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    Date Issued2019 (2)Author
    Gall, Katherine V. (2)
    Landers, John E. (2)Lin, Yen-Chen (2)Tischbein, Maeve (2)Baron, Desiree (1)View MoreUMass Chan AffiliationDepartment of Neurology (2)Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences (2)Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Pharmacology (1)Mass Spectrometry Facility (1)Document TypeJournal Article (2)KeywordAmino Acids, Peptides, and Proteins (2)Biochemistry (2)Nervous System Diseases (2)Neuroscience and Neurobiology (2)amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) (Lou Gehrig disease) (1)View MoreJournalHuman molecular genetics (1)The Journal of biological chemistry (1)

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    Quantitative proteomics identifies proteins that resist translational repression and become dysregulated in ALS-FUS

    Baron, Desiree; Matheny, Tyler; Lin, Yen-Chen; Leszyk, John D.; Kenna, Kevin P.; Gall, Katherine V.; Santos, David P.; Tischbein, Maeve; Funes, Salome; Hayward, Lawrence J.; et al. (2019-07-01)
    Aberrant translational repression is a feature of multiple neurodegenerative diseases. The association between disease-linked proteins and stress granules further implicates impaired stress responses in neurodegeneration. However, our knowledge of the proteins that evade translational repression is incomplete. It is also unclear whether disease-linked proteins influence the proteome under conditions of translational repression. To address these questions, a quantitative proteomics approach was used to identify proteins that evade stress-induced translational repression in arsenite-treated cells expressing either wild-type or amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS)-linked mutant FUS. This study revealed hundreds of proteins that are actively synthesized during stress-induced translational repression, irrespective of FUS genotype. In addition to proteins involved in RNA- and protein-processing, proteins associated with neurodegenerative diseases such as ALS were also actively synthesized during stress. Protein synthesis under stress was largely unperturbed by mutant FUS, although several proteins were found to be differentially expressed between mutant and control cells. One protein in particular, COPBI, was downregulated in mutant FUS-expressing cells under stress. COPBI is the beta subunit of the coat protein I (COPI), which is involved in Golgi to endoplasmic reticulum (ER) retrograde transport. Further investigation revealed reduced levels of other COPI subunit proteins and defects in COPBI-relatedprocesses in cells expressing mutant FUS. Even in the absence of stress, COPBI localization was altered in primary and human stem cell-derived neurons expressing ALS-linked FUS variants. Our results suggest that Golgi to ER retrograde transport may be important under conditions of stress and is perturbed upon the expression of disease-linked proteins such as FUS.
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    The RNA-binding protein FUS/TLS undergoes calcium-mediated nuclear egress during excitotoxic stress and is required for GRIA2 mRNA processing

    Tischbein, Maeve; Baron, Desiree M.; Lin, Yen-Chen; Gall, Katherine V.; Landers, John E.; Fallini, Claudia; Bosco, Daryl A. (2019-05-15)
    Excitotoxic levels of glutamate represent a physiological stress that is strongly linked to amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and other neurological disorders. Emerging evidence indicates a role for neurodegenerative disease-linked RNA-binding proteins (RBPs) in the cellular stress response. However, the relationships between excitotoxicity, RBP function, and disease have not been explored. Here, using primary cortical and motor neurons, we found that excitotoxicity induced the translocation of select ALS-linked RBPs from the nucleus to the cytoplasm within neurons. RBPs affected by excitotoxicity included TAR DNA-binding protein 43 (TDP-43) and, most robustly, fused in sarcoma/translocated in liposarcoma (FUS/TLS). We noted that FUS is translocated through a calcium-dependent mechanism and that its translocation coincides with striking alterations in nucleocytoplasmic transport. Further, glutamate-induced up-regulation of glutamate ionotropic receptor AMPA type subunit 2 (GRIA2) in neurons depended on FUS expression, consistent with a functional role for FUS in excitotoxic stress. These findings reveal molecular links among prominent factors in neurodegenerative diseases, namely excitotoxicity, disease-associated RBPs, and nucleocytoplasmic transport.
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