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4064 Publications
Showing 4061-4064 of 4064 resultsEndothelial exocytosis of Weibel-Palade body (WPB) is one of the first lines of defence against vascular injury. However, the mechanisms that control WPB exocytosis in the final stages (including the docking, priming and fusion of granules) are poorly understood. Here we show that the focal adhesion protein zyxin is crucial in this process. Zyxin downregulation inhibits the secretion of von Willebrand factor (VWF), the most abundant cargo in WPBs, from human primary endothelial cells (ECs) induced by cAMP agonists. Zyxin-deficient mice exhibit impaired epinephrine-stimulated VWF release, prolonged bleeding time and thrombosis, largely due to defective endothelial secretion of VWF. Using live-cell super-resolution microscopy, we visualize previously unappreciated reorganization of pre-existing actin filaments around WPBs before fusion, dependent on zyxin and an interaction with the actin crosslinker α-actinin. Our findings identify zyxin as a physiological regulator of endothelial exocytosis through reorganizing local actin network in the final stage of exocytosis.
Objective: While the contribution of α-Synuclein to neurodegeneration in Parkinson’s disease is well accepted, the putative impact of its close homologue, β-Synuclein, is enigmatic. β-Synuclein is widely expressed throughout the central nervous system as is α-Synuclein, but the physiological functions of both proteins remain unknown. Recent findings supported the view that β-Synuclein can act as an ameliorating regulator of α-Synuclein-induced neurotoxicity, having neuroprotective rather than neurodegenerative capabilities, and being non-aggregating due to absence of most part of the aggregation-promoting NAC domain. However, a mutation of β-Synuclein linked to dementia with Lewy bodies rendered the protein neurotoxic in transgenic mice and fibrillation of β-Synuclein has been demonstrated in vitro. Methods / Results: Supporting the hypothesis that β-Synuclein can act as a neurodegeneration-inducing factor we now demonstrate that wild-type β-Synuclein is neurotoxic for cultured primary neurons. Furthermore, β-Synuclein formed proteinase K resistant aggregates in dopaminergic neurons in vivo, leading to pronounced and progressive neurodegeneration in rats. Expression of β-Synuclein caused mitochondrial fragmentation, but this fragmentation did not render mitochondria non-functional in terms of ion handling and respiration even in late stages of neurodegeneration. A comparison of the neurodegenerative effects induced by α-, β-, and γ-Synuclein revealed that β-Synuclein was eventually as neurotoxic as α-Synuclein for nigral dopaminergic neurons, while γ-Synuclein proved to be non-toxic and had very low aggregation propensity. Interpretation: Our results suggest that the role of β-Synuclein as a putative modulator of neuropathology in aggregopathies like Parkinson’s disease and dementia with Lewy bodies needs to be revisited. ANN NEUROL 2013. © 2013 American Neurological Association.
Directed cell motility is at the basis of biological phenomena such as development, wound healing, and metastasis. It has been shown that substrate attachments mediate motility by coupling the cell's cytoskeleton with force generation. However, it has been unclear how the persistence of cell directionality is facilitated. We show that mRNA localization plays an important role in this process, but the mechanism of action is still unknown. In this study, we show that the zipcode-binding protein 1 transports β-actin mRNA to the focal adhesion compartment, where it dwells for minutes, suggesting a means for associating its localization with motility through the formation of stable connections between adhesions and newly synthesized actin filaments. In order to demonstrate this, we developed an approach for assessing the functional consequences of β-actin mRNA and protein localization by tethering the mRNA to a specific location-in this case, the focal adhesion complex. This approach will have a significant impact on cell biology because it is now possible to forcibly direct any mRNA and its cognate protein to specific locations in the cell. This will reveal the importance of localized protein translation on various cellular processes.
β-secretase (or BACE1) is the key enzyme in the production of β-amyloid (Aβ), which accumulates in the senile plaques characteristic for Alzheimer's disease. Consequently, the lack of BACE1 prevents β-processing of the amyloid precursor protein and Aβ production, which made it a promising target for drug development. However, the loss of BACE1 is also detrimental, leading to myelination defects and altered neuronal activity, functions that have been associated with the cleavage of Neuregulin and a voltage-gated sodium channel subunit. Here we show that the Drosophila ortholog of BACE, dBACE, is required for glial survival. Cell-specific knockdown experiments reveal that this is a non-cell autonomous function, as a knockdown of dBACE in photoreceptor neurons leads to progressive degeneration of glia in their target zone, the lamina. Interestingly, this phenotype is suppressed by the loss of the fly amyloid precursor protein (APPL), whereas a secretion-deficient form of APPL enhances the degeneration. This shows that full-length APPL in neurons promotes the death of neighboring glial cells and that β-processing of APPL is needed to prevent glial death. These results therefore not only demonstrate a novel function for an APP protein in glia, but they also show this function specifically requires regulation by β-cleavage.