Hiding in plain sight: vesicle-mediated export and transmission of prion-like proteins

Infectious proteins or prions are non-native conformations of proteins that are the causative agents of devastating neurodegenerative diseases in humans and heritable traits in filamentous fungi and yeasts. Prion proteins form highly ordered self-perpetuating fibrillar aggregates that traffic vertic...

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Main Author: Mehdi Kabani
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Shared Science Publishers OG 2020-06-01
Series:Microbial Cell
Subjects:
Online Access:http://microbialcell.com/researcharticles/2020a-kabani-microbial-cell/
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spelling doaj-f17fb5f36c654e5b997d278c1f0ccba42020-11-25T03:07:49ZengShared Science Publishers OGMicrobial Cell2311-26382020-06-017719920110.15698/mic2020.07.724Hiding in plain sight: vesicle-mediated export and transmission of prion-like proteinsMehdi Kabani0Institut de Biologie François Jacob, Molecular Imaging Research Center (MIRCen), Commissariat à l'Energie Atomique et aux Ener-gies Alternatives (CEA), Direction de la Recherche Fondamentale (DRF), Laboratoire des Maladies Neurodégénératives, Centre Na-tional de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), F-92265 Fontenay-aux-Roses.Infectious proteins or prions are non-native conformations of proteins that are the causative agents of devastating neurodegenerative diseases in humans and heritable traits in filamentous fungi and yeasts. Prion proteins form highly ordered self-perpetuating fibrillar aggregates that traffic vertically and horizontally from cell to cell. The spreading of these infectious entities relies on different mechanisms, among which the extracellular vesicles (EV)-mediated traffic. The prion form of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae Sup35p translation terminator causes the [PSI+] nonsense suppression phenotype. This fascinating biological model helped us shape our understanding of the mechanisms of formation, propagation and elimination of infectious protein aggregates. We discovered that Sup35p is exported via EV, both in its soluble and aggregated infectious states. We recently reported that high amounts of Sup35p prion particles are exported to the yeast periplasm via periplasmic vesicles (PV) in glucose-starved cells. EV and PV are different in terms of size and protein content, and their export is inversely regulated by glucose availability in the growth medium. We believe these are important observations that should make us revise our current view on the way yeast prions propagate. Hence, I propose several hypotheses as to the significance of these observations for the transmission of yeast prions. I also discuss how yeast could be used as a powerful tractable biological model to investigate the molecular mechanisms of vesicle-mediated export of pathological protein aggregates implicated in neurodegenerative diseases.http://microbialcell.com/researcharticles/2020a-kabani-microbial-cell/yeast prionsprion-like proteinsextracellular vesiclestraffic
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mehdi Kabani
spellingShingle Mehdi Kabani
Hiding in plain sight: vesicle-mediated export and transmission of prion-like proteins
Microbial Cell
yeast prions
prion-like proteins
extracellular vesicles
traffic
author_facet Mehdi Kabani
author_sort Mehdi Kabani
title Hiding in plain sight: vesicle-mediated export and transmission of prion-like proteins
title_short Hiding in plain sight: vesicle-mediated export and transmission of prion-like proteins
title_full Hiding in plain sight: vesicle-mediated export and transmission of prion-like proteins
title_fullStr Hiding in plain sight: vesicle-mediated export and transmission of prion-like proteins
title_full_unstemmed Hiding in plain sight: vesicle-mediated export and transmission of prion-like proteins
title_sort hiding in plain sight: vesicle-mediated export and transmission of prion-like proteins
publisher Shared Science Publishers OG
series Microbial Cell
issn 2311-2638
publishDate 2020-06-01
description Infectious proteins or prions are non-native conformations of proteins that are the causative agents of devastating neurodegenerative diseases in humans and heritable traits in filamentous fungi and yeasts. Prion proteins form highly ordered self-perpetuating fibrillar aggregates that traffic vertically and horizontally from cell to cell. The spreading of these infectious entities relies on different mechanisms, among which the extracellular vesicles (EV)-mediated traffic. The prion form of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae Sup35p translation terminator causes the [PSI+] nonsense suppression phenotype. This fascinating biological model helped us shape our understanding of the mechanisms of formation, propagation and elimination of infectious protein aggregates. We discovered that Sup35p is exported via EV, both in its soluble and aggregated infectious states. We recently reported that high amounts of Sup35p prion particles are exported to the yeast periplasm via periplasmic vesicles (PV) in glucose-starved cells. EV and PV are different in terms of size and protein content, and their export is inversely regulated by glucose availability in the growth medium. We believe these are important observations that should make us revise our current view on the way yeast prions propagate. Hence, I propose several hypotheses as to the significance of these observations for the transmission of yeast prions. I also discuss how yeast could be used as a powerful tractable biological model to investigate the molecular mechanisms of vesicle-mediated export of pathological protein aggregates implicated in neurodegenerative diseases.
topic yeast prions
prion-like proteins
extracellular vesicles
traffic
url http://microbialcell.com/researcharticles/2020a-kabani-microbial-cell/
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