species-specific amino acid substitutions (AAS) arising from single nucleotide polymorphisms within the prion protein gene (Prnp) modulate prion disease pathogenesis, and, in several instances, reduce susceptibility of homo- or heterozygous AAS carriers to prion infection. However, a mechanistic understanding of their protective effects against clinical disease is missing. We generated gene-targeted mouse infection models of chronic wasting disease (CWD), a highly contagious prion disease of cervids. These mice express wild-type deer or PrPC harboring the S138N substitution homo- or heterozygously, a polymorphism found exclusively in reindeer (Rangifer tarandus spp.) and fallow deer (Dama dama). The wild-type deer PrP-expressing model recapitulated CWD pathogenesis including fecal shedding. Encoding at least one 138N allele prevented clinical CWD, accumulation of protease-resistant PrP (PrPres) and abnormal PrP deposits in the brain tissue. However, prion seeding activity was detected in spleens, brains, and feces of these mice, suggesting subclinical infection accompanied by prion shedding. 138N-PrPC was less efficiently converted to PrPres in vitro than wild-type deer (138SS) PrPC. Heterozygous coexpression of wild-type deer and 138N-PrPC resulted in dominant-negative inhibition and progressively diminished prion conversion over serial rounds of protein misfolding cyclic amplification. Our study indicates that heterozygosity at a polymorphic Prnp codon can confer the highest protection against clinical CWD and highlights the potential role of subclinical carriers in CWD transmission.


Subject(s)
Deer , Prion Diseases , Prions , Reindeer , Wasting Disease, Chronic , Mice , Animals , Prions/metabolism , Prion Proteins/genetics , Deer/genetics , Wasting Disease, Chronic/genetics , Mice, Transgenic , Prion Diseases/genetics
7.
PLoS Genet ; 19(1): e1010565, 2023 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36656833

ABSTRACT

Fatal familial insomnia (FFI) is a rare neurodegenerative disease caused by a dominantly inherited single amino acid substitution (D178N) within the prion protein (PrP). No in vitro human brain tissue model for this disease has previously been available. Consequently, how this mutation exerts its damaging effect on brain cells is still unknown. Using CRISPR-Cas9 engineered induced pluripotent stem cells, we made D178N cerebral organoids and compared these with isotype control organoids. We found that, in the absence of other hallmarks of FFI, the D178N organoids exhibited astrogliosis with cellular oxidative stress. Abnormal post-translational processing of PrP was evident but no tissue deposition or propagation of mis-folded PrP isoforms were observed. Neuronal electrophysiological function was compromised and levels of neurotransmitters, particularly acetylcholine and GABA, altered. Underlying these dysfunctions were changes in cellular energy homeostasis, with substantially increased glycolytic and Krebs cycle intermediates, and greater mitochondrial activity. This increased energy demand in D178N organoids was associated with increased mitophagy and depletion of lipid droplets, in turn resulting in shifts of cellular lipid composition. Using a double mutation (178NN) we could confirm that most changes were caused by the presence of the mutation rather than interaction with PrP molecules lacking the mutation. Our data strongly suggests that shifting biosynthetic intermediates and oxidative stress, caused by an imbalance of energy supply and demand, results in astrogliosis with compromised neuronal activity in FFI organoids. They further support that many of the disease associated changes are due to a corruption of PrP function and do not require propagation of PrP mis-folding.


Subject(s)
Insomnia, Fatal Familial , Neurodegenerative Diseases , Prion Diseases , Prions , Humans , Insomnia, Fatal Familial/genetics , Insomnia, Fatal Familial/metabolism , Gliosis/genetics , Gliosis/metabolism , Neurodegenerative Diseases/metabolism , Prions/metabolism , Mutation , Oxidation-Reduction , Organoids/metabolism , Prion Diseases/genetics , Prion Diseases/metabolism
8.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 120(1): e2209815120, 2023 01 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36574660

ABSTRACT

The cellular prion protein (PrPC) converts to alternatively folded pathogenic conformations (PrPSc) in prion infections and binds neurotoxic oligomers formed by amyloid-ß α-synuclein, and tau. ß-Endoproteolysis, which splits PrPC into N- and C-terminal fragments (N2 and C2, respectively), is of interest because a protease-resistant, C2-sized fragment (C2Sc) accumulates in the brain during prion infections, seemingly comprising the majority of PrPSc at disease endpoint in mice. However, candidates for the underlying proteolytic mechanism(s) remain unconfirmed in vivo. Here, a cell-based screen of protease inhibitors unexpectedly linked type II membrane proteins of the S9B serine peptidase subfamily to PrPC ß-cleavage. Overexpression experiments in cells and assays with recombinant proteins confirmed that fibroblast activation protein (FAP) and its paralog, dipeptidyl peptidase-4 (DPP4), cleave directly at multiple sites within PrPC's N-terminal domain. For wild-type mouse and human PrPC substrates expressed in cells, the rank orders of activity were human FAP ~ mouse FAP > mouse DPP4 > human DPP4 and human FAP > mouse FAP > mouse DPP4 >> human DPP4, respectively. C2 levels relative to total PrPC were reduced in several tissues from FAP-null mice, and, while knockout of DPP4 lacked an analogous effect, the combined DPP4/FAP inhibitor linagliptin, but not the FAP-specific inhibitor SP-13786, reduced C2Sc and total PrPSc levels in two murine cell-based models of prion infections. Thus, the net activity of the S9B peptidases FAP and DPP4 and their cognate inhibitors/modulators affect the physiology and pathogenic potential of PrPC.


Subject(s)
PrPC Proteins , Prion Diseases , Prions , Mice , Animals , Humans , Prion Proteins/genetics , Dipeptidyl Peptidase 4/genetics , Dipeptidyl Peptidase 4/metabolism , Prions/chemistry , Serine Endopeptidases/genetics , Serine Endopeptidases/metabolism , Peptide Hydrolases , Fibroblasts/metabolism , Prion Diseases/metabolism , PrPC Proteins/chemistry
9.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 120(13): e2220984120, 2023 03 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36952379

ABSTRACT

The amyotrophic lateral sclerosis-parkinsonism dementia complex (ALS-PDC) of Guam is an endemic neurodegenerative disease that features widespread tau tangles, occasional α-synuclein Lewy bodies, and sparse ß-amyloid (Aß) plaques distributed in the central nervous system. Extensive studies of genetic or environmental factors have failed to identify a cause of ALS-PDC. Building on prior work describing the detection of tau and Aß prions in Alzheimer's disease (AD) and Down syndrome brains, we investigated ALS-PDC brain samples for the presence of prions. We obtained postmortem frozen brain tissue from 26 donors from Guam with ALS-PDC or no neurological impairment and 71 non-Guamanian donors with AD or no neurological impairment. We employed cellular bioassays to detect the prion conformers of tau, α-synuclein, and Aß proteins in brain extracts. In ALS-PDC brain samples, we detected high titers of tau and Aß prions, but we did not detect α-synuclein prions in either cohort. The specific activity of tau and Aß prions was increased in Guam ALS-PDC compared with sporadic AD. Applying partial least squares regression to all biochemical and prion infectivity measurements, we demonstrated that the ALS-PDC cohort has a unique molecular signature distinguishable from AD. Our findings argue that Guam ALS-PDC is a distinct double-prion disorder featuring both tau and Aß prions.


Subject(s)
Alzheimer Disease , Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis , Dementia , Neurodegenerative Diseases , Parkinsonian Disorders , Prion Diseases , Prions , Humans , alpha-Synuclein , Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis/metabolism , Dementia/metabolism , Parkinsonian Disorders/metabolism , tau Proteins/metabolism
10.
PLoS Pathog ; 19(1): e1011083, 2023 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36626391

ABSTRACT

Prion diseases are caused by misfolding of either wild-type or mutant forms of the prion protein (PrP) into self-propagating, pathogenic conformers, collectively termed PrPSc. Both wild-type and mutant PrPSc molecules exhibit conformational diversity in vivo, but purified prions generated by the serial protein misfolding cyclic amplification (sPMCA) technique do not display this same diversity in vitro. This discrepancy has left a gap in our understanding of how conformational diversity arises at the molecular level in both types of prions. Here, we use continuous shaking instead of sPMCA to generate conformationally diverse purified prions in vitro. Using this approach, we show for the first time that wild type prions initially seeded by different native strains can propagate as metastable PrPSc conformers with distinguishable strain properties in purified reactions containing a single active cofactor. Propagation of these metastable PrPSc conformers requires appropriate shaking conditions, and changes in these conditions cause all the different PrPSc conformers to converge irreversibly into the same single conformer as that produced in sPMCA reactions. We also use continuous shaking to show that two mutant PrP molecules with different pathogenic point mutations (D177N and E199K) adopt distinguishable PrPSc conformations in reactions containing pure protein substrate without cofactors. Unlike wild-type prions, the conformations of mutant prions appear to be dictated by substrate sequence rather than seed conformation. Overall, our studies using purified substrates in shaking reactions show that wild-type and mutant prions use fundamentally different mechanisms to generate conformational diversity at the molecular level.


Subject(s)
Prion Diseases , Prions , Humans , Prions/metabolism , Prion Diseases/metabolism , Prion Proteins , Molecular Conformation
11.
PLoS Pathog ; 19(4): e1011309, 2023 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37104170

ABSTRACT

Prion diseases, also known as transmissible spongiform encephalopathies, are rare, progressive, and fatal neurodegenerative disorders, which are caused by the accumulation of the misfolded cellular prion protein (PrPC). The resulting cytotoxic prion species, referred to as the scrapie prion isoform (PrPSc), assemble in aggregates and interfere with neuronal pathways, ultimately rendering neurons dysfunctional. As the prion protein physiologically interacts with redox-active metals, an altered redox balance within the cell can impact these interactions, which may lead to and facilitate further misfolding and aggregation. The initiation of misfolding and the aggregation processes will, in turn, induce microglial activation and neuroinflammation, which leads to an imbalance in cellular redox homeostasis and enhanced redox stress. Potential approaches for therapeutics target redox signalling, and this review illustrates the pathways involved in the above processes.


Subject(s)
Prion Diseases , Prions , Scrapie , Animals , Sheep , Prion Proteins/metabolism , Prions/metabolism , Scrapie/pathology , Oxidation-Reduction
12.
PLoS Pathog ; 19(9): e1011487, 2023 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37747931

ABSTRACT

Select prion diseases are characterized by widespread cerebral plaque-like deposits of amyloid fibrils enriched in heparan sulfate (HS), a abundant extracellular matrix component. HS facilitates fibril formation in vitro, yet how HS impacts fibrillar plaque growth within the brain is unclear. Here we found that prion-bound HS chains are highly sulfated, and that the sulfation is essential for accelerating prion conversion in vitro. Using conditional knockout mice to deplete the HS sulfation enzyme, Ndst1 (N-deacetylase / N-sulfotransferase) from neurons or astrocytes, we investigated how reducing HS sulfation impacts survival and prion aggregate distribution during a prion infection. Neuronal Ndst1-depleted mice survived longer and showed fewer and smaller parenchymal plaques, shorter fibrils, and increased vascular amyloid, consistent with enhanced aggregate transit toward perivascular drainage channels. The prolonged survival was strain-dependent, affecting mice infected with extracellular, plaque-forming, but not membrane bound, prions. Live PET imaging revealed rapid clearance of recombinant prion protein monomers into the CSF of neuronal Ndst1- deficient mice, neuronal, further suggesting that HS sulfate groups hinder transit of extracellular prion protein monomers. Our results directly show how a host cofactor slows the spread of prion protein through the extracellular space and identify an enzyme to target to facilitate aggregate clearance.


Subject(s)
Neurons , Prion Diseases , Prions , Sulfotransferases , Animals , Mice , Heparitin Sulfate/metabolism , Mice, Knockout , Neurons/enzymology , Prion Diseases/metabolism , Prion Proteins/genetics , Prions/metabolism , Sulfotransferases/genetics , Sulfotransferases/metabolism
13.
FASEB J ; 38(14): e23843, 2024 Jul 31.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39072789

ABSTRACT

Prion diseases result from the misfolding of the physiological prion protein (PrPC) to a pathogenic conformation (PrPSc). Compelling evidence indicates that prevention and/or reduction of PrPSc replication are promising therapeutic strategies against prion diseases. However, the existence of different PrPSc conformations (or strains) associated with disease represents a major problem when identifying anti-prion compounds. Efforts to identify strain-specific anti-prion molecules are limited by the lack of biologically relevant high-throughput screening platforms to interrogate compound libraries. Here, we describe adaptations to the protein misfolding cyclic amplification (PMCA) technology (able to faithfully replicate PrPSc strains) that increase its throughput to facilitate the screening of anti-prion molecules. The optimized PMCA platform includes a reduction in sample and reagents, as well as incubation/sonication cycles required to efficiently replicate and detect rodent-adapted and cervid PrPSc strains. The visualization of PMCA products was performed via dot blots, a method that contributed to reduced processing times. These technical changes allowed us to evaluate small molecules with previously reported anti-prion activity. This proof-of-principle screening was evaluated for six rodent-adapted prion strains. Our data show that these compounds targeted either none, all or some PrPSc strains at variable concentrations, demonstrating that this PMCA system is suitable to test compound libraries for putative anti-prion molecules targeting specific PrPSc strains. Further analyses of a small compound library against deer prions demonstrate the potential of this new PMCA format to identify strain-specific anti-prion molecules. The data presented here demonstrate the use of the PMCA technique in the selection of prion strain-specific anti-prion compounds.


Subject(s)
PrPSc Proteins , Protein Folding , Animals , Protein Folding/drug effects , PrPSc Proteins/metabolism , PrPSc Proteins/chemistry , Mice , Prion Diseases/drug therapy , Prion Diseases/metabolism , Prions/metabolism
14.
Nat Rev Mol Cell Biol ; 14(10): 617-29, 2013 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24061228

ABSTRACT

Protein quality control within the cell requires the interplay of many molecular chaperones and proteases. When this quality control system is disrupted, polypeptides follow pathways leading to misfolding, inactivity and aggregation. Among the repertoire of molecular chaperones are remarkable proteins that forcibly untangle protein aggregates, called disaggregases. Structural and biochemical studies have led to new insights into how these proteins collaborate with co-chaperones and utilize ATP to power protein disaggregation. Understanding how energy-dependent protein disaggregating machines function is universally important and clinically relevant, as protein aggregation is linked to medical conditions such as Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, amyloidosis and prion diseases.


Subject(s)
Molecular Chaperones/genetics , Peptide Hydrolases/metabolism , Prion Diseases/genetics , Proteins/chemistry , Alzheimer Disease/genetics , Alzheimer Disease/pathology , Amyloidosis/genetics , Amyloidosis/pathology , Humans , Molecular Chaperones/chemistry , Molecular Chaperones/metabolism , Parkinson Disease/genetics , Parkinson Disease/pathology , Prion Diseases/pathology , Protein Conformation , Protein Folding , Protein Unfolding , Proteins/genetics , Proteins/metabolism , Quality Control
15.
Brain ; 147(1): 240-254, 2024 01 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37669322

ABSTRACT

A common pathological denominator of various neurodegenerative diseases is the accumulation of protein aggregates. Neurotoxic effects are caused by a loss of the physiological activity of the aggregating protein and/or a gain of toxic function of the misfolded protein conformers. In transmissible spongiform encephalopathies or prion diseases, neurodegeneration is caused by aberrantly folded isoforms of the prion protein (PrP). However, it is poorly understood how pathogenic PrP conformers interfere with neuronal viability. Employing in vitro approaches, cell culture, animal models and patients' brain samples, we show that misfolded PrP can induce aggregation and inactivation of TAR DNA-binding protein-43 (TDP-43). Purified PrP aggregates interact with TDP-43 in vitro and in cells and induce the conversion of soluble TDP-43 into non-dynamic protein assemblies. Similarly, mislocalized PrP conformers in the cytosol bind to and sequester TDP-43 in cytosolic aggregates. As a consequence, TDP-43-dependent splicing activity in the nucleus is significantly decreased, leading to altered protein expression in cells with cytosolic PrP aggregates. Finally, we present evidence for cytosolic TDP-43 aggregates in neurons of transgenic flies expressing mammalian PrP and Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease patients. Our study identified a novel mechanism of how aberrant PrP conformers impair physiological pathways by cross-seeding.


Subject(s)
Creutzfeldt-Jakob Syndrome , Prion Diseases , Prions , Animals , Humans , DNA-Binding Proteins , Mammals/metabolism , Prion Diseases/metabolism , Prion Proteins , Prions/metabolism
16.
Brain ; 147(4): 1539-1552, 2024 Apr 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38000783

ABSTRACT

It is increasingly evident that the association of glycans with the prion protein (PrP), a major post-translational modification, significantly impacts the pathogenesis of prion diseases. A recent bioassay study has provided evidence that the presence of PrP glycans decreases spongiform degeneration and disease-related PrP (PrPD) deposition in a murine model. We challenged (PRNPN181Q/197Q) transgenic (Tg) mice expressing glycan-free human PrP (TgGlyc-), with isolates from sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease subtype MM2 (sCJDMM2), sporadic fatal insomnia and familial fatal insomnia, three human prion diseases that are distinct but share histotypic and PrPD features. TgGlyc- mice accurately replicated the basic histotypic features associated with the three diseases but the transmission was characterized by high attack rates, shortened incubation periods and a greatly increased severity of the histopathology, including the presence of up to 40 times higher quantities of PrPD that formed prominent deposits. Although the engineered protease-resistant PrPD shared at least some features of the secondary structure and the presence of the anchorless PrPD variant with the wild-type PrPD, it exhibited different density gradient profiles of the PrPD aggregates and a higher stability index. The severity of the histopathological features including PrP deposition appeared to be related to the incubation period duration. These findings are clearly consistent with the protective role of the PrP glycans but also emphasize the complexity of the conformational changes that impact PrPD following glycan knockout. Future studies will determine whether these features apply broadly to other human prion diseases or are PrPD-type dependent.


Subject(s)
Creutzfeldt-Jakob Syndrome , Prion Diseases , Prions , Humans , Mice , Animals , Prion Proteins/genetics , Prion Proteins/metabolism , Prion Diseases/metabolism , Prions/metabolism , Creutzfeldt-Jakob Syndrome/pathology , Mice, Transgenic , Polysaccharides
17.
Brain ; 147(2): 649-664, 2024 02 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37703312

ABSTRACT

The unfolded protein response (UPR) is rapidly gaining momentum as a therapeutic target for protein misfolding neurodegenerative diseases, in which its overactivation results in sustained translational repression leading to synapse loss and neurodegeneration. In mouse models of these disorders, from Alzheimer's to prion disease, modulation of the pathway-including by the licensed drug, trazodone-restores global protein synthesis rates with profound neuroprotective effects. However, the precise nature of the translational impairment, in particular the specific proteins affected in disease, and their response to therapeutic UPR modulation are poorly understood. We used non-canonical amino acid tagging (NCAT) to measure de novo protein synthesis in the brains of prion-diseased mice with and without trazodone treatment, in both whole hippocampus and cell-specifically. During disease the predominant nascent proteome changes occur in synaptic, cytoskeletal and mitochondrial proteins in both hippocampal neurons and astrocytes. Remarkably, trazodone treatment for just 2 weeks largely restored the whole disease nascent proteome in the hippocampus to that of healthy, uninfected mice, predominantly with recovery of proteins involved in synaptic and mitochondrial function. In parallel, trazodone treatment restored the disease-associated decline in synapses and mitochondria and their function to wild-type levels. In conclusion, this study increases our understanding of how translational repression contributes to neurodegeneration through synaptic and mitochondrial toxicity via depletion of key proteins essential for their function. Further, it provides new insights into the neuroprotective mechanisms of trazodone through reversal of this toxicity, relevant for the treatment of neurodegenerative diseases via translational modulation.


Subject(s)
Alzheimer Disease , Neurodegenerative Diseases , Prion Diseases , Prions , Trazodone , Mice , Animals , Prions/metabolism , Proteome/metabolism , Proteome/pharmacology , Trazodone/pharmacology , Trazodone/therapeutic use , Trazodone/metabolism , Prion Diseases/drug therapy , Prion Diseases/metabolism , Neurodegenerative Diseases/metabolism , Synapses/metabolism , Alzheimer Disease/metabolism
18.
Annu Rev Biochem ; 78: 177-204, 2009.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19231987

ABSTRACT

The prion (infectious protein) concept has evolved with the discovery of new self-propagating protein states in organisms as diverse as mammals and fungi. The infectious agent of the mammalian transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSE) has long been considered the prototypical prion, and recent cell-free propagation and biophysical analyses of TSE infectivity have now firmly established its prion credentials. Other disease-associated protein aggregates, such as some amyloids, can also have prion-like characteristics under certain experimental conditions. However, most amyloids appear to lack the natural transmissibility of TSE prions. One feature that distinguishes the latter from the former is the glycophosphatidylinositol membrane anchor on prion protein, the molecule that is corrupted in TSE diseases. The presence of this anchor profoundly affects TSE pathogenesis, which involves major membrane distortions in the brain, and may be a key reason for the greater neurovirulence of TSE prions relative to many other autocatalytic protein aggregates.


Subject(s)
Prion Diseases/metabolism , Prions/metabolism , Animals , Brain/pathology , Humans , Prion Diseases/pathology , Prions/chemistry , Prions/genetics , Prions/pathogenicity , Protein Folding
19.
J Neurosci ; 43(21): 3970-3984, 2023 05 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37019623

ABSTRACT

Endolysosomal defects in neurons are central to the pathogenesis of prion and other neurodegenerative disorders. In prion disease, prion oligomers traffic through the multivesicular body (MVB) and are routed for degradation in lysosomes or for release in exosomes, yet how prions impact proteostatic pathways is unclear. We found that prion-affected human and mouse brain showed a marked reduction in Hrs and STAM1 (ESCRT-0), which route ubiquitinated membrane proteins from early endosomes into MVBs. To determine how the reduction in ESCRT-0 impacts prion conversion and cellular toxicity in vivo, we prion-challenged conditional knockout mice (male and female) having Hrs deleted from neurons, astrocytes, or microglia. The neuronal, but not astrocytic or microglial, Hrs-depleted mice showed a shortened survival and an acceleration in synaptic derangements, including an accumulation of ubiquitinated proteins, deregulation of phosphorylated AMPA and metabotropic glutamate receptors, and profoundly altered synaptic structure, all of which occurred later in the prion-infected control mice. Finally, we found that neuronal Hrs (nHrs) depletion increased surface levels of the cellular prion protein, PrPC, which may contribute to the rapidly advancing disease through neurotoxic signaling. Taken together, the reduced Hrs in the prion-affected brain hampers ubiquitinated protein clearance at the synapse, exacerbates postsynaptic glutamate receptor deregulation, and accelerates neurodegeneration.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Prion diseases are rapidly progressive neurodegenerative disorders characterized by prion aggregate spread through the central nervous system. Early disease features include ubiquitinated protein accumulation and synapse loss. Here, we investigate how prion aggregates alter ubiquitinated protein clearance pathways (ESCRT) in mouse and human prion-infected brain, discovering a marked reduction in Hrs. Using a prion-infection mouse model with neuronal Hrs (nHrs) depleted, we show that low neuronal Hrs is detrimental and markedly shortens survival time while accelerating synaptic derangements, including ubiquitinated protein accumulation, indicating that Hrs loss exacerbates prion disease progression. Additionally, Hrs depletion increases the surface distribution of prion protein (PrPC), linked to aggregate-induced neurotoxic signaling, suggesting that Hrs loss in prion disease accelerates disease through enhancing PrPC-mediated neurotoxic signaling.


Subject(s)
Neurodegenerative Diseases , Prion Diseases , Prions , Male , Female , Mice , Humans , Animals , Prions/metabolism , Prion Proteins/metabolism , Receptors, AMPA/metabolism , Neurons/metabolism , Prion Diseases/metabolism , Prion Diseases/pathology , Neurodegenerative Diseases/metabolism , Endosomal Sorting Complexes Required for Transport/metabolism
20.
J Biol Chem ; 299(8): 105054, 2023 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37454740

ABSTRACT

Neurodegenerative diseases are often characterized by the codeposition of different amyloidogenic proteins, normally defining distinct proteinopathies. An example is represented by prion diseases, where the classical deposition of the aberrant conformational isoform of the prion protein (PrPSc) can be associated with tau insoluble species, which are usually involved in another class of diseases called tauopathies. How this copresence of amyloidogenic proteins can influence the progression of prion diseases is still a matter of debate. Recently, the cellular form of the prion protein, PrPC, has been investigated as a possible receptor of amyloidogenic proteins, since its binding activity with Aß, tau, and α-synuclein has been reported, and it has been linked to several neurotoxic behaviors exerted by these proteins. We have previously shown that the treatment of chronically prion-infected cells with tau K18 fibrils reduced PrPSc levels. In this work, we further explored this mechanism by using another tau construct that includes the sequence that forms the core of Alzheimer's disease tau filaments in vivo to obtain a distinct fibril type. Despite a difference of six amino acids, these two constructs form fibrils characterized by distinct biochemical and biological features. However, their effects on PrPSc reduction were comparable and probably based on the binding to PrPC at the plasma membrane, inhibiting the pathological conversion event. Our results suggest PrPC as receptor for different types of tau fibrils and point out a role of tau amyloid fibrils in preventing the pathological PrPC to PrPSc conformational change.


Subject(s)
Neurodegenerative Diseases , Prion Diseases , Prions , tau Proteins , Humans , Amyloidogenic Proteins , Prion Diseases/metabolism , Prion Proteins , Prions/metabolism , tau Proteins/metabolism
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