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  • Heat-shock protein dysregulation is associated with functional and pathological TDP-43 aggregation.

Heat-shock protein dysregulation is associated with functional and pathological TDP-43 aggregation.

Nature communications (2013-11-14)
Hsiang-Yu Chang, Shin-Chen Hou, Tzong-Der Way, Chi-Huey Wong, I-Fan Wang
ABSTRACT

Conformational disorders are involved in various neurodegenerative diseases. Reactive oxygen species (ROS) are the major contributors to neurodegenerative disease; however, ROS that affect the structural changes in misfolded disease proteins have yet to be well characterized. Here we demonstrate that the intrinsic propensity of TDP-43 to aggregate drives the assembly of TDP-43-positive stress granules and soluble toxic TDP-43 oligomers in response to a ROS insult via a disulfide crosslinking-independent mechanism. Notably, ROS-induced TDP-43 protein assembly correlates with the dynamics of certain TDP-43-associated chaperones. The heat-shock protein (HSP)-90 inhibitor 17-AAG prevents ROS-induced TDP-43 aggregation, alters the type of TDP-43 multimers and reduces the severity of pathological TDP-43 inclusions. In summary, our study suggests that a common mechanism could be involved in the pathogenesis of conformational diseases that result from HSP dysregulation.

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Anti-Sirt1 Antibody, clone 3H10.2, clone 3H10.2, Upstate®, from mouse