A molecular marker of aging and neurodegeneration is cellular increase of aggregated proteins. Accumulation and spread of misfolded proteins causes toxicity that can induce loss of neurological function. In neurodegenerative disease cases, it is known that aggregates can accumulate in one part of the brain and subsequently spread across other brain tissues. Evidently, through some uncharacterized mechanism, aggregated species can physically travel to other regions of the brain and cause toxicity as part of disease pathology. Thus, it is important to understand both the transfer of aggregates from one cell to another, and how a neuron first handles aggregated species. In mammals, cells can eliminate toxic aggregates through multiple pathways including ubiquitin mediated proteolysis, the degradation through autophagy-lysosome system, or aggregate sequestration via aggresome formation. Our lab discovered that cells can also deal with toxic aggregate build up by collecting and selectively extruding toxic cellular components, through a budding process in a large vesicle called the exopher. The exopher contents are taken up by surrounding tissues to be degraded, potentially describing aggregate transfer from tissue to tissue. This is particularly exciting in light of current research on neurodegeneration, as it has been established that human disease-associated aggregates can transfer between neurons or between neurons and glia in brain, via a largely uncharacterized mechanism thought to promote pathology. We speculate that a mechanism analogous to exopher ejection could be responsible for the transfer of toxic aggregates in mammalian cells. While conducting a large scale targeted RNAi screen of C. elegans genes to probe for important exopher-related proteins, we found several hits that acted as either enhancers or suppressors of exophergenesis. Two particular genes that we found to be important for the exopher mechanism are
ifd-1 and
ifd-2, which are unessential intermediate filament proteins that have undescribed functions. In mammalian systems, both mammalian homologs of C. elegans intermediate filaments are implicated in cytoskeletal organization and aggregate management. These homologs are known to express in neurons and have been associated with neurodegenerative disease aggregated plaques and Lewy Bodies. My studies focus on characterizing the role of IFD-1 and IFD-2 in exophergenesis and will address the relationship between and pathway ordering of IFD-1 and IFD-2. Work will address a novel role for intermediate filaments in C. elegans neurons and shed light on the exopher mechanism. 1) Melentijevic, I, Toth, ML, Arnold, ML, et al. C. elegans neurons jettison protein aggregates and mitochondria under neurotoxic stress. Nature 2017; 542( 7641): 367? 371.