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Full-Text Articles in Life Sciences
Proteasome-Mediated Proteolysis Of The Polyglutamine-Expanded Androgen Receptor Is A Late Event In Spinal And Bulbar Muscular Atrophy (Sbma) Pathogenesis., Erin M Heine, Tamar R Berger, Anna Pluciennik, Christopher R Orr, Lori Zboray, Diane E Merry
Proteasome-Mediated Proteolysis Of The Polyglutamine-Expanded Androgen Receptor Is A Late Event In Spinal And Bulbar Muscular Atrophy (Sbma) Pathogenesis., Erin M Heine, Tamar R Berger, Anna Pluciennik, Christopher R Orr, Lori Zboray, Diane E Merry
Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Faculty Papers
Proteolysis of polyglutamine-expanded proteins is thought to be a required step in the pathogenesis of several neurodegenerative diseases. The accepted view for many polyglutamine proteins is that proteolysis of the mutant protein produces a "toxic fragment" that induces neuronal dysfunction and death in a soluble form; toxicity of the fragment is buffered by its incorporation into amyloid-like inclusions. In contrast to this view, we show that, in the polyglutamine disease spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy, proteolysis of the mutant androgen receptor (AR) is a late event. Immunocytochemical and biochemical analyses revealed that the mutant AR aggregates as a full-length protein, …