Hasegawa Yuta, Yoshida Daisuke, Nakamura Yuki, Sakakibara Shin-ichi
Laboratory for Molecular Neurobiology, Graduate School of Human Sciences, Waseda University, Saitama, 359-1192, Japan.
J Comp Neurol. 2014 Sep 1;522(13):3020-36. doi: 10.1002/cne.23563.
Posttranslational modification of proteins might play an important role in brain cellular dynamics via the rapid turnover or functional change of critical proteins controlling neuronal differentiation or synaptic transmission. Small ubiquitin-like modifier protein (SUMO) is a family of ubiquitin-like small proteins that are covalently attached to target proteins to modify their function posttranslationally. Many cellular processes, such as transcription and protein trafficking, are regulated by SUMOylation, but its functional significance in the brain remains unclear. Although developmental regulation of SUMOylation levels in rat brain was recently demonstrated, no comparative immunohistochemical analysis of the cellular distribution profiles of SUMOylation components, including SUMO1, SUMO2/3, and Ubc9, has been undertaken so far. The present study used immunohistochemical and immunoblot analysis with the different developmental stages of mice and demonstrated the developmentally regulated distribution of SUMO1, SUMO2/3, and Ubc9 in the brain. During embryonic development, SUMOylation by SUMO1 and SUMO2/3 occurred in the nucleoplasm of nestin-positive neural stem cells. Although the total amount of SUMO-modified proteins decreased during postnatal brain development, intense and persistent accumulation of SUMO2/3 was detected throughout life in neural progenitor populations in neurogenic regions, including the subventricular zone and the hippocampal subgranular zone. In contrast, many neurons in the adult brain accumulated SUMO1 rather than SUMO2/3. Heavy immunoreactivity of SUMO1 was found in large projection neurons in the brainstem, whereas SUMO2/3 was almost absent from these areas. This heterogeneous distribution implies that both proteins play a specific and unique role in the brain.
蛋白质的翻译后修饰可能通过控制神经元分化或突触传递的关键蛋白质的快速周转或功能变化,在脑细胞动力学中发挥重要作用。小泛素样修饰蛋白(SUMO)是一类泛素样小蛋白家族,它们共价连接到靶蛋白上,在翻译后修饰其功能。许多细胞过程,如转录和蛋白质运输,都受SUMO化调控,但其在大脑中的功能意义仍不清楚。尽管最近已证明大鼠脑中SUMO化水平的发育调控,但迄今为止尚未对包括SUMO1、SUMO2/3和Ubc9在内的SUMO化成分的细胞分布谱进行比较免疫组织化学分析。本研究使用免疫组织化学和免疫印迹分析方法,对不同发育阶段的小鼠进行研究,证实了SUMO1、SUMO2/3和Ubc9在大脑中的分布受发育调控。在胚胎发育期间,SUMO1和SUMO2/3介导的SUMO化发生在巢蛋白阳性神经干细胞的核质中。尽管在出生后大脑发育过程中SUMO修饰蛋白的总量减少,但在包括脑室下区和海马颗粒下区在内的神经源性区域的神经祖细胞群体中,终生都检测到SUMO2/3的强烈且持续积累。相比之下,成年大脑中的许多神经元积累的是SUMO1而非SUMO2/3。在脑干的大型投射神经元中发现SUMO1有强烈免疫反应性,而这些区域几乎没有SUMO2/3。这种异质性分布表明这两种蛋白在大脑中发挥着特定且独特的作用。