Post-translational modifications in prion diseases

IF 3.5 3区 医学 Q2 NEUROSCIENCES Frontiers in Molecular Neuroscience Pub Date : 2024-07-01 DOI:10.3389/fnmol.2024.1405415
Chloé Bizingre, Clara Bianchi, Anne Baudry, Aurélie Alleaume-Butaux, Benoit Schneider, Mathéa Pietri
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Abstract

More than 650 reversible and irreversible post-translational modifications (PTMs) of proteins have been listed so far. Canonical PTMs of proteins consist of the covalent addition of functional or chemical groups on target backbone amino-acids or the cleavage of the protein itself, giving rise to modified proteins with specific properties in terms of stability, solubility, cell distribution, activity, or interactions with other biomolecules. PTMs of protein contribute to cell homeostatic processes, enabling basal cell functions, allowing the cell to respond and adapt to variations of its environment, and globally maintaining the constancy of the milieu interieur (the body’s inner environment) to sustain human health. Abnormal protein PTMs are, however, associated with several disease states, such as cancers, metabolic disorders, or neurodegenerative diseases. Abnormal PTMs alter the functional properties of the protein or even cause a loss of protein function. One example of dramatic PTMs concerns the cellular prion protein (PrPC), a GPI-anchored signaling molecule at the plasma membrane, whose irreversible post-translational conformational conversion (PTCC) into pathogenic prions (PrPSc) provokes neurodegeneration. PrPC PTCC into PrPSc is an additional type of PTM that affects the tridimensional structure and physiological function of PrPC and generates a protein conformer with neurotoxic properties. PrPC PTCC into PrPSc in neurons is the first step of a deleterious sequence of events at the root of a group of neurodegenerative disorders affecting both humans (Creutzfeldt–Jakob diseases for the most representative diseases) and animals (scrapie in sheep, bovine spongiform encephalopathy in cow, and chronic wasting disease in elk and deer). There are currently no therapies to block PrPC PTCC into PrPSc and stop neurodegeneration in prion diseases. Here, we review known PrPC PTMs that influence PrPC conversion into PrPSc. We summarized how PrPC PTCC into PrPSc impacts the PrPC interactome at the plasma membrane and the downstream intracellular controlled protein effectors, whose abnormal activation or trafficking caused by altered PTMs promotes neurodegeneration. We discussed these effectors as candidate drug targets for prion diseases and possibly other neurodegenerative diseases.
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朊病毒疾病的翻译后修饰
迄今为止,蛋白质的可逆和不可逆翻译后修饰(PTM)已超过 650 种。蛋白质的典型 PTM 包括在目标骨架氨基酸上共价添加功能基团或化学基团,或对蛋白质本身进行裂解,从而产生在稳定性、溶解性、细胞分布、活性或与其他生物大分子的相互作用等方面具有特定性质的修饰蛋白质。蛋白质的 PTM 有助于细胞的平衡过程,使细胞发挥基本功能,让细胞对环境变化做出反应和适应,并在全球范围内维持体内环境(milieu interieur)的恒定性,从而维持人体健康。然而,蛋白质 PTM 异常与多种疾病状态有关,如癌症、代谢紊乱或神经退行性疾病。异常 PTM 会改变蛋白质的功能特性,甚至导致蛋白质功能丧失。细胞朊病毒蛋白(PrPC)是质膜上的一种 GPI锚定信号分子,其不可逆的翻译后构象转化(PTCC)为致病性朊病毒(PrPSc)会引发神经退行性疾病。PrPC PTCC转化为PrPSc是另一种PTM,它会影响PrPC的三维结构和生理功能,并产生一种具有神经毒性特性的蛋白质构象。在神经元中,PrPC PTCC 转化为 PrPSc 是一系列有害事件的第一步,是影响人类(克雅氏病是最具代表性的疾病)和动物(羊瘙痒病、牛海绵状脑病以及麋鹿和鹿慢性消耗性疾病)的神经退行性疾病的根源。目前还没有任何疗法可以阻止 PrPC PTCC 转化为 PrPSc 并阻止朊病毒疾病的神经变性。在此,我们回顾了影响 PrPC 转化为 PrPSc 的已知 PrPC PTM。我们总结了PrPC PTCC转化为PrPSc如何影响质膜上的PrPC相互作用组和下游的细胞内受控蛋白效应物,这些效应物因PTM改变而导致的异常激活或贩运促进了神经退行性变。我们讨论了这些效应物作为朊病毒疾病和其他可能的神经退行性疾病候选药物靶点的问题。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.70
自引率
2.10%
发文量
669
审稿时长
14 weeks
期刊介绍: Frontiers in Molecular Neuroscience is a first-tier electronic journal devoted to identifying key molecules, as well as their functions and interactions, that underlie the structure, design and function of the brain across all levels. The scope of our journal encompasses synaptic and cellular proteins, coding and non-coding RNA, and molecular mechanisms regulating cellular and dendritic RNA translation. In recent years, a plethora of new cellular and synaptic players have been identified from reduced systems, such as neuronal cultures, but the relevance of these molecules in terms of cellular and synaptic function and plasticity in the living brain and its circuits has not been validated. The effects of spine growth and density observed using gene products identified from in vitro work are frequently not reproduced in vivo. Our journal is particularly interested in studies on genetically engineered model organisms (C. elegans, Drosophila, mouse), in which alterations in key molecules underlying cellular and synaptic function and plasticity produce defined anatomical, physiological and behavioral changes. In the mouse, genetic alterations limited to particular neural circuits (olfactory bulb, motor cortex, cortical layers, hippocampal subfields, cerebellum), preferably regulated in time and on demand, are of special interest, as they sidestep potential compensatory developmental effects.
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