4.7 Article

Analysis of ER stress in developing rice endosperm accumulating β-amyloid peptide

Journal

PLANT BIOTECHNOLOGY JOURNAL
Volume 8, Issue 6, Pages 691-718

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-7652.2010.00502.x

Keywords

beta-amyloid (A beta); ER stress; BiP; PDI; heat shock protein; rice

Funding

  1. Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries of Japan [GMC0004, GMC0009]
  2. Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology of Japan (MEXT)

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P>The common neurodegenerative disorder known as Alzheimer's disease is characterized by cerebral neuritic plaques of amyloid beta (A beta) peptide. Plaque formation is related to the highly aggregative property of this peptide, because it polymerizes to form insoluble plaques or fibrils causing neurotoxicity. Here, we expressed A beta peptide as a new causing agent to endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress to study ER stress occurred in plant. When the dimer of A beta(1-42) peptide was expressed in maturing seed under the control of the 2.3-kb glutelin GluB-1 promoter containing its signal peptide, a maximum of about 8 mu g peptide per grain accumulated and was deposited at the periphery of distorted ER-derived PB-I protein bodies. Synthesis of A beta peptide in the ER lumen severely inhibited the synthesis and deposition of seed storage proteins, resulting in the generation of many small and abnormally appearing PB bodies. This ultrastructural change was accounted for by ER stress leading to the accumulation of aggregated A beta peptide in the ER lumen and a coordinated increase in ER-resident molecular chaperones such as BiPs and PDIs in A beta-expressing plants. Microarray analysis also confirmed that expression of several BiPs, PDIs and OsbZIP60 containing putative transmembrane domains was affected by the ER stress response. A beta-expressing transgenic rice kernels exhibited an opaque and shrunken phenotype. When grain phenotype and expression levels were compared among transgenic rice grains expressing several different recombinant peptides, such detrimental effects on grain phenotype were correlated with the expressed peptide causing ER stress rather than expression levels.

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