The potential role of RNA processing in regulating neurofilament (NF) subunit expression and in mediating the neuropathic effects of NF transgenes was explored by determining whether similar regulatory elements and cognate binding factors are present in NF mRNAs. Gel-shift studies were used to compare RNA-binding complexes that assemble on the 3'UTR of the heavy (NF-H), mid-sized (NF-M) and light (NF-L) NF mRNAs when radioactive RNA probes are incubated with high-speed supernatants (S100) of rat brain homogenates. RNA-binding complexes were characterized by their rate of migration in non-denaturing gels and by their ability to be competed with specific homoribopolymers. Similar RNA-binding complexes formed on probes to the 3'UTRs of NF-L and NF-H mRNAs. The complexes were competed with poly(C) and are referred to as poly(C)-sensitive complexes. Their binding sites were localized to a 36 nt sequence in the mid-distal region of the NF-H 3'UTR and to a 45 nt sequence at the proximal edge of the 3'UTR of the NF-L transcript. Although the binding sites showed limited sequence homology, the complexes were cross-competed with unlabeled probes and radioactivity in either probe was cross-linked to a 43 kDa protein. The 43 kDa protein also bound directly to NF-L and NF-H probes in Northwestern blots. Functional studies showed that deletion of the binding sites markedly increased expression of a luciferase reporter gene containing the 3'UTR of NF-L or NF-H by stabilizing the fusion transcripts. Point mutations in the NF-H binding site which prevented formation of the poly(C)-sensitive complex also stabilized the fusion mRNA. The findings reveal a common destabilizing element in the 3'UTR of NF-L and NF-H mRNAs that may be important in coordinating NF subunit expression and in mediating the neuropathic effects of the NF-L and NF-H transgenes in transgenic mice.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0006-8993(00)02389-1 | DOI Listing |
Neurochem Res
December 2024
Department of Pharmaceutical Technology, Meerut Institute of Engineering and Technology, Meerut, India.
Front Cell Dev Biol
December 2023
ERC team, NeuroMyoGene Institute-Pathophysiology and Genetics of Neuron and Muscle, Inserm U1315, CNRS UMR5261, University of Lyon 1, Lyon, France.
Neurofilaments (NFs) are the most abundant component of mature neurons, that interconnect with actin and microtubules to form the cytoskeleton. Specifically expressed in the nervous system, NFs present the particularity within the Intermediate Filament family of being formed by four subunits, the neurofilament light (NF-L), medium (NF-M), heavy (NF-H) proteins and α-internexin or peripherin. Here, we review the current knowledge on NF proteins and neurofilaments, from their domain structures and their model of assembly to the dynamics of their transport and degradation along the axon.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAutophagy
April 2023
Center for Dementia Research, Nathan Kline Institute, Orangeburg, NY, USA.
How macroautophagy/autophagy influences neurofilament (NF) proteins in neurons, a frequent target in neurodegenerative diseases and injury, is not known. NFs in axons have exceptionally long half-lives enabling formation of large stable supporting networks, but they can be rapidly degraded during Wallerian degeneration initiated by a limited calpain cleavage. Here, we identify autophagy as a previously unrecognized pathway for NF subunit protein degradation that modulates constitutive and inducible NF turnover .
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnn Biol Clin (Paris)
February 2021
DMU BioGeM, Service de biochimie métabolique, APHP, Sorbonne Université, Hôpitaux universitaires Pitié-Salpêtrière, Paris, France.
Ann Clin Transl Neurol
February 2021
Department of Laboratory Medicine and Pathology, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota, USA.
Objectives: To describe CSF-defined neuronal intermediate filament (NIF) autoimmunity.
Methods: NIF-IgG CSF-positive patients (41, 0.03% of 118599 tested, 1996-2019) were included (serum was neither sensitive nor specific).
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