Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0282612 (PIN)
2,291 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Infectious proteins (prions) became an important medical issue when they were identified as agents of the transmissible spongiform encephalopathies. More recently, prions have been found in fungi and their investigation has been facilitated by greater experimental tractability. In each case, the normal form of the prion protein may be converted into the infectious form (the prion itself) in an autocatalytic process; conversion may either occur spontaneously or by transmission from an already infected cell. Four fungal prion proteins have been studied in some depth-Ure2p, Sup35p, and Rnq1p of Saccharomyces cerevisiae and HET-s of Podospora anserina. Each has a "prion domain" that governs infectivity and a "functional domain" that contributes the protein's activity in a wild-type cell, if it has one. This activity is repressed in prion-infected cells for loss-of-activity prions, [URE3] (the prion of Ure2p) and [PSI] (the prion of Sup35p). For gain-of-activity prions, [PIN] (the prion of Rnq1p) and [Het-s] (the prion of HET-s), the prion domain is also involved in generating a new activity in infected cells. In prion conversion, prion domains polymerize into an amyloid filament, switching from a "natively unfolded" conformation into an amyloid conformation (stable, protease-resistant, rich in cross-beta structure). For Ure2p and probably also Sup35p, the functional domain retains its globular fold but is inactivated by a steric mechanism. We review the evidence on which this scenario is based with emphasis on filament structure, summarizing current experimental constraints and appraising proposed models. We conclude that the parallel superpleated beta-structure and a specific beta-helical formulation are valid candidates while other proposals are excluded. In both the Ure2p and Sup35p systems, prion domain amyloid filaments exhibit polymorphic variation. However, once a certain structure is nucleated, it is maintained throughout that filament. Electron microscopy of several Ure2p-related constructs indicates that the basis for polymorphism lies mainly if not entirely in the prion domain. Filament polymorphism appears to underlie the phenomenon of prion "variants" which differ in the severity of their phenotype, that is, for Ure2p and Sup35p, the stringency with which their activity is switched off. We discuss a possible structural basis for this phenomenon.
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PMID:Structure, function, and amyloidogenesis of fungal prions: filament polymorphism and prion variants. 1719 Jun 13

Differences in the clinical pathology of mammalian prion diseases reflect distinct heritable conformations of aggregated PrP proteins, called prion strains. Here, using the yeast [PSI(+) ] prion, we examine the de novo establishment of prion strains (called variants in yeast). The [PSI(+) ] prion protein, Sup35, is efficiently induced to take on numerous prion variant conformations following transient overexpression of Sup35 in the presence of another prion, e.g. [PIN(+) ]. One hypothesis is that the first [PSI(+) ] prion seed to arise in a cell causes propagation of only that seed's variant, but that different variants could be initiated in different cells. However, we now show that even within a single cell, Sup35 retains the potential to fold into more than one variant type. When individual cells segregating different [PSI(+) ] variants were followed in pedigrees, establishment of a single variant phenotype generally occurred in daughters, granddaughters or great-granddaughters - but in 5% of the pedigrees cells continued to segregate multiple variants indefinitely. The data are consistent with the idea that many newly formed prions go through a maturation phase before they reach a single specific variant conformation. These findings may be relevant to mammalian PrP prion strain establishment and adaptation.
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PMID:[PSI(+) ] prion variant establishment in yeast. 2299 11

Multiple prion elements, which are transmitted as heritable protein conformations and often linked to distinct phenotypes, have been identified in the budding yeast, Saccharomyces cerevisiae. It has been shown that overproduction of a prion protein Swi1 can promote the de novo conversion of another yeast prion [PSI(+)] when Sup35 is co-overproduced. However, the mechanism underlying this Pin(+) ([PSI(+)] inducible) activity is not clear. Moreover, how the Swi1 prion ([SWI(+)]) interacts with other yeast prions is unknown. Here, we demonstrate that the Pin(+) activity associated with Swi1 overproduction is independent of Rnq1 expression or [PIN(+)] conversion. We also show that [SWI(+)] enhances the appearance of [PSI(+)] and [PIN(+)]. However, [SWI(+)] significantly compromises the Pin(+) activity of [PIN(+)] when they coexist. We further demonstrate that a single yeast cell can harbor three prions, [PSI(+)], [PIN(+)], and [SWI(+)], simultaneously. However, under this condition, [SWI(+)] is significantly destabilized. While the propensity to aggregate underlies prionogenesis, Swi1 and Rnq1 aggregates resulting from overproduction are usually nonheritable. Conversely, prion protein aggregates formed in nonoverexpressing conditions or induced by preexisting prion(s) are more prionogenic. For [PSI(+)] and [PIN(+)] de novo formation, heterologous "facilitators," such as preexisting [SWI(+)] aggregates, colocalize only with the newly formed ring-/rod-shaped Sup35 or Rnq1 aggregates, but not with the dot-shaped mature prion aggregates. Their colocalization frequency is coordinated with their prion inducibility, indicating that prion-prion interactions mainly occur at the early initiation stage. Our results provide supportive evidence for the cross-seeding model of prionogenesis and highlight a complex interaction network among prions in yeast.
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PMID:Investigating the interactions of yeast prions: [SWI+], [PSI+], and [PIN+]. 2472 82

Prion-like domains are low complexity, intrinsically disordered domains that compositionally resemble yeast prion domains. Many prion-like domains are involved in the formation of either functional or pathogenic protein aggregates. These aggregates range from highly dynamic liquid droplets to highly ordered detergent-insoluble amyloid-like aggregates. To better understand the amino acid sequence features that promote conversion to stable, detergent-insoluble aggregates, we used the prediction algorithm PAPA to identify predicted aggregation-prone prion-like domains with a range of compositions. While almost all of the predicted aggregation-prone domains formed foci when expressed in cells, the ability to form the detergent-insoluble aggregates was highly correlated with glutamine/asparagine (Q/N) content, suggesting that high Q/N content may specifically promote conversion to the amyloid state in vivo. We then used this data set to examine cross-seeding between prion-like proteins. The prion protein Sup35 requires the presence of a second prion, [PIN+], to efficiently form prions, but this requirement can be circumvented by the expression of various Q/N-rich protein fragments. Interestingly, almost all of the Q/N-rich domains that formed SDS-insoluble aggregates were able to promote prion formation by Sup35, highlighting the highly promiscuous nature of these interactions.
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PMID:The effects of glutamine/asparagine content on aggregation and heterologous prion induction by yeast prion-like domains. 2866 53

Interactions amongst different amyloid proteins have been proposed as a probable mechanism of aggregation and thus an important risk factor for the onset as well as progression of various neurodegenerative disorders including Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, Huntington's, and Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis. Evidences suggest that transthyretin (TTR), a plasma protein associated with transthyretin amyloidosis or familial polyneuropathy (FAP) interacts with heterologous amyloid proteins including amyloid beta and islet amyloid polypeptide. In addition, recent clinical studies have revealed the presence of systemic polyneuropathy associated with FAP mutations in patients with spinocerebral ataxia, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, and new familial systematic prion disease. Hence, it is important to investigate the interactions amongst different amyloid proteins to gain better insight into the pathology of amyloid disorders. Yeast has been an excellent model system to study interaction/ cross-seeding between heterologous amyloid proteins, more because of presence of endogenous yeast prions. Here, we examined interactions of non-glutamine (non-Q)-rich transthyretin, with glutamine (Q)-rich yeast prion protein Sup35. We established aggregation of an engineered double (F87M/L110M) mutant M-TTR-GFP in yeast. This mutant is monomeric and readily formed aggregates compared to WT-TTR-GFP in yeast at acidic pH. Interestingly, aggregation of M-TTR-GFP was significantly enhanced in presence of [PSI+], an endogenous prion form of Sup35. Different variants of [PSI+] seeded M-TTR-GFP with different efficiencies and curing of [PSI+] (losing the prion form) in these strains reduced aggregation. Moreover, overexpression of prion domain of Sup35 fused to RFP (NM-RFP) also increased M-TTR-GFP aggregation. M-TTR-GFP and NM-RFP aggregates co-localized in perivacuolar and juxtranuclear region. Sup35 protein was even immunocaptured in M-TTR-GFP aggregates. However, M-TTR-GFP overexpression did not induce Sup35 aggregation. Thus, it appears to be a unidirectional interaction between these two amyloid proteins. However, no affect on M-TTR-GFP aggregation was observed due to another yeast prion, [PIN+]. Our findings thus show the molecular interaction of transthyretin with yeast prion and support that sequence similarity is not the prime requirement for heterologous amyloid interactions.
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PMID:Q-Rich Yeast Prion [PSI+] Accelerates Aggregation of Transthyretin, a Non-Q-Rich Human Protein. 2959 96