A series of papers were collated in which genetic approaches were used to identify regulators of neurodegenerative models in
S. cerevisiae and diverse whole organism models in
C. elegans and
D. melanogaster (Figure ). As well as medium and large scale screens we also included examples of targeted small scale genetic studies of candidate genes to allow inclusion of other regulators. There are additional candidate gene studies or screens on cells lines from
Drosophila for example [
21,
22,
25] that have not been included. Data from the published literature was first used to compile a list of genes identified as regulators in various neurodegeneration models in
C. elegans (Additional file
1). For studies in
D. melanogaster and
S. cerevisiae, lists of the gene regulators was compiled and then the existence and identity of any
C. elegans orthologues was examined for each genetic regulator using the Princeton Protein Orthology Database [
26]. Confirmation of the existence of single or multiple potential orthologues generated lists of the
C. elegans orthologues of genetic regulators of neurodegeneration from studies in
D. melanogaster (Additional file
2) and
S. cerevisiae (Additional file
3). From this analysis of a total of 950 identified genetic modifiers of neurodegeneration, 675 were found to have orthologues that could be identified in the
C. elegans genome (Table ). The genes that did not have identifiable orthologues in
C. elegans are likely to be yeast- or fly-specific or simply not represented in the
C. elegans genome.
| Table 1Genetic studies for the identification of regulators of neurodegeneration models in C.elegans, S. cerevisiae and D. melanogaster |
From the combined lists, a total of 624 distinct genes encoding genetic regulators were identified (Additional file
4). An initial analysis of the genetic modifiers based on cellular function was carried out. As described previously from this type of analysis [
17] it could be seen that the genes covered a wide range of cellular functions covering 17 different classes of biological function (Figure ). There was, however, a concentration of genes in certain functional classes. Genes involved in protein folding (e.g. heat shock proteins), protein degradation and autophagy were discovered across multiple disease models. Genes involved in transcriptional regulation were identified across all the polyQ and tau-disease models. It was noteworthy that the α-synuclein disease models produced a particular concentration of regulators functional in vesicular transport (e.g.
rab-1) although these did appear, albeit less frequently, in studies on other disease models.
Of more interest was the potential identification of specific genes with overlapping modifying roles in different disease models and model organisms. Within the set of distinct
C. elegans orthologues we found 34 that had been indentified in more than one study. These are shown in Table and in an expanded version with additional information in Additional file
5. Significantly, all of these genes have human orthologues (Additional file
5). The overlapping regulators fell into several different functional classes (Table ) based on their classification in the original studies.
| Table 2Overlapping genetic regulators of neurodegeneration with orthologues in C.elegans |
| Table 3Biological processes associated with the identified overlapping genetic regulators of neurodegeneration. |
A recent study has extended the identification of suppressors of polyQ aggregation in
C. elegans [
10] by examining whether knock down of their human orthologues would suppress aggregation of mutant huntingtin in a human cell line. Of the 177 human orthologues, 26 inhibited aggregation in the HK293 cells supporting the idea that genetic regulators identified in
C. elegans would have a conserved function relevant for a human model [
23]. Three of the human suppressors correspond to the overlapping regulators in Table (
hsp-1, cct-4 and cct-5) and a fourth was an additional subunit of TCP-1 (
cct-2).
Many but not all of the overlapping genes in Table are known to be expressed in adult neurons in C. elegans where they could, therefore, have a physiological role in regulating neurodegeneration. This is clearly an important consideration as some of the worm disease models are based on aggregate formation in muscle rather than neuronal cells. It should be noted that the data available in WormBase on the cellular expression of worm proteins is variable and so the question of neuronal expression is uncertain for some of the regulators. Two genes, bli-3 and phi-49 have, however, non-neuronal and restricted cell type expression. This may suggest that they may be unlikely to be physiological regulators of neurodegeneration in the worm but alternatively they could, for example, affect release of extracellular factors that act on neurons.
The overlapping gene set included regulators identified in more than one study but only using the same or similar type of disease model in a single species (Table ). Others, however, had been identified in multiple models and/or species. Amongst the latter were, unsurprisingly, members of families with functions related to protein folding such as
hsp-1, hsf-1, dnj-13, cct-4, and
cct-5 which have key roles in proteostasis [
27]. In addition, three genes encoding enzymes involved in ubiquitination,
chn-1, ubc-8, and let-70 were identified in more than one study. The mammalian orthologues, CHIP and Ube2D2 respectively, of
chn-1 (an E3 ligase) and
let-70 (E2 conjugating enzyme) are known to interact directly [
28,
29] as are CHIP and p97 (
cdc-48.1) [
30]. Interestingly, CHIP also provides a further link between ubiquitination and protein folding pathways based on its known interactions with and ability to ubiquitinate Hsc70 and HSF1 (Figure ). These data would put CHIP at a key point in two pathways that modify neurodegeneration. The idea that CHIP is a key player in the regulation of neurodegeneration is reinforced by the evidence that it has been shown to ubiquitinate α-synuclein [
31] and ataxin-1 [
32] and to stimulate the ubiquitin ligase activity of the PD gene product Parkin [
33]. In addition, CHIP has a neuroprotective role in the neurotoxicity caused by over-expression of ataxin-1 in a fly model [
32]. Taken together with the screens included here [
14,
34] in which CHIP orthologues were found to modify neurodegeneration models including those based on tau-induced pathology, polyQ-related disorders and α-synuclein over-expression, it appears that CHIP could play a key protective role in multiple neurodegenerative diseases.
Another significant functional grouping in the shared modifiers is the three histone deacetylases,
sir-2.1, hda-1 and
sin-3 which were identified in both polyQ and α-synuclein disease models in flies and worms. The mammalian orthologues of
hda-1 (human HDAC1) and
sin3 (human SIN3B) interact directly and function as part of a protein complex to repress gene transcription [
35,
36]. A selective study on histone deacetylases in
C. elegans showed opposing effects of different deacetylases but loss of either
hda-1 or
sir-2.1 exacerbated neurodegeneration due to polyQ toxicity [
37]. Overexpression of
sir-2.1 had been suggested to increase longevity in
C. elegans [
38] leading to widespread study of the potential anti-aging effects of the related sirtuins in many species including a possible role in the effects of calorie-restriction on life span in
C. elegans [
39] and other species [
40]. It might be thought that its neuroprotective effect could be related to its general effect on ageing. Recent work has, however, largely eliminated a role for
sir-2.1 in increasing lifespan following the removal of an additional unrelated mutation in the worm strain studied. In contrast, a neuroprotective effect on a polyQ model of neurodegeneration remained associated with
sir-2.1 overexpression [
41]. A neuroprotective role of calorie restriction in
C. elegans has also been shown to be mediated by
sir-2.1 [
42]. SIRT1, the mammalian orthologues of
sir-2.1 and other histone deacetylases have been well established to regulate neurodegeneration and have been suggested as potential drug targets [
43,
44]. The use of histone deacetylases inhibitors is currently being examined for treatment of neurodegenerative diseases but there are concerns about the potential detrimental effects of these inhibitors [
43,
45].
The epsilon isoform of the 14-3-3 proteins (CG31196) was identified in screens in the fly as a regulator of polyQ-mediated neurotoxicity. This fly protein has two worm orthologues (
ftt-2 and
par-5). One of these,
ftt-2 has also been shown to be neuroprotective when over-expressed in a worm model of α-synuclein-mediated neurotoxicity [
46]. It has been shown that 14-3-3 proteins may increase lifespan and can interact with
sir-2.1 [
47,
48]. Recent work [
49] has suggested that the neuroprotective role of 14-3-3 proteins in mammalian cells may be due to inhibition of the apoptotic factor Bax [
49].
A screen of genetic regulators of toxicity due to a mutant huntingtin fragment in
S. cerevisiae identified Bna4 (kynurenine 3-monooxygenase) as the most potent suppressor [
50]. Orthologues of Bna4 exist in
D. melanogaster (CG1555) and in
C. elegans (R07B7.5) but they were not identified in any of the screens in these organisms in Table . Nevertheless, recent studies have identified neuroprotective effects of inhibition or loss of kynurenine 3-monooxygenase and the kynurenine pathway in general in a Huntington's disease model in
D. melanogaster and both Huntington's and Alzheimer's disease models in mice [
51,
52] suggesting a similar role in different organisms. Significantly, the study in
D. melanogaster [
52] also showed that loss of function in the tryptophan 2,3-dioxygenase gene (vermillion) the first enzyme in the kynurenine pathway was neuroprotective. The
C. elegans orthologue of tryptophan 2,3-dioxygenase (C28H8.11) was one of the suppressors of α-synuclein inclusion formation identified in a genome wide screen in
C. elegans [
9]. These two enzymes can be regarded, therefore, as general regulators of neurodegeneration across species and diseases.
Recent work has implicated defects in autophagy as a contributor to neurodegeneration and the process of autophagy as a key protective mechanism in preventing neurodegeneration [
53-
56]. Within the list of regulatory genes identified none encoded direct components of the autophagy machinery. Interestingly, however, the list of overlapping genes included
sir-2.1 orthologues of which are involved in signalling pathways that control autophagy and thereby lifespan [
53,
57]. In addition,
rab-1 was discovered in genetic screens as a regulator of α-synuclein-mediated protein aggregation in a yeast model and is also effective in neuroprotection in worms and flies [
58,
59]. The orthologues of
rab-1 (specifically Rab1a in mammals) were recently shown to rescue an autophagy defect due to α-synuclein overexpression in mammalian cells and in
Drosophila implicating the Rab1a isoform in autophagosome formation [
54].
A genome-wide screen for genes that modify toxicity of Aβ1-42 in
S. cerevisiae has identified 23 suppressor and 17 enhancer genes [
60]. Of these 12 have human and 11
C. elegans orthologues. Three of the conserved yeast suppressors (
YAP1802, INP52 and
SLA1) have known functions in endocytosis. In addition, the human orthologues (
PICALM, SYNJ1 and
SH3KBP1) have been found from genome-wide association studies to be risk factors themselves (
PICALM) or alternatively (
SYNJ1 and
SH3KBP1) to interact with known risk factors for Alzheimer's disease [
61,
62]. Examination of the effect the
C. elegans orthologues (
unc-11, unc-26 and
Y44E3A.4) in a worm Aβ
1-42 model confirmed that the endocytic genes had protective roles in this species [
60]. Interestingly, a protective role for
unc-11 and
unc-26 has previously been identified in a
C. elegans huntingtin polyQ disease model [
13]. Overall these studies suggest an important role for clathrin-mediated endocytosis in regulation of toxicity in different disease models.
The other overlapping modifiers in Table do not fit obviously into related functional classes but some of these genes may be generally significant. One that is noteworthy is the Acyl-CoA oxidase that was identified in all three model species in different disease models. The single orthologue in yeast, pox1, was identified as a regulator of α-synuclein toxicity in yeast [
24]. The fly orthologue FBgn0027572 (CG5009) was identified in a genome wide screen for regulators of polyQ ataxin-3-mediated neurodegeneration in the eye where its over-expression suppressed the phenotype [
63]. In addition, CG5009 also suppressed tau-mediated toxicity. Search of the Princeton Protein Orthology Database identifies seven orthologues of the yeast and fly genes in
C. elegans (C48B4.1, F08A8.2, F08A8.3, F08A8.4, F08A8.1, F59F4.1, F25C8.1) and an additional orthologue has been postulated (F58F9.7) [
64]. It is possible that all of the predicted worm acyl CoA oxidases could have overlapping functions. Of these orthologues, however, only the worm F59F4.1 gene was identified as a regulator of α-synuclein aggregate formation in a large scale RNAi screen where its knock down enhanced aggregation [
65] suggesting that this particular orthologue has a non-redundant role. Interestingly in the fly model CG5009 was functionally linked to protein folding mechanisms based on an examination of effects of its over-expression on defects due to expression of a dominant negative form of Hsp70 [
63]. The effect of over-expression of CG5009 was to enhance the defect, an effect that was also seen with the Hsp70 co-chaperone DnaJ-1. A single orthologue (ACOX1) is present in mammals where it is localised to peroxisomes and functions in β-oxidation of fatty acids. The potential importance of peroxisomes in general and more specifically acyl-CoA oxidase in neuroprotection is highlighted by the Zellweger class of peroxisomal biogenesis disorders in which there are severe neurological abnormalities. Mutations in ACOX1 (OMIM number 609751) are liked to clinical conditions which include a range of neurological problems. The function of acyl-CoA oxidase in fatty acid metabolism and its widespread tissue distribution results, however, in a range of clinical symptoms in conditions of reduced enzyme activity [
66]. Acyl CoA oxidase has not previously been given serious consideration as regulator of neurodegeneration in specifically-targeted studies.