Calcineurin stimulation by Cnb1p overproduction mitigates protein aggregation and α-synuclein toxicity in a yeast model of synucleinopathy
Journal article, 2023

The calcium-responsive phosphatase, calcineurin, senses changes in Ca2+ concentrations in a calmodulin-dependent manner. Here we report that under non-stress conditions, inactivation of calcineurin signaling or deleting the calcineurin-dependent transcription factor CRZ1 triggered the formation of chaperone Hsp100p (Hsp104p)-associated protein aggregates in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Furthermore, calcineurin inactivation aggravated α-Synuclein-related cytotoxicity. Conversely, elevated production of the calcineurin activator, Cnb1p, suppressed protein aggregation and cytotoxicity associated with the familial Parkinson’s disease-related mutant α-Synuclein A53T in a partly CRZ1-dependent manner. Activation of calcineurin boosted normal localization of both wild type and mutant α-synuclein to the plasma membrane, an intervention previously shown to mitigate α-synuclein toxicity in Parkinson’s disease models. The findings demonstrate that calcineurin signaling, and Ca2+ influx to the vacuole, limit protein quality control in non-stressed cells and may have implications for elucidating to which extent aberrant calcineurin signaling contributes to the progression of Parkinson’s disease(s) and other synucleinopathies. [MediaObject not available: see fulltext.].

Protein aggregation

Calcineurin

Protein phosphatase 2B

α-synuclein

Protein quality control

Author

Srishti Chawla

University of Gothenburg

Chalmers, Life Sciences, Systems and Synthetic Biology

Doryaneh Ahmadpour

Sahlgrenska University Hospital

Kara L. Schneider

University of Gothenburg

Navinder Kumar

University of Gothenburg

Arthur Fischbach

Max Planck Society

Mikael Molin

Chalmers, Life Sciences, Systems and Synthetic Biology

Thomas Nyström

University of Gothenburg

Cell Communication and Signaling

1478811x (eISSN)

Vol. 21 1 220

Roles of hydrogen peroxide signaling and peroxiredoxin in aging and age-related decline in proteostasis

Swedish Research Council (VR) (2020-05422), 2021-01-01 -- 2024-12-31.

Subject Categories

Cell Biology

Biochemistry and Molecular Biology

Neurosciences

DOI

10.1186/s12964-023-01242-w

PubMed

37620860

More information

Latest update

9/7/2023 9