Abstract

Normally folded prion protein (PrPC) and its functions in healthy brains remain underappreciated compared with the intense study of its misfolded forms ("prions," PrPSc) during the pathobiology of prion diseases. This impedes the development of therapeutic strategies in Alzheimer's and prion diseases. Disrupting the zebrafish homologs of PrPC has provided novel insights; however, mutagenesis of the zebrafish paralog prp2 did not recapitulate previous dramatic developmental phenotypes, suggesting redundancy with the prp1 paralog. Here, we generated zebrafish prp1 loss-of-function mutant alleles and dual prp1-/-;prp2-/- mutants. Zebrafish prp1-/- and dual prp1-/-;prp2-/- mutants resemble mammalian Prnp knockouts insofar as they lack overt phenotypes, which surprisingly contrasts with reports of severe developmental phenotypes when either prp1 or prp2 is knocked down acutely. Previous studies suggest that PrPC participates in neural cell development/adhesion, including in zebrafish where loss of prp2 affects adhesion and deposition patterns of lateral line neuromasts. In contrast with the expectation that prp1's functions would be redundant to prp2, they appear to have opposing functions in lateral line neurodevelopment. Similarly, loss of prp1 blunted the seizure susceptibility phenotypes observed in prp2 mutants, contrasting the expected exacerbation of phenotypes if these prion gene paralogs were serving redundant roles. In summary, prion mutant fish lack the overt phenotypes previously predicted, and instead they have subtle phenotypes similar to mammals. No evidence was found for functional redundancy in the zebrafish prion gene paralogs, and the phenotypes observed when each gene is disrupted individually are consistent with ancient functions of prion proteins in neurodevelopment and modulation of neural activity.

Highlights

  • Folded prion protein (PrPC) and its functions in healthy brains remain underappreciated compared with the intense study of its misfolded forms (“prions,” PrPSc) during the pathobiology of prion diseases

  • No evidence was found for functional redundancy in the zebrafish prion gene paralogs, and the phenotypes observed when each gene is disrupted individually are consistent with ancient functions of prion proteins in neurodevelopment and modulation of neural activity

  • Reduced normal cellular prion protein (PrPC)3 function(s) are a likely contributor to prion disease progression (despite its loss not being sufficient for disease [1, 2]); it is important to understand the normal physiological functions of PrPC to devise effective disease therapies

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Summary

The abbreviations used are

PrPC, normal cellular prion protein; APP, amyloid-␤ precursor protein; dpf, days post-fertilization; HRM, high-resolution melt analysis; MO, morpholino; NCAM, neural cell adhesion molecule; PLL, posterior lateral line; PTZ, convulsant pentylenetetrazole; RT-qPCR, reverse transcriptase quantitative PCR; TALEN, Tal Effector Nuclease; hpf, h postfertilization; ANOVA, analysis of variance; GPI, glycosylphosphatidylinositol; RNA-Seq, RNA-sequencing; RACE, rapid amplification of cDNA ends; PFA, paraformaldehyde; EJC, exon–junction complex; RFLP, restriction fragment length polymorphism; NMDA, N-methyl-D-aspartic acid; CNS, central nervous system; NBT, nitro blue tetrazolium; BCIP, 5-bromo-4chloro-3-indolyl phosphate. We recently engineered mutations of prp and were surprised to observe that the fish developed normally, with phenotypes that included deeply conserved roles in NMDA receptor dysregulation, learning/memory, and seizure susceptibility [16, 27] This contrasted several works (including our own) using prion knockdown to produce dramatic early defects and suggested that PrPC is required for embryonic development [16, 22, 28]. To reconcile this discrepancy, we hypothesized that the two PrPC paralogs in zebrafish, prp and prp, might have partially redundant roles such that prp was masking phenotypes in our prp mutants. These data suggest that prp and prp might have opposing/ competing roles in the signaling pathway(s) underlying neurodevelopment and neural excitability in at least some tissues

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