Common cellular mechanisms underlie many aging-associated neurodegenerative diseases (ND). For instance, protein aggregation and oxidative stress have been shown to lie beneath the initiation and progression of many ND such as Alzheimer's (AD) and Parkinson's (PD) diseases. The thioredoxin (TRX) system is one of the most important antioxidant defenses and among its functions are not only a cytoprotective effect against oxidative stress but also chaperone function. One of the main interests in our lab is to study the implication of the TRX system in the development of ND. Caenorhabditis elegans is an attractive model system to study the TRX system since available mutants of all TRX family members are viable. To ascertain the role of the thioredoxin system in ND, we performed an RNAi screen of all known genes of the TRX family in transgenic C. elegans models of AD (by overexpression of the human beta-amyloid (Ab) peptide) and PD (by overexpression of a fusion protein composed of human alpha-synuclein (a-syn) and GFP). In these models, Ab and a-syn::GFP peptides aggregate in the cytoplasm leading to pathological phenotypes that can be easily monitored. We found that, out of all the thioredoxin genes screened, only Y47H9C.5/dnj-27 appears to have a protective effect in both AD and PD models.
dnj-27 is the orthologue of the mammalian endoplasmic reticulum (ER) resident protein ERdj5, a protein required as a disulfide reductase for degradation of misfolded proteins by the ER-associated degradation (ERAD) pathway. Using a Pdnj-27::GFP transgene we show that
dnj-27 expression is induced by both human Ab and a-syn in C. elegans body wall muscle cells. We also found that
dnj-27 expression in worms is induced by ER stress upon tunicamycin treatment via IRE-1/XBP-1 pathway and by
ero-1 RNAi, an ER-resident sulfhydryl oxidase required for disulphide bond formation in protein folding, suggesting an evolutionary conserved role of ERdj5/dnj-27 in ERAD. Phsp-4::GFP expression, a reliable indicator of the level of unfolded proteins and of UPR activation, was used to determine whether UPR activation occurs upon Ab and a-syn overexpression. Surprisingly, we found UPR activation in the AD model but not in the PD model. Furthermore, overexpression of
dnj-27 attenuated Ab-induced Phsp-4::GFP expression. We hypothesize that Ab and a-syn aggregation in the cytoplasm might affect ER homeostasis and that DNJ-27 could be involved in the maintenance of this ER homeostasis.