3 research outputs found
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Mechanistic insights into the protective roles of polyphosphate against amyloid cytotoxicity.
The universally abundant polyphosphate (polyP) accelerates fibril formation of disease-related amyloids and protects against amyloid cytotoxicity. To gain insights into the mechanism(s) by which polyP exerts these effects, we focused on α-synuclein, a well-studied amyloid protein, which constitutes the major component of Lewy bodies found in Parkinson's disease. Here, we demonstrate that polyP is unable to accelerate the rate-limiting step of α-synuclein fibril formation but effectively nucleates fibril assembly once α-synuclein oligomers are formed. Binding of polyP to α-synuclein either during fibril formation or upon fibril maturation substantially alters fibril morphology and effectively reduces the ability of α-synuclein fibrils to interact with cell membranes. The effect of polyP appears to be α-synuclein fibril specific and successfully prevents the uptake of fibrils into neuronal cells. These results suggest that altering the polyP levels in the extracellular space might be a potential therapeutic strategy to prevent the spreading of the disease
Cytochrome c lysine acetylation regulates cellular respiration and cell death in ischemic skeletal muscle
Skeletal muscle is more resilient to ischemia-reperfusion injury than other organs. Tissue specific post-translational modifications of cytochrome c (Cytc) are involved in ischemia-reperfusion injury by regulating mitochondrial respiration and apoptosis. Here, we describe an acetylation site of Cytc, lysine 39 (K39), which was mapped in ischemic porcine skeletal muscle and removed by sirtuin5 in vitro. Using purified protein and cellular double knockout models, we show that K39 acetylation and acetylmimetic K39Q replacement increases cytochrome c oxidase (COX) activity and ROS scavenging while inhibiting apoptosis via decreased binding to Apaf-1, caspase cleavage and activity, and cardiolipin peroxidase activity. These results are discussed with X-ray crystallography structures of K39 acetylated (1.50 Å) and acetylmimetic K39Q Cytc (1.36 Å) and NMR dynamics. We propose that K39 acetylation is an adaptive response that controls electron transport chain flux, allowing skeletal muscle to meet heightened energy demand while simultaneously providing the tissue with robust resilience to ischemia-reperfusion injury.National Institutes of Health R01 GM116807, R01 NS120322Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación PGC2018-096049-B-I00, PID2021-126663NB-I00Junta de Andalucía BIO-198, US-1254317, US-1257019, P18-FR-3487, P18HO-409