Hassles with Taking Out the Garbage: Aggravating Aggresomes
- 9 May 2002
- Vol. 3 (6), 388-396
- https://doi.org/10.1034/j.1600-0854.2002.30602.x
Abstract
Diverse human diseases ranging from amyloidosis to neurodegenerative diseases are now recognized as 'conformational diseases' caused by protein misfolding and protein aggregation. Misfolded and aggregated proteins are usually handled in the cell through chaperone-mediated refolding, or when that is impossible, destroyed by proteasomal degradation. Recent evidence suggests that cells might have evolved a third pathway that involves the sequestration of aggregated proteins into specialized 'holding stations' called aggresomes. The aggresomal pathway provides a mechanism by which aggregated proteins form particulate (approximately 200 nm) mini-aggregates that are transported on microtubules (MTs) towards the MT organizing center (MTOC) by a process mediated by the minus-end motor protein dynein. Once at the MTOC, the individual particles pack into a single, usually spherical aggresome (1-3 microm) that surrounds the MTOC. Aggresomes are dynamic: they recruit various chaperones and proteasomes, presumably to aid in the disposal of the aggregated proteins. In addition, the formation of an aggresome is likely to activate the autophagic clearance mechanism that terminates in lysosomal degradation. Hence, the aggresome pathway may provide a novel system to deliver aggregated proteins from the cytoplasm to lysosomes for degradation. Although it is clear that many pathological states correlate with the formation of aggresomes, their causal relationships remain hotly debated. Here, we describe the current state of our knowledge of the aggresome pathway and outline the open questions that provide the focus of current research.Keywords
This publication has 53 references indexed in Scilit:
- Episodic Ataxia Type-1 Mutations in the Kv1.1 Potassium Channel Display Distinct Folding and Intracellular Trafficking PropertiesJournal of Biological Chemistry, 2001
- Phosphorylation-induced Change of the Oligomerization State of αB-crystallinJournal of Biological Chemistry, 2001
- Dopaminergic Loss and Inclusion Body Formation in α-Synuclein Mice: Implications for Neurodegenerative DisordersScience, 2000
- Posttranslational Quality Control: Folding, Refolding, and Degrading ProteinsScience, 1999
- Aggresomes: A Cellular Response to Misfolded ProteinsThe Journal of cell biology, 1998
- UBIQUITIN AND THE CONTROL OF PROTEIN FATE IN THE SECRETORY AND ENDOCYTIC PATHWAYSAnnual Review of Cell and Developmental Biology, 1998
- THE UBIQUITIN SYSTEMAnnual Review of Biochemistry, 1998
- Molecular chaperones in cellular protein foldingNature, 1996
- Characterization of the Active Intermediate of a GroEL–GroES-Mediated Protein Folding ReactionCell, 1996
- Estimation of macromolecule concentrations and excluded volume effects for the cytoplasm of Escherichia coliJournal of Molecular Biology, 1991