We identified three S. cerevisiae lipid elongase null mutants (elo1Δ, elo2Δ, and elo3Δ) that enhance the toxicity of alpha-synuclein (α-syn). These elongases function in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) to catalyze the elongation of medium chain fatty acids to very long chain fatty acids, which is a component of sphingolipids. Without α-syn expression, the various elo mutants showed no growth defects, no reactive oxygen species (ROS) accumulation, and a modest decrease in survival of aged cells compared to wild-type cells. With (WT, A53T or E46K) α-syn expression, the various elo mutants exhibited severe growth defects (although A30P had a negligible effect on growth), ROS accumulation, aberrant protein trafficking, and a dramatic decrease in survival of aged cells compared to wild-type cells. Inhibitors of ceramide synthesis, myriocin and FB1, were extremely toxic to wild-type yeast cells expressing (WT, A53T, or E46K) α-syn but much less toxic to cells expressing A30P. The elongase mutants and ceramide synthesis inhibitors enhance the toxicity of WT α-syn, A53T and E46K, which transit through the ER, but have a negligible effect on A30P, which does not transit through the ER. Disruption of ceramide-sphingolipid homeostasis in the ER dramatically enhances the toxicity of α-syn (WT, A53T, and E46K).
Stationary-phase Saccharomyces cerevisiae cells transferred from spent rich media into water live for weeks, whereas the same cells die within hours if transferred into water with 2% glucose in a process called sugar-induced cell death (SICD). Our hypothesis is that SICD is due to a dysregulated Crabtree effect, which is the phenomenon whereby glucose transiently inhibits respiration and ATP synthesis. We found that stationary-phase cells in glucose/water consume 21 times more O 2 per cell than exponential-phase cells in rich media, and such excessive O 2 consumption causes reactive oxygen species to accumulate. We also found that inorganic phosphate and succinate protect against SICD but by different mechanisms. Phosphate protects by triggering the synthesis of Fru-1,6-P 2 , which inhibits respiration in isolated mitochondria. Succinate protects in wild-type cells but fails to protect in dic1⌬ cells. DIC1 codes for a mitochondrial inner membrane protein that exchanges cytosolic succinate for matrix phosphate. We propose that succinate depletes matrix phosphate, which in turn inhibits respiration and ATP synthesis. In sum, restoring the Crabtree effect, whether with phosphate or succinate, protects cells from SICD.Saccharomyces cerevisiae cells undergo glucose-induced inhibition of respiration and oxidative phosphorylation and a parallel up-regulation of both glycolysis and glucose uptake by a short-term mechanism called the "Crabtree effect" (1-5). The Crabtree effect is a reversible process, and the precise mechanism of this phenomenon is controversial (6 -8). In addition to the down-regulation of genes involved in respiration and oxidative phosphorylation by glucose (9, 10), the Crabtree effect may involve competition between mitochondrial respiratory enzymes and glycolytic enzymes for ADP and inorganic phosphate (11, 12), changes in the permeability of the outer mitochondrial membrane (8), and the accumulation of certain metabolic intermediates, especially Fru-1,6-P 2 (6).The possibility that Fru-1,6-P 2 mediates the Crabtree effect was shown in a recent study that used mitochondria isolated from Crabtree-positive and Crabtree-negative yeast (6).Notably, Fru-1,6-P 2 decreased the rate of O 2 consumption in mitochondria isolated from the Crabtree-positive yeast (S. cerevisiae), but not that in mitochondria isolated from the Crabtree-negative yeast (Candida utilis). Such a result indicates that Fru-1,6-P 2 mediates the Crabtree effect.Although glucose triggers the Crabtree effect when yeast cells are cultured in rich media, glucose in water is very toxic to cells, especially stationary-phase (G 0 ) cells. When stationaryphase cells are shifted into 2% glucose or fructose in water, the cells begin to bud but then rapidly lose viability within a few hours (13,14). The cells undergo an apoptotic death triggered by reactive oxygen species (ROS) 2 accumulation (15). ROS accumulation suggests that the respiratory pathway in mitochondria is turned on rather than repressed. The sugar-induced cell death (SICD) is indep...
The Prestwick and NIH chemical libraries were screened for drugs that protect baker’s yeast from sugar-induced cell death (SICD). SICD is triggered when stationary-phase yeast cells are transferred from spent rich medium into water with 2% glucose and no other nutrients. The rapid, apoptotic cell death occurs because reactive oxygen species (ROS) accumulate. We found that triclabendazole, which is used to treat liver flukes in cattle and man, partially protects against SICD. Characterization of triclabendazole revealed that it also protects yeast cells from death induced by the Parkinson’s disease-related protein alpha-synuclein (α-syn), which is known to induce the accumulation of ROS.
The Ras-adenylyl cyclase-protein kinase A nutrient-sensing pathway controls metabolism, proliferation and resistance to stress in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The genetic disruption of this pathway increases resistance to a variety of stresses. We show here that the pharmacological inhibition of this pathway by the drug triclabendazole increases resistance to oxidants, heat stress and extends the chronological life. Evidence is presented that triclabendazole decreases the intracellular level of cyclic AMP by inhibiting adenylyl cyclase and triggers the parallel rapid translocation of the stress-resistance transcription factor Msn2 from the cytosol into the nucleus, as deduced from experiments employing a strain in which MSN2 is replaced with MSN2-GFP (GFP, green fluorescent protein). Msn2 and Msn4 are responsible for activating the transcription of numerous genes that encode proteins that protect cells from stress. The results are consistent with triclabendazole either inhibiting the association of Ras with adenylyl cyclase or directly inhibiting adenylyl cyclase, which in turn triggers Msn2/4 to enter the nucleus and activate stress-responsible element gene expression.
We have been investigating the role that phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) and phosphatidylcholine (PC) content plays in modulating the solubility of the Parkinson’s disease protein alpha-synuclein (α-syn) using Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Caenorhabditis elegans. One enzyme that synthesizes PE is the conserved enzyme phosphatidylserine decarboxylase (Psd1/yeast; PSD-1/worms), which is lodged in the inner mitochondrial membrane. We previously found that decreasing the level of PE due to knockdown of Psd1/psd-1 affects the homeostasis of α-syn in vivo. In S. cerevisiae, the co-occurrence of low PE and α-syn in psd1Δ cells triggers mitochondrial defects, stress in the endoplasmic reticulum, misprocessing of glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchored proteins, and a 3-fold increase in the level of α-syn. The goal of this study was to identify drugs that rescue this phenotype. We screened the Prestwick library of 1121 Food and Drug Administration-approved drugs using psd1Δ + α-syn cells and identified cyclosporin A, meclofenoxate hydrochloride, and sulfaphenazole as putative protective compounds. The protective activity of these drugs was corroborated using C. elegans in which α-syn is expressed specifically in the dopaminergic neurons, with psd-1 depleted by RNAi. Worm populations were examined for dopaminergic neuron survival following psd-1 knockdown. Exposure to cyclosporine, meclofenoxate, and sulfaphenazole significantly enhanced survival at day 7 in α-syn-expressing worm populations whereby 50–55% of the populations displayed normal neurons, compared to only 10–15% of untreated animals. We also found that all three drugs rescued worms expressing α-syn in dopaminergic neurons that were deficient in the phospholipid cardiolipin following cardiolipin synthase (crls-1) depletion by RNAi. We discuss how these drugs might block α-syn pathology in dopaminergic neurons.
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