Ogawara Midori, Takahashi Mayumi, Shimizu Takahiko, Nakajima Mitsunari, Setoguchi Yasuhiro, Shirasawa Takuji
Department of Molecular Genetics, Tokyo Metropolitan Institute of Gerontology, Itabashi-ku, Japan.
J Neurosci Res. 2002 Aug 1;69(3):353-61. doi: 10.1002/jnr.10302.
Protein-L-isoaspartyl methyltransferase (PIMT) is a putative protein repair enzyme, which methylates the alpha-carboxyl group of atypical L-isoaspartyl residues in aged proteins and converts them to normal L-aspartyl residues. Two splicing variants, PIMT-I and PIMT-II, have been reported, although their biological functions and specific subcellular substrates are still to be defined. We and another group have previously showed that PIMT-deficient mice succumbed to fatal epileptic seizures associated with an abnormal accumulation of isoaspartate (IsoAsp) in the brain. In the present study, we prepared two recombinant adenovirus vectors that contained PIMT-I or PIMT-II, respectively, in order to investigate the differential biological roles of PIMT-I and PIMT-II. These recombinant viruses differentially conferred PIMT-I or PIMT-II expressions in cultured neurons. Biochemical analyses showed that either of PIMT-I or PIMT-II effectively repaired the damaged proteins in PIMT-deficient neurons, but the concomitant expression failed to show an additive effect in the repair of IsoAsp. These results suggested that PIMT-I and PIMT-II might share a common biological function and/or subcellular substrates. In addition, we administered an adeno-PIMT-I vector into the brain of PIMT-deficient mice at embryonic day 14.5 by an exo-utero method to assess the biological effects in vivo. The result showed that recombinant adeno-PIMT improved the symptoms of PIMT-deficient mice in vivo, but only partially repaired IsoAsp in damaged proteins. The gene therapy presented in this report provided a better prognosis for the survival of PIMT-deficient mice than the previously reported anti-epileptic drug therapy. The results suggested a new reagent for gene therapy applicable to ageing-associated neurodegenerative disorders.
蛋白质-L-异天冬氨酰甲基转移酶(PIMT)是一种推测的蛋白质修复酶,它可将老化蛋白质中非典型L-异天冬氨酰残基的α-羧基甲基化,并将其转化为正常的L-天冬氨酰残基。尽管其生物学功能和特定的亚细胞底物仍有待确定,但已报道了两种剪接变体,即PIMT-I和PIMT-II。我们和另一组先前已表明,PIMT缺陷型小鼠会死于与脑中异天冬氨酸(IsoAsp)异常积累相关的致命癫痫发作。在本研究中,我们制备了两种分别包含PIMT-I或PIMT-II的重组腺病毒载体,以研究PIMT-I和PIMT-II的不同生物学作用。这些重组病毒在培养的神经元中差异地赋予了PIMT-I或PIMT-II表达。生化分析表明,PIMT-I或PIMT-II中的任何一种都能有效修复PIMT缺陷型神经元中的受损蛋白质,但同时表达未能在IsoAsp的修复中显示出相加效应。这些结果表明,PIMT-I和PIMT-II可能具有共同的生物学功能和/或亚细胞底物。此外,我们在胚胎第14.5天通过子宫外方法将腺病毒-PIMT-I载体注入PIMT缺陷型小鼠的脑中,以评估体内的生物学效应。结果表明,重组腺病毒-PIMT在体内改善了PIMT缺陷型小鼠的症状,但仅部分修复了受损蛋白质中的IsoAsp。本报告中提出的基因治疗为PIMT缺陷型小鼠的存活提供了比先前报道的抗癫痫药物治疗更好的预后。结果提示了一种适用于与衰老相关的神经退行性疾病的基因治疗新试剂。