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1.
Calreticulin is a Ca(2+)-binding molecular chaperone of the lumen of the endoplasmic reticulum. Calreticulin has been shown to be essential for cardiac and neural development in mice, but the mechanism by which it functions in cell differentiation is not fully understood. To examine the role of calreticulin in cardiac differentiation, the calreticulin gene was introduced into rat cardiomyoblast H9c2 cells, and the effect of calreticulin overexpression on cardiac differentiation was examined. Upon culture in a differentiation medium containing fetal calf serum (1%) and retinoic acid (10 nm), cells transfected with the calreticulin gene were highly susceptible to apoptosis compared with controls. In the gene-transfected cells, protein kinase B/Akt signaling was significantly suppressed during differentiation. Furthermore, protein phosphatase 2A, a Ser/Thr protein phosphatase, was significantly up-regulated, implying suppression of Akt signaling due to dephosphorylation of Akt by the up-regulated protein phosphatase 2A via regulation of Ca(2+) homeostasis. Thus, overexpression of calreticulin promotes differentiation-dependent apoptosis in H9c2 cells by suppressing the Akt signaling pathway. These findings indicate a novel mechanism by which cytoplasmic Akt signaling is modulated to cause apoptosis by a resident protein of the endoplasmic reticulum, calreticulin.  相似文献   

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We used two cell lines expressing fast (RPEfast) and slow (RPEslow) attachment kinetics to investigate mechanisms of cell-substratum adhesion. We show that the abundance of a cytoskeletal protein, vinculin, is dramatically decreased in RPEfast cells. This coincides with the diminished expression level of an endoplasmic reticulum chaperone, calreticulin. Both protein and mRNA levels for calreticulin and vinculin were decreased in RPEfast cells. After RPEfast cells were transfected with cDNA encoding calreticulin, both the expression of endoplasmic reticulum-resident calreticulin and cytoplasmic vinculin increased. The abundance of other adhesion-related proteins was not affected. RPEfast cells underexpressing calreticulin displayed a dramatic increase in the abundance of total cellular phosphotyrosine suggesting that the effects of calreticulin on cell adhesiveness may involve modulation of the activities of protein tyrosine kinases or phosphatases which may affect the stability of focal contacts. The calreticulin and vinculin underexpressing RPEfast cells lacked extensive focal contacts and adhered weakly but attached fast to the substratum. In contrast, the RPEslow cells that expressed calreticulin and vinculin abundantly developed numerous and prominent focal contacts slowly, but adhered strongly. Thus, while the calreticulin overexpressing RPEslow cells "grip" the substratum with focal contacts, calreticulin underexpressing RPEfast cells use close contacts to "stick" to it.  相似文献   

4.
Cellular adhesion to the underlying substratum is regulated through numerous signaling pathways. It has been suggested that insulin receptor substrate 1 (IRS-1) is involved in some of these pathways, via association with and activation of transmembrane integrins. Calreticulin, as an important endoplasmic reticulum-resident, calcium-binding protein with a chaperone function, plays an obvious role in proteomic expression. Our previous work showed that calreticulin mediates cell adhesion not only by affecting protein expression but also by affecting the state of regulatory protein phosphorylation, such as that of c-src. Here, we demonstrate that calreticulin affects the abundance of IRS-1 such that the absence of calreticulin is paralleled by a decrease in IRS-1 levels and the unregulated overexpression of calreticulin is accompanied by an increase in IRS-1 levels. These changes in the abundance of calreticulin and IRS-1 are accompanied by changes in cell-substratum adhesiveness and phosphorylation, such that increases in the expression of calreticulin and IRS-1 are paralleled by an increase in focal contact-based cellsubstratum adhesiveness, and a decrease in the expression of these proteins brings about a decrease in cell-substratum adhesiveness. Wild type and calreticulin-null mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs) were cultured and the IRS-1 isoform profile was assessed. Differences in morphology and motility were also quantified. While no substantial differences in the speed of locomotion were found, the directionality of cell movement was greatly promoted by the presence of calreticulin. Calreticulin expression was also found to have a dramatic effect on the phosphorylation state of serine 636 of IRS-1, such that phosphorylation of IRS-1 on serine 636 increased radically in the absence of calreticulin. Most importantly, treatment of cells with the RhoA/ROCK inhibitor, Y-27632, which among its many effects also inhibited serine 636 phosphorylation of IRS-1, had profound effects on cell-substratum adhesion, in that it suppressed focal contacts, induced extensive close contacts, and increased the strength of adhesion. The latter effect, while counterintuitive, can be explained by the close contacts comprising labile bonds but in large numbers. In addition, the lability of bonds in close contacts would permit fast locomotion. An interesting and novel finding is that Y-27632 treatment of MEFs releases them from contact inhibition of locomotion, as evidenced by the invasion of a cell’s underside by the thin lamellae and filopodia of a cell in close apposition.  相似文献   

5.
Calreticulin is an endoplasmic reticulum Ca(2+) binding chaperone that has multiple functions inside and outside of the endoplasmic reticulum. It is involved in the quality control of newly synthesized proteins and glycoproteins, interacting with various other endoplasmic reticulum chaperones, specifically calnexin and ER protein of 57-kDa in the calreticulin/calnexin cycle. Calreticulin also plays a crucial role in regulating intracellular Ca(2+) homeostasis, associating calreticulin with a wide variety of signaling processes, such as cardiogenesis, adipocyte differentiation and cellular stress responses. The role of calreticulin outside of the endoplasmic reticulum is also extensive, including functions in wound healing and immunity. Therefore, calreticulin has important implications in health and disease. Signaling facts.  相似文献   

6.
In the present study we have demonstrated the presence of calreticulin, a major Ca(2+)-sequestering protein of nonmuscle cells, in a variety of cell types in tissue culture. The protein localizes to the endoplasmic reticulum in most cell types and also to the nuclear envelope or nucleoli-like structures in some cell types. Calreticulin is enriched in the rough endoplasmic reticulum, suggesting a possible involvement in protein synthesis. Calreticulin terminates with the KDEL-COOH sequence, which is likely responsible for its endoplasmic reticulum localization. Unlike some other KDEL proteins, calreticulin expression is neither heat-shock nor Ca(2+)-shock dependent. Using a variety of metabolic inhibitors, we have shown that the pool of calreticulin in L6 cells has a relatively slow turnover and a stable intracellular distribution. In proliferating muscle cells in culture (both L6 and human skeletal muscle) calreticulin is present in the endoplasmic reticulum, and additional intranuclear staining is observed. When fusion of the L6 cells is inhibited with either a high serum concentration or TGF-beta or TPA, the nucleolar staining by anticalreticulin antibodies is diminished, although the presence of calreticulin in the endoplasmic reticulum remains unchanged. In contrast, in differentiated (i.e., fused) muscle cells neither intranuclear nor intracellular staining for calreticulin is present. We conclude, therefore, that calreticulin is abundant in the endoplasmic reticulum in proliferating myoblasts, while it is present in only small amounts in sarcoplasmic reticulum membranes in terminally differentiated myotubes. We propose a model for the domain structure of calreticulin that may explain the differential subcellular distribution of this protein. Because of its widespread distribution in nonmuscle tissues, we postulate that calreticulin is a multifunctional protein that plays an important role in Ca(2+) sequestering and thus that it is the nonmuscle analog of calsequestrin.  相似文献   

7.
Along with other endoplasmic reticulum (ER) Ca2+-binding proteins, notably the glucose-response proteins grp78 and grp94, expression of calreticulin is induced in response to perturbation of normal ER function. It has yet to be clearly defined how this stress is signaled from the ER to the nucleus in mammalian cells, particularly with regard to its initiation. Using a GFP-calreticulin fusion protein, we have generated and selected stably transfected HeLa cells that overexpress calreticulin to investigate whether the protein might be involved in signaling its own induction. Basal levels of endogenous calreticulin mRNA and protein were unaffected in these cells, indicating that overexpression alone does not induce a stress response. ER stress induced calreticulin expression in response to either thapsigargin or tunicamycin was equivalent in these cells to that seen in control, nontransfected cells, leading us to conclude that calreticulin is unlikely be involved in its own induction. Levels of the mRNA encoding the fusion protein were also increased by tunicamycin, but not thapsigargin, suggesting that, in agreement with our previous observations, inhibition of N-linked glycosylation may increase the stability of calreticulin mRNA. This indicates that in mammalian cells, there is more than one signaling pathway for the ER stress response.  相似文献   

8.
Calreticulin: not just another calcium-binding protein   总被引:15,自引:0,他引:15  
In this paper we review some of the rapidly expanding information about calreticulin, a Ca2+-binding/storage protein of the endoplasmic reticulum. The emphasis is placed on the structure and function of calreticulin. We believe that calreticulin is a multifunctional Ca2+-binding protein and that distinct functional properties of the protein may be localized to each of the three structural domains of calreticulin. Most evidence indicates that calreticulin is a resident endoplasmic reticulum protein. However, it can also be found outside of the endoplasmic reticulum compartment, i.e. in the nuclear envelope, in the nucleus, in the cytotoxic granules in T-lymphocytes and in acrosomal vesicles of sperm cells. The evidence reviewed here clearly suggests that calreticulin has other functions in addition to its role as a Ca2+ storage protein in the endoplasmic reticulum.Abbreviations SR sarcoplasmic reticulum - ER endoplasmic reticulum  相似文献   

9.
Calreticulin is an endoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-storage protein, which influences gene expression and cell adhesion. In this study, we show that calreticulin induces fibronectin gene expression and matrix deposition, leading to differences in cell spreading and focal adhesion formation in cells differentially expressing calreticulin. We further show that these effects of calreticulin occur via a c-Src-regulated pathway and that c-Src activity is inversely related to calreticulin abundance. Since c-Src is an important regulator of focal contact turnover, we investigated the effect of c-Src inhibition on cells differentially expressing calreticulin. Inhibition of c-Src rescued the poorly adhesive phenotype of the calreticulin-underexpressing cells in that they became well spread, commenced formation of numerous focal contacts, and deposited a rich fibronectin matrix. Importantly, we show that c-Src activity is dependent on releasable Ca2+ from the endoplasmic reticulum, thus implicating Ca2+-sensitive pathways that are affected by calreticulin in cell-substratum adhesion. We propose that calreticulin affects fibronectin synthesis and matrix assembly via the regulation of fibronectin gene expression. In parallel, calcium-dependent effects of calreticulin on c-Src activity influence the formation and/or stability of focal contacts, which are instrumental in matrix assembly and remodeling.  相似文献   

10.
Ca2+ is an essential second messenger for T cell activation, but the exact mechanisms of its action are poorly understood. The cytosolic Ca2+ concentration is significantly increased upon the stimulation of T cells with either mitogen, cross-linking antibodies, or their cognate ligands. In this study, expression of calreticulin, a major Ca(2+)-binding (storage), KDEL protein of the endoplasmic reticulum was examined in resting and concanavalin A (ConA)-stimulated mouse and human T-lymphocytes. Both resting, mouse and human lymphocytes contain very low levels of calreticulin mRNA and protein. Mouse splenocytes stimulated with ConA exhibited an induction in calreticulin mRNA which peaked by Day 4. A 5-fold increase in the immunoreactive calreticulin protein band was also observed in the cells during this period of stimulation. Similarly when human lymphocytes were cultured with ConA a significant increase in the levels of the calreticulin mRNA and protein was observed. The peak of calreticulin mRNA was observed at Day 1 rather than Day 4 as seen for the mouse. These results clearly demonstrate the presence of calreticulin, a Ca(2+)-binding protein originally characterized in muscle tissue, in activated T-lymphocytes. Furthermore, we show that expression of calreticulin correlates with T-lymphocyte activation. Our results suggest that calreticulin may be involved in the signaling pathway for the induction of Ca(2+)-dependent processes and may represent one regulatory mechanism operating in activation of T-lymphocytes.  相似文献   

11.
Calreticulin is a lectin chaperone essential for intracellular calcium homeostasis. Deletion of calreticulin gene compromises the overall quality control within the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) leading to activation of the unfolded protein response. However, the ER structure of calreticulin deficient cells (crt-/-) is not altered due to accumulation of misfolded proteins. Therefore, the aim of this study was to determine whether the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway is activated in crt-/- cells as a compensatory mechanism for cell survival. Here we show a significant increase in the expression of genes involved in ER associated degradation and activation of the ubiquitin-proteasome system in crt-/- cells. We also demonstrated that the ubiquitination of two proteins processed in ER, connexin 43 and A1AT NHK (alpha1-antitrypsin mutant) are increased in crt-/- cells. Furthermore, we showed that the increased proteasome activity in the crt-/- cells could be rescued upon re-introduction of calreticulin or calsequestrin (a muscle calcium binding protein). We also illustrated that increased cytosolic Ca2+ enhances the proteasome activity. Interestingly, suppression of calnexin function using siRNA further elevated the proteasome activity in crt-/- cells. This is the first report to show that loss of calreticulin function enhances the ubiquitin-proteasome activity which could function as a compensatory mechanism for cell survival.  相似文献   

12.
Heart, brain, and body wall defects in mice lacking calreticulin   总被引:13,自引:0,他引:13  
Calreticulin is a ubiquitously expressed protein, which has been implicated in a large number of cellular functions, including calcium storage and signaling, protein folding, and cell attachment. To examine the role of calreticulin during in vivo development, mice deficient in calreticulin were generated by targeted inactivation of the calreticulin gene. Calreticulin-deficient mutants die in utero, mostly in late gestation. Half of these embryos had decreased cardiac cell mass, associated with increased apoptosis of cardiac myocytes. In vitro differentiation cultures of calreticulin-deficient embryonic stem cells resulted in fewer embryoid bodies with contractile activity than cultures derived from calreticulin +/- stem cells (P < 0.001). Sixteen percent of the mutants exhibited exencephaly secondary to a defect in neural tube closure. Embryos surviving until Embryonic Day 16.5 had omphalocele. Lack of calreticulin did not influence survival of embryonic fibroblasts under various endoplasmic reticulum stress conditions. However, calreticulin did influence cell migration in a calcium- and substrate-dependent manner. We conclude that calreticulin is not essential during the early stages of embryonic development, but is important for the development of heart and brain and for ventral body wall closure. The observed abnormalities are compatible with a role of calreticulin in the modulation of cellular calcium signaling.  相似文献   

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14.
Calcium (Ca2+) is a universal signalling molecule involved in many aspects of cellular function. The majority of intracellular Ca2+ is stored in the endoplasmic reticulum and once Ca2+ is released from the endoplasmic reticulum, specific plasma membrane Ca2+ channels are activated, resulting in increased intracellular Ca2+. In the lumen of the endoplasmic reticulum, Ca2+ is buffered by Ca2+ binding chaperones such as calreticulin. Calreticulin-deficiency is lethal in utero due to impaired cardiac development and in the absence of calreticulin, Ca2+ storage capacity within the endoplasmic reticulum and inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate (InsP3) receptor mediated Ca2+ release from the endoplasmic reticulum are compromised. Over-expression of constitutively active calcineurin in the heart rescues calreticulin-deficient mice from embryonic lethality. This observation indicates that calreticulin is a key upstream regulator of calcineurin in Ca2+-signalling pathways and highlights the importance of the endoplasmic reticulum and endoplasmic reticulum-dependent Ca2+ homeostasis for cellular commitment and tissue development during organogenesis. Furthermore, Ca2+ handling by the endoplasmic reticulum has profound effects on cell sensitivity to apoptosis. Signalling between calreticulin in the lumen of the endoplasmic reticulum and calcineurin in the cytoplasm may play a role in the modulation of cell sensitivity to apoptosis and the regulation of Ca2+-dependent apoptotic pathways.  相似文献   

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16.
《Cellular signalling》2014,26(12):2601-2605
Wnt proteins are lipid modified signaling molecules that have essential functions in development and adult tissue homeostasis. Secretion of Wnt is mediated by the transmembrane protein Wntless, which binds Wnt and transports it from the endoplasmic reticulum to the cell surface for release. To maintain efficient Wnt secretion, Wntless is recycled back to the Golgi and the endoplasmic reticulum through endocytosis and retromer dependent endosome to Golgi transport. We have previously identified protein kinase CK2 (CK2) in a genome-wide screen for regulators of Wnt signaling in Caenorhabditis elegans. Here, we show that CK2 function is required in Wnt producing cells for Wnt secretion. This function is evolutionarily conserved, as inhibition of CK2 activity interferes with Wnt5a secretion from mammalian cells. Mechanistically, we show that inhibition of CK2 function results in enhanced plasma membrane localization of Wls in C. elegans and mammalian cells, consistent with the notion that CK2 is involved in the regulation of Wls internalization.  相似文献   

17.
Active regulation of protein abundance is an essential strategy to modulate cellular signaling pathways. Within the Wnt signaling cascade, regulated degradation of β‐catenin by the ubiquitin‐proteasome system (UPS) affects the outcome of canonical Wnt signaling. Here, we found that abundance of the Wnt cargo receptor Evi (Wls/GPR177), which is required for Wnt protein secretion, is also regulated by the UPS through endoplasmic reticulum (ER)‐associated degradation (ERAD). In the absence of Wnt ligands, Evi is ubiquitinated and targeted for ERAD in a VCP‐dependent manner. Ubiquitination of Evi involves the E2‐conjugating enzyme UBE2J2 and the E3‐ligase CGRRF1. Furthermore, we show that a triaging complex of Porcn and VCP determines whether Evi enters the secretory or the ERAD pathway. In this way, ERAD‐dependent control of Evi availability impacts the scale of Wnt protein secretion by adjusting the amount of Evi to meet the requirement of Wnt protein export. As Wnt and Evi protein levels are often dysregulated in cancer, targeting regulatory ERAD components might be a useful approach for therapeutic interventions.  相似文献   

18.
Poorly formed tumor blood vessels lead to regions of microenvironmental stress due to depletion of oxygen and glucose and accumulation of waste products (acidosis). These conditions contribute to tumor progression and correlate with poor patient prognosis. Here we show that the microenvironmental stresses found in the solid tumor are able to inhibit the canonical Wnt/β-catenin signaling pathway. However, tumor cells harboring common β-catenin pathway mutations, such as loss of adenomatous polyposis coli, are insensitive to this novel hypoxic effect. The underlying mechanism responsible is hypoxia-induced endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress that inhibits normal Wnt protein processing and secretion. ER stress causes dissociation between GRP78/BiP and Wnt, an interaction essential for its correct posttranslational processing. Microenvironmental stress can therefore block autocrine and paracrine signaling of the Wnt/β-catenin pathway and negatively affect tumor growth. This study provides a general paradigm relating oxygen status to ER function and growth factor signaling.  相似文献   

19.
Calreticulin is the major high capacity, low affinity Ca2+ binding protein localized within the endoplasmic reticulum. It functions as a reservoir for triggered release of Ca2+ by the endoplasmic reticulum and is thus integral to eukaryotic signal transduction pathways involving Ca2+ as a second messenger. The early branching photosynthetic protist Euglena gracilis is shown to possess calreticulin as its major high capacity Ca2+ binding protein. The protein was purified, microsequenced and cloned. Like its homologues from higher eukaryotes, calreticulin from Euglena possesses a short signal peptide for endoplasmic reticulum import and the C-terminal retention signal KDEL, indicating that these components of the eukaryotic protein routing apparatus were functional in their present form prior to divergence of the euglenozoan lineage. A gene phytogeny for calreticulin and calnexin sequences in the context of eukaryotic homologues indicates i) that these Ca2+ binding endoplasmic reticulum proteins descend from a gene duplication that occurred in the earliest stages of eukaryotic evolution and furthermore iii that Euglenozoa express the calreticulin protein of the kinetoplastid (trypanosomes and their relatives) lineage, rather than that of the eukaryotic chlorophyte which gave rise to Euglena's plastids. Evidence for conservation of endoplasmic reticulum routing and Ca2+ binding function of calreticulin from Euglena traces the functional history of Ca2+ second messenger signal transduction pathways deep into eukaryotic evolution.  相似文献   

20.
《The Journal of cell biology》1996,135(6):1913-1923
Calreticulin is an ubiquitous and highly conserved high capacity Ca(2+)- binding protein that plays a major role in Ca2+ storage within the lumen of the ER. Here, using L fibroblast cell lines expressing different levels of calreticulin, we show that calreticulin plays a role in the control of cell adhesiveness via regulation of expression of vinculin, a cytoskeletal protein essential for cell-substratum and cell-cell attachments. Both vinculin protein and mRNA levels are increased in cells overexpressing calreticulin and are downregulated in cells expressing reduced level of calreticulin. Abundance of actin, talin, alpha 5 and beta 1 integrins, pp125 focal adhesion kinase, and alpha-catenin is not affected by the differential calreticulin expression. Overexpression of calreticulin increases both cell- substratum and cell-cell adhesiveness of L fibroblasts that, most surprisingly, establish vinculin-rich cell-cell junctions. Upregulation of calreticulin also affects adhesion-dependent phenomena such as cell motility (which decreases) and cell spreading (which increases). Downregulation of calreticulin brings about inverse effects. Cell adhesiveness is Ca2+ regulated. The level of calreticulin expression, however, has no effect on either the resting cytoplasmic Ca2+ concentration or the magnitude of FGF-induced Ca2+ transients. Calreticulin, however, participates in Ca2+ homeostasis as its level of expression affects cell viability at low concentrations of extracellular Ca2+. Consequently, we infer that it is not the Ca2+ storage function of calreticulin that affects cell adhesiveness. Neither endogenous calreticulin nor overexpressed green fluorescent protein-calreticulin construct can be detected outside of the ER. Since all of the adhesion-related effects of differential calreticulin expression can be explained by its regulation of vinculin expression, we conclude that it is the ER-resident calreticulin that affects cellular adhesiveness.  相似文献   

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