My NCBISign In

Display Settings:

Format

Send to:

Choose Destination

    Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2009 Jul 7;106(27):11125-30. Epub 2009 Jun 19.

    Secretion of amyloidogenic gelsolin progressively compromises protein homeostasis leading to the intracellular aggregation of proteins.

    Page LJ, Suk JY, Bazhenova L, Fleming SM, Wood M, Jiang Y, Guo LT, Mizisin AP, Kisilevsky R, Shelton GD, Balch WE, Kelly JW.

    Department of Cell Biology, The Scripps Research Institute, 10550 North Torrey Pines Road, La Jolla, CA 92037, USA.

    Abstract

    Familial amyloidosis of Finnish type (FAF) is a systemic amyloid disease associated with the deposition of proteolytic fragments of mutant (D187N/Y) plasma gelsolin. We report a mouse model of FAF featuring a muscle-specific promoter to drive D187N gelsolin synthesis. This model recapitulates the aberrant endoproteolytic cascade and the aging-associated extracellular amyloid deposition of FAF. Amyloidogenesis is observed only in tissues synthesizing human D187N gelsolin, despite the presence of full-length D187N gelsolin and its 68-kDa cleavage product in blood-demonstrating the importance of local synthesis in FAF. Loss of muscle strength was progressive in homozygous D187N gelsolin mice. The presence of misfolding-prone D187N gelsolin appears to exacerbate the age-associated decline in cellular protein homeostasis (proteostasis), reflected by the intracellular deposition of numerous proteins, a characteristic of the most common degenerative muscle disease of aging humans, sporadic inclusion body myositis.

    PMID: 19549824 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]PMCID: PMC2708763Free PMC Article

    Supplemental Content

    Click here to read Click here to read

    Recent activity

    Your browsing activity is empty.

    Activity recording is turned off.

    Turn recording back on

    See more...
    Write to the Help Desk