Expansion of a poly-glutamine (polyQ) repeat in a group of functionally unrelated proteins is the cause of several inherited neurodegenerative disorders, including Huntington's disease. The polyQ length-dependent aggregation and toxicity of these disease proteins can be reproduced in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. This system allowed us to screen for genes that when overexpressed reduce the toxic effects of an N-terminal fragment of mutant huntingtin with 103 Q. Surprisingly, among the identified suppressors were three proteins with Q-rich, prion-like domains (PrDs): glycine threonine serine repeat protein (Gts1p), nuclear polyadenylated RNA-binding protein 3, and minichromosome maintenance protein 1. Overexpression of the PrD of Gts1p, containing an imperfect 28 residue glutamine-alanine repeat, was sufficient for suppression of toxicity. Association with this discontinuous polyQ domain did not prevent 103Q aggregation, but altered the physical properties of the aggregates, most likely early in the assembly pathway, as reflected in their increased SDS solubility. Molecular simulations suggested that Gts1p arrests the aggregation of polyQ molecules at the level of nonfibrillar species, acting as a cap that destabilizes intermediates on path to form large fibrils. Quantitative proteomic analysis of polyQ interactors showed that expression of Gts1p reduced the interaction between polyQ and other prion-like proteins, and enhanced the association of molecular chaperones with the aggregates. These findings demonstrate that short, Q-rich peptides are able to shield the interactive surfaces of toxic forms of polyQ proteins and direct them into nontoxic aggregates.protein aggregation | protein misfolding | neurodegeneration | prion | polyglutamine proteins
The yeast prion [URE3] is a self-propagating inactive form (the propagon) of the Ure2 protein. Ure2p is composed of two domains: residues 1-93--the prion-forming domain (PFD)--and the remaining C-terminal part of the protein, which forms the functional domain involved in nitrogen catabolite repression. Guanidine hydrochloride, and the overproduction of Ure2p 1-65 or Ure2-GFP have been shown to induce the elimination of [URE3]. We demonstrate here, two different curing mechanisms: the inhibition of [URE3] replication by guanidine hydrochloride and its destruction by Ure2p aggregation. Such aggregation is observed if PFD or Ure2-GFP are overproduced and in heterozygous URE2/URE2-GFP, [URE3] diploids. We found that the GFP foci associated with the presence of the prion were dead-end products, the propagons remaining soluble. Surprisingly, [URE3] propagated via the Ure2-GFP fusion protein alone is resistant to these two curing mechanisms and cannot promote the formation of foci. The relationship between aggregation, prion and Hsp104 gives rise to a model in which the propagon is in equilibrium with larger aggregates and functional protein.
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