Amyloids are protein fibers rich in beta sheet structure that are associated with numerous neurodegenerative diseases, including Alzheimer disease. Amyloids have two major biological properties. First, they can be infectious--meaning that they can spread the altered amyloid conformation to the same protein or even among proteins of distinct primary sequence (the latter phenomenon is known as cross-polymerization). Infectious amyloids are called prions. Second, amyloids can be toxic, whether they are infectious or not. Both properties have tremendous fundamental and biomedical impact. [Het-s] is a prion of the fungus Podospora anserina involved in a defense cell suicide mechanism named heterokaryon incompatibility, which disables mixing of different strains by somatic fusion, an ubiquitous feature in filamentous fungi. The HET-s protein exists in a soluble state or in an aggregated, prion state named [Het-s]. The [Het-s] prion is not toxic by itself in P. anserina or in yeast. However cell death is rapidly triggered by the lethal interaction between 2 alleles of the het-s locus: het-S (het-"large S") and het-s (het-"small s") when the HET-s protein adopts the prion form. This prion has been extensively characterized and it is the only prion for which tridimensional structure is available to date. The critical point is that in the [Het-s] system, transgenic expression of het-s allows propagating a non-toxic prion while co-expression of het-s and het-S generates toxicity. We constructed strains expressing het-s or the prion domain only het-s(218-289) (the 218-289 fragment of the protein) as GFP fusions under the control of the ubiquitous promoter
dpy-30. The fluorescence of
pdpy-30het-s::gfp appears to be mainly diffuse in the cytoplasm while it shows strong aggregation in
pdpy-30het-s(218-289)::gfp strains. We constructed strains expressing het-s(218-289)::gfp in the touch neurons using
mec-4 promoter and observed that the fusion protein is mostly aggregated into a large fiber spanning the cell body and the proximal part of the axon. These aggregates remain to be shown as infectious [Het-s] amyloids. In future experiments, we will aim to generate neuronal toxicity through the co-expression of het-s(218-289) and het-S. This C. elegans model for prion studies, filling a gap between simple fungal systems and highly complex mammalian systems, might allow a better understanding of the molecular and cellular basis of amyloid infectivity and toxicity.