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1.
Myxobacteria are predatory and are prolific producers of secondary metabolites. Here, we tested a hypothesized role that secondary metabolite antibiotics function as weapons in predation. To test this, a Myxococcus xanthus Δta1 mutant, blocked in antibiotic TA (myxovirescin) production, was constructed. This TA− mutant was defective in producing a zone of inhibition (ZOI) against Escherichia coli. This shows that TA is the major M. xanthus-diffusible antibacterial agent against E. coli. Correspondingly, the TA− mutant was defective in E. coli killing. Separately, an engineered E. coli strain resistant to TA was shown to be resistant toward predation. Exogenous addition of spectinomycin, a bacteriostatic antibiotic, rescued the predation defect of the TA− mutant. In contrast, against Micrococcus luteus the TA− mutant exhibited no defect in ZOI or killing. Thus, TA plays a selective role on prey species. To extend these studies to other myxobacteria, the role of antibiotic corallopyronin production in predation was tested and also found to be required for Corallococcus coralloides killing on E. coli. Next, a role of TA production in myxobacterial fitness was assessed by measuring swarm expansion. Here, the TA− mutant had a specific swarm rate reduction on prey lawns, and thus reduced fitness, compared to an isogenic TA+ strain. Based on these observations, we conclude that myxobacterial antibiotic production can function as a predatory weapon. To our knowledge, this is the first report to directly show a link between secondary metabolite production and predation. 相似文献
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Nicolas Jaé Pingping Wang Tianpeng Gu Martin Hühn Zsofia Palfi Henning Urlaub Albrecht Bindereif 《Eukaryotic cell》2010,9(3):379-386
Spliceosomal small nuclear ribonucleoproteins (snRNPs) in trypanosomes contain either the canonical heptameric Sm ring or variant Sm cores with snRNA-specific Sm subunits. Here we show biochemically by a combination of RNase H cleavage and tandem affinity purification that the U4 snRNP contains a variant Sm heteroheptamer core in which only SmD3 is replaced by SSm4. This U4-specific, nuclear-localized Sm core protein is essential for growth and splicing. As shown by RNA interference (RNAi) knockdown, SSm4 is specifically required for the integrity of the U4 snRNA and the U4/U6 di-snRNP in trypanosomes. In addition, we demonstrate by in vitro reconstitution of Sm cores that under stringent conditions, the SSm4 protein suffices to specify the assembly of U4 Sm cores. Together, these data indicate that the assembly of the U4-specific Sm core provides an essential step in U4/U6 di-snRNP biogenesis and splicing in trypanosomes.The excision of intronic sequences from precursor mRNAs is a critical step during eukaryotic gene expression. This reaction is catalyzed by the spliceosome, a macromolecular complex composed of small nuclear ribonucleoproteins (snRNPs) and many additional proteins. Spliceosome assembly and splicing catalysis occur in an ordered multistep process, which includes multiple conformational rearrangements (35). Spliceosomal snRNPs are assembled from snRNAs and protein components, the latter of which fall into two classes: snRNP-specific and common proteins. The common or canonical core proteins are also termed Sm proteins, specifically SmB, SmD1, SmD2, SmD3, SmE, SmF, and SmG (10; reviewed in reference 9), which all share an evolutionarily conserved bipartite sequence motif (Sm1 and Sm2) required for Sm protein interactions and the formation of the heteroheptameric Sm core complex around the Sm sites of the snRNAs (3, 7, 29). Prior to this, the Sm proteins form three heteromeric subcomplexes: SmD3/SmB, SmD1/SmD2, and SmE/SmF/SmG (23; reviewed in reference 34). Individual Sm proteins or Sm subcomplexes cannot stably interact with the snRNA. Instead, a stable subcore forms by an association of the subcomplexes SmD1/SmD2 and SmE/SmF/SmG with the Sm site on the snRNA; the subsequent integration of the SmD3/SmB heterodimer completes Sm core assembly.In addition to the canonical Sm proteins, other proteins carrying the Sm motif have been identified for many eukaryotes. Those proteins, termed LSm (like Sm) proteins, exist in distinct heptameric complexes that differ in function and localization. For example, a complex composed of LSm1 to LSm7 (LSm1-7) accumulates in cytoplasmic foci and participates in mRNA turnover (4, 8, 31). Another complex, LSm2-8, binds to the 3′ oligo(U) tract of the U6 snRNA in the nucleus (1, 15, 24). Finally, in the U7 snRNP, which is involved in histone mRNA 3′-end processing, the Sm proteins SmD1 and SmD2 are replaced by U7-specific LSm10 and LSm11 proteins, respectively (20, 21; reviewed in reference 28).This knowledge is based primarily on the mammalian system, where spliceosomal snRNPs are biochemically well characterized (34). In contrast, for trypanosomes, comparatively little is known about the components of the splicing machinery and their assembly and biogenesis. In trypanosomes, the expression of all protein-encoding genes, which are arranged in long polycistronic units, requires trans splicing. Only a small number of genes are additionally processed by cis splicing (reviewed in reference 11). During trans splicing, a short noncoding miniexon, derived from the spliced leader (SL) RNA, is added to each protein-encoding exon. Regarding the trypanosomal splicing machinery, the U2, U4/U6, and U5 snRNPs are considered to be general splicing factors, whereas the U1 and SL snRNPs represent cis- and trans-splicing-specific components, respectively. In addition to the snRNAs, many protein splicing factors in trypanosomes have been identified based on sequence homology (for example, see references 14 and 19).Recent studies revealed variations in the Sm core compositions of spliceosomal snRNPs from Trypanosoma brucei. Specifically, in the U2 snRNP, two of the canonical Sm proteins, SmD3 and SmB, are replaced by two novel, U2 snRNP-specific proteins, Sm16.5K and Sm15K (33). In this case, an unusual purine nucleotide, interrupting the central uridine stretch of the U2 snRNA Sm site, discriminates between the U2-specific and the canonical Sm cores. A second case of Sm core variation was reported for the U4 snRNP, in which a single protein, SmD3, was suggested to be replaced by the U4-specific LSm protein initially called LSm2, and later called SSm4, based on a U4-specific destabilization after SSm4 knockdown (30). A U4-specific Sm core variation was also previously suggested and discussed by Wang et al. (33), based on the inefficient pulldown of U4 snRNA through tagged SmD3 protein. However, neither of these two studies conclusively demonstrated by biochemical criteria that the specific Sm protein resides in the U4 Sm core; a copurification of other snRNPs could not be unequivocally ruled out.By using a combination of RNase H cleavage, tandem affinity purification, and mass spectrometry, we provide here direct biochemical evidence that in the variant Sm core of the U4 snRNP, only SmD3 is replaced by the U4-specific SSm4. SSm4 is nuclear localized, and the silencing of SSm4 leads to a characteristic phenotype: dramatic growth inhibition, general trans- and cis-splicing defects, a loss of the integrity of the U4 snRNA, as well as a destabilization of the U4/U6 di-snRNP. Furthermore, in vitro reconstitution assays revealed that under stringent conditions, SSm4 is sufficient to specify U4-specific Sm core assembly. In sum, our data establish SSm4 as a specific component of the U4 Sm core and demonstrate its importance in U4/U6 di-snRNP biogenesis, splicing function, and cell viability. 相似文献
5.
Claudine Belon La?la Gannoun-Zaki Georges Lutfalla Laurent Kremer Anne-Béatrice Blanc-Potard 《PloS one》2014,9(12)
MgtC is a virulence factor involved in intramacrophage growth that has been reported in several intracellular pathogens, including Mycobacterium tuberculosis and Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium. MgtC participates also in adaptation to Mg2+ deprivation. Herein, we have constructed a mgtC mutant in Mycobacterium marinum to further investigate the role of MgtC in mycobacteria. We show that the M. marinum mgtC gene (Mma mgtC) is strongly induced upon Mg2+ deprivation and is required for optimal growth in Mg2+-deprived medium. The behaviour of the Mma mgtC mutant has been investigated in the Danio rerio infection model using a transgenic reporter zebrafish line that specifically labels neutrophils. Although the mgtC mutant is not attenuated in the zebrafish embryo model based on survival curves, our results indicate that phagocytosis by neutrophils is enhanced with the mgtC mutant compared to the wild-type strain following subcutaneous injection. Increased phagocytosis of the mutant strain is also observed ex vivo with the murine J774 macrophage cell line. On the other hand, no difference was found between the mgtC mutant and the wild-type strain in bacterial adhesion to macrophages and in the internalization into epithelial cells. Unlike the role reported for MgtC in other intracellular pathogens, Mma MgtC does not contribute significantly to intramacrophage replication. Taken together, these results indicate an unanticipated function of Mma MgtC at early step of infection within phagocytic cells. Hence, our results indicate that although the MgtC function is conserved among pathogens regarding adaptation to Mg2+ deprivation, its role towards phagocytic cells can differ, possibly in relation with the specific pathogen''s lifestyles. 相似文献
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Heterotrimeric Kinesin-II Is Required for the Assembly of Motile 9+2 Ciliary Axonemes on Sea Urchin Embryos 下载免费PDF全文
Heterotrimeric kinesin-II is a plus end– directed microtubule (MT) motor protein consisting of distinct heterodimerized motor subunits associated with an accessory subunit. To probe the intracellular transport functions of kinesin-II, we microinjected fertilized sea urchin eggs with an anti–kinesin-II monoclonal antibody, and we observed a dramatic inhibition of ciliogenesis at the blastula stage characterized by the assembly of short, paralyzed, 9+0 ciliary axonemes that lack central pair MTs. Control embryos show no such defect and form swimming blastulae with normal, motile, 9+2 cilia that contain kinesin-II as detected by Western blotting. Injection of anti–kinesin-II into one blastomere of a two-cell embryo leads to the development of chimeric blastulae covered on one side with short, paralyzed cilia, and on the other with normal, beating cilia. We observed a unimodal length distribution of short cilia on anti–kinesin-II–injected embryos corresponding to the first mode of the trimodal distribution of ciliary lengths observed for control embryos. This short mode may represent a default ciliary assembly intermediate. We hypothesize that kinesin-II functions during ciliogenesis to deliver ciliary components that are required for elongation of the assembly intermediate and for formation of stable central pair MTs. Thus, kinesin-II plays a critical role in embryonic development by supporting the maturation of nascent cilia to generate long motile organelles capable of producing the propulsive forces required for swimming and feeding. 相似文献
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Calmodulin in Schizosaccharomyces pombe is encoded by the cam1+ gene, which is indispensable for both vegetative growth and sporulation. Here, we report how Cam1 functions in spore formation. We found that Cam1 preferentially localized to the spindle pole body (SPB) during meiosis and sporulation. Formation of the forespore membrane, a precursor of the plasma membrane in spores, was blocked in a missense cam1 mutant, which was viable but unable to sporulate. Three SPB proteins necessary for the onset of forespore membrane formation, Spo2, Spo13, and Spo15, were unable to localize to the SPB in the cam1 mutant although five core SPB components that were tested were present. Recruitment of Spo2 and Spo13 is known to require the presence of Spo15 in the SPB. Notably, Spo15 was unstable in the cam1 mutant, and as a result, SPB localization of Spo2 and Spo13 was lost. Overexpression of Spo15 partially alleviated the sporulation defect in the cam1 mutant. These results indicate that calmodulin plays an essential role in forespore membrane formation by stably maintaining Spo15, and thus Spo2 and Spo13, at the SPB in meiotic cells.Calmodulin is a calcium-binding protein that is ubiquitously distributed and highly conserved among eukaryotes. It contains four EF-hand Ca2+-binding sites, which are required for function. Calmodulin controls a variety of cellular processes mostly related to calcium signaling. When bound to calcium, calmodulin undergoes a characteristic conformational change to an active configuration. Activated calmodulin then binds effector proteins and transmits the signal to downstream regulators.Yeast is a genetically tractable model organism suitable for studying the biological function of calmodulin, using conditional-lethal calmodulin mutants (4). In the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, calmodulin is encoded by the CMD1 gene (5). Cmd1p is implicated in a wide variety of cellular processes, including initiation of budding and mitotic spindle formation (24). The fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe has a typical calmodulin encoded by the cam1+ gene, which plays an indispensable role in cell proliferation, dependent on its Ca2+-binding activity (18, 19, 30). A green fluorescent protein (GFP)-Cam1 fusion protein localizes to sites of polarized cell growth and to the spindle pole body (SPB) in vegetative cells (19). Thus, an essential role of Cam1 might be its regulatory function in chromosome segregation (19). The role of calmodulin in the sexual cycle has been documented to a lesser extent in previous studies. A missense mutant, cam1-117, in which the Arg117 codon is changed to a Phe codon, exhibits reduced sporulation efficacy (29), suggesting that calmodulin plays a role in sporulation in fission yeast.Spore formation in fission yeast initiates with assembly of the forespore membrane (FSM), composed of double-unit membranes within the cytoplasm of a diploid zygote cell (10, 27, 28, 34). The FSM expands to encapsulate each haploid nucleus generated by meiosis and then forms a nucleated prespore. The inner bilayer of the FSM subsequently becomes the plasma membrane of the newborn spores. During meiosis II, the SPB undergoes morphological alteration from a compact single plaque to a multilayered expanded structure (10). Such modification of the SPB is a prerequisite for FSM assembly, which occurs close to the outermost layer of the modified SPB (9, 10, 20, 21).Three SPB component proteins, Spo2, Spo13, and Spo15, have been identified as essential for SPB modification and formation of the FSM (11, 23). Spo15, a large coiled-coil protein, is associated with the SPB throughout the life cycle and is indispensable for recruitment of Spo2 and Spo13 to the cytoplasmic surface of the meiotic SPB. The latter two proteins are produced only during meiosis (23). These observations imply that the SPB serves as a platform for assembly of the FSM. Cam1 has been reported to localize to the SPB during vegetative growth (19), raising the intriguing possibility that fission yeast calmodulin is involved in sporulation through proper construction of a modified meiotic SPB. To test this possibility, we report herein a detailed analysis of Cam1 localization during meiosis and the consequence of a missense mutation of cam1 on SPB modification and FSM formation. 相似文献
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Late embryogenesis abundant (LEA) proteins are involved in tolerance to drought, cold and high salinity in many different organisms. In this report, a LEA protein producing full-length gene OsLEA3-2 was identified in rice (Oryza sativa) using the Rapid Amplification of cDNA Ends (RACE) method. OsLEA3-2 was found to be only expressed in the embryo and can be induced by abiotic stresses. The coding protein localizes to the nucleus and overexpression of OsLEA3-2 in yeast improved growth performance compared with control under salt- and osmotic-stress conditions. OsLEA3-2 was also inserted into pHB vector and overexpressed in Arabidopsis and rice. The transgenic Arabidopsis seedlings showed better growth on MS media supplemented with 150 mM mannitol or 100 mM NaCl as compared with wild type plants. The transgenic rice also showed significantly stronger growth performance than control under salinity or osmotic stress conditions and were able to recover after 20 days of drought stress. In vitro analysis showed that OsLEA3-2 was able to protect LDH from aggregation on freezing and inactivation on desiccation. These results indicated that OsLEA3-2 plays an important role in tolerance to abiotic stresses. 相似文献
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DeLacy V. Rhodes Katie E. Crump Olga Makhlynets Melanie Snyder Xiuchun Ge Ping Xu JoAnne Stubbe Todd Kitten 《The Journal of biological chemistry》2014,289(9):6273-6287
Streptococcus sanguinis is a cause of infective endocarditis and has been shown to require a manganese transporter called SsaB for virulence and O2 tolerance. Like certain other pathogens, S. sanguinis possesses aerobic class Ib (NrdEF) and anaerobic class III (NrdDG) ribonucleotide reductases (RNRs) that perform the essential function of reducing ribonucleotides to deoxyribonucleotides. The accompanying paper (Makhlynets, O., Boal, A. K., Rhodes, D. V., Kitten, T., Rosenzweig, A. C., and Stubbe, J. (2014) J. Biol. Chem. 289, 6259–6272) indicates that in the presence of O2, the S. sanguinis class Ib RNR self-assembles an essential diferric-tyrosyl radical (FeIII2-Y•) in vitro, whereas assembly of a dimanganese-tyrosyl radical (MnIII2-Y•) cofactor requires NrdI, and MnIII2-Y• is more active than FeIII2-Y• with the endogenous reducing system of NrdH and thioredoxin reductase (TrxR1). In this study, we have shown that deletion of either nrdHEKF or nrdI completely abolishes virulence in an animal model of endocarditis, whereas nrdD mutation has no effect. The nrdHEKF, nrdI, and trxR1 mutants fail to grow aerobically, whereas anaerobic growth requires nrdD. The nrdJ gene encoding an O2-independent adenosylcobalamin-cofactored RNR was introduced into the nrdHEKF, nrdI, and trxR1 mutants. Growth of the nrdHEKF and nrdI mutants in the presence of O2 was partially restored. The combined results suggest that MnIII2-Y•-cofactored NrdF is required for growth under aerobic conditions and in animals. This could explain in part why manganese is necessary for virulence and O2 tolerance in many bacterial pathogens possessing a class Ib RNR and suggests NrdF and NrdI may serve as promising new antimicrobial targets. 相似文献
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Sonia Martinez-Caballero Laurent M. Dejean Michael S. Kinnally Kyoung Joon Oh Carmen A. Mannella Kathleen W. Kinnally 《The Journal of biological chemistry》2009,284(18):12235-12245
Although Bcl-2 family proteins control intrinsic apoptosis, the mechanisms
underlying this regulation are incompletely understood. Patch clamp studies of
mitochondria isolated from cells deficient in one or both of the pro-apoptotic
proteins Bax and Bak show that at least one of the proteins must be present
for formation of the cytochrome c-translocating channel,
mitochondrial apoptosis-induced channel (MAC), and that the single channel
behaviors of MACs containing exclusively Bax or Bak are similar. Truncated Bid
catalyzes MAC formation in isolated mitochondria containing Bax and/or Bak
with a time course of minutes and does not require VDAC1 or VDAC3.
Mathematical analysis of the stepwise changes in conductance associated with
MAC formation is consistent with pore assembly by a barrel-stave model.
Assuming the staves are two transmembrane α-helices in Bax and Bak,
mature MAC pores would typically contain ∼9 monomers and have diameters of
5.5–6 nm. The mitochondrial permeability data are inconsistent with
formation of lipidic pores capable of transporting megadalton-sized
macromolecules as observed with recombinant Bax in liposomes.Permeabilization of the mitochondrial outer membrane is the commitment step
in intrinsic apoptosis. This process is tightly regulated by Bcl-2 family
proteins that control formation of the megachannel mitochondrial
apoptosis-induced channel
(MAC)2 in this
membrane. MAC formation correlates with release of pro-apoptotic factors,
including cytochrome c from the intermembrane space into the cytosol,
and initiates apoptosis
(1–7).MAC is absent from normal mitochondria but forms in the outer membrane
early in apoptosis, reaching peak conductances of 1.5–5 nS. This channel
is formed in the presence of the multidomain pro-apoptotic proteins Bax and/or
Bak
(8–13),
and may be composed of these proteins along with other components
(14,
15). Unlike Bax, Bak is
normally a resident of the mitochondrial outer membrane and is bound to VDAC2,
another outer membrane protein
(16). However, Bak is not
available for oligomerization until another pro-apoptotic protein, like t-Bid,
disrupts the interaction of Bak with VDAC2. In contrast, most Bax is located
in the cytoplasm until an apoptotic signal induces the translocation of Bax to
the outer membrane of mitochondria and eventual Bax oligomerization in this
same membrane (14,
17).Bax and Bak have multiple putative transmembrane domains; the amphipathic
helices 5 and 6 of Bax are predicted to form, at least in part, the pore of
the cytochrome c release channel
(18). Bax lacking helices 5
and 6 does not translocate to mitochondria nor cause cytochrome c
release (19,
20). Given the structural
similarities between Bax and Bak, the same helices may be important in
formation of the MAC pore by both proteins
(21). Although Bax and Bak are
certainly involved in MAC formation, the exact molecular composition of this
channel remains unknown.In this study we report that Bax and Bak are functionally redundant with
regard to MAC formation and cytochrome c release in mouse embryonic
fibroblasts (MEF). This is true despite the fact that Bak normally resides in
the outer membrane, whereas Bax is generally translocated to this membrane to
induce MAC formation. Our experimental design bypasses Bax translocation and
any underlying autocatalytic mechanism that might be involved
(22). Instead, it focuses on
formation of the MAC pore. Early MAC-associated conductance increments are
relatively small, suggesting that Bax-dependent formation of the cytochrome
c-permeable pore does not occur prior to membrane insertion of Bax.
Mathematical modeling of the conductance changes indicates that, if MAC is a
circular pore assembled by sequential addition of helices 5 and 6 from Bax
and/or Bak monomers, the mature, cytochrome c transport-competent
pore is likely a 9–10-mer of these proteins. 相似文献
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Yue J. Wang Florencia McAllister Jennifer M. Bailey Sherri-Gae Scott Audrey M. Hendley Steven D. Leach Bidyut Ghosh 《PloS one》2014,9(11)
The role of miRNA processing in the maintenance of adult pancreatic acinar cell identity and during the initiation and progression of pancreatic neoplasia has not been studied in detail. In this work, we deleted Dicer specifically in adult pancreatic acinar cells, with or without simultaneous activation of oncogenic Kras. We found that Dicer is essential for the maintenance of acinar cell identity. Acinar cells lacking Dicer showed increased plasticity, as evidenced by loss of polarity, initiation of epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT) and acinar-to-ductal metaplasia (ADM). In the context of oncogenic Kras activation, the initiation of ADM and pancreatic intraepithelial neoplasia (PanIN) were both highly sensitive to Dicer gene dosage. Homozygous Dicer deletion accelerated the formation of ADM but not PanIN. In contrast, heterozygous Dicer deletion accelerated PanIN initiation, revealing complex roles for Dicer in the regulation of both normal and neoplastic pancreatic epithelial identity. 相似文献
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Electron micrographs of serial sections show that the male sexual apparatus of Scutellonema brachyurum includes two morphologically identical spicules. Each is composed of a swollen tubular head, crescentic shaft, and leaf-like blade with membranous velum expanded from the central trunk. The spicules are concave and grooved on the ventral side and convex on the dorsal side near the trunk. The trunk is continuous with the shaft and head. Nerve tissue occupies the core of the spicule and includes a dendritic process which gains access to the exterior via a small pore on the lateral side of the spicule tip. Three protractor and two retractor muscles are associated with each spicule. A sensory accessory piece connects with the tip of the gubernaculum and protrudes from the lower side of the opening of the spicular pouch; it protracts and retracts with the muscularized gubernaculum. The gubernaculum varies from bow-shaped in the distal part to boat-shaped in the mid region. A sac exits beneath the accessory piece as a buffer for its movement. A cuticular guiding bar originating from the dorsal wall of the spicular pouch has a tongue. The ventral surface of the tongue is sclerotized to separate the two spicules. It is mobile by muscles of the protractor gubernaculi, retractor gubernaculi, and seductor gubernaculi. 相似文献
17.
Barrie J. Anthony Kylie R. James Geoffrey N. Gobert Grant A. Ramm Donald P. McManus 《PloS one》2013,8(6)
Hepatic fibrosis induced by egg deposition is the most serious pathology associated with chronic schistosomiasis, in which the hepatic stellate cell (HSC) plays a central role. While the effect of Schistosoma mansoni eggs on the fibrogenic phenotype of HSCs has been investigated, studies determining the effect of eggs of
S
. japonicum
on HSCs are lacking. Disease caused by
S
. japonicum
is much more severe than that resulting from S. mansoni infection so it is important to compare the pathologies caused by these two parasites, to determine whether this phenotype is due to the species interacting differently with the mammalian host. Accordingly, we investigated the effect of
S
. japonicum
eggs on the human HSC cell line, LX-2, with and without TGF-β (Transforming Growth Factor beta) co-treatment, so as to determine the impact on genes associated with fibrogenesis, inflammation and matrix re-organisation. Activation status of HSCs was assessed by αSMA (Alpha Smooth Muscle Actin) immunofluorescence, accumulation of Oil Red O-stained lipid droplets and the relative expression of selected genes associated with activation. The fibrogenic phenotype of HSCs was inhibited by the presence of eggs both with or without TGF-β treatment, as evidenced by a lack of αSMA staining and reduced gene expression of αSMA and Col1A1 (Collagen 1A1). Unlike S. mansoni-treated cells, however, expression of the quiescent HSC marker PPAR-γ (Peroxisome Proliferator-Activated Receptor gamma) was not increased, nor was there accumulation of lipid droplets. In contrast,
S
. japonicum
eggs induced the mRNA expression of MMP-9 (Matrix Metalloproteinase 9), CCL2 (Chemokine (C-C motif) Ligand 2) and IL-6 (Interleukin 6) in HSCs indicating that rather than inducing complete HSC quiescence, the eggs induced a proinflammatory phenotype. These results suggest HSCs in close proximity to
S
. japonicum
eggs in the liver may play a role in the proinflammatory regulation of hepatic granuloma formation. 相似文献
18.
Marcus M. Soliai Susan E. Meyer Joshua A. Udall David E. Elzinga Russell A. Hermansen Paul M. Bodily Aaron A. Hart Craig E. Coleman 《PloS one》2014,9(1)
Pyrenophora semeniperda (anamorph Drechslera campulata) is a necrotrophic fungal seed pathogen that has a wide host range within the Poaceae. One of its hosts is cheatgrass (Bromus tectorum), a species exotic to the United States that has invaded natural ecosystems of the Intermountain West. As a natural pathogen of cheatgrass, P. semeniperda has potential as a biocontrol agent due to its effectiveness at killing seeds within the seed bank; however, few genetic resources exist for the fungus. Here, the genome of P. semeniperda isolate assembled from sequence reads of 454 pyrosequencing is presented. The total assembly is 32.5 Mb and includes 11,453 gene models encoding putative proteins larger than 24 amino acids. The models represent a variety of putative genes that are involved in pathogenic pathways typically found in necrotrophic fungi. In addition, extensive rearrangements, including inter- and intrachromosomal rearrangements, were found when the P. semeniperda genome was compared to P. tritici-repentis, a related fungal species. 相似文献
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20.
Claire E. Moore Sergio Regufe da Mota Halina Mikolajek Christopher G. Proud 《Molecular and cellular biology》2014,34(12):2294-2307
Eukaryotic elongation factor 2 kinase (eEF2K) is the best-characterized member of the α-kinase family. Within this group, only eEF2K and myosin heavy chain kinases (MHCKs) have known substrates. Here we have studied the roles of specific residues, selected on the basis of structural data for MHCK A and TRPM7, in the function of eEF2K. Our data provide the first information regarding the basis of the substrate specificity of α-kinases, in particular the roles of residues in the so-called N/D loop, which appears to occupy a position in the structure of α-kinases similar to that of the activation loop in other kinases. Several mutations in the EEF2K gene occur in tumors, one of which (Arg303Cys) is at a highly conserved residue in the N/D loop. This mutation greatly enhances eEF2K activity and may be cytoprotective. Our data support the concept that the major autophosphorylation site (Thr348 in eEF2K) docks into a binding pocket to help create the kinase-competent conformation. This is similar to the situation for MHCK A and is consistent with this being a common feature of α-kinases. 相似文献