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Knockout of PA200 improves proteasomal degradation and myelination in a proteotoxic neuropathy

Jordan J.S. Verplank*, Joseph M. Gawron, Nicholas J. Silvestri, Lawrence Wrabetz, Maria Laura Feltri

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

2 Scopus citations

Abstract

The cellular response to a decrease in protein degradation by 26S proteasomes in chronic diseases is poorly understood. Pharmacological inhibition of proteasomes increases the expression of proteasome subunits and Proteasome Activator 200 (PA200), an alternative proteasome activator. In the S63del mouse model of the peripheral neuropathy Charcot Marie Tooth 1B (CMT1B), proteasomal protein degradation is decreased and proteasome gene expression is increased. Here, we show an increase in PA200 and PA200-bound proteasomes in the peripheral nerves of S63del mice. To test genetically whether the upregulation of PA200 was compensatory, we generated S63del//PA2002/2 mice. Unexpectedly, in the sciatic nerves of these mice, there was greater proteasomal protein degradation than in S63del, less polyubiquitinated proteins and markers of the unfolded protein response, and a greater amount of assembled, active 26S proteasomes. These changes were not seen in PA2002/2 controls and were therefore specific to the neuropathy. Furthermore, in S63del//PA2002/2 mice, myelin thickness and nerve conduction were restored to WT levels. Thus, the upregulation of PA200 is maladaptive in S63del mice and its genetic ablation prevented neuropathy.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere202302349
JournalLife Science Alliance
Volume7
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 2024

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