Author:
Gruber Anselm,Hornburg Daniel,Antonin Matthias,Krahmer Natalie,Collado Javier,Schaffer Miroslava,Zubaite Greta,Lüchtenborg Christian,Sachsenheimer Timo,Brügger Britta,Mann Matthias,Baumeister Wolfgang,Hartl F. Ulrich,Hipp Mark S.,Fernández-Busnadiego Rubén
Abstract
Huntington’s disease is caused by the expansion of a polyglutamine (polyQ) tract in the N-terminal exon of huntingtin (HttEx1), but the cellular mechanisms leading to neurodegeneration remain poorly understood. Here we present in situ structural studies by cryo-electron tomography of an established yeast model system of polyQ toxicity. We find that expression of polyQ-expanded HttEx1 results in the formation of unstructured inclusion bodies and in some cases fibrillar aggregates. This contrasts with recent findings in mammalian cells, where polyQ inclusions were exclusively fibrillar. In yeast, polyQ toxicity correlates with alterations in mitochondrial and lipid droplet morphology, which do not arise from physical interactions with inclusions or fibrils. Quantitative proteomic analysis shows that polyQ aggregates sequester numerous cellular proteins and cause a major change in proteome composition, most significantly in proteins related to energy metabolism. Thus, our data point to a multifaceted toxic gain-of-function of polyQ aggregates, driven by sequestration of endogenous proteins and mitochondrial and lipid droplet dysfunction.
Publisher
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Cited by
72 articles.
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