4.5 Article

Involvement of glypican-1 autoprocessing in scrapie infection

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 28, Issue 5, Pages 964-972

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1460-9568.2008.06386.x

Keywords

heparan sulphate; nitric oxide; prion; proteoglycan; recycling

Categories

Funding

  1. Swedish Science Council (VR-M)
  2. Swedish National Board for Laboratory Animals (CFN)
  3. Swedish Research Council for Environment, Agricultural Science and Spatial Planning (FORMAS)
  4. Jaenssons, Bergvall, Crafoord, Hedborg, Kock, Segerfalk, Zoega and Osterlund Foundations

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The copper-binding cellular prion protein (PrPC) and the heparan sulphate (HS)-containing proteoglycan glypican-1 (Gpc-1) can both be attached to lipid rafts via their glycosylphosphatidylinositol anchors, and copper ions stimulate their cointernalization from the cell surface to endosomes. The prion protein controls cointernalization and delivers copper necessary for S-nitrosylation of conserved cysteines in the Gpc-1 core protein. Later, during recycling through endosomal compartments, nitric oxide can be released from the S-nitroso groups and catalyses deaminative degradation and release of the HS substituents. Here, by using confocal immunofluorescence microscopy, we show that normal PrPC and Gpc-1 colocalize inside GT1-1 cells. However, in scrapie-infected cells (ScGT1-1), Gpc-1 protein remained at the cell surface separate from the cellular prion protein. Scrapie infection stimulated Gpc-1 autoprocessing and the generated HS degradation products colocalized with intracellular aggregates of the disease-related scrapie prion protein isoform (PrPSc). Coimmunoprecipitation experiments demonstrated an association between Gpc-1 and PrPC in uninfected cells, and between HS degradation products and PrPSc in infected cells. Silencing of Gpc-1 expression or prevention of Gpc-1 autoprocessing elevated the levels of intracellular PrPSc aggregates in infected cells. These results suggest a role for Gpc-1 autoprocessing in the clearance of PrPSc from infected cells.

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