2 resultados para post-translational regulation

em CaltechTHESIS


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O-GlcNAc glycosylation of nuclear and cytosolic proteins is an essential post-translational modification implicated in many diseases, from cancer to diabetes. Importantly, many important neuronal proteins are also O-GlcNAc modified, and aberrant O-GlcNAcylation of these proteins may contribute to the pathology of neurodegenerative diseases although these mechanisms have not been well defined. Here we investigated the role of O-GlcNAc glycosylation in the brain, utilizing both chemistry and molecular biology to study O-GlcNAc transferase (OGT), the enzyme that adds the sugar modification. To evaluate the role of OGT in adult neurons, we generated a forebrain-specific conditional knockout of OGT (OGT cKO) in mice. Although indistinguishable from wild-type littermates at birth, after three weeks we observe progressive neurodegeneration in OGT cKO mice. Hallmarks of Alzheimer’s disease, including neuronal loss, neuroinflammation, behavioral deficits, hyperphosphorylated tau, and amyloid beta peptide accumulation, are observed. Furthermore, decreases in OGT protein levels were found in human AD brain tissue, suggesting that altered O-GlcNAcylation likely contributes to neurodegenerative diseases in humans. This model is one of a few mouse models that recapitulate AD phenotypes without mutating and overexpressing human tau, amyloid precursor protein, or presenilin, highlighting the essential role of OGT in neurodegenerative pathways.

Given the importance of OGT in the brain, we further investigated the regulation of the OGT enzyme by phosphorylation. We found that phosphorylation of OGT near its C-terminus reduces its activity in cancer cells, and have developed phosphorylation-specific antibodies to aid mechanistic studies. Furthermore, mutation of this phosphorylation site on OGT, followed by overexpression in neurons was shown to enhance neurite outgrowth, demonstrating a functional consequence for this site. Thus phosphorylation of OGT inhibits its activity and enhances neurite outgrowth, and current studies aim to characterize the signaling pathway that regulates OGT phosphorylation in neurons.

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A unique chloroplast Signal Recognition Particle (SRP) in green plants is primarily dedicated to the post-translational targeting of light harvesting chlorophyll-a/b binding (LHC) proteins. Our study of the thermodynamics and kinetics of the GTPases of the system demonstrates that GTPase complex assembly and activation are highly coupled in the chloroplast GTPases, suggesting they may forego the GTPase activation step as a key regulatory point. This reflects adaptations of the chloroplast SRP to the delivery of their unique substrate protein. Devotion to one highly hydrophobic family of proteins also may have allowed the chloroplast SRP system to evolve an efficient chaperone in the cpSRP43 subunit. To understand the mechanism of disaggregation, we showed that LHC proteins form micellar, disc-shaped aggregates that present a recognition motif (L18) on the aggregate surface. Further molecular genetic and structure-activity analyses reveal that the action of cpSRP43 can be dissected into two steps: (i) initial recognition of L18 on the aggregate surface; and (ii) aggregate remodeling, during which highly adaptable binding interactions of cpSRP43 with hydrophobic transmembrane domains of the substrate protein compete with the packing interactions within the aggregate. We also tested the adaptability of cpSRP43 for alternative substrates, specifically in attempts to improve membrane protein expression and inhibition of amyloid beta fibrillization. These preliminary results attest to cpSRP43’s potential as a molecular chaperone and provides the impetus for further engineering endeavors to address problems that stem from protein aggregation.