βA1-crystallin regulates glucose metabolism and mitochondrial function in mouse retinal astrocytes by modulating PTP1B activity

βA3/A1-crystallin, a lens protein that is also expressed in astrocytes, is produced as βA3 and βA1-crystallin isoforms by leaky ribosomal scanning. In a previous human proteome high-throughput array, we found that βA3/A1-crystallin interacts with protein tyrosine phosphatase 1B (PTP1B), a key regula...

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Veröffentlicht in:Communications biology 2021-02, Vol.4 (1), p.248-248, Article 248
Hauptverfasser: Ghosh, Sayan, Liu, Haitao, Yazdankhah, Meysam, Stepicheva, Nadezda, Shang, Peng, Vaidya, Tanuja, Hose, Stacey, Gupta, Urvi, Calderon, Michael Joseph, Hu, Ming-Wen, Nair, Archana Padmanabhan, Weiss, Joseph, Fitting, Christopher S., Bhutto, Imran A., Gadde, Santosh Gopi Krishna, Naik, Naveen Kumar, Jaydev, Chaitra, Lutty, Gerard A., Handa, James T., Jayagopal, Ashwath, Qian, Jiang, Sahel, José-Alain, Rajasundaram, Dhivyaa, Sergeev, Yuri, Zigler, J. Samuel, Sethu, Swaminathan, Watkins, Simon, Ghosh, Arkasubhra, Sinha, Debasish
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:βA3/A1-crystallin, a lens protein that is also expressed in astrocytes, is produced as βA3 and βA1-crystallin isoforms by leaky ribosomal scanning. In a previous human proteome high-throughput array, we found that βA3/A1-crystallin interacts with protein tyrosine phosphatase 1B (PTP1B), a key regulator of glucose metabolism. This prompted us to explore possible roles of βA3/A1-crystallin in metabolism of retinal astrocytes. We found that βA1-crystallin acts as an uncompetitive inhibitor of PTP1B, but βA3-crystallin does not. Loss of βA1-crystallin in astrocytes triggers metabolic abnormalities and inflammation. In CRISPR/cas9 gene-edited βA1-knockdown (KD) mice, but not in βA3-knockout (KO) mice, the streptozotocin (STZ)-induced diabetic retinopathy (DR)-like phenotype is exacerbated. Here, we have identified βA1-crystallin as a regulator of PTP1B; loss of this regulation may be a new mechanism by which astrocytes contribute to DR. Interestingly, proliferative diabetic retinopathy (PDR) patients showed reduced βA1-crystallin and higher levels of PTP1B in the vitreous humor. Ghosh et al. show that a lens protein βA1-crystallin inhibits PTP1B activity, regulating the metabolism of retinal astrocytes. They find that knockdown of βA1-crystallin exacerbates the streptozotocin-induced diabetic retinopathy-like phenotype in mice, suggesting the possibility that the interaction between βA1-PTP1B may be targeted for diabetic retinopathy.
ISSN:2399-3642
2399-3642
DOI:10.1038/s42003-021-01763-5