4.4 Article

Cytosolic PrP Induces Apoptosis of Cell by Disrupting Microtubule Assembly

Journal

JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 43, Issue 3, Pages 316-325

Publisher

HUMANA PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1007/s12031-010-9443-9

Keywords

Prion; Cytosolic PrP; Tubulin; Molecular interaction; Apoptosis

Funding

  1. National Basic Research Program of China (973 Program) [2007CB310505]
  2. Chinese National Natural Science Foundation [30771914, 30800975]
  3. National Science and Technology Task Force Project [2006BAD06A13-2]
  4. Institution Technique RD Grant [2008EG150300]
  5. China Mega-Project for Infectious Disease [2009ZX10004-101]
  6. SKLID development Grant [2008SKLID102, 2008SKLID202]

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Prion protein (PrP) is able to bind with tubulin and to interfere with the formation of microtubule. To investigate the influence of accumulation of cytosolic PrP in cytoplasm on microtubule, plasmid pcDNA3.1-PrP23-230 expressing human PrP23-230 was introduced into HeLa cells. Immunoprecipitation assays identified the molecular interaction between cytosolic PrP and cellular tubulin. Confocal microscopy showed the co-localization of the expressed cytosolic PrP with tubulin in cytoplasm. Immunofluorescent assays of tubulin illustrated remarkable disruption of microtubular structures in the cells accumulated with cytosolic PrP. Meanwhile, the expressed cytosolic PrP significantly reduced cell viability and induced cell apoptosis. The amounts of microtubule protein in the cells expressing cytosolic PrP were decreased. Moreover, the levels of endogenous tubulin in the brain tissues of scrapie-infected hamsters were significantly lower than that of normal one. It highlights a close linkage between disruption of microtubule framework and cell death caused by abnormal presence of cellular PrP in cytoplasm. The association of apoptosis with microtubule-disrupting activity caused by cytosolic PrP may further provide insight into the unresolved biological function of PrP in the neurons.

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