74 research outputs found

    Allosteric activation of Hsp70 reduces mutant huntingtin levels, the clustering of N-terminal fragments, and their nuclear accumulation

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    AIMS: Huntington's disease (HD) is caused by a mutant huntingtin protein that misfolds, yields toxic N-terminal fragments, aggregates, and disrupts proteostasis. The Hsp70 chaperone is a potential therapeutic target as it prevents proteotoxicity by favouring protein folding, disaggregation, or degradation. We tested the hypothesis that allosteric Hsp70 activation with a pharmacological mimetic of the Hsp70 co-chaperone Hip, YM-1, could modulate huntingtin proteostasis. MAIN METHODS: We used HD cell models expressing either N-terminal or full-length huntingtin. Using single-cell analysis we studied huntingtin aggregation in different cellular compartments by fluorescence microscopy. Protein interaction was evaluated by immunoprecipitation, while protein levels were quantified by immunofluorescence and western-blot. KEY FINDINGS: N-terminal huntingtin interacted with Hsp70 and increased its levels. Treatment with YM-1 reduced N-terminal huntingtin clustering and nuclear aggregation. Full-length mutant huntingtin also interacted with Hsp70, and treatment with YM-1 reduced huntingtin levels when combined with Hsp70 induction by heat shock. Mechanistically, YM-1 increases the Hsp70 affinity for substrates, promoting their proteasomal degradation. Consistently, YM-1 reduced the levels of ubiquitinated proteins. Interestingly, YM-1 accumulated in mitochondria, interfered with its Hsp70 isoform involved in protein import, and increased NRF1 levels, a regulator of proteasome genes. We thus suggest that YM-1 may trigger the coordination of mitochondrial and cytosolic proteostasis, enhancing protein degradation. SIGNIFICANCE: Our findings show that the strategy of allosteric Hsp70 activation holds potential for HD. While drug efficacy may be limited to tissues with elevated Hsp70, combined therapies with Hsp70 elevating strategies could harness the full potential of allosteric Hsp70 activators for HD

    Targeting the proteostasis network in Huntington's disease

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    Huntington's disease (HD) is an autosomal dominant neurodegenerative disorder caused by a polyglutamine expansion mutation in the huntingtin protein. Expansions above 40 polyglutamine repeats are invariably fatal, following a symptomatic period characterised by choreiform movements, behavioural abnormalities, and cognitive decline. While mutant huntingtin (mHtt) is widely expressed from early life, most patients with HD present in mid-adulthood, highlighting the role of ageing in disease pathogenesis. mHtt undergoes proteolytic cleavage, misfolding, accumulation, and aggregation into inclusion bodies. The emerging model of HD pathogenesis proposes that the chronic production of misfolded mHtt overwhelms the chaperone machinery, diverting other misfolded clients to the proteasome and the autophagy pathways, ultimately leading to a global collapse of the proteostasis network. Multiple converging hypotheses also implicate ageing and its impact in the dysfunction of organelles as additional contributing factors to the collapse of proteostasis in HD. In particular, mitochondrial function is required to sustain the activity of ATP-dependent chaperones and proteolytic machinery. Recent studies elucidating mitochondria-endoplasmic reticulum interactions and uncovering a dedicated proteostasis machinery in mitochondria, suggest that mitochondria play a more active role in the maintenance of cellular proteostasis than previously thought. The enhancement of cytosolic proteostasis pathways shows promise for HD treatment, protecting cells from the detrimental effects of mHtt accumulation. In this review, we consider how mHtt and its post translational modifications interfere with protein quality control pathways, and how the pharmacological and genetic modulation of components of the proteostasis network impact disease phenotypes in cellular and in vivo HD models

    Concepções de agricultores ecológicos do Paraná sobre alimentação saudável.

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    OBJETIVO: Descrever as concepções de agricultores ecológicos sobre alimentação saudável. MÉTODOS: Estudo com abordagem qualitativa. Entre janeiro e fevereiro de 2007, foram realizadas entrevistas em profundidade com o apoio de um roteiro com 11 mulheres e um homem residentes em comunidade agrícola de Rio Branco do Sul, PR, selecionados aleatoriamente dentre as 20 famílias de agricultores ecológicos desse município. RESULTADOS: Três categorias de análise foram identificadas: "tomada de consciência da alimentação saudável", "capacidade de compra" e "terra saudável". O significado da alimentação saudável para as mulheres agricultoras envolve a ideia de que os alimentos devem ser naturais, sem agrotóxicos nem produtos químicos industrializados. Cotidianamente o consumo de frutas, verduras e legumes somado ao básico feijão, arroz e carne deve ser abundante e a composição do prato deve visar à prevenção de obesidade e doenças crônico-degenerativas. O cuidado com os recursos naturais para garantir a produção de alimentos saudáveis, a segurança alimentar, a sustentabilidade do meio ambiente e a vida futura do planeta integram o conceito de alimentação saudável. CONCLUSÕES: O conhecimento, a autocrítica e o discernimento acompanharam as concepções em relação à alimentação saudável

    Genetic and Cellular Characterization of Caenorhabditis elegans Mutants Abnormal in the Regulation of Many Phase II Enzymes

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    Background: The phase II detoxification enzymes execute a major protective role against xenobiotics as well as endogenous toxicants. To understand how xenobiotics regulate phase II enzyme expression, acrylamide was selected as a model xenobiotic chemical, as it induces a large number and a variety of phase II enzymes, including numerous glutathione S-transferases (GSTs) in Caenorhabditis elegans. Methodology/Principal Findings: To begin dissecting genetically xenobiotics response pathways (xrep), 24 independent mutants of C. elegans that exhibited abnormal GST expression or regulation against acrylamide were isolated by screening about 3.5610 5 genomes of gst::gfp transgenic strains mutagenized with ethyl methanesulfonate (EMS). Complementation testing assigned the mutants to four different genes, named xrep-1,-2,-3, and-4. One of the genes, xrep-1, encodes WDR-23, a nematode homologue of WD repeat-containing protein WDR23. Loss-of-function mutations in xrep-1 mutants resulted in constitutive expression of many GSTs and other phase II enzymes in the absence of acrylamide, and the wild-type xrep-1 allele carried on a DNA construct successfully cured the mutant phenotype of the constitutive enzyme expression. Conclusions/Significance: Genetic and cellular characterization of xrep-1 mutants suggest that a large number of GSTs and other phase II enzymes induced by acrylamide are under negative regulation by XREP-1 (WDR-23), which is likely to be a functional equivalent of mammalian Keap1 and a regulator of SKN-1, a C. elegans analogue of cap-n-collar Nrf2 (nuclea
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