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Insolubility of disrupted-in-schizophrenia 1 disrupts oligomer-dependent interactions with nuclear distribution element 1 and is associated with sporadic mental disease
- Source :
- The journal of neuroscience 28, 3839-3845 (2008). doi:10.1523/JNEUROSCI.5389-07.2008
- Publication Year :
- 2008
- Publisher :
- Soc., 2008.
-
Abstract
- Disrupted-in-schizophrenia 1 (DISC1) and other genes have been identified recently as potential molecular players in chronic psychiatric diseases such as affective disorders and schizophrenia. A molecular mechanism of how these genes may be linked to the majority of sporadic cases of these diseases remains unclear. The chronic nature and irreversibility of clinical symptoms in a subgroup of these diseases prompted us to investigate whether proteins corresponding to candidate genes displayed subtle features of protein aggregation. Here, we show that in postmortem brain samples of a distinct group of patients with phenotypes of affective disorders or schizophrenia, but not healthy controls, significant fractions of DISC1 could be identified as cold Sarkosyl-insoluble protein aggregates. A loss-of-function phenotype could be demonstrated for insoluble DISC1 through abolished binding to a key DISC1 ligand, nuclear distribution element 1 (NDEL1): in human neuroblastoma cells, DISC1 formed expression-dependent, detergent-resistant aggregates that failed to interact with endogenous NDEL1. Recombinant (r) NDEL1 expressed inEscherichia coliselectively bound an octamer of an rDISC1 fragment but not dimers or high molecular weight multimers, suggesting an oligomerization optimum for molecular interactions of DISC1 with NDEL1. For DISC1-related sporadic psychiatric disease, we propose a mechanism whereby impaired cellular control over self-association of DISC1 leads to excessive multimerization and subsequent formation of detergent-resistant aggregates, culminating in loss of ligand binding, here exemplified by NDEL1. We conclude that the absence of oligomer-dependent ligand interactions of DISC1 can be associated with sporadic mental disease of mixed phenotypes.
- Subjects :
- Candidate gene
Proteome
metabolism [Recombinant Proteins]
Protein aggregation
Ligands
Mice
ddc:590
Drug Interactions
genetics [Schizophrenia]
Histone octamer
Genetics
bipolar disorder
biology
General Neuroscience
Articles
Ligand (biochemistry)
Phenotype
Recombinant Proteins
depression
DISC1 protein, human
metabolism [Schizophrenia]
psychiatric disease
Mice, Transgenic
Nerve Tissue Proteins
protein aggregation
DISC1
Cell Line, Tumor
Escherichia coli
Cadaver
Animals
Humans
multimerization
genetics [Mood Disorders]
protein conformational disease
Gene
Brain Chemistry
metabolism [Nerve Tissue Proteins]
NDEL1
Mood Disorders
metabolism [Mood Disorders]
Solubility
NDEL1 protein, human
Schizophrenia
biology.protein
metabolism [Escherichia coli]
isolation & purification [Proteome]
chemistry [Nerve Tissue Proteins]
Carrier Proteins
metabolism [Carrier Proteins]
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- The journal of neuroscience 28, 3839-3845 (2008). doi:10.1523/JNEUROSCI.5389-07.2008
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....2304c286316252b8237545189caa6b19
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.5389-07.2008