Getting in Shape: Targeting the Etiology of Protein Misfolding Diseases – Celebrating Jeffery Kelly's Pioneering Work

IF 2.3 4区 化学 Q3 CHEMISTRY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
Lars Plate, Joseph C. Genereux
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This is exemplified by the development of Tafamidis,<span><sup>1</sup></span> the first clinically approved molecule to treat a disease of protein misfolding.<span><sup>2, 3</sup></span></p><p>Jeff's discovery that protein misfolding of transthyretin (TTR) is an obligate step prior to protein aggregation<span><sup>4</sup></span> established that preventing the accumulation of misfolded proteins can block disease pathology. Rigorous biochemical and biophysical characterization established that transthyretin tetramer dissociation into monomers is the rate-limiting step that initiates protein misfolding.<span><sup>5</sup></span> This critical insight motivated the development of small molecules that could stabilize the native conformation of TTR,<span><sup>6</sup></span> culminating in the development and clinical approval of Tafamidis.</p><p>Later, Jeff and his collaborators introduced the idea of protein homeostasis (or proteostasis).<span><sup>7</sup></span> Protein folding and maturation into its native structure is not only governed by the intrinsic stability of each polypeptide chain, but in a cellular environment, the large ensemble of molecular chaperones, co-chaperones, other protein quality factors, and their interacting activities maintain the integrity of the proteome for cellular and organismal health. Importantly, dysregulation of the proteostasis network can lead to insufficient protein folding capacity and accumulation of misfolded proteins, which is associated with various disease states, ranging from neurodegeneration to diabetes and cancer.<span><sup>8, 9</sup></span></p><p>Several reviews and articles in this special issue address how a detailed understanding of protein misfolding and the proteostasis network can be leveraged in therapeutic development. These contributions highlight the impact that Jeff's work has had on the broader chemistry and biology research community.</p><p>Although transthyretin amyloidosis was once thought to be rare, we now know that millions of people are carriers of likely pathogenic variants.<span><sup>10</sup></span> Following the success of Tafamidis, there are now many emerging approaches for therapeutic intervention in this disease class, as reviewed by Per Hammarström in this issue.<span><sup>11</sup></span> Another class of protein associated with systemic amyloidosis is immunoglobulin light chain, which lead to AL amyloidosis. Gareth Morgan reviews how both amyloidogenicity and the protein load contribute to the potential amyloidogenicity.<span><sup>12</sup></span> Importantly, the same kinetic stabilization strategy that worked for TTR has now been shown to be promising for protecting against AL. TTR and AL illustrate the challenge that diverse mutations present towards understanding protein folding and misfolding. To handle this challenge for the case of a loss-of-function system, Ting-Wei Mu and colleagues present a research article applying machine learning tools to predict the function of nearly saturating amino acid substitutions in GABA<sub>A</sub> receptors, whose misfolding and consequent degradation is associated with familial epilepsy.<span><sup>13</sup></span> As validation, they find a good correlation between predicted and reported clinical pathology for known diseases. Similar to GABA<sub>A</sub>, there are diverse mutations in CFTR associated with misfolding and/or loss of function, causing cystic fibrosis disease. As one of the most investigated genetic disease targets in the past few decades, CFTR has well-characterized and effective stabilizing ligands that have dramatically enhanced patient lifespans.<span><sup>14, 15</sup></span> Despite this success, Lars Plate and colleagues outline in their review how approved therapies do not benefit patients with all CFTR variants and discuss how new approaches can fill this gap.<span><sup>16</sup></span> They also address how approaches learned from CFTR can be leveraged against other membrane protein misfolding diseases.</p><p>Post-translational modifications (PTMs) are critical in regulating protein functions, giving rise to many diverse proteoforms. However, some detrimental modifications also occur, often aggravated by aging, when the damaged proteins can no longer be cleared by degradation machinery and start to misfold and aggregate. The microtubule-associated protein tau is one important aggregation-prone protein associated with various neurodegenerative diseases. Jason Gestwicki and colleagues review how the tau aggregation processes are influenced by a large range of possible PTMs.<span><sup>17</sup></span> As most aggregation-prone tau forms are cationic, interactions with other polyanionic biomolecules in the cytosol likely play an important regulatory role and can influence the nature of tau fibrils formed in different cell and tissue regions. Glycosylation is another prevalent PTM that regulates the functions of many secreted and cell-surface proteins. Matthew Shoulders and colleagues review the crosstalk between regulation of N- and O-linked glycosylation and secretory proteostasis by the Unfolded Protein Response (UPR).<span><sup>18</sup></span> While the canonical function of the UPR is to enhance the folding capacity in the secretory pathway in response to folding stress, they highlight the IRE-XBP1 s arm of the UPR as having an underappreciated role as a central regulator of the glycome architecture. As UPR signaling is dysregulated in many disease states where alterations to the glycome have been observed, the interplay may have important functional consequences that remain to be explored.</p><p>The recognition that a decline in proteostasis is linked to a wide range of disease states has motivated researchers to better understand the regulation of the proteostasis network and develop avenues to therapeutically enhance proteostasis capacity.<span><sup>19, 20</sup></span> The proteasome is one critical proteostasis component that degrades proteins that are no longer needed by the cell. Darci Trader and colleagues review how damages and declines in proteasome activity are linked to aging and disease states in not just humans but also other model organisms.<span><sup>21</sup></span> They also highlight genetic and pharmacological approaches to restore proteasome activity. Disaggregases are proteostasis machinery that disassemble protein aggregates and potentially clear toxic protein conformations. Jim Shorter and colleagues review the recent discovery of the first metazoan mitochondrial disaggregase, Skd3.<span><sup>22</sup></span> They discuss the structure, function, and diseases associated with genetic defects in Skd3. As discussed above, the UPR is one signaling pathway to upregulate the proteostasis capacity. Jonathan Lin and colleagues present research on PERK, one of the sensor proteins of the UPR and the integrated stress response that detects misfolded proteins in the endoplasmic reticulum lumen.<span><sup>23</sup></span> They assembled a dataset of PERK variants and characterized specific variants identified as risk factors for tauopathy disease, finding diminished PERK signaling. As an example of pharmacological intervention, Luke Wiseman and colleagues present a research article finding a small molecule regulator of protein disulfide isomerase (PDIA1) blocks inflammasome activation.<span><sup>24</sup></span> This study highlights that a pharmacological proteostasis regulator compound can be repurposed to influence other cellular activities.</p><p>Lastly, significant challenges remain to detect misfolded protein conformations, especially in an in vivo environment. Joseph Genereux and colleagues review new technologies for identifying misfolded proteins and their potential to reveal broader consequences about the proteome integrity in disease states.<span><sup>25</sup></span></p><p>Many of the articles published here have been contributed by former trainees and/or collaborators of Jeff, highlighting the lasting personal and scientific legacy that his research accomplishments and training efforts have made. We are incredibly grateful for his mentorship and support over the years and into the future. 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引用次数: 0

Abstract

We are excited to share this special issue dedicated to Jeffery Kelly, commemorating his 2023 Wolf Prize in Chemistry. This award recognizes his pioneering research accomplishments, which have dramatically changed our fundamental understanding of how proteins (mis)fold in vitro and in vivo while at the same time leveraging those discoveries to change the lives of patients across the globe. The award specifically refers to the latter: “for developing a clinical strategy to ameliorate pathological protein aggregation”. This is exemplified by the development of Tafamidis,1 the first clinically approved molecule to treat a disease of protein misfolding.2, 3

Jeff's discovery that protein misfolding of transthyretin (TTR) is an obligate step prior to protein aggregation4 established that preventing the accumulation of misfolded proteins can block disease pathology. Rigorous biochemical and biophysical characterization established that transthyretin tetramer dissociation into monomers is the rate-limiting step that initiates protein misfolding.5 This critical insight motivated the development of small molecules that could stabilize the native conformation of TTR,6 culminating in the development and clinical approval of Tafamidis.

Later, Jeff and his collaborators introduced the idea of protein homeostasis (or proteostasis).7 Protein folding and maturation into its native structure is not only governed by the intrinsic stability of each polypeptide chain, but in a cellular environment, the large ensemble of molecular chaperones, co-chaperones, other protein quality factors, and their interacting activities maintain the integrity of the proteome for cellular and organismal health. Importantly, dysregulation of the proteostasis network can lead to insufficient protein folding capacity and accumulation of misfolded proteins, which is associated with various disease states, ranging from neurodegeneration to diabetes and cancer.8, 9

Several reviews and articles in this special issue address how a detailed understanding of protein misfolding and the proteostasis network can be leveraged in therapeutic development. These contributions highlight the impact that Jeff's work has had on the broader chemistry and biology research community.

Although transthyretin amyloidosis was once thought to be rare, we now know that millions of people are carriers of likely pathogenic variants.10 Following the success of Tafamidis, there are now many emerging approaches for therapeutic intervention in this disease class, as reviewed by Per Hammarström in this issue.11 Another class of protein associated with systemic amyloidosis is immunoglobulin light chain, which lead to AL amyloidosis. Gareth Morgan reviews how both amyloidogenicity and the protein load contribute to the potential amyloidogenicity.12 Importantly, the same kinetic stabilization strategy that worked for TTR has now been shown to be promising for protecting against AL. TTR and AL illustrate the challenge that diverse mutations present towards understanding protein folding and misfolding. To handle this challenge for the case of a loss-of-function system, Ting-Wei Mu and colleagues present a research article applying machine learning tools to predict the function of nearly saturating amino acid substitutions in GABAA receptors, whose misfolding and consequent degradation is associated with familial epilepsy.13 As validation, they find a good correlation between predicted and reported clinical pathology for known diseases. Similar to GABAA, there are diverse mutations in CFTR associated with misfolding and/or loss of function, causing cystic fibrosis disease. As one of the most investigated genetic disease targets in the past few decades, CFTR has well-characterized and effective stabilizing ligands that have dramatically enhanced patient lifespans.14, 15 Despite this success, Lars Plate and colleagues outline in their review how approved therapies do not benefit patients with all CFTR variants and discuss how new approaches can fill this gap.16 They also address how approaches learned from CFTR can be leveraged against other membrane protein misfolding diseases.

Post-translational modifications (PTMs) are critical in regulating protein functions, giving rise to many diverse proteoforms. However, some detrimental modifications also occur, often aggravated by aging, when the damaged proteins can no longer be cleared by degradation machinery and start to misfold and aggregate. The microtubule-associated protein tau is one important aggregation-prone protein associated with various neurodegenerative diseases. Jason Gestwicki and colleagues review how the tau aggregation processes are influenced by a large range of possible PTMs.17 As most aggregation-prone tau forms are cationic, interactions with other polyanionic biomolecules in the cytosol likely play an important regulatory role and can influence the nature of tau fibrils formed in different cell and tissue regions. Glycosylation is another prevalent PTM that regulates the functions of many secreted and cell-surface proteins. Matthew Shoulders and colleagues review the crosstalk between regulation of N- and O-linked glycosylation and secretory proteostasis by the Unfolded Protein Response (UPR).18 While the canonical function of the UPR is to enhance the folding capacity in the secretory pathway in response to folding stress, they highlight the IRE-XBP1 s arm of the UPR as having an underappreciated role as a central regulator of the glycome architecture. As UPR signaling is dysregulated in many disease states where alterations to the glycome have been observed, the interplay may have important functional consequences that remain to be explored.

The recognition that a decline in proteostasis is linked to a wide range of disease states has motivated researchers to better understand the regulation of the proteostasis network and develop avenues to therapeutically enhance proteostasis capacity.19, 20 The proteasome is one critical proteostasis component that degrades proteins that are no longer needed by the cell. Darci Trader and colleagues review how damages and declines in proteasome activity are linked to aging and disease states in not just humans but also other model organisms.21 They also highlight genetic and pharmacological approaches to restore proteasome activity. Disaggregases are proteostasis machinery that disassemble protein aggregates and potentially clear toxic protein conformations. Jim Shorter and colleagues review the recent discovery of the first metazoan mitochondrial disaggregase, Skd3.22 They discuss the structure, function, and diseases associated with genetic defects in Skd3. As discussed above, the UPR is one signaling pathway to upregulate the proteostasis capacity. Jonathan Lin and colleagues present research on PERK, one of the sensor proteins of the UPR and the integrated stress response that detects misfolded proteins in the endoplasmic reticulum lumen.23 They assembled a dataset of PERK variants and characterized specific variants identified as risk factors for tauopathy disease, finding diminished PERK signaling. As an example of pharmacological intervention, Luke Wiseman and colleagues present a research article finding a small molecule regulator of protein disulfide isomerase (PDIA1) blocks inflammasome activation.24 This study highlights that a pharmacological proteostasis regulator compound can be repurposed to influence other cellular activities.

Lastly, significant challenges remain to detect misfolded protein conformations, especially in an in vivo environment. Joseph Genereux and colleagues review new technologies for identifying misfolded proteins and their potential to reveal broader consequences about the proteome integrity in disease states.25

Many of the articles published here have been contributed by former trainees and/or collaborators of Jeff, highlighting the lasting personal and scientific legacy that his research accomplishments and training efforts have made. We are incredibly grateful for his mentorship and support over the years and into the future. We hope that this special issue celebrating Jeff's highly deserved award serves as a tribute to the ideas that he pioneered and motivates others to make a lasting effort to improve human health.

保持体形:针对蛋白质错误折叠疾病的病因学-庆祝杰弗里凯利的开创性工作
糖基化是另一种普遍的PTM,它调节许多分泌蛋白和细胞表面蛋白的功能。Matthew Shoulders及其同事回顾了未折叠蛋白反应(UPR)中N-和o -链糖基化调控与分泌性蛋白酶抑制之间的相互作用虽然UPR的典型功能是增强分泌途径中的折叠能力,以应对折叠压力,但他们强调了UPR的IRE-XBP1分支作为糖基结构的中心调节者的作用未被充分认识。由于UPR信号在许多已经观察到的血糖改变的疾病状态中失调,相互作用可能具有重要的功能后果,仍有待探索。认识到蛋白质平衡的下降与多种疾病状态有关,这促使研究人员更好地了解蛋白质平衡网络的调控,并开发出从治疗上增强蛋白质平衡能力的途径。19,20蛋白酶体是一种关键的蛋白质平衡成分,它可以降解细胞不再需要的蛋白质。Darci Trader和他的同事回顾了蛋白酶体活性的损害和下降是如何与人类以及其他模式生物的衰老和疾病状态联系在一起的他们还强调了恢复蛋白酶体活性的遗传和药理学方法。分解气体是一种蛋白质平衡机制,它可以分解蛋白质聚集体,并可能清除有毒的蛋白质构象。Jim Shorter及其同事回顾了最近发现的第一个后生动物线粒体分解酶Skd3.22,他们讨论了Skd3的结构、功能和与遗传缺陷相关的疾病。如上所述,UPR是上调蛋白酶抑制能力的信号通路之一。Jonathan Lin和他的同事介绍了PERK的研究,PERK是UPR的传感器蛋白之一,也是检测内质网管中错误折叠蛋白的综合应激反应他们收集了PERK变异的数据集,并描述了被确定为牛头病危险因素的特定变异,发现PERK信号减弱。作为药物干预的一个例子,Luke Wiseman及其同事发表了一篇研究文章,发现蛋白质二硫异构酶(PDIA1)的小分子调节剂可以阻断炎性体的激活这项研究强调了一种药理学的蛋白质平衡调节化合物可以被重新利用来影响其他细胞活动。最后,检测错误折叠的蛋白质构象仍然存在重大挑战,特别是在体内环境中。Joseph Genereux及其同事回顾了鉴定错误折叠蛋白质的新技术,以及它们在揭示疾病状态下蛋白质组完整性的更广泛后果方面的潜力。这里发表的许多文章都是由Jeff的前学员和/或合作者贡献的,突出了他的研究成就和培训努力所带来的持久的个人和科学遗产。我们非常感谢他多年来和未来的指导和支持。我们希望这期特刊庆祝杰夫当之无愧的奖项,是对他开创的思想的致敬,并激励其他人为改善人类健康做出持久的努力。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Israel Journal of Chemistry
Israel Journal of Chemistry 化学-化学综合
CiteScore
6.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
62
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: The fledgling State of Israel began to publish its scientific activity in 1951 under the general heading of Bulletin of the Research Council of Israel, which quickly split into sections to accommodate various fields in the growing academic community. In 1963, the Bulletin ceased publication and independent journals were born, with Section A becoming the new Israel Journal of Chemistry. The Israel Journal of Chemistry is the official journal of the Israel Chemical Society. Effective from Volume 50 (2010) it is published by Wiley-VCH. The Israel Journal of Chemistry is an international and peer-reviewed publication forum for Special Issues on timely research topics in all fields of chemistry: from biochemistry through organic and inorganic chemistry to polymer, physical and theoretical chemistry, including all interdisciplinary topics. Each topical issue is edited by one or several Guest Editors and primarily contains invited Review articles. Communications and Full Papers may be published occasionally, if they fit with the quality standards of the journal. The publication language is English and the journal is published twelve times a year.
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