SUMMARYA key feature in Huntington disease (HD) is the accumulation of mutant Huntingtin (HTT) protein, which may be regulated by posttranslational modifications. Here, we define the primary sites of SUMO modification in the amino-terminal domain of HTT, show modification downstream of this domain, and demonstrate that HTT is modified by the stress-inducible SUMO-2. A systematic study of E3 SUMO ligases demonstrates that PIAS1 is an E3 SUMO ligase for both HTT SUMO-1 and SUMO-2 modification and that reduction of dPIAS in a mutant HTT Drosophila model is protective. SUMO-2 modification regulates accumulation of insoluble HTT in HeLa cells in a manner that mimics proteasome inhibition and can be modulated by overexpression and acute knockdown of PIAS1. Finally, the accumulation of SUMO-2-modified proteins in the insoluble fraction of HD postmortem striata implicates SUMO-2 modification in the age-related pathogenic accumulation of mutant HTT and other cellular proteins that occurs during HD progression.
Aggresomes and related inclusion bodies appear to serve as storage depots for misfolded and aggregated proteins within cells, which can potentially be degraded by the autophagy pathway. A homogenous fluorescence-based assay was devised to detect aggregated proteins inside aggresomes and inclusion bodies within an authentic cellular context. The assay employs a novel red fluorescent molecular rotor dye, which is essentially nonfluorescent until it binds to structural features associated with the aggregated protein cargo. Aggresomes and related structures were generated within cultured cells using various potent, cell permeable, proteasome inhibitors: MG-132, lactacystin, epoxomicin and bortezomib, and then selectively detected with the fluorescent probe. Employing the probe in combination with various fluorescein-labeled primary antibodies facilitated co-localization of key components of the autophagy system (ubiquitin, p62, and LC3) with aggregated protein cargo by fluorescence microscopy. Furthermore, cytoplasmic aggregates were highlighted in SK-N-SH human neuroblastoma cells incubated with exogenously supplied amyloid beta peptide 1–42. SMER28, a small molecule modulator of autophagy acting via an mTOR-independent mechanism, prevented the accumulation of amyloid beta peptide within these cells. The described assay allows assessment of the effects of protein aggregation directly in cells, without resorting to the use of non-physiological protein mutations or genetically engineered cell lines. With minor modification, the assay was also adapted to the analysis of frozen or formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissue sections, with demonstration of co-localization of aggregated cargo with β-amyloid and tau proteins in brain tissue sections from Alzheimer’s disease patients.
A number of sequences are presented which have high utility for the discovery of novel fungal PKS gene clusters. The sequences appear to be specific for particular types of fungal polyketide (i.e. non-reduced, partially reduced or highly reduced KS domains). We have also developed primers suitable for amplifying segments of fungal genes encoding polyketide C-methyltransferase domains. Genomic fragments amplified using these specific primer sequences can be used in blotting experiments and have high potential as aids for the eventual cloning of new fungal PKS gene clusters.
While X-ray and NMR structures are now available for most components of the Type II fatty acid synthase (FAS), there are no structures for Type I FAS domains. A region from the mammalian (rat) FAS, including the putative acyl carrier protein (ACP), has been cloned and over-expressed. Here we report multinuclear, multidimensional NMR studies which show that this isolated ACP domain contains four alpha-helices (residues 8-16 [1]; 41-51 [2]; 58-63 [3] and 66-74 [4]) and an overall global fold characteristic of ACPs from both Type II FAS and polyketide synthases (PKSs). The overall length of the structured ACP domain (67 residues) is smaller than the structured regions of the Eschericia coli FAS ACP (75 residues), the actinorhodin PKS ACP (78 residues) and the Bacillus subtilis FAS ACP (76 residues). We further show that the rat FAS ACP is recognised as an efficient substrate by enzymes known to modify Type II ACPs including phosphopantetheinyl and malonyl transferases, but not by the heterologous S. coelicolor minimal polyketide synthase.
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