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The glycerophosphodiester phosphodiesterase enzyme family involved in the hydrolysis of glycerophosphodiesters has been characterized in bacteria and recently identified in mammals. Here, we have characterized the activity and function of GDE3, one of the seven mammalian enzymes. GDE3 is up-regulated during osteoblast differentiation and can affect cell morphology. We show that GDE3 is a glycerophosphoinositol (GroPIns) phosphodiesterase that hydrolyzes GroPIns, producing inositol 1-phosphate and glycerol, and thus suggesting specific roles for this enzyme in GroPIns metabolism. Substrate specificity analyses show that wild-type GDE3 selectively hydrolyzes GroPIns over glycerophosphocholine, glycerophosphoethanolamine, and glycerophosphoserine. A single point mutation in the catalytic domain of GDE3 (GDE3R231A) leads to loss of GroPIns enzymatic hydrolysis, identifying an arginine residue crucial for GDE3 activity. After heterologous GDE3 expression in HEK293T cells, phosphodiesterase activity is detected in the extracellular medium, with no effect on the intracellular GroPIns pool. Together with the millimolar concentrations of calcium required for GDE3 activity, this predicts an enzyme topology with an extracellular catalytic domain. Interestingly, GDE3 ectocellular activity is detected in a stable clone from a murine osteoblast cell line, further confirming the activity of GDE3 in a more physiological context. Finally, overexpression of wild-type GDE3 in osteoblasts promotes disassembly of actin stress fibers, decrease in growth rate, and increase in alkaline phosphatase activity and calcium content, indicating a role for GDE3 in induction of differentiation. Thus, we have identified the GDE3 substrate GroPIns as a candidate mediator for osteoblast proliferation, in line with the GroPIns activity observed previously in epithelial cells.The glycerophosphodiester phosphodiesterases (GP-PDEs)5 were initially characterized in bacteria, where they have functional roles for production of metabolic carbon and phosphate sources from glycerophosphodiesters (1, 2) and in adherence to and degradation of mammalian host-cell membranes (3). The GP-PDEs have a catalytic region of 56 amino acids (4). After their characterization in bacteria, mammalian glycerophosphodiesterases were identified, with the definition of a family of seven members (5). The first of these, GDE1, is an interactor of regulator of G-protein signaling (RGS)16, and was subsequently defined as a GP-PDE regulated by G-protein signaling (4). Indeed, GDE1 expression in HEK293T cells showed increased enzymatic activity upon α/β-adrenergic and lysophospholipid receptor stimulation (4). The second member, GDE2, was isolated by homology searches in neuronal tissues and its physiological role involves neuronal differentiation (6, 7). In contrast, GDE3 has been characterized as a marker of osteoblast differentiation and was isolated through a differential display method (8). GDE4 was isolated only recently with three-dimensional modeling defining it as a GP-PDE, although no functional activity has been correlated to its expression (9). The remaining members were cloned following data base searches, with further studies required for the definition of their properties (5). The diversity among these family members, in terms of tissue distribution, subcellular localization, and substrate specificity, suggests they selectively regulate biological functions and have distinct physiological roles (5).The only GP-PDE activity that has been biochemically characterized to date followed GDE1 overexpression in HEK293T cells, which showed a selectivity for the glycerophosphoinositols (GPIs) as substrate (4), in contrast to the bacterial GP-PDEs that show broad substrate specificities with respect to the alcohol moiety of the glycerophosphodiesterases (1, 2). The GPIs are naturally occurring, biologically active metabolites of the phosphoinositides that were originally investigated in the context of Ras-transformed cells (10). They are present in virtually all cell types, where their intracellular levels can also be modulated according to cell activation, differentiation, and development (Refs. 11 and 12 and references therein). Recently, glycerophosphoinositol (GroPIns) was characterized as a mediator of purinergic and adrenergic regulation of PCCl3 thyroid cell proliferation (13), while GroPIns 4-phosphate (GroPIns4P) has been shown to induce reorganization of the actin cytoskeleton in fibroblasts and in T-lymphocytes, by promoting a sustained and robust activation of the Rho GTPases (1416).The GPIs appear to rapidly equilibrate across the plasma membrane when added exogenously to cells, to exert their actions within the cell (12). The plasma membrane transporter for GroPIns characterized in yeast is the protein GIT1 (17), with one of its orthologs in mammalian cells identified as the human permease Glut2 (18). This specific transporter has been proposed to mediate both GroPIns uptake and release, which depends on the GroPIns concentration gradient across the plasma membrane. Under physiological conditions, this gradient can arise from the formation of GPIs from the phosphoinositides inside cells following activation of a specific isoform of phospholipase A2, PLA2IVα (13, 19).The release of the GPIs into the extracellular medium can affect their paracrine targets (16) or initiate their catabolism. This is supported by our characterization of GDE1 activity, and now of GDE3 activity, both of which show a substrate selectivity toward GroPIns, and catalytic activity after heterologous expression that can only be monitored in the extracellular space. Interestingly, GDE3 activity appears to be related to modulation of osteoblast functions, delineating a role for GDE3 in promoting osteoblast differentiation, and mainly regulating osteoblast proliferation.  相似文献   

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We immunopurified a surface antigen specific for the collecting duct (CD) epithelium. Microsequencing of three polypeptides identified the antigen as the neuronal cell adhesion molecule L1, a member of the immunoglobulin superfamily. The kidney isoform showed a deletion of exon 3. L1 was expressed in the mesonephric duct and the metanephros throughout CD development. In the adult CD examined by electron microscopy, L1 was not expressed on intercalated cells but was restricted to CD principal cells and to the papilla tall cells. By contrast, L1 appeared late in the distal portion of the elongating nephron in the mesenchymally derived epithelium and decreased during postnatal development. Immunoblot analysis showed that expression, proteolytic cleavage, and the glycosylation pattern of L1 protein were regulated during renal development. L1 was not detected in epithelia of other organs developing by branching morphogenesis. Addition of anti-L1 antibody to kidney or lung organotypic cultures induced dysmorphogenesis of the ureteric bud epithelium but not of the lung. These results suggest a functional role for L1 in CD development in vitro. We further postulate that L1 may be involved in the guidance of developing distal tubule and in generation and maintenance of specialized cell phenotypes in CD.  相似文献   

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Abstract: We have determined the expression of the Alzheimer's disease-associated proteins presenilin-1 and presenilin-2 in primary cultures of rat hippocampal neurons. Neurons highly express presenilin-1 and presenilin-2, whereas both proteins were not detected in astrocytes. Further, we have analyzed the subcellular localization and expression in rat hippocampal neurons during development. Although presenilin proteins were localized predominantly to the endoplasmic reticulum in nonneuronal cells transfected with presenilin cDNAs, in neurons, presenilin proteins were also found in compartments not staining with antibodies to grp78(BiP). Presenilin-1 and presenilin-2 were predominantly detected in vesicular structures within the somatodendritic compartment with much less expression in axons. Polarized distribution of presenilin-1 and presenilin-2 differs slightly, with more presenilin-2 expressed in axons compared with presenilin-1. Presenilin expression was found to be developmentally regulated. Presenilin expression strongly increased during neuronal differentiation until full morphological polarization and then declined. No full-length presenilin-1 or presenilin-2 could be detected within cell lysates. At early developmental stages the expected ~34-kDa N-terminal proteolytic fragment of presenilin-1 and the ~38-kDa fragment of presenilin-2 were detected. Later during differentiation we predominantly detected a ~38-kDa fragment for presenilin-1 and a ~42-kDa fragment for presenilin-2. By epitope mapping, we show that these slower migrating peptides represent N-terminal proteolytic fragments, cleaved C-terminal to the conventional site of processing. It is noteworthy that both presenilin-1 and presenilin-2 undergo alternative proteolytic cleavage at the same stage of neuronal differentiation. Regulation of presenilin expression and proteolytic processing might have implications for the pathological as well as the biological function of presenilins during aging in the human brain.  相似文献   

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Abscisic acid (ABA) has been implicated as a key component in water-deficit-induced responses, including those triggered by drought, NaCl, and low- temperature stress. In this study a role for ABA in mediating the NaCl-stress-induced increases in tonoplast H+-translocating ATPase (V-ATPase) and Na+/H+ antiport activity in Mesembryanthemum crystallinum, leading to vacuolar Na+ sequestration, were investigated. NaCl or ABA treatment of adult M. crystallinum plants induced V-ATPase H+ transport activity, and when applied in combination, an additive effect on V-ATPase stimulation was observed. In contrast, treatment of juvenile plants with ABA did not induce V-ATPase activity, whereas NaCl treatment resulted in a similar response to that observed in adult plants. Na+/H+ antiport activity was induced in both juvenile and adult plants by NaCl, but ABA had no effect at either developmental stage. Results indicate that ABA-induced changes in V-ATPase activity are dependent on the plant reaching its adult phase, whereas NaCl-induced increases in V-ATPase and Na+/H+ antiport activity are independent of plant age. This suggests that ABA-induced V-ATPase activity may be linked to the stress-induced, developmentally programmed switch from C3 metabolism to Crassulacean acid metabolism in adult plants, whereas, vacuolar Na+ sequestration, mediated by the V-ATPase and Na+/H+ antiport, is regulated through ABA-independent pathways.  相似文献   

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The FK506-binding proteins (FKBPs) belong to the peptidyl prolyl cis-trans isomerase (PPIase) family, and catalyse the rotation of the peptide bond preceding a proline. They are conserved in organisms from bacteria to man. In order to understand the function of plant FKBP isoforms, we have produced transgenic wheat plants overexpressing each of the two wheat FKBPs: wFKBP73 (which is expressed in young vegetative and reproductive tissues under normal growth conditions) and wFKBP77 (which is induced by heat stress). Transgenic lines overexpressing wFKBP77 at 25°C showed major morphological abnormalities, specifically relating to height, leaf shape, spike morphology and sterility. In these plants, the levels of hsp90 mRNA were over two fold higher than in controls, indicating a common regulatory pathway shared between wFKBP77 and Hsp90. Transgenic lines overexpressing wFKBP73 showed normal vegetative morphology, but the grain weight and composition was altered, corresponding to changes in amylase activity during seed development.  相似文献   

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Abstract: Golgi-enriched fractions have been isolated from rat brain of increasing postnatal age and defined by electron microscopy and distribution of marker enzymes. The expression of sialyltransferase activity associated with these fractions has been demonstrated to developmentally decrease and this appeared to be, in part, dependent on endogenous competitive inhibition. The developmental regulation of this activity paralleled the sialylation state of the neural cell adhesion molecule (D2-CAM/N-CAM) and could be demonstrated to be capable of endogenously sialylating this protein in the isolated Golgi fractions. In 12-day-old animals the majority of the transferred [14C]sialic acid was found to be associated with the high-molecular-weight [>200 kilodaltons (kd)] form of D2-CAM/N-CAM, indicative of the protein having been heavily sialylated. Sialylation of the individual D2-CAM/N-CAM polypeptides was also demonstrated in both 12-day and adult animals and transfer was evident only in the 180-kd and 115-kd components and not in the 140-kd component. In contrast, Golgi-enriched fractions prepared from adult animals showed little capability of heavily sialylating D2-CAM/N-CAM to any significant extent.  相似文献   

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The AVR9 elicitor from the fungal pathogen Cladosporium fulvum induces defense-related responses, including cell death, specifically in tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill.) plants that carry the Cf-9 resistance gene. To study biochemical mechanisms of resistance in detail, suspension cultures of tomato cells that carry the Cf-9 resistance gene were initiated. Treatment of cells with various elicitors, except AVR9, induced an oxidative burst, ion fluxes, and expression of defense-related genes. Agrobacterium tumefaciens-mediated transformation of Cf9 tomato leaf discs with Avr9-containing constructs resulted efficiently in transgenic callus formation. Although transgenic callus tissue showed normal regeneration capacity, transgenic plants expressing both the Cf-9 and the Avr9 genes were never obtained. Transgenic F1 seedlings that were generated from crosses between tomato plants expressing the Avr9 gene and wild-type Cf9 plants died within a few weeks. However, callus cultures that were initiated on cotyledons from these seedlings could be maintained for at least 3 months and developed similarly to callus cultures that contained only the Cf-9 or the Avr9 gene. It is concluded, therefore, that induction of defense responses in Cf9 tomato cells by the AVR9 elicitor is developmentally regulated and is absent in callus tissue and cell-suspension cultures, which consists of undifferentiated cells. These results are significant for the use of suspension-cultured cells to investigate signal transduction cascades.  相似文献   

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Toxoplasma gondii is an obligate intracellular protozoan parasite that invades and replicates within most nucleated cells of warm-blooded animals. The basis for this wide host cell tropism is unknown but could be because parasites invade host cells using distinct pathways and/or repertoires of host factors. Using synchronized parasite invasion assays, we found that host microtubule disruption significantly reduces parasite invasion into host cells early after stimulating parasite invasion but not at later time points. Host microtubules are specifically associated with the moving junction, which is the site of contact between the host cell and the invading parasite. Host microtubules are specifically associated with the moving junction of those parasites invading early after stimulating invasion but not with those invading later. Disruption of host microtubules has no effect on parasite contact, attachment, motility, or rate of penetration. Rather, host microtubules hasten the time before parasites commence invasion. This effect on parasite invasion is distinct from the role that host microtubules play in bacterial and viral infections, where they function to traffic the pathogen or pathogen-derived material from the host cell''s periphery to its interior. These data indicate that the host microtubule cytoskeleton is a structure used by Toxoplasma to rapidly infect its host cell and highlight a novel function for host microtubules in microbial pathogenesis.Toxoplasma gondii is an obligate intracellular protozoan parasite that is capable of causing disease in fetuses and immunocompromised individuals (23). The parasite infects a wide range of nucleated cells of most warm-blooded animals. The mechanisms underlying this wide tropism are not known but could be due to either the parasite infecting cells using a ubiquitously expressed host receptor and associated machinery, inserting its own receptor into the host cell''s plasma membrane, or using multiple host cell receptors/machinery (5).Toxoplasma invasion is a multistep, complex process consisting of parasite contact to host cells, intimate attachment, parasite motility, and then penetration (5). Host cell contact is a loose, low-affinity interaction that is mediated by parasite surface antigens. An unknown signal then triggers the release of proteins from a specialized secretory organelle called micronemes whose contents include proteins that function as adhesins. This is then followed by parasite gliding motility on the host cell surface. At some point, proteins from a second secretory organelle, named rhoptries, are exocytosed. Among these rhoptry proteins, several (RON2, RON4, RON5, and RON8) are part of a preformed complex that binds the previously secreted AMA1 microneme protein (1, 2, 20, 33). Together, these proteins form the moving junction complex, which defines the parasite entry site on the host cell plasma membrane. Parasite penetration occurs by the parasite propelling itself forward, via acto-myosin-dependent motility, into the host plasma membrane (35). This causes an invagination of the plasma membrane resulting in the formation of the parasitophorous vacuole (PV), which is the compartment that the parasite resides in throughout its time in the host cell. However, host plasma membrane-associated proteins are selectively incorporated into the developing PV such that glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-linked proteins are included, while single-pass transmembrane proteins are excluded (7, 24).In contrast to parasite molecules that function during invasion, few host cell components involved in this process are known. A notable exception is the finding that host Arp2/3-dependent actin polymerization promotes Toxoplasma invasion (11). Nevertheless, how actin or other host molecules function during invasion remains to be determined. The host microtubule cytoskeleton has been widely studied for its role during receptor-mediated endocytosis, as well as in bacterial and viral infections, where microtubules act to facilitate cargo transport from the host cell periphery to the interior (8, 15, 27, 29, 40). Consistent with this role in cargo transport, host microtubules also promote trafficking of rhoptry proteins secreted into the host cell (12). However, whether this host cell structure functions during parasite invasion per se is unknown.Here, we tested the hypothesis that host microtubules are used by Toxoplasma tachyzoites to penetrate into its host cell. Using synchronized parasite invasion assays, we find that disruption of host microtubules significantly reduces parasite invasion into host cells early after stimulating parasite invasion but not at later time points. Host microtubules are localized to the moving junction but, unlike their previously described role in pathogen invasion, host microtubules promote tachyzoite invasion by hastening the time that parasites initiate invasion.  相似文献   

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