Parkinson's disease is the second most common neurodegenerative disorder and is characterized by the degeneration of dopaminergic neurons in the substantia nigra. Mitochondrial dysfunction has been implicated as an important trigger for Parkinson's disease-like pathogenesis because exposure to environmental mitochondrial toxins leads to Parkinson's disease-like pathology. Recently, multiple genes mediating familial forms of Parkinson's disease have been identified, including PTEN-induced kinase 1 (PINK1; PARK6) and parkin (PARK2), which are also associated with sporadic forms of Parkinson's disease. PINK1 encodes a putative serine/threonine kinase with a mitochondrial targeting sequence. So far, no in vivo studies have been reported for pink1 in any model system. Here we show that removal of Drosophila PINK1 homologue (CG4523; hereafter called pink1) function results in male sterility, apoptotic muscle degeneration, defects in mitochondrial morphology and increased sensitivity to multiple stresses including oxidative stress. Pink1 localizes to mitochondria, and mitochondrial cristae are fragmented in pink1 mutants. Expression of human PINK1 in the Drosophila testes restores male fertility and normal mitochondrial morphology in a portion of pink1 mutants, demonstrating functional conservation between human and Drosophila Pink1. Loss of Drosophila parkin shows phenotypes similar to loss of pink1 function. Notably, overexpression of parkin rescues the male sterility and mitochondrial morphology defects of pink1 mutants, whereas double mutants removing both pink1 and parkin function show muscle phenotypes identical to those observed in either mutant alone. These observations suggest that pink1 and parkin function, at least in part, in the same pathway, with pink1 functioning upstream of parkin. The role of the pink1-parkin pathway in regulating mitochondrial function underscores the importance of mitochondrial dysfunction as a central mechanism of Parkinson's disease pathogenesis.
Drosophila Reaper (RPR), Head Involution Defective (HID), and GRIM induce caspase-dependent cell death and physically interact with the cell death inhibitor DIAP1. Here we show that HID blocks DIAP1's ability to inhibit caspase activity and provide evidence suggesting that RPR and GRIM can act similarly. Based on these results, we propose that RPR, HID, and GRIM promote apoptosis by disrupting productive IAP-caspase interactions and that DIAP1 is required to block apoptosis-inducing caspase activity. Supporting this hypothesis, we show that elimination of DIAP1 function results in global early embryonic cell death and a large increase in DIAP1-inhibitable caspase activity and that DIAP1 is still required for cell survival when expression of rpr, hid, and grim is eliminated.
We have isolated a new type of ATP-dependent protease from Escherichia coli. It is the product of the heat-shock locus hsIVU that encodes two proteins: HslV, a 19-kDa protein similar to proteasome (3 subunits, and HslU, a 50-kDa protein related to the ATPase ClpX. In the presence of ATP, the protease hydrolyzes rapidly the fluorogenic peptide Z-Gly-Gly-Leu-AMC and very slowly certain other chymotrypsin substrates. This activity increased 10-fold in E. coi expressing heat-shock Proteasomes are multicatalytic proteolytic complexes present in both the nucleus and cytosol of eukaryotic cells (1). The 26S form of the proteasome catalyzes the degradation of ubiquitinconjugated proteins (2-5), and thus it plays a key role in many cellular processes, including progression through the cell cycle (6, 7), removal of abnormal proteins, and antigen presentation (8). The proteolytic core of the 26S complex is the 20S (700 kDa) proteasome particle, which consists of four sevenmembered rings. The subunits of the 20S proteasome fall into two families (9, 10): the a-type forms the two outer rings, and P-type, which contain the active sites, forms the two inner rings of the complex.Proteasomes were thought to exist exclusively in eukaryotes and certain archaebacteria (11). However, 20S proteasomes were recently discovered in the actinomycete Rhodococcus (12), and in the Escherichia coli genome sequencing project, a novel heat-shock locus (hslVU) was discovered that encodes a 19-kDa protein (HslV) (13), whose sequence is similar to 3-type proteasome subunits. This discovery of proteasome-related genes was surprising, because several groups had failed to observe a structure in E. coli resembling the proteasome or proteins resembling ubiquitin. The hslV gene is cotranscribed with the adjacent hslU gene, which codes for a 50-kDa protein containing one ATP/GTP binding motif (13 For the expression of glutathione S-transferase (GST)-fusion proteins, the hslVand hslU genes were PCR amplified separately using A phage 18-126 DNA bearing the hslVU operon, kindly provided by F. Blattner (University of Wisconsin-Madison), and cloned into the vector pGEX-2T (Pharmacia). Vector pV106 (GST-HslV) and pU206 (GST-HslU) were electroporated into E. coli C600 cells. GST-fusion proteins were purified from strains C106 and C206 using the GST Purification Module (Pharmacia). To obtain antibodies, purified GST-HslV and GST-HslU proteins were injected into rabbits. Polyclonal anti-HslV and antiHslU antibodies were then affinity purified using the GST-fusions as ligands, and depleted of anti-GST antibodies using a GST column.Abbreviations: hsl, heat-shock locus; GST, glutathone S-transferase. tTo whom reprint requests should be addressed.5808
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