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An optimized Western blot assay provides a comprehensive assessment of the physiological endoproteolytic processing of the prion protein

Authors :
Ilaria Vanni
Floriana Iacobone
Claudia D’Agostino
Matteo Giovannelli
Laura Pirisinu
Hermann Clemens Altmeppen
Joaquin Castilla
Juan Maria Torres
Umberto Agrimi
Romolo Nonno
Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España)
European Commission
Ministero della Salute
Vanni, Ilaria
Iacobone, Floriana
Pirisinu, Laura
Altmeppen, Hermann Clemens
Castilla, Joaquin
Torres, Juan Maria
Agrimi, Umberto
Nonno, Romolo
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, 2023.

Abstract

15 Pág.<br />The prion protein (PrPC) is subjected to several conserved endoproteolytic events producing bioactive fragments that are of increasing interest for their physiological functions and their implication in the pathogenesis of prion diseases and other neurodegenerative diseases. However, systematic and comprehensive investigations on the full spectrum of PrPC proteoforms have been hampered by the lack of methods able to identify all PrPC-derived proteoforms. Building on previous knowledge of PrPC endoproteolytic processing, we thus developed an optimized Western blot assay able to obtain the maximum information about PrPC constitutive processing and the relative abundance of PrPC proteoforms in a complex biological sample. This approach led to the concurrent identification of the whole spectrum of known endoproteolytic-derived PrPC proteoforms in brain homogenates, including C-terminal, N-terminal and, most importantly, shed PrPC-derived fragments. Endoproteolytic processing of PrPC was remarkably similar in the brain of widely used wild type and transgenic rodent models, with α-cleavage-derived C1 representing the most abundant proteoform and ADAM10-mediated shedding being an unexpectedly prominent proteolytic event. Interestingly, the relative amount of shed PrPC was higher in WT mice than in most other models. Our results indicate that constitutive endoproteolytic processing of PrPC is not affected by PrPC overexpression or host factors other than PrPC but can be impacted by PrPC primary structure. Finally, this method represents a crucial step in gaining insight into pathophysiological roles, biomarker suitability, and therapeutic potential of shed PrPC and for a comprehensive appraisal of PrPC proteoforms in therapies, drug screening, or in the progression of neurodegenerative diseases.<br />H. C. A. was supported by the CJD Foundation, Inc and Alzheimer Forschung Initiative e.V. (grant no.: 19050p); J. C. was supported by Spanish Ministry of Science award (grant no.: PID2021-122201OB-C21) cofunded by European Regional Development Fund. R. N. was supported by the Ministero della Salute (grant no.: RF-2016-02364498).

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....163fbd1ee22fa08589f2a177d1ecc50d