Publication | Open Access
Genetic modulation of polyglutamine toxicity by protein conjugation pathways in Drosophila
162
Citations
63
References
2002
Year
Androgen ReceptorGeneticsMolecular GeneticsToxicological MechanismCellular DegenerationPolyglutamine ToxicityDegenerative PathologyProtein MisfoldingToxicologyBulbar Muscular AtrophyProteomicsCell SignalingProtein FunctionCell BiologyGenetic ModulationNeurodegenerative DiseasesDevelopmental BiologyProtein Conjugation PathwaysGenetic MechanismSystems BiologyMedicine
Spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy (SBMA) is a heritable neurodegenerative disease caused by the expansion of a polyglutamine [poly(Q)] repeat within the androgen receptor (AR) protein. We studied SBMA in Drosophila using an N-terminal fragment of the human AR protein. Expression of a pathogenic AR protein with an expanded poly(Q) repeat in Drosophila results in nuclear and cytoplasmic inclusion formation, and cellular degeneration, preferentially in neuronal tissues. We have studied the influence of ubiquitin-dependent modification and the proteasome pathway on neural degeneration and AR protein fragment solubility. Compromising the ubiquitin/proteasome pathway enhances degeneration and decreases poly(Q) protein solubility. Our data further suggest that Hsp70 and the proteasome act in an additive manner to modulate neurodegeneration. Through the over-expression of a mutant of the SUMO-1 activating enzyme Uba2, we further show that poly(Q)-induced degeneration is intensified when the cellular SUMO-1 protein conjugation pathway is altered. These data suggest that post-translational protein modification, including the ubiquitin/proteasome and the SUMO-1 pathways, modulate poly(Q) pathogenesis.
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