Neurobiology of Disease (Nov 1998)

Heterogeneous Intracellular Localization and Expression of Ataxin-3

  • Yvon Trottier,
  • Géraldine Cancel,
  • Isabelle An-Gourfinkel,
  • Yves Lutz,
  • Chantal Weber,
  • Alexis Brice,
  • Etienne Hirsch,
  • Jean-Louis Mandel

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 5
pp. 335 – 347

Abstract

Read online

Spinocerebellar ataxia type 3 or Machado–Joseph disease (SCA3/MJD) is an autosomal dominant neurodegenerative disorder caused by an unstable and expanded CAG trinucleotide repeat that leads to the expansion of a polyglutamine tract in a protein of unknown function, ataxin-3. We have generated and characterized a panel of monoclonal and polyclonal antibodies raised against ataxin-3 and used them to analyze its expression and localization. In Hela cells, multiple isoforms are expressed besides the major 55-kDa form. While the majority of ataxin-3 is cytosolic, both immunocytofluorescence and subcellular fractionation studies indicate the presence of ataxin-3, in particular, of some of the minor isoforms, in the nuclear and mitochodrial compartments. We also show that ataxin-3 can be phosphorylated. In the brain, only one ataxin-3 isoform containing the polyglutamine stretch was detected, and normal and mutated proteins were found equally expressed in all patient brain regions analyzed. In most neurons, ataxin-3 had a cytoplasmic, dendritic, and axonal localization. Some neurons presented an additional nuclear localization. Ataxin-3 is widely expressed throughout the brain, with a variable intensity specific for subpopulations of neurons. Its expression is, however, not restricted to regions that show intranuclear inclusions and neurodegeneration in SCA3/MJD.