Bilirubin neurotoxicity is associated with proteasome inhibition.
Hongbiao HuangMingxing GuoNingning LiuChong ZhaoHaoyu ChenXiaoli WangSiyan LiaoPing ZhouYuning LiaoXin ChenXiaoying LanJinghong ChenDacai XuXiaofen LiXianping ShiLi YuYuqiang NieXuejun WangChang-E ZhangJinbao LiuPublished in: Cell death & disease (2017)
The molecular mechanism underlying bilirubin neurotoxicity remains obscure. Ubiquitin-proteasome system-mediated proteolysis is pivotal to virtually all cellular processes and cell survival. Here we report for the first time that bilirubin at a clinically relevant elevated level impairs proteasomal function via inhibiting both the 19S proteasome-associated deubiquitinases (USP14 and UCHL5) and the chymotrypsin-like (CT-like) peptidase activity of 20S proteasomes, thereby contributing to bilirubin neurotoxicity. This is supported by multiple lines of evidence. First, sera from patients with hyperbilirubinemia were able to inhibit the peptidase activity of purified 20S proteasome in vitro in a bilirubin concentration-dependent manner; meanwhile, the blood cells of these patients showed significantly increased levels of ubiquitinated proteins (Ub-prs), consistent with proteasome inhibition. Second, intracerebroventricular injection to adult rats or intraperitoneal injections to neonatal rats of bilirubin-induced neural accumulation of Ub-prs, concurrent with other neural pathology; and brain malfunction and pathology induced by neonatal exposure to hyperbilirubinemia were detectable in the rats during their adulthood. Third, in primary cultures of hippocampal neurons, bilirubin strikingly induced Ub-pr accumulation before the activation of cell death pathway becomes discernible. Finally, bilirubin in vitro directly inhibited both the deubiquitination activity of proteasome-associated USP14 and UCHL5 and the CT-like peptidase activity of purified 20S proteasomes, in a dose-dependent manner. Hence, this study has discovered that increased bilirubin at a clinically achievable level can act as a proteasome inhibitor via targeting the 19S proteasome-associated deubiquitinases (DUBs) and, perhaps to a less extent, the 20S proteasome, identifying a novel mechanism for bilirubin neurotoxicity.
Keyphrases
- cell death
- computed tomography
- end stage renal disease
- chronic kidney disease
- signaling pathway
- magnetic resonance imaging
- newly diagnosed
- ejection fraction
- depressive symptoms
- small molecule
- radiation therapy
- oxidative stress
- prognostic factors
- drug induced
- diabetic rats
- white matter
- spinal cord injury
- dual energy
- endothelial cells
- young adults
- image quality
- locally advanced
- blood brain barrier
- platelet rich plasma
- cell proliferation