Cargando…

The Toxicity of a Mutant Prion Protein Is Cell-Autonomous, and Can Be Suppressed by Wild-Type Prion Protein on Adjacent Cells

Insight into the normal function of PrP(C), and how it can be subverted to produce neurotoxic effects, is provided by PrP molecules carrying deletions encompassing the conserved central region. The most neurotoxic of these mutants, Δ105–125 (called ΔCR), produces a spontaneous neurodegenerative illn...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Biasini, Emiliano, Turnbaugh, Jessie A., Massignan, Tania, Veglianese, Pietro, Forloni, Gianluigi, Bonetto, Valentina, Chiesa, Roberto, Harris, David A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3299791/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22428057
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0033472
_version_ 1782226173430857728
author Biasini, Emiliano
Turnbaugh, Jessie A.
Massignan, Tania
Veglianese, Pietro
Forloni, Gianluigi
Bonetto, Valentina
Chiesa, Roberto
Harris, David A.
author_facet Biasini, Emiliano
Turnbaugh, Jessie A.
Massignan, Tania
Veglianese, Pietro
Forloni, Gianluigi
Bonetto, Valentina
Chiesa, Roberto
Harris, David A.
author_sort Biasini, Emiliano
collection PubMed
description Insight into the normal function of PrP(C), and how it can be subverted to produce neurotoxic effects, is provided by PrP molecules carrying deletions encompassing the conserved central region. The most neurotoxic of these mutants, Δ105–125 (called ΔCR), produces a spontaneous neurodegenerative illness when expressed in transgenic mice, and this phenotype can be dose-dependently suppressed by co-expression of wild-type PrP. Whether the toxic activity of ΔCR PrP and the protective activity or wild-type PrP are cell-autonomous, or can be exerted on neighboring cells, is unknown. To investigate this question, we have utilized co-cultures of differentiated neural stem cells derived from mice expressing ΔCR or wild-type PrP. Cells from the two kinds of mice, which are marked by the presence or absence of GFP, are differentiated together to yield neurons, astrocytes, and oligodendrocytes. As a surrogate read-out of ΔCR PrP toxicity, we assayed sensitivity of the cells to the cationic antibiotic, Zeocin. In a previous study, we reported that cells expressing ΔCR PrP are hypersensitive to the toxic effects of several cationic antibiotics, an effect that is suppressed by co-expression of wild type PrP, similar to the rescue of the neurodegenerative phenotype observed in transgenic mice. Using this system, we find that while ΔCR-dependent toxicity is cell-autonomous, the rescuing activity of wild-type PrP can be exerted in trans from nearby cells. These results provide important insights into how ΔCR PrP subverts a normal physiological function of PrP(C), and the cellular mechanisms underlying the rescuing process.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-3299791
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2012
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-32997912012-03-16 The Toxicity of a Mutant Prion Protein Is Cell-Autonomous, and Can Be Suppressed by Wild-Type Prion Protein on Adjacent Cells Biasini, Emiliano Turnbaugh, Jessie A. Massignan, Tania Veglianese, Pietro Forloni, Gianluigi Bonetto, Valentina Chiesa, Roberto Harris, David A. PLoS One Research Article Insight into the normal function of PrP(C), and how it can be subverted to produce neurotoxic effects, is provided by PrP molecules carrying deletions encompassing the conserved central region. The most neurotoxic of these mutants, Δ105–125 (called ΔCR), produces a spontaneous neurodegenerative illness when expressed in transgenic mice, and this phenotype can be dose-dependently suppressed by co-expression of wild-type PrP. Whether the toxic activity of ΔCR PrP and the protective activity or wild-type PrP are cell-autonomous, or can be exerted on neighboring cells, is unknown. To investigate this question, we have utilized co-cultures of differentiated neural stem cells derived from mice expressing ΔCR or wild-type PrP. Cells from the two kinds of mice, which are marked by the presence or absence of GFP, are differentiated together to yield neurons, astrocytes, and oligodendrocytes. As a surrogate read-out of ΔCR PrP toxicity, we assayed sensitivity of the cells to the cationic antibiotic, Zeocin. In a previous study, we reported that cells expressing ΔCR PrP are hypersensitive to the toxic effects of several cationic antibiotics, an effect that is suppressed by co-expression of wild type PrP, similar to the rescue of the neurodegenerative phenotype observed in transgenic mice. Using this system, we find that while ΔCR-dependent toxicity is cell-autonomous, the rescuing activity of wild-type PrP can be exerted in trans from nearby cells. These results provide important insights into how ΔCR PrP subverts a normal physiological function of PrP(C), and the cellular mechanisms underlying the rescuing process. Public Library of Science 2012-03-12 /pmc/articles/PMC3299791/ /pubmed/22428057 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0033472 Text en Biasini et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Biasini, Emiliano
Turnbaugh, Jessie A.
Massignan, Tania
Veglianese, Pietro
Forloni, Gianluigi
Bonetto, Valentina
Chiesa, Roberto
Harris, David A.
The Toxicity of a Mutant Prion Protein Is Cell-Autonomous, and Can Be Suppressed by Wild-Type Prion Protein on Adjacent Cells
title The Toxicity of a Mutant Prion Protein Is Cell-Autonomous, and Can Be Suppressed by Wild-Type Prion Protein on Adjacent Cells
title_full The Toxicity of a Mutant Prion Protein Is Cell-Autonomous, and Can Be Suppressed by Wild-Type Prion Protein on Adjacent Cells
title_fullStr The Toxicity of a Mutant Prion Protein Is Cell-Autonomous, and Can Be Suppressed by Wild-Type Prion Protein on Adjacent Cells
title_full_unstemmed The Toxicity of a Mutant Prion Protein Is Cell-Autonomous, and Can Be Suppressed by Wild-Type Prion Protein on Adjacent Cells
title_short The Toxicity of a Mutant Prion Protein Is Cell-Autonomous, and Can Be Suppressed by Wild-Type Prion Protein on Adjacent Cells
title_sort toxicity of a mutant prion protein is cell-autonomous, and can be suppressed by wild-type prion protein on adjacent cells
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3299791/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22428057
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0033472
work_keys_str_mv AT biasiniemiliano thetoxicityofamutantprionproteiniscellautonomousandcanbesuppressedbywildtypeprionproteinonadjacentcells
AT turnbaughjessiea thetoxicityofamutantprionproteiniscellautonomousandcanbesuppressedbywildtypeprionproteinonadjacentcells
AT massignantania thetoxicityofamutantprionproteiniscellautonomousandcanbesuppressedbywildtypeprionproteinonadjacentcells
AT veglianesepietro thetoxicityofamutantprionproteiniscellautonomousandcanbesuppressedbywildtypeprionproteinonadjacentcells
AT forlonigianluigi thetoxicityofamutantprionproteiniscellautonomousandcanbesuppressedbywildtypeprionproteinonadjacentcells
AT bonettovalentina thetoxicityofamutantprionproteiniscellautonomousandcanbesuppressedbywildtypeprionproteinonadjacentcells
AT chiesaroberto thetoxicityofamutantprionproteiniscellautonomousandcanbesuppressedbywildtypeprionproteinonadjacentcells
AT harrisdavida thetoxicityofamutantprionproteiniscellautonomousandcanbesuppressedbywildtypeprionproteinonadjacentcells
AT biasiniemiliano toxicityofamutantprionproteiniscellautonomousandcanbesuppressedbywildtypeprionproteinonadjacentcells
AT turnbaughjessiea toxicityofamutantprionproteiniscellautonomousandcanbesuppressedbywildtypeprionproteinonadjacentcells
AT massignantania toxicityofamutantprionproteiniscellautonomousandcanbesuppressedbywildtypeprionproteinonadjacentcells
AT veglianesepietro toxicityofamutantprionproteiniscellautonomousandcanbesuppressedbywildtypeprionproteinonadjacentcells
AT forlonigianluigi toxicityofamutantprionproteiniscellautonomousandcanbesuppressedbywildtypeprionproteinonadjacentcells
AT bonettovalentina toxicityofamutantprionproteiniscellautonomousandcanbesuppressedbywildtypeprionproteinonadjacentcells
AT chiesaroberto toxicityofamutantprionproteiniscellautonomousandcanbesuppressedbywildtypeprionproteinonadjacentcells
AT harrisdavida toxicityofamutantprionproteiniscellautonomousandcanbesuppressedbywildtypeprionproteinonadjacentcells