Neuronal Maintenance via a Neuron-Specific Degradation Pathway

Date

2015-01-26

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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Neurons can survive for decades via cell maintenance and protein degradation. This process includes the general protein endolysosomal degradation pathway, an integral part of which is the Rab GTPase proteins. Recently, components of a neuron-specific protein degradation pathway were discovered, which include the neuronal vesicle ATPase component V100 and the synaptic vesicle protein neuronal Synaptobrevin (n-Syb). While this neuron-specific degradation pathway has been shown as necessary for neuronal maintenance in adult Drosophila melanogaster fruit flies, it is not known what this neuron-specific degradation pathway does, nor how it interacts with the general protein degradation pathway. Our research aimed to fill this gap in knowledge. Such research may be salient because the misregulation of protein degradation in neurons leads to neurodegenerative diseases like dementia. OBJECTIVE: We hypothesized that neurons either have an increased or a specialized need for protein degradation in comparison to other cells. METHODS:

  1. The lab chose a myristoylated protein (myr) to represent general proteins found in every cell, and Synaptotagmin1 (Syt1) to represent neuron-specific proteins. The acidification-sensitive tag mCherry-pHluorin, which changes color with a decrease in pH, was placed on Syt1 and myr to visualize acidification and degradation of the two proteins.
  2. The lab generated Drosophila lines to compare acidification and degradation of Syt1 and myr in wild-type versus the following three mutants: rab7 mutants to disrupt general protein degradation, v100 to disrupt the neuron-specific protein degradation, and synaptobrevin also to disrupt neuron-specific degradation.
  3. We performed live imaging to visualize acidification and protein degradation at synaptic terminals. Brains of Drosophila pupae from each cross were dissected, mounted onto Petri dishes, and surrounded with a culture medium to be kept alive. A resonant confocal microscope was used to observe the brain's lamina, a layer of neurons between the eye and the brain. At the lamina, we recorded 30-minute videos showing changes in fluorescence representing protein degradation. RESULTS AND CONCLUSION: Preliminary data show that nsyb and v100 mutations may cause defects in the degradation of neuron-specific cargo. Such evidence suggests that the neuron-specific endolysosomal degradation pathway specifically degrades the synaptic vesicle protein Synaptotagmin1. Also, the experiments indicate that disruption of either the neuron-specific or the general endolysosomal degradation pathway has no effect on the acidification of the myristoylated protein. Such evidence implies that the general pathway of protein degradation occurs at synapses, but has no specificity for protein cargo. A greater sample size is needed for future experiments, as well as quantitative analysis.

General Notes

The 53rd Annual Medical Student Research Forum at UT Southwestern Medical Center (Monday, January 26, 2015, 2-5 p.m., D1.602)

Table of Contents

Subjects

Basic Research and Disease Models, Adenosine Triphosphatases, Drosophila, Neurons, Proteolysis, rab GTP-Binding Proteins, R-SNARE Proteins, Synaptic Vesicles

Citation

Schmidt, T., Jin, E. J., Ozel, M. N., Epstein, D., Marchant, C., & Hiesinger, R. (2015, January 26). Neuronal maintenance via a neuron-specific degradation pathway. Poster presented at the 53rd Annual Medical Student Research Forum, Dallas, TX. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/2152.5/1519

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