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Characterization of TAG-63 and its role on axonal transport in C. elegans.

Traffic. 2020 Feb;21(2):231-249. doi:10.1111/tra.12706. Epub 2019 Nov 06
Prerana Bhan 1 , Muniesh Muthaiyan Shanmugam 2 , Ding Wang 2 , Odvogmed Bayansan 2 , Chih-Wei Chen 2 , Oliver I Wagner 2
Prerana Bhan 1 , Muniesh Muthaiyan Shanmugam 2 , Ding Wang 2 , Odvogmed Bayansan 2 , Chih-Wei Chen 2 , Oliver I Wagner 2
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[No authors listed]

Author information
  • 1 Research Center for Healthy Aging, China Medical University, Taichung, Taiwan, ROC.
  • 2 Department of Life Science, National Tsing Hua University, Institute of Molecular and Cellular Biology, Hsinchu, Taiwan, ROC.

摘要


Model organisms are increasingly used to study and understand how neurofilament (NF)-based neurological diseases develop. However, whether a NF homolog exists in C. elegans remains unclear. We characterize TAG-63 as a NF-like protein with sequence homologies to human NEFH carrying various coiled coils as well as clustered phosphorylation sites. TAG-63 also exhibits features of NFL such as a molecular weight of around 70 kD, the lack of KSP repeats and the ability to form 10 nm filamentous structures in transmission electron micrographs. An anti-NEFH antibody detects a band at the predicted molecular weight of TAG-63 in Western blots of whole worm lysates and this band cannot be detected in tag-63 knockout worms. A transcriptional tag-63 reporter expresses in a broad range of neurons, and various anti-NFH antibodies stain worm neurons with an overlapping expression of axonal vesicle transporter UNC-104(KIF1A). Cultured neurons grow shorter axons when incubating with drugs known to disintegrate the NF network and rhodamine-labeled in vitro reconstituted TAG-63 filaments disintegrate upon drug exposure. Speeds of UNC-104 motors are diminished in tag-63 mutant worms with visibly increased accumulations of motors along axons. UNC-104/TAG-63 and SNB-1/TAG-63 not only colocalize in neurons but also revealed positive BiFC (bimolecular fluorescence assay) signals. In summary, we identified and characterized TAG-63 in C. elegans, and demonstrate that lack of this protein limits axonal transport efficiencies. Additionally, this study would aid in developing NF-related disease models in the future.

KEYWORDS: NEFH, NF, SNB-1, TAG-63, UNC-104, intermediate filament, kinesin-3, neurofilament