Temperature is a major environmental variable governing plant growth and development, and climate change has already altered the phenology of wildplants and crops 1 . However, the mechanisms by which plants sense temperature are not well understood. Environmental signals, including temperature, are integrated into growth and developmental pathways via the circadian clock and the activity of the Evening Complex (EC), a major signalling hub and core clock component 2,3 . The EC acts as a temperature responsive transcriptional repressor, providing rhythmicity and temperature responsiveness to growth via unknown mechanisms 2,4-6 . The EC consists of EARLY FLOWERING3 (ELF3) 4,7 , a large scaffold protein and key component
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is predominantly sporadic, but associated with heritable genetic mutations in 5-10% of cases, including those in Cu/Zn superoxide dismutase (SOD1). We previously showed that misfolding of SOD1 can be transmitted to endogenous human wild-type SOD1 (HuWtSOD1) in an intracellular compartment. Using NSC-34 motor neuron-like cells, we now demonstrate that misfolded mutant and HuWtSOD1 can traverse between cells via two nonexclusive mechanisms: protein aggregates released from dying cells and taken up by macropinocytosis, and exosomes secreted from living cells. Furthermore, once HuWt-SOD1 propagation has been established, misfolding of HuWt-SOD1 can be efficiently and repeatedly propagated between HEK293 cell cultures via conditioned media over multiple passages, and to cultured mouse primary spinal cord cells transgenically expressing HuWtSOD1, but not to cells derived from nontransgenic littermates. Conditioned media transmission of HuWtSOD1 misfolding in HEK293 cells is blocked by HuWtSOD1 siRNA knockdown, consistent with human SOD1 being a substrate for conversion, and attenuated by ultracentrifugation or incubation with SOD1 misfolding-specific antibodies, indicating a relatively massive transmission particle which possesses antibody-accessible SOD1. Finally, misfolded and protease-sensitive HuWtSOD1 comprises up to 4% of total SOD1 in spinal cords of patients with sporadic ALS (SALS). Propagation of HuWtSOD1 misfolding, and its subsequent cell-tocell transmission, is thus a candidate process for the molecular pathogenesis of SALS, which may provide novel treatment and biomarker targets for this devastating disease.A myotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a fatal neuromuscular condition that afflicts as many as 1 of 350 males and 420 females over the age of 18 (1). In ALS, degeneration of upper and lower motor neurons causes progressive muscle paralysis and spasticity, affecting mobility, speech, swallowing, and respiration (2). Half of affected individuals die within 3 y, and less than 20% survive for more than 5 y (3); 90-95% of ALS cases are sporadic (SALS) in which some apparently facilitating gene mutations, such as repeat expansions in the gene that encodes ataxin-2 (4), have been identified. The remaining 5-10% of ALS cases are familial (FALS) and predominantly associated with Mendelian-inherited mutations in the genes encoding Cu/Zn superoxide dismutase (SOD1), TAR-DNA-binding protein 43 (TDP-43), fused in sarcoma/translocated in liposarcoma (FUS/ TLS), C9ORF72, and other genes (reviewed in ref. 3).Despite the profusion of functionally diverse genes implicated in FALS and SALS, clinical and pathological similarities between all forms of ALS suggest the existence of a common pathogenic pathway that could be united by a single gene/protein (5). One of the mechanisms by which a mutant or wild-type (WT) protein can dominate pathogenesis of phenotypically diverse diseases is by propagated protein misfolding, such as that underpinning the prion diseases, which has been increa...
Oligomeric assemblies formed from a variety of disease-associated peptides and proteins have been strongly associated with toxicity in many neurodegenerative conditions, such as Alzheimer's disease. The precise nature of the toxic agents, however, remains still to be established. We show that prefibrillar aggregates of E22G (arctic) variant of the Abeta(1-42) peptide bind strongly to 1-anilinonaphthalene 8-sulfonate and that changes in this property correlate significantly with changes in its cytotoxicity. Moreover, we show that this phenomenon is common to other amyloid systems, such as wild-type Abeta(1-42), the I59T variant of human lysozyme and an SH3 domain. These findings are consistent with a model in which the exposure of hydrophobic surfaces as a result of the aggregation of misfolded species is a crucial and common feature of these pathogenic species.
Clusterin is an extracellular chaperone present in all disease-associated extracellular amyloid deposits, but its roles in amyloid formation and protein deposition in vivo are poorly understood. The current study initially aimed to characterize the effects of clusterin on amyloid formation in vitro by a panel of eight protein substrates. Two of the substrates (Alzheimer's beta peptide and a PI3-SH3 domain) were then used in further experiments to examine the effects of clusterin on amyloid cytotoxicity and to probe the mechanism of clusterin action. We show that clusterin exerts potent effects on amyloid formation, the nature and extent of which vary greatly with the clusterin:substrate ratio, and provide evidence that these effects are exerted via interactions with prefibrillar species that share common structural features. Proamyloidogenic effects of clusterin appear to be restricted to conditions in which the substrate protein is present at a very large molar excess; under these same conditions, clusterin coincorporates with substrate protein into insoluble aggregates. However, when clusterin is present at much higher but still substoichiometric levels (e.g., a molar ratio of clusterin:substrate=1:10), it potently inhibits amyloid formation and provides substantial cytoprotection. These findings suggest that clusterin is an important element in the control of extracellular protein misfolding.
The ␣-helix is a key structural element in a wide range of peptides and proteins. We report here the design, synthesis, and characterization of a modified peptide in which the helix content can be reversibly photoregulated. The peptide contains two cysteine residues that are cross-linked by an azobenzene derivative in an intramolecular fashion. In accordance with the design, the photoisomerization of the azobenzene cross-linker from the trans to the cis form causes a large increase in the helix content of the peptide, in water.
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