Conversion of green fluorescent protein ... nal addition of a short peptide
Conversion of green fluorescent protein into a toxic, aggregation-prone protein by C-terminal addition of a short peptide.
39
A non-natural 16-residue degron peptide has been reported to convey proteasome-dependent degradation when fused to proteins expressed in yeast (Gilon, T., Chomsky, O., and Kulka, R. (2000) Mol. Cell. Biol. 20, 7214-7219) or when fused to green fluorescent protein (GFP) and expressed in mammalian cells (Bence, N. F., Sampat, R. M., and Kopito, R. R. (2001) Science 292, 1552-1555). We find that expression of the GFP::degron in Caenorhabditis elegans muscle or neurons results in the formation of stable perinuclear deposits. Similar perinuclear deposition of GFP::degron was also observed upon transfection of primary rat hippocampal neurons or mouse Neuro2A cells. The generality of this observation was supported by transfection of HEK 293 cells with both GFP::degron and DsRed(monomer)::degron constructs. GFP::degron expressed in C. elegans is less soluble than unmodified GFP and induces the small chaperone protein HSP-16, which co-localizes and co-immunoprecipitates with GFP::degron deposits. Induction of GFP::degron in C. elegans muscle leads to rapid paralysis, demonstrating the in vivo toxicity of this aggregating variant. This paralysis is suppressed by co-expression of HSP-16, which dramatically alters the subcellular distribution of GFP::degron. Our results suggest that in C. elegans, and perhaps in mammalian cells, the degron peptide is not a specific proteasome-targeting signal but acts instead by altering GFP secondary or tertiary structure, resulting in an aggregation-prone form recognized by the chaperone system. This altered form of GFP can form toxic aggregates if its expression level exceeds the capacity of chaperone-based degradation pathways. GFP::degron may serve as an instructive generic aggregating control protein for studies of disease-associated aggregating proteins, such as huntingtin, alpha-synuclein, and the beta-amyloid peptide.
Link CD, Fonte V, Hiester B, Yerg J, Ferguson J, Csontos S, Silverman MA, Stein GH
The Journal of biological chemistry
2006-01-20 00:00
281
3
1808-16
Amino Acid Sequence,Animals,Base Sequence,Caenorhabditis elegans,Cloning, Molecular,DNA Primers,Genetic Vectors,Green Fluorescent Proteins,Molecular Sequence Data,Peptides,Recombinant Fusion Proteins,Solubility,DNA Primers,Peptides,Recombinant Fusion Proteins,Green Fluorescent Proteins
Institute for Behavioral Genetics, University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado 80309, USA linkccoloradoedu
J. Biol. Chem.
NIA AG12423, NIA AG21037, NINDS R15 NS048047A
0021-9258
10.1074/jbc.M505581200
M505581200
1082
True
16239215