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In recent years, increasing concerns have been raised about the environmental risk of microplastics in freshwater ecosystems. Small microplastics enter the water either directly or accumulate through disintegration of larger plastic particles. These particles might then be ingested by filter-feeding zooplankton, such as rotifers. Particles released into the water may also interact with the biota through the formation of aggregates, which might alter the uptake by zooplankton. In this study, we tested for size-specific aggregation of polystyrene microspheres and their ingestion by a common freshwater rotifer Brachionus calyciflorus. The ingestion of three sizes of polystyrene microspheres (MS) 1-, 3-, and 6-mu m was investigated. Each MS size was tested in combination with three different treatments: MS as the sole food intake, MS in association with food algae and MS aggregated with biogenic matter. After 72 h incubation in pre-filtered natural river water, the majority of the 1-mu m spheres occurred as aggregates. The larger the particles, the higher the relative number of single particles and the larger the aggregates. All particles were ingested by the rotifer following a Type-II functional response. The presence of algae did not influence the ingestion of the MS for all three sizes. The biogenic aggregation of microspheres led to a significant size-dependent alteration in their ingestion. Rotifers ingested more microspheres (MS) when exposed to aggregated 1- and 3-mu m MS as compared to single spheres, whereas fewer aggregated 6-mu m spheres were ingested. This indicates that the small particles when aggregated were in an effective size range for Brachionus, while the aggregated larger spheres became too large to be efficiently ingested. These observations provide the first evidence of a size- and aggregation-dependent feeding interaction between microplastics and rotifers. Microplastics when aggregated with biogenic particles in a natural environment can rapidly change their size-dependent availability. The aggregation properties of microplastics should be taken into account when performing experiments mimicking the natural environment.
Maintenance of triplet decoding is crucial for the expression of functional protein because deviations either into the -1 or +1 reading frames are often non-functional. We report here that expression of huntingtin (Htt) exon 1 with expanded CAG repeats, implicated in Huntington pathology, undergoes a sporadic +1 frameshift to generate from the CAG repeat a trans-frame AGC repeat-encoded product. This +1 recoding is exclusively detected in pathological Htt variants, i.e. those with expanded repeats with more than 35 consecutive CAG codons. An atypical +1 shift site, UUC C at the 5 end of CAG repeats, which has some resemblance to the influenza A virus shift site, triggers the +1 frameshifting and is enhanced by the increased propensity of the expanded CAG repeats to form a stem-loop structure. The +1 trans-frame-encoded product can directly influence the aggregation of the parental Htt exon 1.
Ten polyQ (polyglutamine) diseases constitute a group of hereditary, neurodegenerative, lethal disorders, characterized by neuronal loss and motor and cognitive impairments. The only common molecular feature of polyQ disease-associated proteins is the homopolymeric polyglutamine repeat. The pathological expansion of polyQ tract invariably leads to protein misfolding and aggregation, resulting in formation of the fibrillar intraneuronal deposits (aggregates) of the disease protein. The polyQ-related cellular toxicity is currently attributed to early, small, soluble aggregate species (oligomers), whereas end-stage, fibrillar, insoluble aggregates are considered to be benign. In the complex cellular environment aggregation and toxicity of mutant polyQ proteins can be affected by both the sequences of the corresponding disease protein (factors acting in cis) and the cellular environment (factors acting in trans). Additionally, the nucleus has been suggested to be the primary site of toxicity in the polyQ-based neurodegeneration. In this study, the dynamics and structure of nuclear and cytoplasmic inclusions were examined to determine the intrinsic and extrinsic factors influencing the cellular aggregation of atrophin-1, a protein implicated in the pathology of dentatorubral-pallidoluysian atrophy (DRPLA), a polyQ-based disease with complex clinical features. Dynamic imaging, combined with biochemical and biophysical approaches revealed a large heterogeneity in the dynamics of atrophin-1 within the nuclear inclusions compared with the compact and immobile cytoplasmic aggregates. At least two types of inclusions of polyQ-expanded atrophin-1 with different mobility of the molecular species and ability to exchange with the surrounding monomer pool coexist in the nucleus of the model cell system, neuroblastoma N2a cells. Furthermore, our novel cross-seeding approach which allows for monitoring of the architecture of the aggregate core directly in the cell revealed an evolution of the aggregate core of the polyQ-expanded ATN1 from one composed of the sequences flanking the polyQ domain at early aggregation phases to one dominated by the polyQ stretch in the later aggregation phase. Intriguingly, these changes in the aggregate core architecture of nuclear and cytoplasmic inclusions mirrored the changes in the protein dynamics and physico-chemical properties of the aggregates in the aggregation time course. 2D-gel analyses followed by MALDI-TOF MS (matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time of flight mass spectrometry) were used to detect alterations in the interaction partners of the pathological ATN1 variant compared to the non-pathological ATN1. Based on these results, we propose that the observed complexity in the dynamics of the nuclear inclusions provides a molecular explanation for the enhanced cellular toxicity of the nuclear aggregates in polyQ-based neurodegeneration.