Cargando…

Nascent mutant Huntingtin exon 1 chains do not stall on ribosomes during translation but aggregates do recruit machinery involved in ribosome quality control and RNA

Mutations that cause Huntington’s Disease involve a polyglutamine (polyQ) sequence expansion beyond 35 repeats in exon 1 of Huntingtin. Intracellular inclusion bodies of mutant Huntingtin protein are a key feature of Huntington’s disease brain pathology. We previously showed that in cell culture the...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Ormsby, Angelique R., Cox, Dezerae, Daly, James, Priest, David, Hinde, Elizabeth, Hatters, Danny M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7394408/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32735619
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0233583
_version_ 1783565225408069632
author Ormsby, Angelique R.
Cox, Dezerae
Daly, James
Priest, David
Hinde, Elizabeth
Hatters, Danny M.
author_facet Ormsby, Angelique R.
Cox, Dezerae
Daly, James
Priest, David
Hinde, Elizabeth
Hatters, Danny M.
author_sort Ormsby, Angelique R.
collection PubMed
description Mutations that cause Huntington’s Disease involve a polyglutamine (polyQ) sequence expansion beyond 35 repeats in exon 1 of Huntingtin. Intracellular inclusion bodies of mutant Huntingtin protein are a key feature of Huntington’s disease brain pathology. We previously showed that in cell culture the formation of inclusions involved the assembly of disordered structures of mHtt exon 1 fragments (Httex1) and they were enriched with translational machinery when first formed. We hypothesized that nascent mutant Httex1 chains co-aggregate during translation by phase separation into liquid-like disordered aggregates and then convert to more rigid, amyloid structures. Here we further examined the mechanisms of inclusion assembly in a human epithelial kidney (AD293) cell culture model. We found mHttex1 did not appear to stall translation of its own nascent chain, or at best was marginal. We also found the inclusions appeared to recruit low levels of RNA but there was no difference in enrichment between early formed and mature inclusions. Proteins involved in translation or ribosome quality control were co-recruited to the inclusions (Ltn1 Rack1) compared to a protein not anticipated to be involved (NACAD), but there was no major specificity of enrichment in the early formed inclusions compared to mature inclusions. Furthermore, we observed co-aggregation with other proteins previously identified in inclusions, including Upf1 and chaperone-like proteins Sgta and Hspb1, which also suppressed aggregation at high co-expression levels. The newly formed inclusions also contained immobile mHttex1 molecules which points to the disordered aggregates being mechanically rigid prior to amyloid formation. Collectively our findings show little evidence that inclusion assembly arises by a discrete clustering of stalled nascent chains and associated quality control machinery. Instead, the machinery appear to be recruited continuously, or secondarily, to the nucleation of inclusion formation.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-7394408
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2020
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-73944082020-08-07 Nascent mutant Huntingtin exon 1 chains do not stall on ribosomes during translation but aggregates do recruit machinery involved in ribosome quality control and RNA Ormsby, Angelique R. Cox, Dezerae Daly, James Priest, David Hinde, Elizabeth Hatters, Danny M. PLoS One Research Article Mutations that cause Huntington’s Disease involve a polyglutamine (polyQ) sequence expansion beyond 35 repeats in exon 1 of Huntingtin. Intracellular inclusion bodies of mutant Huntingtin protein are a key feature of Huntington’s disease brain pathology. We previously showed that in cell culture the formation of inclusions involved the assembly of disordered structures of mHtt exon 1 fragments (Httex1) and they were enriched with translational machinery when first formed. We hypothesized that nascent mutant Httex1 chains co-aggregate during translation by phase separation into liquid-like disordered aggregates and then convert to more rigid, amyloid structures. Here we further examined the mechanisms of inclusion assembly in a human epithelial kidney (AD293) cell culture model. We found mHttex1 did not appear to stall translation of its own nascent chain, or at best was marginal. We also found the inclusions appeared to recruit low levels of RNA but there was no difference in enrichment between early formed and mature inclusions. Proteins involved in translation or ribosome quality control were co-recruited to the inclusions (Ltn1 Rack1) compared to a protein not anticipated to be involved (NACAD), but there was no major specificity of enrichment in the early formed inclusions compared to mature inclusions. Furthermore, we observed co-aggregation with other proteins previously identified in inclusions, including Upf1 and chaperone-like proteins Sgta and Hspb1, which also suppressed aggregation at high co-expression levels. The newly formed inclusions also contained immobile mHttex1 molecules which points to the disordered aggregates being mechanically rigid prior to amyloid formation. Collectively our findings show little evidence that inclusion assembly arises by a discrete clustering of stalled nascent chains and associated quality control machinery. Instead, the machinery appear to be recruited continuously, or secondarily, to the nucleation of inclusion formation. Public Library of Science 2020-07-31 /pmc/articles/PMC7394408/ /pubmed/32735619 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0233583 Text en © 2020 Ormsby 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 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Ormsby, Angelique R.
Cox, Dezerae
Daly, James
Priest, David
Hinde, Elizabeth
Hatters, Danny M.
Nascent mutant Huntingtin exon 1 chains do not stall on ribosomes during translation but aggregates do recruit machinery involved in ribosome quality control and RNA
title Nascent mutant Huntingtin exon 1 chains do not stall on ribosomes during translation but aggregates do recruit machinery involved in ribosome quality control and RNA
title_full Nascent mutant Huntingtin exon 1 chains do not stall on ribosomes during translation but aggregates do recruit machinery involved in ribosome quality control and RNA
title_fullStr Nascent mutant Huntingtin exon 1 chains do not stall on ribosomes during translation but aggregates do recruit machinery involved in ribosome quality control and RNA
title_full_unstemmed Nascent mutant Huntingtin exon 1 chains do not stall on ribosomes during translation but aggregates do recruit machinery involved in ribosome quality control and RNA
title_short Nascent mutant Huntingtin exon 1 chains do not stall on ribosomes during translation but aggregates do recruit machinery involved in ribosome quality control and RNA
title_sort nascent mutant huntingtin exon 1 chains do not stall on ribosomes during translation but aggregates do recruit machinery involved in ribosome quality control and rna
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7394408/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32735619
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0233583
work_keys_str_mv AT ormsbyangeliquer nascentmutanthuntingtinexon1chainsdonotstallonribosomesduringtranslationbutaggregatesdorecruitmachineryinvolvedinribosomequalitycontrolandrna
AT coxdezerae nascentmutanthuntingtinexon1chainsdonotstallonribosomesduringtranslationbutaggregatesdorecruitmachineryinvolvedinribosomequalitycontrolandrna
AT dalyjames nascentmutanthuntingtinexon1chainsdonotstallonribosomesduringtranslationbutaggregatesdorecruitmachineryinvolvedinribosomequalitycontrolandrna
AT priestdavid nascentmutanthuntingtinexon1chainsdonotstallonribosomesduringtranslationbutaggregatesdorecruitmachineryinvolvedinribosomequalitycontrolandrna
AT hindeelizabeth nascentmutanthuntingtinexon1chainsdonotstallonribosomesduringtranslationbutaggregatesdorecruitmachineryinvolvedinribosomequalitycontrolandrna
AT hattersdannym nascentmutanthuntingtinexon1chainsdonotstallonribosomesduringtranslationbutaggregatesdorecruitmachineryinvolvedinribosomequalitycontrolandrna