The intracellular accumulation of unfolded or misfolded proteins is believed to contribute to aging and age-related neurodegenerative diseases. However, the links between age-dependent proteotoxicity and cellular protein degradation systems remain poorly understood. Here, we show that 26S proteasome activity and abundance attenuate with age, which is associated with the impaired assembly of the 26S proteasome with the 19S regulatory particle (RP) and the 20S proteasome. In a genetic gain-of-function screen, we characterized Rpn11, which encodes a subunit of the 19S RP, as a suppressor of expanded polyglutamine-induced progressive neurodegeneration. Rpn11 overexpression suppressed the age-related reduction of the 26S proteasome activity, resulting in the extension of flies' life spans with suppression of the age-dependent accumulation of ubiquitinated proteins. On the other hand, the loss of function of Rpn11 caused an early onset of reduced 26S proteasome activity and a premature age-dependent accumulation of ubiquitinated proteins. It also caused a shorter life span and an enhanced neurodegenerative phenotype. Our results suggest that maintaining the 26S proteasome with age could extend the life span and suppress the age-related progression of neurodegenerative diseases.Ubiquitin-conjugated, misfolded protein aggregates are observed in the brain during normal aging and in late-onset human neurodegenerative diseases, such as Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, and polyglutamine diseases (e.g., Huntington's disease or spinocerebellar ataxias) (9). Many of the mutations that cause dominantly inherited neurodegenerative diseases dramatically increase the amount of protein aggregates in vitro and in vivo, supporting the widely accepted hypothesis that proteotoxicity caused by the aggregates underlies the pathogenesis of many neurodegenerative diseases (32). Proteotoxicity can have many effects, including disruption of microtubuledependent axonal transport (10), perturbation of membrane permeability (23), and impaired function of the ubiquitin-proteasome system (UPS) (1, 17). Aggregation-mediated toxicity has also been suggested in normal aging, because recent reports show that the impairment of autophagy in the central nervous system causes accumulation of ubiquitinated proteins and leads to neurodegenerative diseases (12, 21). These observations suggest that the continuous clearance of misfolded proteins through cellular degradation systems, including the UPS and autophagy, is important for preventing aggregationmediated proteotoxicity both in age-related neurodegenerative diseases and in normal aging.Clinical symptoms of neurodegenerative diseases generally do not appear or progress until advanced ages, not only in sporadic forms but also in inherited forms of neurodegenerative diseases (26). These observations suggest that aggregationmediated toxicity appears in a late-onset manner both in normal aging and in neurodegenerative diseases. Furthermore, a link between the aging process and aggregation-mediated proteotoxicity h...
Caspase activation has been extensively studied in the context of apoptosis. However, caspases also control other cellular functions, although the mechanisms regulating caspases in nonapoptotic contexts remain obscure. Drosophila IAP1 (DIAP1) is an endogenous caspase inhibitor that is crucial for regulating cell death during development. Here we describe Drosophila IKK-related kinase (DmIKKvarepsilon) as a regulator of caspase activation in a nonapoptotic context. We show that DmIKKvarepsilon promotes degradation of DIAP1 through direct phosphorylation. Knockdown of DmIKKvarepsilon in the proneural clusters of the wing imaginal disc, in which nonapoptotic caspase activity is required for proper sensory organ precursor (SOP) development, stabilizes endogenous DIAP1 and affects Drosophila SOP development. Our results demonstrate that DmIKKvarepsilon is a determinant of DIAP1 protein levels and that it establishes the threshold of activity required for the execution of nonapoptotic caspase functions.
While our paper was under review at Cell, Shapiro and Anderson (2006) published an independent characterization of the Ik2/DmIKK3 gene in the context of dorsoventral patterning. The authors describe a functional link between Ik2/DmIKK3 and organization of microtubule minus-ends for mRNA localization during oogenesis.
Programmed cell death, or apoptosis, is an essential event in animal development. Spatiotemporal analysis of caspase activation in vivo could provide new insights into programmed cell death occurring during development. Here, using the FRET-based caspase-3 indicator, SCAT3, we report the results of live-imaging analysis of caspase activation in developing Drosophila in vivo. In Drosophila, the salivary gland is sculpted by caspase-mediated programmed cell death initiated by the steroid hormone 20-hydroxyecdysone (ecdysone). Using a SCAT3 probe, we observed that caspase activation in the salivary glands begins in the anterior cells and is then propagated to the posterior cells in vivo. In vitro salivary gland culture experiments indicated that local exposure of ecdysone to the anterior salivary gland reproduces the caspase activation gradient as observed in vivo. In FTZ-F1 mutants, caspase activation was delayed and occurred in a random pattern in vivo. In contrast to the in vivo response, the salivary glands from FTZ-F1 mutants showed a normal in vitro response to ecdysone, suggesting that FTZ-F1 may be involved in ecdysteroid biosynthesis and secretion of ecdysone from the ring gland for local initiation of programmed cell death. These results imply a role of FTZ-F1 in coordinating the initiation of salivary gland apoptosis in development.apoptosis ͉ imaging ͉ metamorphosis ͉ FRET ͉ ecdysone
How the functional activity of the brain is altered during aging to cause age-related memory impairments is unknown. We used functional cellular imaging to monitor two different calcium-based memory traces that underlie olfactory classical conditioning in young and aged Drosophila. Functional imaging of neural activity in the processes of the dorsal paired medial (DPM) and mushroom body neurons revealed that the capacity to form an intermediateterm memory (ITM) trace in the DPM neurons after learning is lost with age, whereas the capacity to form a short-term memory trace in the α′/β′ mushroom body neurons remains unaffected by age. Stimulation of the DPM neurons by activation of a temperaturesensitive cation channel between acquisition and retrieval enhanced ITM in aged but not young flies. These data indicate that the functional state of the DPM neurons is selectively altered with age to cause an age-related impairment of ITM, and demonstrate that altering the excitability of DPM neurons can restore age-related memory impairments.
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