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1.
ATAD3 (ATPase family AAA-Domain containing protein 3) is a mitochondrial inner membrane ATPase with unknown but vital functions. Initial researches have focused essentially on the major p66-ATAD3 isoform, but other proteins and mRNAs are described in the data banks. Using a set of anti-peptide antibodies and by the use of rodent and human cell lines and organs, we tried to detail ATAD3 gene expression profiles and to verify the existence of the various ATAD3 isoforms. In rodent, the single ATAD3 gene is expressed as a major isoform of 67 kDa, (ATAD3l; long), in all cells and organs studied. A second isoform, p57-ATAD3s (small), is expressed specifically throughout brain development and in adult, and overexpressed around the peri-natal period. p57-ATAD3s is also expressed in neuronal and glial rodent cell lines, and during in vitro differentiation of primary cultured rat oligodendrocytes. Other smaller isoforms were also detected in a tissue-specific manner. In human and primates, ATAD3 paralogues are encoded by three genes (ATAD3A, 3B and 3C), each of them presenting several putative variants. Analyzing the expression of ATAD3A and ATAD3B with four specific anti-peptide antibodies, and comparing their expressions with in vitro expressed ATAD3 cDNAs, we were able to observe and define five isoforms. In particular, the previously described p72-ATAD3B is confirmed to be in certain cases a phosphorylated form of ATAD3As. Moreover, we observed that the ATAD3As phosphorylation level is regulated by insulin and serum. Finally, exploring ATAD3 mRNA expression, we confirmed the existence of an alternative splicing in rodent and of several mRNA isoforms in human.  相似文献   

2.
ATAD3 (ATPase family AAA domain-containing protein 3) is a mitochondrial membrane bound ATPase whose function has not yet been discovered but its role is essential for the embryonic development. The ATAD3 gene exists since the pluri-cellular organisms with specialized tissues and remains unique until vertebrates. In primates and humans, two other genes have appeared (called ATAD3B and ATAD3C versus ATAD3A the ancestral gene). ATAD3 knock down in different non-transformed cell lines is associated with drastic changes in the mitochondrial network, inhibition of proliferation and modification of the functional interactions between mitochondria and endoplasmic reticulum. However, the analysis of the functions of ATAD3A and ATAD3B in different human cancer cell lines shows on the contrary that they can have anti-proliferative effects and induce chemoresistant properties. ATAD3 may therefore be implicated in an unknown but essential and growth-linked mitochondrial function existing since pluri-cellular -organization and involved in tumorigenesis.  相似文献   

3.
ATAD3 (ATPase family AAA Domain-containing protein 3) is a mitochondrial membrane bound ATPase whose function has not yet been discovered but its role is essential for embryonic development. The ATAD3 gene has existed since the pluri-cellular organisms with specialized tissues and has remained unique until vertebrates. In primates and human, two other genes have appeared (called ATAD3B and ATAD3C versus ATAD3A the ancestral gene). ATAD3 knock-down in different non-transformed cell lines is associated with drastic changes in the mitochondrial network, inhibition of proliferation and modification of the functional interactions between mitochondria and endoplasmic reticulum. However, the analysis of the cellular properties of ATAD3A and ATAD3B in different human cancer cell lines shows on the contrary that they can present anti-proliferative and chemoresistant properties. ATAD3 may therefore be implicated in an unknown but essential and growth-linked mitochondrial function existing since pluri-cellular organization and involved in tumorigenesis.  相似文献   

4.
Here we report on the identification of a human pluripotent embryonic stem cell (hESC) specific mitochondrial protein that is re-expressed in cancer cells, ATAD3B. ATAD3B belongs to the AAA+ ATPase ATAD3 protein family of mitochondrial proteins specific to multicellular eukaryotes. Using loss- and gain-of-function approaches, we show that ATAD3B associates with the ubiquitous ATAD3A species, negatively regulates the interaction of ATAD3A with matrix nucleoid complexes and contributes to a mitochondria fragmentation phenotype. We conclude that ATAD3B is a negative regulator of ATAD3A and may function as an adaptor of mitochondrial homeostasis and metabolism in hESCs and cancer cells.  相似文献   

5.
Mitochondrial ATPase ATAD3A is essential for cholesterol transport, mitochondrial structure, and cell survival. However, the relationship between ATAD3A and nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is largely unknown. In this study, we found that ATAD3A was upregulated in the progression of NAFLD in livers from rats with diet-induced nonalcoholic steatohepatitis and in human livers from patients diagnosed with NAFLD. We used CRISPR-Cas9 to delete ATAD3A in Huh7 human hepatocellular carcinoma cells and used RNAi to silence ATAD3A expression in human hepatocytes isolated from humanized liver-chimeric mice to assess the influence of ATAD3A deletion on liver cells with free cholesterol (FC) overload induced by treatment with cholesterol plus 58035, an inhibitor of acetyl-CoA acetyltransferase. Our results showed that ATAD3A KO exacerbated FC accumulation under FC overload in Huh7 cells and also that triglyceride levels were significantly increased in ATAD3A KO Huh7 cells following inhibition of lipolysis mediated by upregulation of lipid droplet-binding protein perilipin-2. Moreover, loss of ATAD3A upregulated autophagosome-associated light chain 3-II protein and p62 in Huh7 cells and fresh human hepatocytes through blockage of autophagosome degradation. Finally, we show the mitophagy mediator, PTEN-induced kinase 1, was downregulated in ATAD3A KO Huh7 cells, suggesting that ATAD3A KO inhibits mitophagy. These results also showed that loss of ATAD3A impaired mitochondrial basal respiration and ATP production in Huh7 cells under FC overload, accompanied by downregulation of mitochondrial ATP synthase. Taken together, we conclude that loss of ATAD3A promotes the progression of NAFLD through the accumulation of FC, triglyceride, and damaged mitochondria in hepatocytes.  相似文献   

6.
ATAD3 is a mitochondrial integral inner membrane ATPase with unknown function. ATAD3 is absent in yeast and protozoan and present in all pluricellular eucaryotes where its expression is essential for development. To date, bacterial-based expression of full-length ATAD3 has been unsuccessful because of very high levels of endogenous degradation. Based on Saccharomyces cerevisiae as a heterogeneous expression system, we engineered a high copy strain expressing human ATAD3A-Myc-HIS at a relative high level (2.5mg/l of yeast culture) without significantly affecting yeast growth. Most of the expressed human ATAD3A-Myc-HIS co-purified with the yeast mitochondrial fraction thus suggesting that targeting to this organelle is preserved in yeast. Like the endogenous protein in human cells, ATAD3A-Myc-HIS expressed in yeast is found resistant to extraction with salt and certain detergents, suggesting membrane insertion. Sarkosyl, C13-DAO, C12-DAO and ONMG efficiently solubilized ATAD3A-Myc-HIS from yeast extracts, but these soluble species did not bind to agarose-nickel matrix. By contrast, urea-denaturated ATAD3A-Myc-HIS bound to agarose-nickel beads and could be renatured and eluted to obtain highly pure ATAD3A-Myc-HIS. As the native protein in vivo, this recombinant, renatured species specifically bound in vitro to S100B and S100A1 in Far-Western assays.  相似文献   

7.
S100 proteins comprise a multigene family of EF-hand calcium binding proteins that engage in multiple functions in response to cellular stress. In one case, the S100B protein has been implicated in oligodendrocyte progenitor cell (OPC) regeneration in response to demyelinating insult. In this example, we report that the mitochondrial ATAD3A protein is a major, high-affinity, and calcium-dependent S100B target protein in OPC. In OPC, ATAD3A is required for cell growth and differentiation. Molecular characterization of the S100B binding domain on ATAD3A by nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy techniques defined a consensus calcium-dependent S100B binding motif. This S100B binding motif is conserved in several other S100B target proteins, including the p53 protein. Cellular studies using a truncated ATAD3A mutant that is deficient for mitochondrial import revealed that S100B prevents cytoplasmic ATAD3A mutant aggregation and restored its mitochondrial localization. With these results in mind, we propose that S100B could assist the newly synthesized ATAD3A protein, which harbors the consensus S100B binding domain for proper folding and subcellular localization. Such a function for S100B might also help to explain the rescue of nuclear translocation and activation of the temperature-sensitive p53val135 mutant by S100B at nonpermissive temperatures.The S100 proteins comprise a multigene family of low-molecular-weight EF-hand calcium binding and zinc binding proteins (5, 13, 16, 24, 33). To date, 19 different S100 proteins have been assigned to this protein family, and they show different degrees of similarity, ranging from 25 to 56% identity at the amino acid level. With S100B, S100P, and S100Z being the exceptions, the majority of the S100 genes are clustered on human chromosome 1q21 (33). Most S100 proteins serve as calcium sensor proteins that, upon activation, regulate the function and/or subcellular distribution of specific target proteins (13, 33, 47), and they are characterized by common structural motifs, including two low-affinity (KD [equilibrium dissociation constant] of ∼10 μM to 100 μM) helix-loop-helix calcium binding domains (EF hands) that are separated by a hinge region and flanked by amino- and carboxy-terminal domains. The carboxy-terminal domain is variable among S100 proteins, and it typically is the site that is responsible for the selective interaction of each individual S100 protein with specific target proteins (30). S100 proteins are often upregulated in cancers, in inflammation, and in response to cellular stress (14, 16), suggesting that they function in cell responses to stress situations. Consistent with this hypothesis, stress situations were necessary to reveal phenotypes associated with the S100 knockout in mice (11, 14, 33, 56). Moreover, recent observations revealed a new function for the S100 protein family that included their ability to assist and regulate multichaperone complex-ligand interactions (41, 50, 51).One member of the S100 protein family, S100B, has attracted much interest in the past few years because, like other proteins implicated in neurodegeneration (e.g., amyloid, superoxide dismutase, and dual-specificity tyrosine phosphorylation-regulated kinase 1A), its gene is located within a segment of chromosome 21, which is trisomic in Down''s syndrome (DS). Its expression in the brain of mammals coincides with defined periods of central nervous system (CNS) maturation and cell differentiation (43). In oligodendrocyte progenitor cells (OPC), S100B expression is associated with differentiation, and S100B contributes to OPC differentiation in response to demyelinating insult (11). To understand the contribution of S100B to OPC differentiation, we searched for high-affinity S100B target proteins in this cell type by using far-Western analysis. A major and highly specific S100B target protein was identified, the mitochondrial ATAD3A protein.ATAD3A belongs to a new family of eukaryote-specific mitochondrial AAA+ ATPase proteins (17). In the human genome, two genes, Atad3A and Atad3B, are located in tandem on chromosome 1p36.33. The Atad3A gene is ubiquitous among multicellular organisms but absent in yeast. The Atad3B gene is specific to the human genome (27). ATAD3A is a mitochondrial protein anchored into the mitochondrial inner membrane (IM) at contact sites with the outer membrane (OM). Thanks to its simultaneous interaction with the two membranes, ATAD3A regulates mitochondrial dynamics at the interface between the inner and outer membranes and controls diverse cell responses ranging from mitochondrial metabolism, cell growth, and mitochondrial fission 20a, 25). The ATAD3A protein has also been identified as a mitochondrial DNA binding protein (23) and as a cell surface antigen in some human tumors (20, 21). The plasma membrane localization of ATAD3A in tumor cells is suggestive that ATAD3A mitochondrial routing can be compromised in pathological situations such as cancer. To understand the functional response resulting from the interaction between S100B and ATAD3A, we first characterized the minimal interaction domain on ATAD3A for S100B binding using thermodynamic studies of wild-type and ATAD3A variants as well as via nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy techniques. These studies allowed us to further refine the consensus S100B binding motif, which is conserved in several other S100B target proteins, including the p53 protein and several newly discovered target proteins associated with the cell translational machinery. We next analyzed the cellular interaction of S100B with truncated ATAD3A mutants that harbor the S100B binding domain but that are deficient for mitochondrial import. These studies revealed that S100B could assist ATAD3A mutant proteins during cytoplasmic processing by preventing dysfunctional aggregation events. Our results are discussed in light of the possible function of S100B in assisting the cytoplasmic processing of proteins for proper folding and subcellular localization.  相似文献   

8.
Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) encodes several key components of respiratory chain complexes that produce cellular energy through oxidative phosphorylation. mtDNA is vulnerable to damage under various physiological stresses, especially oxidative stress. mtDNA damage leads to mitochondrial dysfunction, and dysfunctional mitochondria can be removed by mitophagy, an essential process in cellular homeostasis. However, how damaged mtDNA is selectively cleared from the cell, and how damaged mtDNA triggers mitophagy, remain mostly unknown. Here, we identified a novel mitophagy receptor, ATAD3B, which is specifically expressed in primates. ATAD3B contains a LIR motif that binds to LC3 and promotes oxidative stress‐induced mitophagy in a PINK1‐independent manner, thus promoting the clearance of damaged mtDNA induced by oxidative stress. Under normal conditions, ATAD3B hetero‐oligomerizes with ATAD3A, thus promoting the targeting of the C‐terminal region of ATAD3B to the mitochondrial intermembrane space. Oxidative stress‐induced mtDNA damage or mtDNA depletion reduces ATAD3B‐ATAD3A hetero‐oligomerization and leads to exposure of the ATAD3B C‐terminus at the mitochondrial outer membrane and subsequent recruitment of LC3 for initiating mitophagy. Furthermore, ATAD3B is little expressed in m.3243A > G mutated cells and MELAS patient fibroblasts showing endogenous oxidative stress, and ATAD3B re‐expression promotes the clearance of m.3243A > G mutated mtDNA. Our findings uncover a new pathway to selectively remove damaged mtDNA and reveal that increasing ATAD3B activity is a potential therapeutic approach for mitochondrial diseases.  相似文献   

9.
ATAD2 is an E2F target gene that is highly expressed in gastrointestinal and breast carcinomas. Here we characterize a related gene product, ATAD2B. Both genes are evolutionarily conserved, with orthologues present in all eukaryotic genomes examined. Human ATAD2B shows a high degree of similarity to ATAD2. Both contain an AAA domain and a bromodomain with amino acid sequences sharing 97% and 74% identity, respectively. The expression of ATAD2B was studied in the chicken embryo using a polyclonal antibody raised against a recombinant fragment of human ATAD2B. Immunohistochemistry revealed transient nuclear expression in subpopulations of developing neurons. The transient nature of the expression was confirmed by immunoblotting homogenates of the developing telencephalon. Cell fractionation was used to confirm the nuclear localization of ATAD2B in the developing nervous system: anti-ATAD2B recognizes a smaller band (approximately 160 kDa) in the nuclear fraction and a larger band (approximately 300 kDa) in the membrane fraction, suggesting that posttranslational processing of ATAD2B may regulate its transport to the nucleus. The expression of ATAD2B was also studied in human tumors. Oncomine and immunohistochemistry reveal ATAD2B expression in glioblastoma and oligodendroglioma; ATAD2B immunostaining was also elevated in human breast carcinoma. In tumors ATAD2B appears to be cytoplasmic or membrane bound, and not nuclear. Our observations suggest that ATAD2B may play a role in neuronal differentiation and tumor progression.  相似文献   

10.
线粒体质量控制对于线粒体网络的稳态和线粒体功能的正常发挥具有重要意义。三磷酸腺苷酶家族蛋白3A(ATAD3A)是同时参与调节线粒体结构功能、线粒体动力学和线粒体自噬等重要生物学过程的线粒体膜蛋白之一。近期研究表明,ATAD3A既可与Mic60/Mitofilin和线粒体转录因子A (TFAM)等因子相互作用以维持线粒体嵴的形态和氧化磷酸化功能,又能与发动蛋白相关蛋白1 (Drp1)结合而正性/负性调节线粒体分裂,还可作为线粒体外膜转位酶(TOM)复合物和线粒体内膜转位酶(TIM)复合物之间的桥接因子而介导PTEN诱导激酶(PINK1)输入线粒体进行加工,显示出促自噬或抗自噬活性。本文对ATAD3A在调控线粒体质量控制中的作用及其机制进行了综述。  相似文献   

11.
In yeast, a sequence of physical and genetic interactions termed the endoplasmic reticulum (ER)–mitochondria organizing network (ERMIONE) controls mitochondria–ER interactions and mitochondrial biogenesis. Several functions that characterize ERMIONE complexes are conserved in mammalian cells, suggesting that a similar tethering complex must exist in metazoans. Recent studies have identified a new family of nuclear‐encoded ATPases associated with diverse cellular activities (AAA+‐ATPase) mitochondrial membrane proteins specific to multicellular eukaryotes, called the ATPase family AAA domain‐containing protein 3 (ATAD3) proteins (ATAD3A and ATAD3B). These proteins are crucial for normal mitochondrial–ER interactions and lie at the heart of processes underlying mitochondrial biogenesis. ATAD3A orthologues have been studied in flies, worms, and mammals, highlighting the widespread importance of this gene during embryonic development and in adulthood. ATAD3A is a downstream effector of target of rapamycin (TOR) signalling in Drosophila and exhibits typical features of proteins from the ERMIONE‐like complex in metazoans. In humans, mutations in the ATAD3A gene represent a new link between altered mitochondrial–ER interaction and recognizable neurological syndromes. The primate‐specific ATAD3B protein is a biomarker of pluripotent embryonic stem cells. Through negative regulation of ATAD3A function, ATAD3B supports mitochondrial stemness properties.  相似文献   

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14.
To investigate the underlying causes of chemoresistance in malignant pleural mesothelioma, we have studied mesothelioma cell lines as 3D spheroids, which acquire increased chemoresistance compared to 2D monolayers. We asked whether the gene expression of 3D spheroids would reveal mechanisms of resistance. To address this, we measured gene expression of three mesothelioma cell lines, M28, REN and VAMT, grown as 2D monolayers and 3D spheroids. A total of 209 genes were differentially expressed in common by the three cell lines in 3D (138 upregulated and 71 downregulated), although a clear resistance pathway was not apparent. We then compared the list of 3D genes with two publicly available datasets of gene expression of 56 pleural mesotheliomas compared to normal tissues. Interestingly, only three genes were increased in both 3D spheroids and human tumors: argininosuccinate synthase 1 (ASS1), annexin A4 (ANXA4) and major vault protein (MVP); of these, ASS1 was the only consistently upregulated of the three genes by qRT-PCR. To measure ASS1 protein expression, we stained 2 sets of tissue microarrays (TMA): one with 88 pleural mesothelioma samples and the other with additional 88 pleural mesotheliomas paired with matched normal tissues. Of the 176 tumors represented on the two TMAs, ASS1 was expressed in 87 (50%; staining greater than 1 up to 3+). For the paired samples, ASS1 expression in mesothelioma was significantly greater than in the normal tissues. Reduction of ASS1 expression by siRNA significantly sensitized mesothelioma spheroids to the pro-apoptotic effects of bortezomib and of cisplatin plus pemetrexed. Although mesothelioma is considered by many to be an ASS1-deficient tumor, our results show that ASS1 is elevated at the mRNA and protein levels in mesothelioma 3D spheroids and in human pleural mesotheliomas. We also have uncovered a survival role for ASS1, which may be amenable to targeting to undermine mesothelioma multicellular resistance.  相似文献   

15.
ATAD3 is a mitochondrial inner membrane-associated protein that has been predicted to be an ATPase but from which no associated function is known. The topology of ATAD3 in mitochondrial membranes is not clear and subject to controversy. A direct interaction of the N-terminal domain (amino-acids 44–247) with the mtDNA has been described, but the same domain has been reported to be sensitive to limited proteolysis in purified mitochondria. Furthermore, ATAD3 has been found in a large purified nucleoid complex but could not be cross-linked to the nucleoid. To resolve these discrepancies we used two immunological approaches to test whether the N-terminal (amino-acids 40–53) and the C-terminal (amino-acids 572–586) regions of ATAD3 are accessible from the cytosol. Using N-terminal and C-terminal specific anti-peptide antibodies, we carried out back-titration ELISA measurements and immuno-fluorescence analysis on freshly purified human mitochondria. Both approaches showed that the N-terminal region of ATAD3A is accessible to antibodies in purified mitochondria. The N-terminal region of ATAD3A is thus probably in the cytoplasm or in an accessible intermembrane space. On the contrary, the C-terminal region is not accessible to the antibody and is probably located within the matrix. These results demonstrate both that the N-terminal part of ATAD3A is outside the inner membrane and that the C-terminal part is inside the matrix.  相似文献   

16.
Many copies of mammalian mitochondrial DNA contain a short triple-stranded region, or displacement loop (D-loop), in the major noncoding region. In the 35 years since their discovery, no function has been assigned to mitochondrial D-loops. We purified mitochondrial nucleoprotein complexes from rat liver and identified a previously uncharacterized protein, ATAD3p. Localization studies suggested that human ATAD3 is a component of many, but not all, mitochondrial nucleoids. Gene silencing of ATAD3 by RNA interference altered the structure of mitochondrial nucleoids and led to the dissociation of mitochondrial DNA fragments held together by protein, specifically, ones containing the D-loop region. In vitro, a recombinant fragment of ATAD3p bound to supercoiled DNA molecules that contained a synthetic D-loop, with a marked preference over partially relaxed molecules with a D-loop or supercoiled DNA circles. These results suggest that mitochondrial D-loops serve to recruit ATAD3p for the purpose of forming or segregating mitochondrial nucleoids.  相似文献   

17.
Retinoblastoma (RB) represents an aggressive malignancy in the eye during the period of infancy and childhood. We delineated the ability of microRNA-186 (miR-186) to influence viability, invasion, migration, angiogenesis, and apoptosis of RB via the Hedgehog signaling pathway by targeting AAA domain-containing protein 2 (ATAD2). The microarray-based analysis was adopted to identify differentially expressed genes (DEGs) related to RB. Subsequently, RB cells were treated with miR-186 mimic, miR-186 inhibitor, or si-ATAD2. The expression of miR-186, ATAD2, Hedgehog signaling pathway-related genes were evaluated, and the target relationship between miR-186 and ATAD2 was verified. Finally, cell proliferation, invasion, migration, apoptosis, and angiogenesis were assessed. ATAD2 was identified as a DEG and modulated by miR-186. Moreover, we revealed that ATAD2 was highly expressed, whereas miR-186 was lowly expressed, and the Hedgehog signaling pathway was activated in RB. Then, ATAD2 as a putative target of miR-186 was validated using a luciferase assay. miR-186 mimic or siRNA-ATAD2 in RB cells reduced cell viability, invasion, and migration coordinating with elevated apoptosis via impairing the Hedgehog signaling pathway, where repressed angiogenesis was observed. Overexpression of miR-186 attenuates RB via the inactivation of the Hedgehog signaling pathway by downregulating ATAD2.  相似文献   

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Tyrosine kinase activity was determined in neonatal and adult human brain, oligodendrogliomas, and astrocytomas. The astrocytomas were divided into low- (grade I and grade II) and high-grade (grade III and grade IV) tumors. We measured the tyrosine kinase activity in the cytosolic and membrane fraction using poly(glutamic acid:tyrosine, 4:1) as an artificial substrate. The cytosolic activity in oligodendrogliomas (n = 7), low-grade astrocytomas (n = 7), and neonatal brain (n = 1) was increased, on average, two- to fourfold compared with that in normal adult brain (n = 14). The cytosolic activities of high-grade astrocytomas (n = 11) were in approximately the same range as found in normal adult brain. The absence of an increase in cytosolic activity in high-grade astrocytomas compared with adult brain is likely due to the occurrence of necrosis in these tumors. In contrast to the cytosolic activity, no differences were found in the membrane-bound activity. By fast protein liquid chromatography, at least three forms of cytosolic protein tyrosine kinase could be separated, which eluted at 0, 115, and 210 mM NaCl. In most cases the highest amount of activity eluted at 210 mM NaCl. However, in oligodendrogliomas, high-grade astrocytomas, and neonatal brain, more activity eluted at 115 mM NaCl than in normal adult brain (p = 0.043). Nevertheless, protein tyrosine kinases from all three peaks contributed to the elevated levels of total cytosolic activity of oligodendrogliomas and low-grade astrocytomas.  相似文献   

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