The Loss of PGAM5 Suppresses the Mitochondrial Degeneration Caused by Inactivation of PINK1 in
PTEN-induced kinase 1 (PINK1), which is required for mitochondrial homeostasis, is a gene product responsible for early-onset Parkinson's disease (PD). Another early onset PD gene product, Parkin, has been suggested to function downstream of the PINK1 signalling pathway based on genetic studies in Drosophila. PINK1 is a serine/threonine kinase with a predicted mitochondrial target sequence and a probable transmembrane domain at the N-terminus, while Parkin is a RING-finger protein with ubiquitin-ligase (E3) activity. However, how PINK1 and Parkin regulate mitochondrial activity is largely unknown. To explore the molecular mechanism underlying the interaction between PINK1 and Parkin, we biochemically purified PINK1-binding proteins from human cultured cells and screened the genes encoding these binding proteins using Drosophila PINK1 (dPINK1) models to isolate a molecule(s) involved in the PINK1 pathology. Here we report that a PINK1-binding mitochondrial protein, PGAM5, modulates the PINK1 pathway. Loss of Drosophila PGAM5 (dPGAM5) can suppress the muscle degeneration, motor defects, and shorter lifespan that result from dPINK1 inactivation and that can be attributed to mitochondrial degeneration. However, dPGAM5 inactivation fails to modulate the phenotypes of parkin mutant flies. Conversely, ectopic expression of dPGAM5 exacerbated the dPINK1 and Drosophila parkin (dParkin) phenotypes. These results suggest that PGAM5 negatively regulates the PINK1 pathway related to maintenance of the mitochondria and, furthermore, that PGAM5 acts between PINK1 and Parkin, or functions independently of Parkin downstream of PINK1.
Published in the journal:
The Loss of PGAM5 Suppresses the Mitochondrial Degeneration Caused by Inactivation of PINK1 in. PLoS Genet 6(12): e32767. doi:10.1371/journal.pgen.1001229
Category:
Research Article
doi:
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1001229
Summary
PTEN-induced kinase 1 (PINK1), which is required for mitochondrial homeostasis, is a gene product responsible for early-onset Parkinson's disease (PD). Another early onset PD gene product, Parkin, has been suggested to function downstream of the PINK1 signalling pathway based on genetic studies in Drosophila. PINK1 is a serine/threonine kinase with a predicted mitochondrial target sequence and a probable transmembrane domain at the N-terminus, while Parkin is a RING-finger protein with ubiquitin-ligase (E3) activity. However, how PINK1 and Parkin regulate mitochondrial activity is largely unknown. To explore the molecular mechanism underlying the interaction between PINK1 and Parkin, we biochemically purified PINK1-binding proteins from human cultured cells and screened the genes encoding these binding proteins using Drosophila PINK1 (dPINK1) models to isolate a molecule(s) involved in the PINK1 pathology. Here we report that a PINK1-binding mitochondrial protein, PGAM5, modulates the PINK1 pathway. Loss of Drosophila PGAM5 (dPGAM5) can suppress the muscle degeneration, motor defects, and shorter lifespan that result from dPINK1 inactivation and that can be attributed to mitochondrial degeneration. However, dPGAM5 inactivation fails to modulate the phenotypes of parkin mutant flies. Conversely, ectopic expression of dPGAM5 exacerbated the dPINK1 and Drosophila parkin (dParkin) phenotypes. These results suggest that PGAM5 negatively regulates the PINK1 pathway related to maintenance of the mitochondria and, furthermore, that PGAM5 acts between PINK1 and Parkin, or functions independently of Parkin downstream of PINK1.
Introduction
Parkinson's disease (PD (OMIM #168600)) is a neurodegenerative disease that affects the maintenance of dopaminergic (DA) neurons. PD prevalence is estimated at ∼1% among people over the age of 65 and increases with age. Clinical features of PD include motor abnormalities (tremor, rigidity, akinesia), autonomic disturbances, psychiatric disability and cognitive impairment. The recent identification of PD-associated genes has advanced our understanding the molecular mechanisms underlying PD. Two of these genes, PINK1 (PARK6, OMIM #605909, Gene ID: 65018) and parkin (PARK2, OMIM #600116, Gene ID: 5071), are associated with early-onset autosomal recessive PD, in which loss-of-function (LOF) of a single gene product results in the clinical manifestation of Parkinsonism [1], [2]. The PINK1 gene encodes a serine/threonine kinase with a predicted mitochondrial target sequence and a probable transmembrane domain at the N-terminus [3]. The gene product of the parkin gene encodes a protein with an E3 activity [4]–[6]. Recent genetic studies in Drosophila have reported that dPINK1 (Gene ID: 31607) acts as an upstream regulator of dParkin (Gene ID: 40336) in a common pathway that influences mitochondrial maintenance in a subset of tissues, including the flight muscle and DA neurons [7]–[9]. LOF of the dPINK1 or the dparkin genes results in enlarged or swollen mitochondria, a phenotype that can be partially rescued by heterozygosity for LOF mutations of the mitochondrial fusion-promoting components Optic atrophy 1 (OPA1) and Mitofusin (Mfn), or by increased mitochondrial fission activity via increased dosage of the dynamin-related protein 1 (drp1) gene [10]–[12]. Studies in mammalian or Drosophila cultured cells report that PINK1 is required to recruit Parkin to damaged depolarized mitochondria, and promotes their degradation through an autophagic event called mitophagy [13]–[16]. Thus, there is strong evidence to support an important role for PINK1 and Parkin in regulating mitochondrial homeostasis. However, little is known about how PINK1 regulates mitochondrial integrity and turnover through Parkin. Indeed, the precise means by which PINK1 exerts an effect on Parkin is not clear.
Here we show that a mitochondrial protein, phosphoglycerate mutase 5 (PGAM5, Gene ID: 192111), which was previously reported to be localized at the outer mitochondrial membrane and to lack a phosphoglycerate mutase activity [17], [18], is involved in the PINK1 pathway, and that loss of PGAM5 activity improves mitochondrial defects caused by PINK1 inactivation in Drosophila.
Results
Isolation of PGAM5 as a PINK1-Binding Protein
We and others have previously demonstrated that PINK1 is genetically upstream of parkin [7]–[9]. To further investigate the relationship between PINK1 and Parkin, we searched for PINK1-binding proteins using a combination of biochemical purification and mass spectrometric analysis. We affinity-purified human PINK1 with a FLAG tag at its C-terminus (hPINK1-FLAG) from lysate of human embryonic kidney (HEK) 293 cells stably expressing hPINK1-FLAG using an anti-FLAG column, and determined proteins specifically presented in the hPINK1-FLAG elution fractions, which include cytoskeleton-related proteins (MAP1B (GeneID: 4131), KIF11 (GeneID: 3832), Tubulin GeneID: 602530, 191130)), proteasome subunits (PSMD1 (GeneID: 5707), PSMD2 (GeneID: 5708), PSMC6 (GeneID: 5706)), PRKDC (GeneID: 5591), Hsp70 (1A, GeneID: 3303; 1B, GeneID: 3304), Hsp90 (GeneID: 3320), Cdc37 (GeneID: 11140), Insulin substrate-4 (IRS-4, GeneID: 8471) and PGAM5 (Figure 1A). PRKDC is one of proteins non-specifically associated with FLAG-tagged proteins in our proteomic analyses (data not shown). The roles of Hsp90, Cdc37 and the proteasome for PINK1 have been characterized previously [15], [19]–[22]. We therefore chose IRS-4 and PGAM5 and tested whether these proteins modulate the dPINK1 LOF phenotypes by Drosophila genetics. Our initial in vivo tests revealed that a mutant allele for dPGAM5 (CG14816, GeneID: 31143), PGAM5NP0568 significantly suppressed the abnormal wing postures observed in dPINK1 knockdown flies [9] (Figure 1B), while it failed to improve the viability (Figure 1C). Reducing the dose of chico (GeneID: 64880), which encodes a Drosophila orthologue of IRS-4, significantly suppresses the short lifespan phenotype caused by dPINK1 knockdown, without affecting wing posture (Figure 1D and 1E). Inhibition of chico activity has previously been reported to extend the lifespan of Drosophila, such that we reasoned that the effect on lifespan we observed might reflect a general phenomenon rather than reflecting a specific interaction with dPINK1 [23]. Thus for subsequent studies, we chose to focus on PGAM5.
The results of co-immunoprecipitation confirmed that C-terminally Myc-tagged human PGAM5 (hPGAM5-Myc) specifically binds to hPINK1-FLAG in transfected HEK293 cells (Figure 2A). Moreover, we found that hPGAM5 and hPINK1 immunoreactivity co-localizes with mitochondria in transfected HeLa cells, consistent with the previous finding that PGAM5 is localized to the mitochondria (Figure 2B and 2C) [24]. To test if endogenous hPGAM5 interacts with hPINK1, we first generated an anti-hPGAM5 antibody (Figure 2D). Next, we used a previously established anti-PINK1 antibody to immunoprecipitate PINK1 from HEK293 cell lysate, then probed with anti-PGAM5 to detect endogenous hPGAM5. As shown in Figure 2E, endogenous hPGAM5 was detectable in the fraction immunoprecipitated using anti-hPINK1 antibody but not a control antibody, confirming the results of mass spectrometric analysis. Physical association of dPINK1 with dPGAM5 was also observed in Drosophila S2 cells (Figure 2F), suggesting that their functional interaction is conserved between human and Drosophila.
Previous findings that PINK1 and PGAM5 possess kinase and phosphatase activities, respectively [18], [25], [26], prompted us to test the possibility of their enzyme-substrate relationships. A mobility shift assay to monitor the status of PINK1 phosphorylation suggested that overexpression of hPGMA5 has little effect on hPINK1 phosphorylation (Figure 2G). On the other hand, an in vitro kinase assay using recombinant dPINK1 failed to show a possibility that PGAM5 is a substrate for PINK1, or that PGAM5 modifies hPINK1 kinase activities (Figure 2H).
dPGAM5 Alters Mitochondrial Morphology in Drosophila
The Drosophila genome appears to have two orthologs of mammalian PGAM5, one on the X (CG14816) and the other on the second chromosome (CG15874, GeneID: 37899). We have renamed CG14816 and CG15874 as dPGAM5 and dPGAM5-2, respectively. Our initial in vivo genetic study and most subsequent analyses were performed using dPGAM5 mutant and transgenic animals because dPGAM5 is more similar to hPGAM5 than is dPGAM5-2 (dPGAM5 vs. hPGAM5, 44% amino acid identity, and dPGAM5-2 vs. hPGAM5, 38% identity, as determined using ClustalW v1.4 to align the sequences), and because the results of high-throughput analysis of transcript abundance suggest that the dPGAM5-2 transcript is expressed at very low levels at the adult stage, if at all (see http://flybase.org/reports/FBgn0035004.html).
We determined the P-element insertion allele PGAM5NP0568 as a hypomorph allele, which showed a reduction of dPGAM5 transcript levels to about 25% of normal levels (Figure S1). We then generated a dPGAM5 null allele PGAM51, in which the expression of dPGAM5 completely disappeared at both the transcript and protein levels (Figure S1B and S1C). The PGAM51 homozygous animal is viable, fertile and grossly normal. However, it displayed longer lifespan (Figure 3A). By contrast, overexpression of dPGAM5 or dPGAM5-2 resulted in shorter longevity (Figure 3B). Since a previous report described that overexpression of human PGAM5 affects the mitochondrial morphology or mobility in the cultured cells [24], we observed the mitochondria in the dPGAM5 null and transgenic flies. Although inactivation of dPGAM5 gene function did not cause mitochondrial degeneration, the morphology of the mitochondria appears to be moderately altered (Figure 3D and 3H compared to Figure 3C and 3G). The mitochondria in the indirect flight muscles of the PGAM5 mutant flies were longer in the long-axis direction compared to control animals (Figure 3K). A similar tendency was seen in DA neurons of the adult brain although the difference did not reach statistical significance (Figure 3L and 3M). In addition, we frequently observed constrictions in the mitochondria (see broken lines in Figure 3D). In contrast, transgenic expression of dPGAM5 or dPGAM5-2 in Drosophila leads to fragmentation of mitochondria, with cristae well-preserved in the indirect flight muscles (Figure 3E, 3F, 3I, and 3J) and in the tyrosine-hydroxylase (TH)-positive neurons of the adult fly brain (Figure 3N and 3O). These results suggested that dPGAM5 is likely to promote the mitochondrial fission process in Drosophila.
The Relationship between PGAM5 and the Mitochondrial Fission/Fusion Machinery
Evolutionarily-conserved GTPases Mfn and OPA1 promote the mitochondrial fusion event while another GTPase Drp1 regulates the mitochondrial fission [27], [28]. To determine the role of PGAM5 in the mitochondrial fission pathway, we manipulated the activities of the genes that are involved in mitochondrial fission/fusion in dPGAM5 null flies. Decreased Mfn activity resulted in fragmented mitochondria in the indirect muscle tissues, which was not affected by removal of the dPGAM5 gene (Figure 4A–4D and 4G, Figure S2). Conversely, an increased mitochondrial fission activity by introducing an extra copy of the drp1 gene was not suppressed in the dPGAM5 null genetic background (Figure 4E–4G). These results suggested that dPGAM5 may function upstream of Mfn or Drp1, or that the mechanism of the mitochondrial morphological changes by dPGAM5 is independent of that of the known fusion/fission components.
dPGAM5 Modulates Phenotypes Caused by dPINK1 Inactivation in Drosophila
We next confirmed that the results of the genetic tests in Figure 1B and 1C using a LOF allele for dPINK1, PINK1B9 to exclude off-target effects due to RNAi (Figure 5). Adult PINK1B9 flies often have abnormal thoraces with dents in the mid-anterior region, which is likely due to degeneration of the muscle tissues lining the inside of the thorax (Figure 5B) [8]. This thorax phenotype seen in PINK1B9 flies can be suppressed by introduction of the PGAM5NP0568 or the PGAM51 allele (Figure 5A and 5D). We then examined the effects of dPGAM5 inactivation on dPINK1 mutant phenotypes that progressively increase over time. As described above, loss of dPINK1 activity leads to the appearance of abnormal wing postures, which is indicative of flight muscle degeneration, and the percent of affected flies increases with advancing age (Figure 5C and 5F) [8]. Introduction of the dPGAM5 mutant alleles dramatically suppresses this phenotype (Figure 5E and 5F), whereas ectopic expression of dPGAM5 enhances the phenotype (Figure 5G). Progressive loss of climbing ability and the shorter lifespan of PINK1B9 flies are additional prominent phenotypes that may represent dysfunction of DA neurons of the central nervous system and muscle degeneration. The dPGAM5 mutant alleles also significantly improved these phenotypes (Figure 5H and 5J). Conversely, overexpression of dPGAM5 worsened the phenotypes (Figure 5I and 5K). Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) sections from one day-old adult PINK1B9 mutant flies reveal that mitochondria in the indirect flight muscles are abnormally fused with one another and that the structures of the mitochondrial cristae are unclear (i.e. the cristae have lost the normal electron density seen by TEM) as compared to those of a dPINK1 revertant line (Figure 6A and 6D compared to Figure 3C and 3G). Importantly, the mitochondrial hyperfusion and loss of cristae usually observed in dPINK1 mutant animals can be partly suppressed by introduction of the PGAM5NP0568 or the PGAM51 allele (Figure 6B, 6E, and 6G). In sharp contrast, transgenic expression of dPGAM5 further promoted mitochondrial degeneration (Figure 6C and 6F). Similar results were obtained when mitochondria in DA neurons of the adult brain (Figure 6H, 6I, and 6J) and in the indirect muscle tissues (Figure S3) were visualized using a version of GFP with a mitochondrial targeting signal (mitoGFP). Mitochondrial morphology in DA neurons in wild-type flies showed a long tubular network in the cytoplasm (Figure 3L). As previously reported, DA neurons in PINK1B9 flies form spherical aggregates of mitochondria (Figure 6I). Removal of dPGAM5 from PINK1B9 flies led to an increase in the number of small fragmented or tubular mitochondria (Figure 6J). These results suggest that excessive mitochondrial aggregation, which is modulated by dPGAM5 inactivation, is indicative of a functional failure of mitochondria in DA neurons.
Consistent with the beneficial effects of dPGAM5 inactivation on the mitochondrial degeneration seen in PINK1B9 flies, we observed that dPGAM5 inactivation suppresses the loss of DA neurons in the protocerebral posterior lateral 1 (PPL1) and protocerebral posterior medial 1 and 2 (PPM1/2) clusters of aged flies (Figure 6K–6M).
Removal of dPGAM5 Fails to Suppress Phenotypes Resulting from dparkin Inactivation
Previous studies in Drosophila suggested that dPINK1 is genetically associated with dparkin and furthermore, that dPINK1 functions upstream of dparkin [7]–[9]. In addition, dparkin null mutations cause mitochondrial degeneration of a subset of tissues in Drosophila, which phenocopies dPINK1 inactivation [29], [30]. Given the evidence that PGAM5 is involved in the PINK1 pathway, we next asked if dPGAM5 also affects the in vivo mitochondrial phenotypes associated with mutations in dParkin. Introduction of PGAM5NP0568 in the parkin hypomorphic genetic background (parkinP21) had little effect on abnormal wing postures (Figure 7A–7C) [29], [30]. Consistent with the result in the wing phenotype, loss of dPGAM5 activity failed to rescue the age-dependent motor defects and shorter lifespan observed in parkinP21flies (Figure 7D and 7F). In the same settings, overexpression of dPGAM5 further enhanced both motor defect and reduced lifespan phenotype (Figure 7E and 7G). Loss of dParkin activity results in an elongated morphology in mitochondria of the adult indirect flight muscle tissues, a phenotype that was suppressed by loss of the dPGAM5 gene (Figure 7H, 7I, and 7L). However, the crista structures of the mitochondria were not restored by inactivation of the dPGAM5 gene (Figure 7J and 7K). Taken together, these data suggest that dPGAM5 lies genetically upstream of dparkin, or functions independently of dparkin downstream of dPINK1 in Drosophila.
Activation of a Redox Control Pathway Improves Viability of dPINK1 Mutant Flies
PGAM5 was previously reported to interact with Keap1 (Gene ID: 9817), a substrate adaptor protein for a Cullin-3-dependent E3 complex [17]. In a normal redox state, the Keap1 complex suppresses activity of a bZIP transcription factor, Nrf2, through ubiquitin/proteasome-dependent protein degradation [31]. Oxidative stress impairs inhibition of Nrf2 by Keap1 [31]. Nrf2 thus becomes stabilized and activates oxidative stress protective genes, restoring cellular redox homeostasis. Although we confirmed the association of PGAM5 with Keap1 in human cultured cells, the proposed Keap1-binding motif in PGAM5, NXESGE, was not conserved in dPGAM5 (Figure S1). On the other hand, Keap1/Nrf2 signaling does appear to be conserved in Drosophila [32]. We tested if Keap1/Nrf2 signaling modulates PINK1 phenotypes. Removal of a copy of the keap1 gene (Gene ID: 42062) in dPINK1 knockdown flies, wherein the dPINK1 RNAi was expressed in the muscle tissues, failed to rescue the abnormal wing posture (Figure 8A). However, Keap1 heterozygosity is beneficial to survival of aging dPINK1 knockdown files, supporting a previous report suggesting that oxidative stress is partly involved in the PINK1 pathology (Figure 8B) [33], [34].
Discussion
The event of fusion/fission is required for maintenance of a healthy mitochondrial population. Mitochondrial fusion is believed to require the interchange of a set of internal components, including copies of the mitochondrial genome, respiratory proteins and metabolic products. Mitochondrial fission has been proposed to play a role in disposal of damaged mitochondria, such as those with a reduced mitochondrial membrane potential, via mitophagy [35]. A role for PINK1 in the regulation of mitochondrial fission/fusion dynamics has recently been demonstrated in Drosophila [10]–[12]. The PINK1/Parkin pathway appears to promote fission and/or inhibits fusion, likely through an indirect mechanism. Indeed, loss of dPINK1 or dParkin produces swollen or enlarged mitochondria in tissues with high-energy demands, such as the muscles, which is suppressed by reduced fusion activity or increased fission activity after genetic manipulation of the mitochondrial fission/fusion machinery. Namely, either reducing the activity of the mitochondrial fusion proteins OPA1 and Mfn, or increasing the activity of a mitochondrial fission protein, Drp1, can partially rescue PINK1 and parkin mutant phenotypes.
We identified PGAM5 as a PINK1-binding protein and went on to show that dPGAM5 can modulate dPINK1 mutant phenotypes. Loss of dPGAM5 activity had little effect on the lifespan of a dPINK1 RNAi fly strain in our initial in vivo test (Figure 1C). However, we found that loss of dPGAM5 does significantly extend lifespan of PINK1B9 mutant flies (Figure 5J). We speculate that continuous expression of the short hairpin RNA in the RNAi-based test confers additional toxicity, leading to a shorter lifespan in a sequence-independent manner, such that the suppressive effect of dPGAM5 mutations cannot be detected in the PINK1 RNAi flies.
dPGAM5 appears to be dispensable for mitochondrial homeostasis in Drosophila, as overall, flies homozygous for a null allele of dPGAM5, PGAM51, appear to be normal. It has previously been reported that ectopic expression of PGAM5 leads to perinuclear aggregation or small fragmentation of mitochondria in mammalian cultured cells, which suggested that PGAM5 has a role in regulation of mitochondrial fission/fusion process or mobility [24]. Our study also observed alteration of mitochondrial morphology in Drosophila with different dPGAM5 activities. Transgenic expression of dPGAM5 or dPGAM5-2 leads to fragmentation of mitochondria both in the TH+ neurons and indirect flight muscles (Figure 3E, 3F, 3I and 3J). By contrast, dPGAM5 LOF moderately increases mitochondria with a longer tubular or a swollen morphology (Figure 3D and 3K). Our genetic tests with the known mitochondrial fusion/fission machinery suggested that PGAM5 acts upstream of them or in an independent pathway (Figure 4). Given that PGAM5 is involved in mitochondrial fission, loss of PGAM5 would be expected to enhance the PINK1 mutant phenotype in Drosophila, similar to the interaction between PINK1 and the mitochondrial fusion/fission machinery [10]–[12]. Interestingly, the number of large aggregated mitochondria, which are frequently seen in PINK1B9 flies, was mildly decreased in TH+ neurons of PINK1B9PGAM51 flies (Figure 6H–6J). Moreover, loss of dPGAM5 also modulated the mitochondrial morphology of dParkin mutant fly without suppressing the mitochondrial degeneration (Figure 7H–7L). Based on these observations, it could be speculated that PGAM5 does not directly regulate mitochondrial fission but instead, modulates the PINK1 pathway in a different way. Recent studies have proposed two different models for the mechanism of mitochondrial morphological changes through the PINK1/Parkin pathway in Drosophila and mammals. Ziviani et al. and Poole et al. have demonstrated that dParkin promotes degradation of Mfn in a dPINK1-dependent manner, which leads to mitochondrial fragmentation in Drosophila [16], [36]. Our current results demonstrated that the loss of dPGAM5 activity does not affect mitochondrial fragmentation caused by reduction of Mfn activity, suggesting that dPGAM5 might not contribute to the proposed PINK1/Parkin pathway (Figure 4). Sandebring et al. have proposed that accumulation of damaged mitochondria by PINK1 inactivation results in mitochondrial calcium efflux, which activates Drp1 through Calcineurin-mediated dephosphorylation of Drp1 in human cells [37]. This model well explains the observation that loss of PINK1 indirectly promotes mitochondrial fragmentation in mammalian cells and the indication that PINK1 is not a core component of the fusion/fission machinery in a Drosophila study [11]. However, most of Drosophila studies do not support a result that loss of PINK1 leads to mitochondrial fragmentation in mammals. Thus, it still remains a question for further investigation how PGAM5 modulates the mitochondrial dynamics.
Although the property of PGAM5 to physically interact with PINK1 appears to be conserved between human and Drosophila, the functional significance of this binding remains to be established. PINK1 and PGAM5 have kinase and phosphatase activities, respectively. However, there is no evidence to suggest that PINK1 directly phosphorylates PGAM5, or that PGAM5 dephosphorylates PINK1 (Figure 2G and 2H) [18], [25], [26]. The PINK1 protein levels are maintained at very low level under steady-state conditions by constitutive processing and subsequent degradation through the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway [15]. Recent studies suggested that PINK1 selectively translocates from cytosol to mitochondria with low membrane potential, at which PINK1 is stabilized [14], [15], [38]. The accumulated PINK1 on the depolarized mitochondria further recruits Parkin to induce mitophagy [13]–[15], [38]. However, Parkin does not seem to be the target of PINK1 kinase activity [15], and PINK1 does not seem to activate Parkin E3 activity directly (data not shown). Based on these findings, it is possible that PGAM5 may promote a selective recruitment of PINK1 to the outer membrane of the damaged mitochondria, or that PGAM5 may regulate PINK1 stabilization. Our molecular analysis, however, did not support the idea that PGAM5 stabilizes PINK1 (data not shown). In addition, because loss of dPGAM5 partially suppresses dPINK1 null phenotypes, it seems likely that PINK1 negatively regulates PGAM5 function (Figure 9). PGAM5 was originally identified as a Bcl-xL-binding protein, and in itself can be toxic to cells, promoting mitochondrial fragmentation, when expressed at high levels (Figure 3B). Therefore, it seems possible that PGAM5 modulates a cell protective or a mitochondrial morphogenetic activity of the Bcl-2 family member Bcl-xL downstream of PINK1 but in a pathway that is independent from Parkin (Figure 9A) [39]. In this context, PINK1 may suppress the cell toxic action of PGAM5 through an indirect mechanism where an unidentified substrate of PINK1 inactivates PGAM5. Interestingly, a recent report suggests that the dPINK1 phenotype can be partially suppressed by transgenic expression of Drosophila Bcl-2 protein Buffy [8]. Alternatively, PGAM5 may be one of components of a negative regulator complex against Parkin E3, downstream of PINK1 (Figure 9B). Matsuda et al. have reported that Parkin E3 activity is activated only at the depolarized mitochondria, suggesting the existence of its negative regulator(s) [38]. E3 activity of Parkin may be released when PINK1 associates with the negative regulator complex via PGAM5 and suppresses its function by phosphorylation of another complex component(s). This idea might be partly supported by our observation that loss of dPGAM5 had little effect on dparkin mutant flies.
Although the primary cause of the mitochondrial degeneration by the loss of PINK1 remains less obvious, the growing evidence suggests that PINK1 eliminates oxidatively damaged mitochondria in cooperation with Parkin, the failure of which leads to tissue degeneration. Supporting for this hypothesis, the mitochondrial phenotypes of dPINK1 and dParkin mutant flies are primarily exhibited in similar tissues that require higher energy demands [7]–[9]. Although dPAGM5 might not regulate Keap1 function in Drosophila, the Keap1/Nrf2 pathway appears to be conserved in Drosophila [32], and activation of the Keap1/Nrf2 pathway by genetic manipulation effectively suppressed the short-lifespan phenotype by dPINK1 inactivation. This finding may also support the above idea that the accumulation of oxidatively damaged mitochondria leads to degeneration of specific tissues, providing a hint of therapeutic strategies for PINK1-associated PD.
In conclusion, the results of our genetic study demonstrate that the mitochondrial-localized protein PGAM5 modulates the PINK1 pathway in Drosophila. However, further work will be required to determine how PGAM5 regulates the PINK1 pathway at the molecular level, as well as to determine if manipulation of PGAM5 activity might provide a therapeutic advantage in treatment of PINK1-associated PD.
Materials and Methods
Purification of PINK1-Binding Proteins
HEK293 cells stably expressing hPINK1-FLAG or parent cells were grown in suspension culture (Joklik-modified Eagle's minimum essential medium with 5% fetal bovine serum). The cell pellet (2.4×108 cells) was homogenized in lysis buffer (50 mM Tris pH 7.4, 120 mM NaCl, 5 mM EDTA, 10% glycerol, 1% Trion-X100) supplemented with Complete Protease Inhibitors (Roche Diagnostics). The soluble fraction of the suspension was immunoprecipitated with anti-FLAG M2 agarose (Sigma-Aldrich) and washed five times in lysis buffer. The fractions eluted with 200 µg/ml 3x FLAG peptide were resolved by SDS-PAGE. Specific bands detected by silver staining were excised for in-gel digestion. The digest extracted from the gel was subjected to online HPLC-MS/MS, followed by informatics-based identification of the proteins (Nippon Proteomics).
Drosophila Genetics
Fly culture and crosses were performed on standard fly food containing yeast, cornmeal and molasses, and flies were raised at 25°C unless otherwise indicated. To generate UAS-dPGAM5 transgenic lines, cDNA for dPGAM5 and dPGAM5-2 obtained by RT-PCR from adult Drosophila total RNA was subcloned into the pUAST vector. Introduction of transgenes into Drosophila germ line and establishment of transgenic lines into a w– background were performed by BestGene Inc. (Chino Hills, CA). A P-element insertion line for dPGAM5 mutant, PGAM5NP0568 obtained from Kyoto Drosophila Genetic Resource Center, expresses a reduced level (∼25%) of mRNA, in which NP0568 element is integrated 50 bp downstream of the dPGAM5 translational start site (Figure S1B). We could not detect any dPGAM5 protein signal in PGAM5NP0568 homozygous flies (Figure S1C). The PGAM5NP0568 line was backcrossed to w– for six generations to remove background mutations, and used for most experiments as a dPGAM5 mutant line. UAS-dPGAM5 RNAi (VDRC 51655) and UAS-mfn RNAi (VDRC105261 and VDRC40478) strains were obtained from the Vienna Drosophila RNAi Center. To generate PGAM51, the KG09727 P-element insertion (obtained from the Bloomington Drosophila Stock Center) was mobilized using Δ2–3 transposase, and the entire dPGAM5 coding region was deleted by imprecise excision, as shown in Figure S1A. All other fly stocks and GAL4 lines used in this study were obtained from the Bloomington Drosophila Stock Center and have been previously described: UAS-dPINK1 RNAi [9]; PINK1B9 and revertant PINK1RV [8]; parkinP21 [30]; keap1EY1and keap1EY5 [32]; Drp12 and Drp1+[40].
RT-PCR and Plasmids
For quantitative RT-PCR analysis, reverse transcription and PCR reactions with total RNA extracted from fly heads were performed using a Superscript VILO cDNA synthesis kit (Invitrogen) and SYBR GreenER qPCR SuperMix (Invitrogen), respectively. Full-length cDNAs corresponding to hPGAM5 (GenBank NP_001170543) and a short isoform of hPGAM5 (hPGAM5-S, GenBank NM_138575) were amplified by RT-PCR from total RNA purified from HEK293 cells or a cDNA clone (RIKEN clone ID: IRAK003D15), and was cloned in pcDNA3-Myc, pGEX6P-1 and pGEX4T-1 vectors. Expression plasmids for hPINK1-FLAG and pUAST-dPINK1-Myc have been reported elsewhere [9], [20].
Antibodies
Rabbit anti-human PGAM5 polyclonal antibody was raised against recombinant GST-tagged PGAM5 domain (89–289 aa) produced in the E. coli strain BL21(DE3)pLysS (Novagen), and was affinity-purified against the antigen. Rabbit anti-dPGAM5 polyclonal antibody was raised against the peptide ELLTNRIPRDVKNVV. Anti-hPINK1 antibody (BC100-494), anti-Myc (4A6) and anti-FLAG (M2) antibodies were purchased from Novus, Millipore and Sigma-Aldrich, respectively. Mouse anti-TH monoclonal antibody was purchased from ImmunoStar, and rabbit anti-Drosophila TH polyclonal antibody was described previously [9].
Cell Culture, Immunoprecipitation, and Immunoblot Analysis
Transfection of mammalian cultured cell, immunopurification of FLAG-protein from transfected cell lysate and immunoblot analysis was performed as described previously [4], [41]. For the hPGAM5 RNAi experiment, HEK293 cell lysate transfected with 20 µM stealth RNAi reagent against hPGAM5 or a control RNAi reagent (Invitrogen), was analyzed 72 hrs after transfection. To detect an endogenous interaction between PINK1 and PGAM5, we treated HEK293 cells (2×107 cells) with 20 µM carbonyl cyanide 3-chlorophenylhydrazone for 24 hrs to induce a sufficient level of human PINK1 protein for the study. The treated cells were subjected to immunoprecipitation using a Rabbit TrueBlot kit combined with rabbit anti-human PINK1 or rabbit anti-Delta (Santa Cruz) as a species-matched control. For the preparation of fly samples for immunoblot analysis, fly heads were directly homogenized in 20 µl/head of SDS sample buffer using a motor-driven pestle. After centrifugation at 16,000 g for 10 min, the supernatant was used in SDS-PAGE.
In Vitro Phosphorylation Assay
Recombinant 2x GST-dPINK1 (153–709 aa), which has an N-terminal GST-tag and a C-terminal GST/6x His tag, was produced in the E. coli strain pG-KJE8/BL21 (TAKARA) and purified by a sequential purification with Ni-NTA agarose and glutathione sepharose. GST-hPGAM5-S (1–255 aa) and GST-hPGAM5 (1–289 aa) were incubated with 2x GST-dPINK1 as described in Figure 2.
Whole-Mount Immunostaining and Transmission Electron Microscopic (TEM) Analysis
Counting of TH-positive neurons was performed by whole-mount immunostaining of brain samples as described previously [9]. TEM images were obtained at the Biomedical Research Core of Tohoku University Graduate School of Medicine. All histochemical analyses were performed using DeltaVision microscope system (Applied Precision) or LSM5 PASCAL laser scanning microscope system (Carl Zeiss). The images obtained by DeltaVision system were deconvolved through 10 iterations using the DeltaVision deconvolution software (Applied Precision). Area calculation of the mitochondria was performed following established criteria for classification [12] using softWoRx (Applied Precision) or Image J software from the US National Institute of Health (http://rsb.info.nih.gov/ij/).
Lifespan Assay and Quantification of Wing Phenotypes and Climbing Ability
For lifespan studies, twenty female adult flies per vial were maintained at 25°C, transferred to fresh fly food, and scored for survival every 4 or 5 days. To control for isogeny, the PGAM5NP0568, PINK1B9 and PGAM51, PINK1B9 alleles were backcrossed to PINK1B9 for six generations, and parkinP21 and PGAM5NP0568; parkinP21 were backcrossed to w− wild-type background for six generations, UAS-dPGAM5 transgenic flies were generated in the w− genetic background and thus have matched genetic backgrounds. The lifespan of PGAM51 was compared in the y− genetic background. The number of flies exhibiting defective abnormal wing posture (held-up or drooped) was determined for each genotype [9]. A climbing assay was performed as described previously [42].
Statistical Analysis
One-way repeated measures ANOVA was performed to determine significant differences among multiple groups unless otherwise indicated. If a significant result was achieved (p<0.05), the mean of the control and the specific test groups was analyzed using the Tukey-Kramer test. For lifespan assays, the Kaplan-Meier analysis with log-rank test was performed.
Supporting Information
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Štítky
Genetika Reprodukčná medicínaČlánok vyšiel v časopise
PLOS Genetics
2010 Číslo 12
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