Abstract
BackgroundN-terminal fragments of mutant huntingtin (htt) that terminate between residues 90–115, termed cleavage product A or 1 (cp-A/1), form intracellular and intranuclear inclusion bodies in the brains of patients with Huntington's disease (HD). These fragments appear to be proteolytic products of the full-length protein. Here, we use an HEK293 cell culture model to investigate huntingtin proteolytic processing; previous studies of these cells have demonstrated cleavage of htt to cp-A/1 like htt fragments.ResultsRecombinant N-terminal htt fragments, terminating at residue 171 (also referred to as cp-B/2 like), were efficiently cleaved to produce cp-A/1 whereas fragments representing endogenous caspase, calpain, and metalloproteinase cleavage products, terminating between residues 400–600, were inefficiently cleaved. Using cysteine-labeling techniques and antibody binding mapping, we localized the C-terminus of the cp-A/1 fragments produced by HEK293 cells to sequences minimally limited by cysteine 105 and an antibody epitope composed of residues 115–124. A combination of genetic and pharmacologic approaches to inhibit potential proteases, including γ-secretase and calpain, proved ineffective in preventing production of cp-A/1.ConclusionsOur findings indicate that HEK293 cells express a protease that is capable of efficiently cleaving cp-B/2 like fragments of htt with normal or expanded glutamine repeats. For reasons that remain unclear, this protease cleaves longer htt fragments, with normal or expanded glutamine expansions, much less efficiently. The protease in HEK293 cells that is capable of generating a cp-A/1 like htt fragment may be a novel protease with a high preference for a cp-B/2-like htt fragment as substrate.
Highlights
Huntington’s disease (HD) is an autosomal-dominant, progressive, and fatal neurodegenerative disease that is caused by an expansion of a CAG trinucleotide repeat in the first exon of the htt gene (GenBank:NM_002111) [1]
To determine whether other htt N-terminal fragments generated by calpain, caspase, or matrix metalloproteinase-10 (MMP-10) are more efficient substrates for subsequent cleavage, we transfected htt cDNAs encoding 18Q versions of these htt fragments into Human embryonic kidney 293 (HEK293) cells and assessed the generation of cleavage product A or 1 (cp-A/1) and cp-B/2 by immunoblot (Fig. S1)
Htt fragments that would be generated by calpain, caspase, and MMP-10 endoproteolysis (N402, N469, N513, N536, N552, and N586) were capable of generating only small amounts of fragments that migrated at the sizes expected for cp-A/1 and cp-B/2
Summary
Huntington’s disease (HD) is an autosomal-dominant, progressive, and fatal neurodegenerative disease that is caused by an expansion of a CAG trinucleotide repeat in the first exon of the htt gene (GenBank:NM_002111) [1]. Patients carrying the polyQ expansion exhibit general brain atrophy, prominent cortical- and striatal-neuron loss, and harbor inclusion bodies composed of mutant htt throughout their central nervous system [2,3,4]. N-terminal fragments of mutant huntingtin (htt) that terminate between residues 90–115, termed cleavage product A or 1 (cp-A/1), form intracellular and intranuclear inclusion bodies in the brains of patients with Huntington’s disease (HD). These fragments appear to be proteolytic products of the full-length protein. We use an HEK293 cell culture model to investigate huntingtin proteolytic processing; previous studies of these cells have demonstrated cleavage of htt to cp-A/1 like htt fragments
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