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Disinhibition of NF-κB toxicity leads to dendrite defects in neurodegenerative diseases
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- Title
- Disinhibition of NF-κB toxicity leads to dendrite defects in neurodegenerative diseases
- DGIST Authors
- Myeong Hoon Han ; Sung Bae Lee ; Kyoung Sang Cho
- Advisor
- 이성배
- Co-Advisor(s)
- Kyoung Sang Cho
- Issued Date
- 2021
- Awarded Date
- 2021/02
- Citation
- Myeong Hoon Han. (2021). Disinhibition of NF-κB toxicity leads to dendrite defects in neurodegenerative diseases. doi: 10.22677/thesis.200000361588
- Type
- Thesis
- Abstract
-
Dendrite pathology have been observed in several neurodegenerative diseases (NDs). Although many studies have identified a few pathogenic mediators of dendrite defects that act through loss-of-function in NDs, the underlying pathogenic mechanisms of the dendrite defects remain still largely unknown. Here, I identify Relish/NF-κB as a novel gain-of-toxicity-based mediator of dendrite defects in polyglutamine (polyQ) diseases and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). In a Drosophila model for spinocerebellar ataxia type 3/Machado Joseph Disease (SCA3/MJD), a one of the polyQ disease, dendrite defects caused by toxic MJD proteins require Dredd/Caspase-8-mediated endoproteolytic cleavage of Relish to generate its N-terminal fragment, Rel68, and subsequent nuclear localization of Rel68 mediated by Charon. Furthermore, overexpression of Rel68 alone results in neuronal toxicity causing dendrite and behavioral defects in cell-autonomous manner, and I identify two novel transcriptional targets, Tup and Pros, that mediate Rel68-induced neuronal toxicity. Finally, I show that Rel68-induced neuronal toxicity contributes to dendrite and behavioral defects in a Drosophila model for ALS. Collectively, my findings suggest disinhibition of latent toxicity of Relish/NF-κB as a novel pathogenic mechanism underlying dendrite pathology in NDs.
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- Table Of Contents
-
I. Introduction 1
1.1. Neurodegenerative diseases induce neuropathic features such as dendrite defects at the early stage 1
1.2. Several transcription factors orchestrate the formation of dendrite morphology 2
1.3. Dendrite defects in neurodegenerative diseases are involved with factors acting through either loss-of-function or gain-of-toxicity mechanisms 3
1.4. Cell-autonomous function of NF-κB and its contribution to the dendrite defects in neurodegenerative diseases are not fully understood 5
II. Materials and Methods 7
III. Results 18
3.1. Relish is identified as a toxic mediator of dendrite defects induced by toxic MJD polyQ proteins 18
3.2. Dredd-mediated endoproteolytic cleavage of Relish to generate N-terminal fragment of Relish, Rel68 contributes to polyQ-induced dendrite defects 37
3.3. Increased nuclear localization of N-terminal fragment of Relish contributes to polyQ-induced dendrite defects 59
3.4. Tup and Pros mediate Rel68-induced neuronal toxicity contributing to dendrite defects induced by MJD-78Q 74
3.5. Tup mediates Rel68-induced neuronal cell death and behavioral abnormalities 85
3.6. Rel68 contributes to dendrite and behavioral defects in animal models for amyotrophic lateral sclerosis 94
IV. Discussion 106
V. References 112
VI. Summary in Korean 117
VII. Acknowledgements 122
- URI
-
http://dgist.dcollection.net/common/orgView/200000361588
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11750/16638
- Degree
- Doctor
- Department
- Brain and Cognitive Sciences
- Publisher
- DGIST
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