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The Journal of Neuroscience, February 15, 2003, 23(4):1254
blue cheese Mutations Define a Novel, Conserved Gene
Involved in Progressive Neural Degeneration
Kim D.
Finley1, 2,
Philip T.
Edeen1,
Robert C.
Cumming2,
Michelle D.
Mardahl-Dumesnil3,
Barbara J.
Taylor4,
Maria H.
Rodriguez2,
Calvin E.
Hwang2,
Michael
Benedetti1, and
Michael
McKeown1, 5
1 Molecular and Cellular Biology Laboratory and
2 Cellular Neurobiology Laboratory, The Salk Institute for
Biological Studies, La Jolla, California 92037-1099, 3 Department of Biology, San Diego State University, San
Diego, California 92020, 4 Department of Zoology, Oregon
State University, Corvallis, Oregon 97331, and 5 Molecular
Biology, Cell Biology, and Biochemistry, Brown University, Providence,
Rhode Island 02912
 |
ABSTRACT |
A common feature of many human neurodegenerative diseases is the
accumulation of insoluble ubiquitin-containing protein aggregates in
the CNS. Although Drosophila has been helpful in
understanding several human neurodegenerative disorders, a
loss-of-function mutation has not been identified that leads to
insoluble CNS protein aggregates. The study of
Drosophila mutations may identify unique components that
are associated with human degenerative diseases. The Drosophila
blue cheese (bchs) gene defines such a novel
degenerative pathway. bchs mutants have a reduced adult
life span with the age-dependent formation of protein aggregates
throughout the neuropil of the CNS. These inclusions contain insoluble
ubiquitinated proteins and amyloid precursor-like protein. Progressive
loss of CNS size and morphology along with extensive neuronal apoptosis
occurs in aged bchs mutants. BCHS protein is widely
expressed in the cytoplasm of CNS neurons and is present over the
entire length of axonal projections. BCHS is nearly 3500 amino acids in
size, with the last 1000 amino acids consisting of three functional protein motifs implicated in vesicle transport and protein processing. This region along with previously unidentified proteins encoded in the
human, mouse, and nematode genomes shows striking homology along the
full length of the BCHS protein. The high degree of conservation
between Drosophila and human bchs
suggests that study of the functional pathway of BCHS and associated
mutant phenotype may provide useful insights into human
neurodegenerative disorders.
Key words:
neurodegeneration; ubiquitin; APPL; protein
aggregates; apoptosis; Drosophila
 |
Introduction |
With an increase in the number of
older adults, age-associated neural degenerative disorders have become
an area of growing public concern, medical attention, and scientific
study. Although significant progress has been made in characterizing
many aspects of human neurodegeneration, the multifactorial nature and
the long period over which these diseases develop have hampered
informative research. Considering these difficulties, recent work has
highlighted the value of studying disease-associated genes in model
organisms and has led to the genetic study of neurodegeneration in
Drosophila (Mutsuddi and Nambu, 1998
; Chan and Bonini, 2000
;
Muqit and Feany, 2002
).
Two main approaches have been productive: (1) the study of mutations in
endogenous Drosophila genes and their neurodegenerative phenotypes and (2) the study of transgenic flies expressing
disease-associated variants of human proteins. Among the endogenous
genes and proteins that have been studied are homologs of human
proteins, including the amyloid precursor protein, presenilins, and
superoxide dismutase (Phillips et al., 1989
; Mutsuddi and Nambu, 1998
;
Reiter et al., 2001
), as well as genes involved in retinitis pigmentosa
(i.e., rhodopsin and arrestin) (Davidson and Steller, 1998
; Alloway et al., 2000
; Kiselev et al., 2000
). Work on these genes, their
corresponding proteins, and interacting partners in flies has led to
unique insights into normal function and consequences associated with human degenerative diseases.
Expression of disease-associated proteins in flies has included studies
of polyglutamine expansion proteins (Warrick et al., 1999
;
Fernandez-Funez et al., 2000
; Kazemi-Esfarjani and Benzer, 2000
;
Steffan et al., 2001
; Kazantsev et al., 2002
) as well as mutant forms
of
-synuclein (Feany and Bender, 2000
; Auluck et al., 2002
) and tau
(Wittmann et al., 2001
). For most of these studies the animals develop
hallmark features associated with the human disease counterpart. These
include the formation of protein aggregates marked with ubiquitin,
neuronal apoptosis, and the loss of neural tissues. This work
underscores the conserved nature of cellular pathology and degenerative
cascades. These transgenic models have allowed genetic screens to
identify modifiers of degenerative phenotypes (enhancers or
suppressors) that would be difficult to characterize in other systems
(Warrick et al., 1999
; Fernandez-Funez et al., 2000
; Kazemi-Esfarjani
and Benzer, 2000
; Steffan et al., 2001
; Kazantsev et al., 2002
).
Given the success of studying Drosophila neurodegenerative
loci and misexpressed human disease genes, it is somewhat surprising that endogenous Drosophila mutations have not been
identified with certain key features associated with common late-onset
human neurodegenerative disorders, notably the formation of protein aggregates containing ubiquitinated proteins and amyloid precursor-like protein (APPL) (Bence et al., 2001
; Sherman and Goldberg, 2001
; Ding et
al., 2002
). This study closes this gap by identification and
characterization of a new Drosophila gene, blue
cheese (bchs), which defines a novel degenerative
pathway displaying this pathology. Inspiring the mutant name, we find
the formation of protein inclusions throughout the CNS of
bchs mutants. These inclusions contain insoluble ubiquitinated protein aggregates and the Drosophila APPL and
stain positive with the amyloid dye thioflavine S. Along with abnormal retinal and CNS morphology and size, aged mutant brains show extensive neuronal apoptosis. Loss-of-function mutations in bchs also
result in a significantly shortened adult life span. The BCHS protein is highly conserved from nematodes to humans and contains motifs implicated in membrane vesicle transport and protein processing. Given
the substantial level of homology, it is reasonable to propose functional and pathological consequences as a result of the loss of
BCHS in other species.
 |
Materials and Methods |
Drosophila culture and mutagenesis. Stocks and
crosses were grown on standard Drosophila medium at 25°C
until eclosion. For aging studies and protein and confocal
analysis, newly emerged adults were placed in fresh vials containing 25 individuals and were aged at 29°C for the times indicated. Flies were
transferred to fresh food every 2-3 d. For analysis of life span the
number of dead individuals for each genotype was counted during
transfer, and the percentage remaining alive was calculated. Life span
is given as the mean time of death. Aging profiles were plotted with CA-Cricket Graph III program, and p value comparisons were
prepared by using Microsoft Excel and the online program
GraphPad
(http://www.graphpad.com/quickcalcs/ttest2.cfm).
New mutations in bchs were generated by using established
P-element mutagenesis techniques and EP(2)2299 transposable element (Rio, 1991
). Initially, all lines containing mobilization events were
examined for viability and health over Df(2L)clot7 and as homozygotes
and were tested for female fertility
(dsf+). Of the 80 mobilized lines
meeting these criteria, nearly one-half demonstrated precise removal of
the P-element as determined via genomic Southern blot, PCR, and/or
sequencing analysis in and around the original insertion site (see Fig.
1B). The remaining lines contain small deletions or
rearrangements to the 5' region of bchs and were grouped
into 13 molecular classifications for aging analysis.
Molecular techniques. Cloning of the bchs genomic
region and the deletion boundaries have been described previously
(Finley et al., 1998
) (http://flybase.bio.indiana.edu/). blue
cheese cDNAs were isolated from libraries (Tulle Hazelrigg,
Columbia University, New York, NY), using standard techniques and
genomic restriction fragment probes. Subcloned cDNA fragments were
sequenced with vector primers or primers designed to match previously
sequenced DNA regions on an ABI automated sequencer. Contiguous
sequences were assembled with Sequencher software (Gene
Codes, Ann Arbor, MI). BLAST, ProfileScan [run remotely,
National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI), Bethesda, MD],
or DNA STAR programs were used for data base searches, sequence
comparisons, and alignments. For Northern blots total RNA was isolated
(RNeasy Total RNA Kit; Qiagen, Chatsworth, CA), and RNA
from 20 heads was loaded per lane. Transferred blots were hybridized
with 32P-labeled random primed probe from
bchs cDNA clones via established techniques.
Mammalian and nematode homologs of BCHS were identified by tblastn
searches run remotely at NCBI, using all or part of the BCHS sequence
as query. The majority of human and mouse BCHS sequences (with the
exception of short 3' cDNA contig, KIAA0993) was assembled by
linking of previously unidentified and unconnected exons from human or
mouse genomic sequence. Regions of weak homology to
Drosophila were checked further for splice site and
reading frame alignment and by cross comparison between the human and
mouse sequences.
In situ hybridization. Pharate adults were embedded in
Tissue Freezing Medium (Triangle Biomedical Sciences,
Durham, NC) and cryostat sectioned (20 µm). In situ
hybridization followed described procedures (Finley et al., 1998
).
Riboprobes were synthesized by using T3 or T7 polymerase with a
linearized pBluescript vector containing 5' bchs cDNA
templates and digoxygenin-coupled nucleotides (DIG RNA Labeling Kit,
Boehringer Mannheim, Indianapolis, IN).
Plastic section histology. Heads, from flies of a particular
age, were dissected from the body and proboscis and fixed overnight in
3% glutaraldehyde, 3% paraformaldehyde in 0.1 M
cacodylate buffer, pH 7.4, at 4°C. Heads were washed after primary
fixation in 0.1 M cacodylate buffer and postfixed on ice in
1% OsO4/0.1 M cacodylate buffer for
2 hr. After two washes in water the tissues were dehydrated in a
standard acetone series and infiltrated with Epon 812 (EMS grade).
Heads were oriented relative to the head cuticle before sectioning.
Semithick sections (1.0 µm) were stained warmed for 2 min with 0.5%
methylene blue, 0.5% borax, and 0.5% AzureII and rinsed with water.
Sections were dehydrated before mounting with Permount (EMS grade,
Fisher Scientific, Houston, TX).
BCHS antibody production, protein preparation, and immunoblot
analysis. The BCHS C terminus (183 amino acids) was subcloned into
the pGEX-KG vector (Amersham Biosciences, Piscataway,
NJ). Guinea pigs were immunized with purified BCHS-fusion
protein (glutathione beads, Sigma, St. Louis, MO) by
following standard techniques. Antibodies were affinity purified by
using membrane-bound fusion protein (Immobilon-P,
Millipore, Bedford, MA) and standard techniques.
Approximately 30 flies for a particular age and genotype were placed in
individual 15 ml conical centrifuge tubes, flash-frozen in liquid
nitrogen, and vortexed several times. Severed heads were separated from
thoraxes and abdomens by using a standard tea sieve. Heads were
homogenized in PBS, 1% Triton X-100, and protease inhibitors at 4°C
and centrifuged at 15,000 × g (Johnston et al., 1998
;
Mohtashami et al., 2001
). Supernatants were collected as the Triton
X-100 soluble fraction, and the remaining pellet was resuspended in 50 mM Tris, pH 7.5, and 2% SDS with protease inhibitors and then sonicated (Johnston et al., 1998
). After
centrifugation the supernatant was collected as the Triton X-100
insoluble fraction. For each sample 30 µg of protein
(Bio-Rad, Hercules, CA) was resolved by 4-20% SDS-PAGE
(Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA) and electroblotted. Western
blots were probed sequentially with anti-ubiquitin (1:1000 dilution;
Zymed Laboratories, San Francisco, CA), anti-histone 2B
(1:500 dilution; James Kadonaga, University of California, San Diego,
CA), and anti-BCHS (1:200 dilution) antibodies with the use of standard
techniques. Specific antibody binding was detected with standard ECL reagents.
Fluorescence confocal microscopy. For aggregate formation
studies the flies were aged at 29°C for the indicated times. Under anesthesia the heads were removed and placed in PBS; the surrounding cuticle was dissected and the brains fixed for 45 min at 25°C in PBT
(1× PBS with 0.1% Triton X-100) with 3.5% paraformaldehyde. After
three PBT washes the brains were incubated in ubiquitin monoclonal
antibody (1:100 dilution; Zymed Laboratories) and/or APPL
antibody (preabsorbed, 1:2000 dilution; Kalpana White, Brandeis University, Waltham, MA) in PBT with 3% normal goat serum (NGS) as
blocking agent overnight at 4°C. After three washes with PBT the
samples were incubated in the indicated secondary antibodies (1:200
dilution, PBT with 3% NGS; Jackson ImmunoResearch, West Grove, PA) for 1 hr. For actin detection a 1:250 dilution of
phalloidin-TRITC (100 µg/ml stock; Sigma) was added to
the secondary antibody incubation. To label protein aggregates, we
added a 1:100 dilution of thioflavine S (direct yellow 7, 1 mg/ml stock; Sigma) to the secondary incubation. Samples
were washed three times (in PBT), mounted, and imaged with an
Olympus 1× 70 inverted confocal microscope and Fluoview digital imaging software.
To detect the BCHS protein, we dissected staged larval and adult
tissues, fixed them (PBS, 3.5% paraformaldehyde) for 25 min at room
temperature, and washed them three times in PBT. Samples were incubated
in BCHS antibody (1:50 dilution; affinity-purified) and with either
ELAV antibody (1:1000 dilution; Developmental Studies Hybridoma
Bank, Iowa City, IA) or REPO antibody (preabsorbed fixed
embryos, 1:1000 dilution; Gerd Technau, University of Mainz, Mainz,
Germany) overnight at 4°C in PBT containing 3% NGS. Tissues were
washed three times in PBT and incubated in the indicated secondary
antibodies (1:200 dilution, PBT with 3% NGS; Jackson ImmunoResearch) for 1 hr. Washed samples were confocal imaged as described.
Terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated biotinylated UTP
nick end labeling analysis. Aged brains were dissected and fixed
(PBS, 4% paraformaldehyde) for 20 min at room temperature. Tissues
were washed twice in PBS, once in PBS plus 0.1% Triton X-100 and 0.1%
sodium citrate for 5 min, and then twice in PBS. The final wash was
removed carefully with 3 mm paper strips. TUNEL analysis was performed
by following the manufacturer's instructions (Boehringer
Mannheim). Direct fluorescence confocal microscopy was used to
detect fluorescein-labeled DNA strand breaks. For each CNS image a
single compressed confocal stack was made from a series of 10 optical
sections (2.0 µm each).
 |
Results |
Loss of bchs results in premature adult death
Initial work on the bchs gene began during our
characterization of the 26A salivary chromosome region and the adjacent
dissatisfaction gene (dsf) (Fig.
1A) (Finley et al.,
1998
). Since this initial study we have generated or identified
multiple bchs alleles and deletions of the surrounding
genomic region. These include Df(2L)dsf3 (bchs1) and Df(2L)dsf4
(bchs2) chromosomes, which remove ~60 kb
of sequence containing both bchs and dsf genes,
as well as the Df(2L)clot7 and Df(2L)w3 deletions (Fig.
1A) (Finley et al., 1998
). P-element insertion
alleles bchs3 (isolated in our lab) and
bchs4 [isolated by Rorth as EP(2L)2299]
(Rorth, 1996
; Kraut et al., 2001
) interrupt the first intron and
substantially lower BCHS protein expression (Fig. 1B;
also see below).

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Figure 1.
The bchs region, mutations, protein
structure, and species alignment. A, The location and
extent of deletions uncovering bchs are illustrated. The
map of the bchs genomic region and deletion boundaries
is as described previously [Finley et al. (1998) ; see flybase website
in Materials and Methods]. The location and arrangement of the
bchs and dsf genes are indicated, as are
the 402Cy P-element (w+;
dark gray) and P-elements generating
bchs mutations (bchs3
and bchs4; light gray).
The 402Cy P-element is the parent of the Df(2L)dsf3 and Df(2L)dsf4
deletions and the bchs3 insertion. It
is carried on the CyO chromosome used as a wild-type control in aging
experiments. B, The intron/exon structure of
bchs was determined by comparison and alignment of cDNA
and genomic sequences. The locations of BEACH, WD40, and FYVE protein
motifs and potential phosphorylation sites are indicated. Sites of
P-element insertion are indicated. The extent of the
bchs5 internal deletion (determined by
DNA sequencing) is indicated by the hatched bar. A
precise excision derivative, the
bchsrev1 allele, was determined by DNA
sequencing and is indicated by arrows. C,
Drosophila, vertebrate, and nematode BCHS protein
alignments were generated by comparison of the inferred amino acid
sequences. The overall size, protein domains, and amino acid sequence
of the different BCHS proteins are conserved, including the first 2500 amino acids possibly identifying functional motifs within this region.
The identified domains within the C-terminal region have the highest
amino acid identity over divergent phyla, reaching >80% over extended
regions of the protein.
|
|
Starting with the bchs4 allele, we
generated several internal deletions by P-element mobilization (Rio,
1991
; Finley et al., 1998
). These substantially alter or remove intron
1 and portions of the bchs coding sequence. For example, the
bchs5 allele deletes most of the first
intron, second exon, and much of the third exon, removing the
translation start site and the first ~200 amino acids of the protein
(Fig. 1B). Precise excisions of the
bchs4 P-element, such as
bchsrev1, restore the wild-type sequence
and gene structure (Fig. 1B, arrows). All mutant alleles of bchs, either as
homozygotes or in conjunction with larger regional deletions
[Df(2L)clot7], generated normal Mendelian frequencies of adults that
display appropriate motor, feeding, and grooming behaviors. This
includes the Df(2L)dsf3 (bchs1) and
Df(2L)dsf4 (bchs2) deletion alleles. All
bchs mutations generate males that are fertile, and genetic
combinations that are dsf+ produce
fertile females (i.e., bchs3,
bchs4,
bchs5).
In contrast to the normal survival found during larval and pupal
development, bchs mutant adults demonstrate a significant decrease in life span (Fig. 2, Table
1). When compared with wild-type controls, the mean life span is decreased between 40 and 45% to an
average of between18 and 23 d when grown at 29°C (Table 1). This
decrease in longevity includes all P-element misexcision alleles (Fig.
2A), P-element insertions (Fig.
2B), and any combination of deletions, which remove
or alter both copies of the bchs gene (Fig.
3C). Rescue of the
phenotype and a return to normal life span is seen in those
lines with precise P-element excisions that restore a wild-type
sequence and gene structure (i.e.,
bchsrev1) (Fig. 2A,
Table 1). Nor is premature death associated only with higher
temperatures. When maintained at 25°C,
bchs3/Df(2L)clot7 flies have an average
life span of 22.25 d (n = 219), whereas wild-type
controls (Canton S) have an average of 36.8 d
(n = 99). This is a similar 40% reduction in adult
life span and indicates that early death of bchs mutant
flies is not a temperature-dependent phenotype. The lack of pronounced
developmental defects, normal behaviors in young adults, and premature
death all indicate that the bchs gene is essential for
normal adult survival and longevity.

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Figure 2.
Premature death of bchs mutants.
Newly eclosed males were collected and aged at 29°C for the duration
of the experiments. A, Imprecise excisions of the
bchs4 P-element, generating
alterations in the 5' region of the bchs gene, result in
a shortened average life span, as shown by the
bchs5/bchs5,
bchs6/bchs6,
bchs7/bchs7,
bchs8/bchs8,
and
bchs9/bchs9
fly lines. Rescue of premature death occurs when the same
bchs4 P-element is removed precisely
from its bchs location, as demonstrated by the
bchsrev1/bchsrev1
line. B, P-element insertions in the first intron of
bchs reduce average life span, as seen in
bchs3/Df(2L)clot7,
bchs4/bchs4,
and bchs4/Df(2L)clot7 genetic
combinations. C, Flies containing one or more wild-type
copies of bchs, Canton S, 402Cy/Df(2L)w3,
or 402Cy/Df(2L)clot7 have an average life span between 29.0 and
32.5 d. Adults with both copies of the bchs genomic
region removed, Df(2L)dsf3/Df(2L)clot7, Df(2L)dsf4/Df(2L)w3, or
Df(2L)dsf4/Df(2L)clot7 flies, show a 40-45% reduction in average life
span when compared with controls. Mutating the dsf gene
in the case of dsf1/Df(2L)clot7 flies
does not alter average adult longevity significantly. Mean lifespan,
SDs, and p values for a selection of genotypes are
summarized in Table 1.
|
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Figure 3.
BCHS mRNA and protein expression patterns.
A, Northern blot analysis of total RNA from 20 adult
male and female heads. Wild-type (1) and
dsf1/Df(2L)clot7
(3) mutant brains express a single, nearly 12.0 kb mRNA that is absent from Df(2L)dsf3/Df(2L)clot7 flies
(2). B, Frozen sections from
wild-type pharate adults (Finley et al., 1998 ) were used for in
situ hybridization to bchs mRNA. Specific
labeling for bchs is detected in a horizontal section
through the head at the level of the antennal lobes. Labeling is seen
in cortical regions containing neuronal cell bodies and is absent from
neuropil areas. Arrows point to labeled cortical cells;
the antenna lobe (AL), optic lobe (OL), and retina (R) are
indicated. mRNA was not detected in muscles of the head (m) or
other tissues. Sections through adult thorax also show uniform
bchs labeling in thoracic and abdominal ganglia neurons
and not in other tissues (data not shown). C, Western
blot analysis of BCHS shows a protein running well above the largest
molecular weight marker (250 kDa) in head extracts from 1-d-old
Canton S (1) and
402CyO/Df(2L)clot7 (2) wild-type controls. At
this age bchs4/Df(2L)clot7 flies
(3) express some BCHS, whereas BCHS is absent
from bchs3/Df(2L)clot7
(4) and Df(2L)dsf3/Df(2L)clot7
(5) flies. At 2 weeks only wild-type flies
(1) have detectable levels of the BCHS protein.
Protein no longer is detected in
bchs4/Df(2L)clot7 flies
(3). D-F, Subcellular location of
the BCHS protein. D, Immunofluorescence staining of a
third instar larval eye disc double-labeled for BCHS (basal section;
FITC) and neuronal-specific marker ELAV (apical section;
Texas Red). The two proteins demonstrate similar
temporal expression patterns in neurons, but ELAV is located primarily
within the nucleus while BCHS is found in cytoplasm
(center; merged panel).
E, Eye disc (ED), optic stalk
(OS), and attached larval optic lobe (OL)
are stained for BCHS (FITC). The protein is found along the entire
length of photoreceptor axons. The inset is an enhanced
intensity image showing BCHS extending as far as growth cones. This
pattern is visible only because of the lack of BCHS expression in
surrounding undifferentiated neuroblasts at this developmental time
point. F, Mature BCHS expression pattern in a retina
(R) and laminal ganglion (LG)
optical section of a 2-week-old
dsf1/Df(2L)clot7 adult
(n = 9). BCHS protein levels are still high in
older adults (consistent with Western blots). The protein remains
located in the cytoplasm of retinal axons and in laminal ganglia.
G, Enhanced image of an identically prepared retina and
attached CNS from an age-matched bchs mutant
[Df(2L)dsf3/Df(2L)clot7; n = 11]. This level of
staining is similar to secondary antibody alone and is substantially
below the staining of bchs+
animals.
|
|
Characterization of the bchs gene and protein
Genomic DNA from the bchs region was used to probe
adult cDNA libraries. Thirty-four cDNAs were identified and fully or
partially sequenced. Analysis and alignment of these sequences yielded
a single continuous inferred mRNA for the bchs gene.
The bchs mRNA consists of 11,140 nucleotides with a single
open reading frame of 10,476 nucleotides. The mRNA encodes a predicted
protein of 3492 amino acids with a molecular weight of 389,755 Da. We
verified the mRNA sequence and mapped intron-exon junctions by direct
sequencing of the 15 kb bchs genomic region (Fig.
1B) and later verified these conclusions by using
sequence data from the Drosophila genome project, which
identified the gene as CG9011 and CG14001. Database screens and
sequence homology comparisons reveal two distinct regions within the
protein, a novel N-terminal portion (nearly 2500 amino acids) and a
motif-rich C terminus containing three identifiable domains.
The first of these domains, termed BEACH, originally was classified in
the lyst family of genes (lysosomal trafficking regulator) (Barbosa et al., 1996
; Nagle et al., 1996
; Tchernev et al., 2002
). Recessive mutations in lyst cause the beige phenotype in
mice and the Chediak-Higashi syndrome in humans. Both disorders are associated with lysosomal metabolism, trafficking, and protein-sorting defects. Humans and mice demonstrate pigmentation defects; however, humans have the additional pathology of immune disorders and mental retardation (Nagle et al., 1996
; Faigle et al., 1998
). As with other
BEACH-containing proteins, BCHS also has a series of WD40 repeats that
are thought to mediate protein-protein interactions (Neer et al.,
1994
).
The BCHS C terminus ends in a cysteine-rich FYVE finger domain (Fig.
1B) (Burd and Emr, 1998
; Corvera et al., 1999
;
Stenmark and Aasland, 1999
; Wurmser et al., 1999
; Cormont et al.,
2001
). This motif is found in an independent set of proteins with
vesicle transport and protein-processing functions. Recent work
indicates that FYVE fingers function as phosphatidyl inositol
3-phosphate [PtdIns(3)P] binding modules and downstream effectors of
Rab protein signaling cascade (Kutateladze et al., 1999
; Cormont et
al., 2001
). BCHS is the first identified protein to contain both BEACH
and FYVE domains (Stenmark and Aasland, 1999
).
Of the several hundred amino acids in BCHS capable of being
phosphorylated, seven residues have surrounding sequence consensus motifs consistent with potential kinase phosphorylation sites (Fig.
1B; 1 tyrosine, 4 serines, and 2 threonines). These
residues may act as phosphorylation and interaction sites for a range
of adapter and regulatory proteins functioning through SH2 or PTB domains (Shoelson, 1997
).
Aside from potential phosphorylation sites, the first 2500 amino acids of BCHS lack significant homology to any previously identified protein or functional domain. However, comparison of EST and
genomic sequences from different species reveals strong conservation of
this region in novel proteins from nematodes (NP502420, NP502421,
NP502422) to humans (KIAA0993) and mice (X144441).
Indeed, using the Drosophila sequence as a scaffold, we have
assembled the nearly complete amino acid sequence for worm, mouse, and
human BCHS. The degree of amino acid identity among these different proteins is illustrated in Figure 1C. For identifiable
motifs, like the BEACH domain, identity between Drosophila
and human BCHS can be >80% over 400 amino acids. In addition, the
overall protein size and motif organization are also highly conserved
between divergent species. The continuous homology and the multiple
regions of high identity across the length of different BCHS proteins strongly suggest that they are conserved orthologs and are likely to
perform similar cellular functions.
BCHS expression pattern and subcellular location
As a step toward characterizing bchs function, we
examined the temporal and tissue expression patterns of the
bchs RNA. Northern blot analysis reveals a nearly 12.0 kb
transcript from adult head tissues of both wild-type and
dsf1 mutant flies that is absent from
bchs deletion alleles [Df(2L)dsf3] (Fig. 3A).
In situ hybridization analysis of frozen sections reveals uniform levels of the bchs mRNA throughout the young adult
CNS, but none in surrounding adipose or muscle tissues (Fig.
3B). The signal is strongest in outer cortical regions of
the CNS, areas dense in neuronal cell bodies (Fig. 3,
arrows). The mRNA is not detected in regions of neuropil
(axonal projections). A similar pattern of bchs neuronal
expression is found in the cortical layer of the adult ventral ganglia
(data not shown).
Immunoblot analysis with BCHS-specific antibodies identifies a large
protein in neuronal tissue from young control animals and
bchs4 mutants, which is absent in
Df(2L)dsf3/Df(2L)clot7 and
bchs3/Df(2L)clot7 flies (Fig.
3C). At 2 weeks the BCHS protein is not detected in head
preparations from any mutant strains, including bchs4 animals. At this time wild-type BCHS
exhibits a slightly faster electrophoretic mobility. These data
indicate that the null and P-element bchs alleles
substantially eliminate or lower expression of the protein (Table
1).
To determine whether BCHS could mediate some aspects of vesicle and/or
protein trafficking like other BEACH- or FYVE-containing proteins, we
asked whether the BCHS protein is cytoplasmic and present in neuronal
projections. We took advantage of the well characterized developmental
profile and stereotypic organization of the Drosophila
visual system to examine BCHS localization within neurons and axons
(Torroja et al., 1996
; Hay et al., 1997
). In the late larval eye disc
we find BCHS expressed in photoreceptor cells after neuronal
differentiation (Fig. 3D, FITC and merged image). The
cytoplasmic localization of BCHS is best illustrated by comparison with
the nuclear staining pattern of the ELAV protein (Texas Red). ELAV is
localized primarily in photoreceptor nuclei, as illustrated by its
staining in confocal sections from apical regions of the eye disc
(Robinow and White, 1988
). BCHS appears to be excluded from nucleus and
instead generates a lattice-like staining pattern in confocal sections
from basal regions of the disc. This indicates that BCHS is cytoplasmic
within the eight neurons making up an ommatidial cluster. The bright
central staining in each ommatidium marks BCHS in the confluence of
photoreceptor axons before their projection toward the optic lobes of
the CNS.
An examination of larval eye discs that remain attached to the brain
reveals the presence of the BCHS protein in neuronal projections (Fig.
3E). Most notably, the protein can be followed in axons
projecting down the optic stalk and into the developing optic lobes. At
this developmental time point BCHS reaches as far as growth cones and
is visible only because of the lack of its expression in the
surrounding neuroblasts. Later this staining pattern would be obscured
by ubiquitous BCHS expression within neurons of this region. The
enlarged inset image highlights the presence of BCHS within the
photoreceptor cytoplasm.
We do not detect BCHS in glia or in most adult motor neuron projections
(data not shown). Consistent with results from in situ and
immunoblot analysis of adult brains, BCHS expression remains high in
neuronal cytoplasm and projections, as shown in the 2-week-old adult
retina and laminal ganglia (Fig. 3F). BCHS is absent
from retinal or other neuronal tissue from age-matched null controls,
as seen in an enhanced image (fivefold enhancement) with staining
equivalent to secondary antibody alone (Fig. 3G). Together
these data show that BCHS is present in neuronal cytoplasm and is
present in CNS projections, which is consistent with a function in
intracellular vesicle transport or protein trafficking.
bchs mutants demonstrate
extensive neurodegeneration
Extensive expression of BCHS in the CNS and neural projections and
its continued presence in older adults suggested that premature death
is the result of progressive deterioration in neural tissues. Initial
light microscopy and phase-contrast images of fixed tissues from
bchs mutants showed a general loss of CNS size and
morphology. The progressive nature of the bchs neural
degenerative phenotype is best illustrated in the well defined and
ordered structure of the adult retina.
Plastic-embedded tangential sections from 1-d-old wild-type and
bchs3/Df(2L)clot7 adults show
normal development of retinal structures. Ommatidia have the correct
number of cells, and rhabdomeres are in the appropriate orientation
(Fig. 4A,B). At 10 d the wild-type controls have normal mature ommatidial structures (Fig.
4C), whereas the
bchs3/Df(2L)clot7 adults show signs of
degeneration (Fig. 4C). We find the beginnings of
architectural disorganization as well as the development of vacuoles
between clusters of ommatidia (Fig. 4D, indicated by
arrows). At 14 d the structure of wild-type retinas still appears robust, with only an occasional vacuole being detected (Fig. 4E, arrow). At this time
retinal structures from bchs3/Df(2L)clot7
mutants show increased degeneration (Fig. 4F)
(Alloway et al., 2000
). There is substantial loss of ommatidial
morphology, a condensation of individual rhabdomeres, and the
development of large vacuoles between ommatidia (Fig.
4F, arrows), all tissue-specific features
of a progressive degenerative process (Alloway et al., 2000
).

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Figure 4.
Neural degeneration and apoptosis in
bchs mutants. A-F, Plastic-embedded
tangential sections (1 µm) of adult retina stained with methylene
blue. Minor differences in early ommatidial morphology are attributable
to the depth of each individual section and position within a given
eye. A, Retinal morphology of Canton S
controls at 1 d of age is very similar to that of
bchs3/Df(2L)clot7
(B) individuals of the same age.
C, At 10 d wild-type controls demonstrate the
mature architecture and cellular morphology of
Drosophila retina, whereas age-matched
bchs3/Df(2L)clot7 flies
(D) show the first signs of degeneration
(vacuoles noted by arrows). E, At 14 d of age the wild-type retinas appear healthy and intact, with only the
rare development of small vacuoles (arrow).
F, At 14 d the degeneration detected earlier in
bchs3/Df(2L)clot7 mutant flies has
progressed further. There is a substantial loss of ommatidial
architecture and an enlargement of vacuoles (arrows).
G, H, Frontal sections (1 µm) from 10-d-old adults
taken at the same depth within the head, near the central complex, as
noted by the esophagus (E, arrows) and
fan-shaped (FB) and ellipsoid bodies
(EB). G, A section taken from 10-d-old
controls demonstrates the characteristic organization and size of
mature Drosophila neural structures. H,
Age-matched section from a
bchs3/Df(2L)clot7 fly shows the
presence of retinal degeneration (arrow) as well as
atrophy of laminal (LG) and medullary
(MG) ganglia, inferior lateral deutocerebrum
(ILD), superior lateral (SLPr) and medial
(SMPr) protocerebrum, and subesophageal ganglia
(SOG) structures of the CNS. Nuclei and background
appear darker in this image because of slight image enhancement.
I, J, In situ TUNEL analysis of
2-week-old brains. In wild-type brains (I)
the arrows indicate the limited number of cells
undergoing apoptosis [402CyO/Df(2L)clot7; n = 10]. bchs null brains (J) have
extensive TUNEL labeling, indicating significant numbers of cells
undergoing apoptosis in most cortical regions of the CNS
[Df(2L)dsf3/Df(2L)clot7; n = 7].
|
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The neural degeneration associated with loss of bchs is not
limited to the retina. In comparing plastic-embedded frontal sections from the same depth within the head from aged wild-type
(n = 7 from 10 to 14 d) (Fig. 4G) and
bchs3/Df(2L)clot7 (n = 10 from 10 to 14 d) (Fig. 4H) individuals, we consistently find atrophy of neural tissues in mutant animals. Using
the esophagus (Fig. 4E, arrows) as a
further positional landmark and starting at the periphery and working
toward the central regions of the CNS, we find the retinal degeneration
as demonstrated in Figure 4, D and F
(arrow), clearly visible down the length of individual
ommatidia. Loss of tissue size and morphology is also apparent in the
laminal and medullary ganglia, inferior lateral deutocerebrum, superior
lateral and medial protocerebrum, subesophageal ganglia, and fan-shaped
and ellipsoid body regions of the CNS. Sections taken at 14 d
demonstrate an increase in atrophy and fragility for bchs
mutant brains. At later times mutant deterioration is significant
enough to make the production of quality, complete sections to examine
CNS morphology extremely difficult. Nevertheless, regions of sections
from such older adults indicate a continued decrease in brain volume.
In addition, dissected brains of multiple genotypes used for confocal
microscopy (Figs. 4I,J,
5A,B) show an approximately
one-sixth decrease in linear dimension, indicating an ~40% decrease
in volume. Unlike in other characterized Drosophila
mutations, which show CNS-wide neural degeneration and early adult
death, we do not detect extensive vacuolization of bchs
mutant brains. Occasional vacuoles that do develop are indicated (Fig.
4H, arrows).

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Figure 5.
CNS protein aggregate formation.
A-G, Single 0.2 µm transverse optical sections taken
at least 5 µm into adult CNS. A, Optical section from
an 11-d-old wild-type adult brain (n = 27) stained
for actin (phalloidin-TRITC, Texas Red) and ubiquitin
(FITC). Normal flies have a consistent pattern of actin
and ubiquitin proteins within the CNS. Actin is enriched in neural
projections and regions of synaptic innervation, whereas ubiquitin is
stained uniformly throughout the entire CNS. B,
Age-matched bchs null brains (n = 53) have deposits of ubiquitin in the CNS, mainly in regions of
neuropil. C, Confocal images of 10-d-old wild-type
controls (n = 20) stained for thioflavine S
(green) and anti-ubiquitin (TexR).
D, Identical images from age-matched
bchs3/Df(2L)clot7 flies
(n = 15) stained with thioflavine S and for
ubiquitin aggregates. E, Confocal sections from 11-d-old
Df(2L)dsf3/Df(2L)clot7 adult brain (n = 22) stained
for APPL (TexR) and ubiquitin (FITC).
Drosophila APPL colocalizes with ubiquitin deposits in
the CNS. F, APPL aggregates do not form in 2-week-old
wild-type controls (n = 12). G,
Inset enlargement (through portions of the mushroom
body) shows the close association of ubiquitin and APPL in protein
aggregates.
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With the use of a range of light microscopy staining techniques for
sectioned tissues, typically used to characterize the loss of neural
morphology or development of neural tangles (including silver
staining), we failed to detect obvious differences between the brains
from aged bchs mutants and their wild-type counterparts (data not shown). However, we do find the development of dark inclusions throughout the CNS of older bchs flies, using
phase-contrast light microscopy on fixed whole-mount preparations. This
indicated the possible development of neural inclusions, which may be
associated with the degeneration and premature death found with
bchs mutants.
To characterize the temporal development and composition of these CNS
inclusions better, we coupled chemical and immunohistochemical techniques used in the detection of protein aggregates with confocal microscopy of dissected, fixed Drosophila CNS preparations
from a range of genotypes and ages. We began with specific proteins known to be included in pathological neural aggregates and focused on
the protein degradation peptide signal, ubiquitin. This was in part
attributable to its extensive association with a wide range of
neural-toxic protein inclusions, mechanistic conservation, and the
cross-reaction of commercial antibodies with the Drosophila protein (Warrick et al., 1999
; Lai et al., 2001
; Sherman and Goldberg, 2001
).
The 10-d-old wild-type and mutant brains were immunostained for
ubiquitin (FITC) and counterstained for actin (Texas Red). Confocal CNS
sections from wild-type flies revealed a robust and characteristic
staining pattern for both proteins (Fig. 5A). Actin primarily highlights neural projections (neuropil), whereas ubiquitin is distributed uniformly throughout the CNS. In optical sections from
identically prepared and age-matched bchs mutants, only
minor global changes were detected for actin. Unlike other studies of in vivo aggregate formation, we did not observe
incorporation of actin into inclusion-like structures (Fig.
5B) (Suhr et al., 2001
). This is in sharp contrast to
ubiquitin. In 10-d-old bchs mutants we find immunoreactive
ubiquitin concentrated in aggregate-like structures
throughout the CNS (Fig. 5B). Extracellular deposits are
even more pronounced at later ages (data not shown). Consistent with
the progressive nature of the bchs phenotype, young
bchs mutant brains do not contain these ubiquitinated
structures and are indistinguishable from their age-matched sibling
controls (data not shown).
To determine whether bchs ubiquitin aggregates
demonstrate structural similarities associated with other pathological
conditions, we coupled ubiquitin staining with the fluorescent dye
thioflavine S (Bacskai et al., 2001
). Used to detect protein
aggregates, thioflavine S binds to proteins that have taken on a
-pleated sheet conformation. It highlights abnormal in
vivo and in vitro protein structures (often
associated with neural pathology), including those containing A
peptide and mutant
-synuclein (Ostrerova-Golts et al., 2000
; Bacskai
et al., 2001
). At 10 d we do not detect staining or colocalization of ubiquitin with thioflavine S within the CNS of wild-type controls (Fig. 5C), nor do we detect specific staining or aggregate
formation in young bchs mutants or in age-matched controls
(data not shown). We do find a close association of thioflavine S
staining with ubiquitin containing inclusions in brains from 10-d-old
bchs mutants (Fig. 5D, inset). This
indicates that a loss of bchs results in the formation of
protein aggregates with structural similarities to aggregates
associated with other progressive pathological conditions.
Other proteins also associated with human neurodegenerative disorders
and CNS aggregate formations are conserved in Drosophila. This includes the amyloid precursor protein (APP) linked to
Alzheimer's disease (Reiter et al., 2001
). The Drosophila
homolog (APPL) is expressed abundantly in older adult neuronal tissues
(Torroja et al., 1996
). In 2-week-old bchs null brains we
find that APPL (Texas Red) colocalizes with the CNS ubiquitinated
inclusions (FITC) (Fig. 5E). Once again, these structures
are genotype- and age-dependent and are not found in young
bchs mutant animals (data not shown) nor in age-matched
controls containing a functional copy of bchs gene (Fig.
5F). At higher magnification we find colocalization of ubiquitin and APPL in CNS inclusions (Fig. 5G). To
varying degrees all tested bchs mutant alleles show similar
ubiquitin aggregate formation over time, with the weaker
bchs4 allele being the least affected at
10 d of age (Table 1).
Protein aggregate formation is often toxic to neurons and can
initiate the apoptotic cell death pathway. We performed TUNEL analysis
(direct labeling of DNA strand breaks) to determine whether aggregate
formation in bchs mutant brains is associated with an increase in programmed cell death of neurons (Davidson and Steller, 1998
; Abrams, 1999
; Alloway et al., 2000
; Kiselev et al., 2000
). In
2-week-old wild-type control brains we find an average of 10-20 cells
undergoing apoptosis (Fig. 4I, arrows). In
contrast, age-matched bchs mutants show extensive CNS-wide
apoptosis (Fig. 4J). Colocalization of dying cells
with neuronal-specific (ELAV) (Robinow and White, 1988
) or
glial-specific (REPO) (Xiong and Montell, 1995
) markers was not
possible at this late developmental and degenerative time (data not
shown). However, the cortical placement (location of neuronal cell
bodies) and extensive number of cells highlighted by TUNEL labeling
indicate that the majority of affected cells is neurons. Collectively,
these results show that premature death of bchs adults is
associated with age-dependent accumulation of neuronal abnormalities.
This progressive condition is consistent with the formation of protein
inclusions containing ubiquitin and APPL and with protein aggregates
having
-pleated sheet properties. Also associated with aggregate
formation is an increased neuronal apoptotic death for bchs mutants.
Immunoblot analysis of ubiquitin conjugates
Along with extensive ubiquitination and
-sheet structure, an
additional feature of pathological protein aggregates is their tendency
to be insoluble (Sherman and Goldberg, 2001
). There is evidence that,
along with removal of problematic proteins, sequestering cytotoxic
peptides in insoluble aggregates may act as an intermediate mechanism to protect the cell from harmful secondary
effects (Johnston et al., 1998
; Marsh et al., 2000
; Bence et al.,
2001
). To determine whether bchs mutants demonstrate an
alteration in the ubiquitination pathway and whether older mutants
develop substantial levels of insoluble proteins, we performed
immunoblot analysis of CNS proteins that were obtained after sequential
protein extractions (Fig. 6) (Johnston et
al., 1998
; Mohtashami et al., 2001
). In the soluble protein fraction
(Triton X-100 extraction) we do not detect a genotype- or age-specific
change in levels of free ubiquitin or in the amounts of
ubiquitin-conjugated proteins (Fig. 6A). This indicates that overall levels of ubiquitin and the steady-state level
of soluble ubiquitin conjugates are not altered significantly for any
age or genotype that was examined.

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Figure 6.
Immunoblot analysis of ubiquitin-conjugated
proteins from adult Drosophila heads. Sequential protein
extracts from heads of (1) wild-type, (2)
bchs4/Df(2L)clot7, (3)
bchs3/Df(2L)clot7, and (4)
Df(2L)dsf3/Df(2L)clot7 flies were examined by Western blot analysis for
free ubiquitin and conjugated forms of the protein. A,
In the Triton X-100 fraction (readily soluble proteins) the levels of
free ubiquitin and high molecular weight ubiquitin-conjugated proteins
were not altered significantly for any genotype or age that was
examined (1 or 14 d). Significant differences in less soluble
ubiquitin-conjugated proteins also were not detected in young animals
after more stringent extractions (SDS fraction). B, At
14 d there is a substantial increase in the amount of less soluble
high molecular weight ubiquitinated conjugates in the SDS fraction for
all three bchs mutant combinations, but not for
wild-type controls. The bchs4 allele
(2) has a nearly ninefold increase, whereas the Df(2L)dsf3/Df(2L)clot7
deletion genotype (4) has the highest level of accumulation (22.8-fold
increase) when compared with wild-type controls. Results are summarized
in Table 1.
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Consistent with the absence of CNS aggregates in 1-d-old
bchs mutant adults, levels of
ubiquitin-conjugated proteins from the insoluble protein fraction (SDS)
are not significantly different for any particular genotype
(genotype-independent) (Fig. 6B). This reinforces the
observation that loss of bchs does not result in gross
developmental defects associated with protein processing or
turnover. However, in the insoluble protein fraction older bchs mutants do demonstrate a sharp increase in levels of
high molecular weight ubiquitinated proteins (genotype-dependent) (Fig. 6B). When normalized to histone 2B (load control) and
compared with age-matched wild-type controls, bchs mutant
brains show between a ninefold (bchs4) and
a 23-fold [Df(2L)dsf3/Df(2L)clot7] increase in levels of insoluble
ubiquitinated proteins (Table 1). Along with the formation of
age-dependent CNS protein inclusions (Fig. 5), these data indicate that
a significant fraction of ubiquitinated, aggregated proteins is in an
insoluble conformation. Given the potential role of BCHS in vesicle
transport, these data suggest that the lack of BCHS may lead to
alterations in the transport of proteins that are to be degraded.
 |
Discussion |
Loss of bchs identifies a novel degenerative pathway
in Drosophila
In this paper we demonstrate that a loss of the
Drosophila blue cheese gene results in premature adult
death. Elimination of the protein by gene deletion, interruption
of transcription with transposable P-elements, or removal of the
translational start site all result in the same premature death
phenotype. Of the 17 mutant bchs alleles tested for average
life span, all were found to die early and behave as recessive
loss-of-function mutations. For the alleles that were examined in
detail, we find a tight correlation between lack of adult BCHS
expression, premature death, and protein aggregate formation in the
CNS. These data, along with phenotype rescue in those lines with clean
P-element excisions and the absence of similar phenotype for other
mutations in nearby genes (i.e., dsf), clearly
indicate that removal of BCHS significantly reduces adult life span.
The decrease in longevity for bchs mutants is closely
associated with the progressive formation of CNS-wide protein
aggregates, which stain with thioflavine S. Although direct
demonstration of ubiquitin/APPL coaggregates will require
immunoelectron microscopy, at the level of confocal microscopy these
inclusions at least partly consist of ubiquitinated proteins with APPL.
Consistent with the thioflavine S staining of aggregates, Western blot
analysis reveals that a substantial fraction of ubiquitinated proteins is located in the Triton X-100 insoluble protein fraction. This suggests that a sequestering mechanism may be functioning to buffer the
cytotoxic effects of protein aggregate formation within the mutant CNS.
The progressive formation of protein aggregates in bchs
adults could be the precipitating factor initiating a degenerative cascade. The downstream consequences are the loss of retinal and CNS
size and morphology, apoptosis of neurons, and premature death of older
bchs mutant individuals. These phenotypes define a novel mechanism of progressive CNS-wide neural degeneration for
Drosophila.
Although there may be subtle developmental defects associated with a
loss of bchs, several mechanistic functions for the protein can be eliminated because of a notable lack of phenotypes involving gross failures in nervous system development or synaptic function. Unlike other genes with major roles in neuronal differentiation or
axonal path finding, bchs mutant animals emerge as adults at normal genetic ratios and breed with apparently normal efficiency. This
also implies that many aspects of protein trafficking associated with
earlier stages of development are substantially correct. The survival
of BCHS mutants to adulthood also suggests that the protein is not
essential for more global aspects of protein trafficking or vesicle
transport. Therefore, it does not perform similar functions to those
attributed to the Drosophila hrs gene (encoding a
Snap 25 binding protein) (Lloyd et al., 2002
). Similarly, young
bchs mutant adults do not demonstrate behavioral deficits
expected of defective synaptic vesicle release, recycling, or
refilling, such as those shown by the temperature-sensitive allele of
the GTPase dynamin encoded by the shibere gene (Seugnet et
al., 1997
; Kiselev et al., 2000
).
The neuropathology seen in bchs mutants is unlike that of
other characterized Drosophila degenerative mutations.
Recessive loss-of-function mutations in bubblegum,
drop-dead, swiss cheese, spongecake,
or eggroll often are associated with defects in either lipid
metabolism or glial maintenance of adult neuronal tissues (Buchanan and
Benzer, 1993
; Xiong and Montell, 1995
; Kretzschmar et al., 1997
; Min
and Benzer, 1997
, 1999
; Nakano et al., 2001
). When compared with
bchs, these mutations tend to have an even shorter adult
life span, serious behavioral defects, and different neurodegenerative
pathologies, including substantial neuropil vacuolization of the CNS.
In contrast, bchs mutants have a less reduced adult life
span, show few early behavioral defects, and do not develop a
significant number of CNS vacuoles. The presence of BCHS in mature
neurons and the degenerative CNS phenotype associated with its loss
suggest that BCHS has a direct role in maintaining those neurons in
which it is expressed.
A possible role in protein or vesicle trafficking for BCHS is suggested
by the functional motifs identified in the C terminus of BCHS, most
notably the BEACH and FYVE domains. Mutations in proteins containing
either the BEACH or FYVE domain result in maturation and/or trafficking
defects of membrane organelles, mainly involving the endosome and
lysosome (Stenmark and Aasland, 1999
; Lloyd et al., 2002
; Tchernev et
al., 2002
). Consistent with this function and bchs mutant
phenotypes, it is worth noting that during a dominant misexpression
screen the overexpression of BCHS in developing larval motor neurons
led to changes in synaptic structures, suggesting a role in importing
or removing proteins from axons (Kraut et al., 2001
).
The accumulation of ubiquitin-containing protein aggregates further
supports a role for BCHS in trafficking or degradation of proteins.
Although we do not find major alterations in the level of free
ubiquitin or soluble ubiquitin protein conjugates, we do detect
age-dependent accumulation of insoluble, ubiquitinated protein
aggregates and specific proteins, including APPL. This suggests that
ubiquitination still occurs but that there is a defect in transport or
degradation of targeted proteins (Hicke, 2001
; Pickart, 2001
). It is
possible that even a minor fraction of proteins with altered processing
or trafficking could generate the progressive accumulation of insoluble
ubiquitinated protein aggregates seen in bchs mutants.
Conserved degenerative pathways
A comparison of the mutant phenotypes of bchs to the
phenotypes of other Drosophila neurodegeneration models
strengthens the concept of the conserved nature of degenerative
pathways between divergent phyla. Of interest are the direct
comparisons that can be made between human and fly dominant
missense mutations in the major opsin gene and retinitis pigmentosa.
These mutations alter rhodopsin association with regulatory proteins,
changing endocytotic clearance of rhodopsin from rhabdomeres. As a
result, ubiquitinated protein aggregates form, photoreceptor neurons
undergo apoptotic death, and there is progressive retinal degeneration.
By the removal of components involved in this process (i.e., rhodopsin
or arrestin) or by the block of protein transport or apoptosis, retinal
degeneration is prevented in Drosophila (Davidson and
Steller, 1998
; Jacobson, 1998
; Alloway et al., 2000
; Kiselev et al.,
2000
). This process has notable similarities to bchs-induced
degeneration: the slow development of neural degeneration in
photoreceptor neurons, the formation of ubiquitinated protein
aggregates in certain mutant conditions, and apoptotic death of
neurons. There are several pronounced differences between the
bchs phenotype and the mutant rhodopsin-induced
degeneration. The bchs phenotype results from loss of a
protein, not expression of an abnormal protein, and its loss affects
the entire CNS, not just retinal neurons. The similarities and
differences between the two systems indicate a CNS-wide role for BCHS
in trafficking, accumulation, or turnover of proteins. This further
suggests potential connections of BCHS with a number of disorders
involving the accumulation of potentially toxic protein aggregates.
In many human neurodegenerative disorders defects in membrane vesicle
transport and/or protein degradation are thought to play a key role in
the inability of neurons to eliminate toxic insoluble peptides
effectively. Wild-type
-synuclein and huntingtin proteins associate
with membrane vesicles and are thought to be involved in synaptic
plasticity or trafficking of subcellular vesicles (Jo et al., 2000
;
Bence et al., 2001
; Sharon et al., 2001
; Waelter et al., 2001
).
Dominant gain-of-function mutations in either gene result in the
accumulation of these proteins along with ubiquitinated insoluble
aggregates. There is growing evidence that this is mediated in part via
a direct alteration in proteasome function. Similarly, an increase in
cytotoxic amyloid A
1-42 peptide
production and Alzheimer's disease may be associated with aberrant
transport of APP, resulting in altered peptide production or
degradation (Cataldo et al., 1996
; Gandy and Petanceska, 2000
; Gunawardena and Goldstein, 2001
). Thus there are clear precedents in
humans for changes in protein or vesicle trafficking that lead to
bchs-like neurodegenerative phenotypes.
The similarity of bchs phenotypes to aspects of human neural
degenerative disease and the high degree of similarity between Drosophila BCHS and the human BCHS raise important questions
concerning the role of human BCHS in neural maintenance and
neuropathology. Does human BCHS share conserved functions with
Drosophila BCHS? This seems likely given the functional and
phenotypic similarities between other Drosophila
neurodegenerative mutations and their human counterparts and the
similar phenotypic consequences when human degeneration-inducing
proteins or protein motifs are introduced into Drosophila.
Interestingly, the human bchs locus, KIAA0993, Locus Link
23001 (previously identified from partial 3' cDNAs) maps to a region
associated with several cases of familial neurodegenerative disorders.
In support of a role for mammalian BCHS in the brain, Northern blot
analysis that uses mouse bchs cDNA probes reveals a 12 kb
bchs transcript in murine neuronal cell lines and brain tissue (data not shown). Although human neuronal tissues have not been
tested for BCHS expression, the possibility remains that the human
counterpart is required for long-term function and survival of the
nervous system, especially with regard to protein trafficking and
processing. Ultimately, the identification of a novel degenerative pathway in a genetically tractable system opens up new areas of study
involving ubiquitination, age-dependent protein aggregate formation,
and their role concerning the health and survival of the nervous system.
Note added in proof. After the analysis for
Figure 1C was completed, a full-length sequence for human
BCHS appeared in GenBank under the name ALFY, NP_055806.1. This results
from unpublished work of Simonsen, Birkeland, and Stenmark. Homology
begins at BCHS amino acid 48 and extends to amino acid 3486. Identity
based on BLAST alignment is 47% (63% positive).
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received June 19, 2002; revised Nov. 15, 2002; accepted Nov. 29, 2002.
This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grants R01
MH57460 and R03 AG19614(M.M.), R01 GM56920A (B.J.T.), and R01 NS09658
(David Schubert). K.D.F. was supported by a National Institutes
of Health Postdoctoral Training Grant (Salk Institute), National
Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke Postdoctoral Fellowship,
and the Pioneer Foundation. M.M. was a member of the National Cancer
Institute-supported Cancer Center at the Salk Institute. We thank David
Schubert for his support and advice regarding the area of
neurodegeneration. We also thank Laura Knittel, David Acevedo, Michael
Blower, Carlos Arias, and Charles Peto for technical assistance and
Elizabeth Callan-Grabowski and Catherine Browning with help in
manuscript preparation. Finally, we thank Dr. Kuo-Fen Lee for use of
the confocal microscope facilities.
Correspondence should be addressed to either of the following: Kim D. Finley, Cellular Neurobiology Laboratory, The Salk Institute for
Biological Studies, La Jolla, CA 92037-1099, E-mail: finley{at}salk.edu; or Michael McKeown, Molecular Biology, Cell Biology, and Biochemistry, GJ-363, Brown University, 69 Brown Street, Providence, RI 02912, E-mail: Michael_McKeown{at}Brown.edu.
 |
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