Rhes, a Striatal-selective Protein Implicated in Huntington Disease, Binds Beclin-1 and Activates Autophagy

0301 basic medicine TOR Serine-Threonine Kinases Membrane Proteins PC12 Cells Rats Mice 03 medical and health sciences HEK293 Cells Huntington Disease Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-bcl-2 GTP-Binding Proteins Autophagy Animals Humans Beclin-1 Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinase 8 Apoptosis Regulatory Proteins Gene Deletion HeLa Cells Protein Binding Signal Transduction
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.m113.536912 Publication Date: 2013-12-10T03:28:02Z
ABSTRACT
The protein mutated in Huntington disease (HD), mutant huntingtin (mHtt), is expressed throughout the brain and body. However, the pathology of HD is characterized by early and dramatic destruction selectively of the striatum. We previously reported that the striatal-specific protein Rhes binds mHtt and enhances its cytotoxicity. Moreover, Rhes-deleted mice are dramatically protected from neurodegeneration and motor dysfunction in mouse models of HD. We now report a function of Rhes in autophagy, a lysosomal degradation pathway implicated in aging and HD neurodegeneration. In PC12 cells, deletion of endogenous Rhes decreases autophagy, whereas Rhes overexpression activates autophagy. These effects are independent of mTOR and opposite in the direction predicted by the known activation of mTOR by Rhes. Rhes robustly binds the autophagy regulator Beclin-1, decreasing its inhibitory interaction with Bcl-2 independent of JNK-1 signaling. Finally, co-expression of mHtt blocks Rhes-induced autophagy activation. Thus, the isolated pathology and delayed onset of HD may reflect the striatal-selective expression and changes in autophagic activity of Rhes.
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