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1.
In Dictyostelium discoideum, the secreted proteins AprA and CfaD function as reporters of cell density and regulate cell number by inhibiting proliferation at high cell densities. AprA also functions to disperse groups of cells at high density by acting as a chemorepellent. However, the signal transduction pathways associated with AprA and CfaD are not clear, and little is known about how AprA affects the cytoskeleton to regulate cell movement. We found that the p21-activated kinase (PAK) family member PakD is required for both the proliferation-inhibiting activity of AprA and CfaD and the chemorepellent activity of AprA. Similar to cells lacking AprA or CfaD, cells lacking PakD proliferate to a higher cell density than wild-type cells. Recombinant AprA and CfaD inhibit the proliferation of wild-type cells but not cells lacking PakD. Like AprA and CfaD, PakD affects proliferation but does not significantly affect growth (the accumulation of mass) on a per-nucleus basis. In contrast to wild-type cells, cells lacking PakD are not repelled from a source of AprA, and colonies of cells lacking PakD expand at a slower rate than wild-type cells, indicating that PakD is required for AprA-mediated chemorepulsion. A PakD-GFP fusion protein localizes to an intracellular punctum that is not the nucleus or centrosome, and PakD-GFP is also occasionally observed at the rear cortex of moving cells. Vegetative cells lacking PakD show excessive actin-based filopodia-like structures, suggesting that PakD affects actin dynamics, consistent with previously characterized roles of PAK proteins in actin regulation. Together, our results implicate PakD in AprA/CfaD signaling and show that a PAK protein is required for proper chemorepulsive cell movement in Dictyostelium.  相似文献   

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3.
In Dictyostelium discoideum, AprA and CfaD are secreted proteins that inhibit cell proliferation. We found that the proliferation of cells lacking CnrN, a phosphatase and tensin homolog (PTEN)-like phosphatase, is not inhibited by exogenous AprA and is increased by exogenous CfaD. The expression of CnrN in cnrN¯ cells partially rescues these altered sensitivities, suggesting that CnrN is necessary for the ability of AprA and CfaD to inhibit proliferation. Cells lacking CnrN accumulate normal levels of AprA and CfaD. Like cells lacking AprA and CfaD, cnrN¯ cells proliferate faster and reach a higher maximum cell density than wild type cells, tend to be multinucleate, accumulate normal levels of mass and protein per nucleus, and form less viable spores. When cnrN¯ cells expressing myc-tagged CnrN are stimulated with a mixture of rAprA and rCfaD, levels of membrane-associated myc-CnrN increase. AprA also causes chemorepulsion of Dictyostelium cells, and CnrN is required for this process. Combined, these results suggest that CnrN functions in a signal transduction pathway downstream of AprA and CfaD mediating some, but not all, of the effects of AprA and CfaD.  相似文献   

4.

Background  

Several studies have shown that organ size, and the proliferation of tumor metastases, may be regulated by negative feedback loops in which autocrine secreted factors called chalones inhibit proliferation. However, very little is known about chalones, and how cells sense them. We previously identified two secreted proteins, AprA and CfaD, which act as chalones in Dictyostelium. Cells lacking AprA or CfaD proliferate faster than wild-type cells, and adding recombinant AprA or CfaD to cells slows their proliferation.  相似文献   

5.
AprA and CfaD are secreted proteins that function as autocrine signals to inhibit cell proliferation in Dictyostelium discoideum. Cells lacking AprA or CfaD proliferate rapidly, and adding AprA or CfaD to cells slows proliferation. Cells lacking the ROCO kinase QkgA proliferate rapidly, with a doubling time 83% of that of the wild type, and overexpression of a QkgA-green fluorescent protein (GFP) fusion protein slows cell proliferation. We found that qkgA cells accumulate normal levels of extracellular AprA and CfaD. Exogenous AprA or CfaD does not slow the proliferation of cells lacking qkgA, and expression of QkgA-GFP in qkgA cells rescues this insensitivity. Like cells lacking AprA or CfaD, cells lacking QkgA tend to be multinucleate, accumulate nuclei rapidly, and show a mass and protein accumulation per nucleus like those of the wild type, suggesting that QkgA negatively regulates proliferation but not growth. Despite their rapid proliferation, cells lacking AprA, CfaD, or QkgA expand as a colony on bacteria less rapidly than the wild type. Unlike AprA and CfaD, QkgA does not affect spore viability following multicellular development. Together, these results indicate that QkgA is necessary for proliferation inhibition by AprA and CfaD, that QkgA mediates some but not all of the effects of AprA and CfaD, and that QkgA may function downstream of these proteins in a signal transduction pathway regulating proliferation.Physiological processes that define and maintain the sizes of tissues are poorly understood. Although a number of characterized gene products negatively regulate the sizes of tissues (21, 23), the mechanism by which the activities of such gene products are controlled is unclear. One potential mechanism for tissue size regulation consists of tissue-specific autocrine signals that inhibit proliferation in a concentration-dependent manner (18). Since the extracellular concentration of such factors increases as a function of cell density and/or cell number, the proliferation-inhibiting function of these factors can limit tissue size. Considerable evidence for such factors has been reported. For instance, full hepatectomy in one of two rats with conjoined circulatory systems stimulated proliferation in the intact liver of the conjoined rat, suggesting the existence of a systemic factor produced by the liver that inhibits the proliferation of hepatocytes (16). However, only a small number of factors with analogous functional roles, such as myostatin, which regulates skeletal muscle size (30), and Gdf11, which negatively regulates neurogenesis in the olfactory epithelium (38), have been identified. The mechanisms by which such signals inhibit proliferation are not well understood. As such autocrine signals may serve to limit tumor growth (14, 20), elucidation of the identities of such factors and their associated signal transduction pathways may yield novel cancer therapies.We have identified two such autocrine proliferation-repressing signals in the social amoeba Dictyostelium discoideum, a genetically and biochemically tractable model organism. The proteins AprA and CfaD are secreted by Dictyostelium and inhibit the proliferation of Dictyostelium cells in a concentration-dependent manner (4, 12). Cells in which the genes encoding either AprA or CfaD have been disrupted by homologous recombination proliferate rapidly, and cells overexpressing AprA or CfaD proliferate slowly (4, 11). Adding recombinant AprA (rAprA) or recombinant CfaD (rCfaD) to cells slows proliferation, demonstrating that these proteins function as extracellular signals (4, 12). In addition to exhibiting rapid proliferation, aprA and cfaD cells exhibit a multinucleate phenotype, strongly suggesting that AprA and CfaD are negative regulators of mitosis (4, 11). aprA cells are insensitive to the proliferation-inhibiting effects of CfaD (12), and cfaD cells are insensitive to AprA (4), indicating the necessity of both genes for proliferation inhibition and suggesting a common proliferation-inhibiting mechanism. The G protein complex subunits Gα8, Gα9, and Gβ are necessary for proliferation inhibition by AprA, and the addition of recombinant AprA to purified cell membranes increases binding of GTP to wild-type and gα9 cell membranes but not gα8 or gβ membranes, indicating that AprA activates a proliferation-inhibiting signal transduction pathway of which Gα8 and Gβ are components (5). The signal transduction pathway downstream of Gα8 and the associated mechanism of proliferation inhibition are unknown.Although the selective forces that have maintained functional autocrine proliferation inhibitors in proliferating Dictyostelium cells are unclear, AprA and CfaD may provide an advantage during the multicellular portion of the Dictyostelium life cycle. Upon starvation, Dictyostelium cells secrete pulses of the chemoattractant cyclic AMP, leading to cells streaming toward aggregation centers (15, 27). This process causes the formation of multicellular groups regulated in size by a secreted protein complex that stimulates stream breakup (9, 10). These groups develop into multicellular fruiting body structures composed of a mass of stress-resistant spores supported by an approximately 1-mm-high stalk (24). While the stalk cells inevitably die in an act of apparent altruism (31), the presence of nutrients stimulates spore germination and a continuation of proliferation (13). Following development, aprA and cfaD cells form fewer viable spores than the wild type (4, 11), suggesting that AprA and CfaD increase the fitness of Dictyostelium during development.Like aprA and cfaD cells, Dictyostelium cells lacking the ROCO family kinase QkgA have an abnormally rapid proliferation (1). The ROCO protein family is widely conserved and is defined by the presence of a Ras of complex protein (Roc) domain followed by a C terminus of Roc (Cor) domain, which mediates homodimerization (19). In eukaryotes, these domains are commonly followed C terminally by a kinase domain with similarity to the tyrosine kinase-like (TKL) group of kinases (3, 26, 29). In Dictyostelium, other ROCO proteins function in cyclic GMP signaling (8, 35) and cytokinesis (2), and a total of 11 predicted ROCO proteins are present in the genome, 10 of which, including QkgA, encode kinase domains predicted to be catalytically active (17). The human genome encodes two ROCO kinases, which are expressed in a wide range of tissues (25, 40). Little is known regarding the physiological functions of these proteins, although the ROCO protein LRRK2 is implicated in a dominantly inherited form of Parkinson''s disease (40) and negatively regulates neurite growth in rat cortical cultures (28).In this report, we show that, like aprA and cfaD cells, qkgA cells proliferate to a higher cell density than the wild type and tend to be multinucleate. Additionally, we show that qkgA cells are insensitive to exogenous AprA and CfaD, indicating that QkgA is required for AprA and CfaD signal transduction.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Autocrine proliferation repressor protein A (AprA) is a protein secreted by Dictyostelium discoideum cells. Although there is very little sequence similarity between AprA and any human protein, AprA has a predicted structural similarity to the human protein dipeptidyl peptidase IV (DPPIV). AprA is a chemorepellent for Dictyostelium cells, and DPPIV is a chemorepellent for neutrophils. This led us to investigate if AprA and DPPIV have additional functional similarities. We find that like AprA, DPPIV is a chemorepellent for, and inhibits the proliferation of, D. discoideum cells, and that AprA binds some DPPIV binding partners such as fibronectin. Conversely, rAprA has DPPIV‐like protease activity. These results indicate a functional similarity between two eukaryotic chemorepellent proteins with very little sequence similarity, and emphasize the usefulness of using a predicted protein structure to search a protein structure database, in addition to searching for proteins with similar sequences.  相似文献   

8.
The ability of cells to sense chemical gradients is essential during development, morphogenesis, and immune responses. Although much is known about chemoattraction, chemorepulsion remains poorly understood. Proliferating Dictyostelium cells secrete a chemorepellent protein called AprA. AprA prevents pseudopod formation at the region of the cell closest to the source of AprA, causing the random movement of cells to be biased away from the AprA. Activation of Ras proteins in a localized sector of a cell cortex helps to induce pseudopod formation, and Ras proteins are needed for AprA chemorepulsion. Here we show that AprA locally inhibits Ras cortical activation through the G protein–coupled receptor GrlH, the G protein subunits Gβ and Gα8, Ras protein RasG, protein kinase B, the p21-activated kinase PakD, and the extracellular signal–regulated kinase Erk1. Diffusion calculations and experiments indicate that in a colony of cells, high extracellular concentrations of AprA in the center can globally inhibit Ras activation, while a gradient of AprA that naturally forms at the edge of the colony allows cells to activate Ras at sectors of the cell other than the sector of the cell closest to the center of the colony, effectively inducing both repulsion from the colony and cell differentiation. Together, these results suggest that a pathway that inhibits local Ras activation can mediate chemorepulsion.  相似文献   

9.
The neuronal ceroid lipofuscinoses (NCL) are a group of inherited, severe neurodegenerative disorders also known as Batten disease. Juvenile NCL (JNCL) is caused by recessive loss-of-function mutations in CLN3, which encodes a transmembrane protein that regulates endocytic pathway trafficking, though its primary function is not yet known. The social amoeba Dictyostelium discoideum is increasingly utilized for neurological disease research and is particularly suited for investigation of protein function in trafficking. Therefore, here we establish new overexpression and knockout Dictyostelium cell lines for JNCL research. Dictyostelium Cln3 fused to GFP localized to the contractile vacuole system and to compartments of the endocytic pathway. cln3 cells displayed increased rates of proliferation and an associated reduction in the extracellular levels and cleavage of the autocrine proliferation repressor, AprA. Mid- and late development of cln3 cells was precocious and cln3 slugs displayed increased migration. Expression of either Dictyostelium Cln3 or human CLN3 in cln3 cells suppressed the precocious development and aberrant slug migration, which were also suppressed by calcium chelation. Taken together, our results show that Cln3 is a pleiotropic protein that negatively regulates proliferation and development in Dictyostelium. This new model system, which allows for the study of Cln3 function in both single cells and a multicellular organism, together with the observation that expression of human CLN3 restores abnormalities in Dictyostelium cln3 cells, strongly supports the use of this new model for JNCL research.  相似文献   

10.
Growing Dictyostelium cells secrete CfaD and AprA, two proteins that have been characterized as chalones. They exist within a high-molecular-weight complex that reversibly inhibits cell proliferation, but not growth, via cell surface receptors and a signaling pathway that includes G proteins. How the production of these two proteins is regulated is unknown. Dictyostelium cells possess three GCN2-type eukaryotic initiation factor 2 α subunit (eIF2α) kinases, proteins that phosphorylate the translational initiation factor eIF2α and possess a tRNA binding domain involved in their regulation. The Dictyostelium kinases have been shown to function during development in regulating several processes. We show here that expression of an unregulated, activated kinase domain greatly inhibits cell proliferation. The inhibitory effect on proliferation is not due to a general inhibition of translation. Instead, it is due to enhanced production of a secreted factor(s). Indeed, extracellular CfaD and AprA proteins, but not their mRNAs, are overproduced in cells expressing the activated kinase domain. The inhibition of proliferation is not seen when the activated kinase domain is expressed in cells lacking CfaD or AprA or in cells that contain a nonphosphorylatable eIF2α. We conclude that production of the chalones CfaD and AprA is translationally regulated by eIF2α phosphorylation. Both proteins are upregulated at the culmination of development, and this enhanced production is lacking in a strain that possesses a nonphosphorylatable eIF2α.  相似文献   

11.
Developing Dictyostelium cells aggregate to form fruiting bodies containing typically 2 × 104 cells. To prevent the formation of an excessively large fruiting body, streams of aggregating cells break up into groups if there are too many cells. The breakup is regulated by a secreted complex of polypeptides called counting factor (CF). Countin and CF50 are two of the components of CF. Disrupting the expression of either of these proteins results in cells secreting very little detectable CF activity, and as a result, aggregation streams remain intact and form large fruiting bodies, which invariably collapse. We find that disrupting the gene encoding a third protein present in crude CF, CF45-1, also results in the formation of large groups when cells are grown with bacteria on agar plates and then starve. However, unlike countin and cf50 cells, cf45-1 cells sometimes form smaller groups than wild-type cells when the cells are starved on filter pads. The predicted amino acid sequence of CF45-1 has some similarity to that of lysozyme, but recombinant CF45-1 has no detectable lysozyme activity. In the exudates from starved cells, CF45-1 is present in a ~450-kDa fraction that also contains countin and CF50, suggesting that it is part of a complex. Recombinant CF45-1 decreases group size in colonies of cf45-1 cells with a 50% effective concentration (EC50) of ~8 ng/ml and in colonies of wild-type and cf50 cells with an EC50 of ~40 ng/ml. Like countin and cf50 cells, cf45-1 cells have high levels of cytosolic glucose, high cell-cell adhesion, and low cell motility. Together, the data suggest that CF45-1 participates in group size regulation in Dictyostelium.  相似文献   

12.
Tang Y  Gomer RH 《Eukaryotic cell》2008,7(10):1758-1770
An interesting but largely unanswered biological question is how eukaryotic organisms regulate the size of multicellular tissues. During development, a lawn of Dictyostelium cells breaks up into territories, and within the territories the cells aggregate in dendritic streams to form groups of ~20,000 cells. Using random insertional mutagenesis to search for genes involved in group size regulation, we found that an insertion in the cnrN gene affects group size. Cells lacking CnrN (cnrN) form abnormally small groups, which can be rescued by the expression of exogenous CnrN. Relayed pulses of extracellular cyclic AMP (cAMP) direct cells to aggregate by chemotaxis to form aggregation territories and streams. cnrN cells overaccumulate cAMP during development and form small territories. Decreasing the cAMP pulse size by treating cnrN cells with cAMP phosphodiesterase or starving cnrN cells at a low density rescues the small-territory phenotype. The predicted CnrN sequence has similarity to phosphatase and tensin homolog (PTEN), which in Dictyostelium inhibits cAMP-stimulated phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase signaling pathways. CnrN inhibits cAMP-stimulated phosphatidylinositol 3,4,5-trisphosphate accumulation, Akt activation, actin polymerization, and cAMP production. Our results suggest that CnrN is a protein with some similarities to PTEN and that it regulates cAMP signal transduction to regulate territory size.  相似文献   

13.
RasG is the most abundant Ras protein in growing Dictyostelium cells and the closest relative of mammalian Ras proteins. We have generated null mutants in which expression of RasG is completely abolished. Unexpectedly, RasG cells are able to grow at nearly wild-type rates. However, they exhibit defective cell movement and a wide range of defects in the control of the actin cytoskeleton, including a loss of cell polarity, absence of normal lamellipodia, formation of unusual small, punctate polymerized actin structures, and a large number of abnormally long filopodia. Despite their lack of polarity and abnormal cytoskeleton, mutant cells perform normal chemotaxis. However, rasG cells are unable to perform normal cytokinesis, becoming multinucleate when grown in suspension culture. Taken together, these data suggest a principal role for RasG in coordination of cell movement and control of the cytoskeleton.  相似文献   

14.
The gapA gene encoding a novel RasGTPase-activating protein (RasGAP)–related protein was found to be disrupted in a cytokinesis mutant of Dictyostelium that grows as giant and multinucleate cells in a dish culture. The predicted sequence of the GAPA protein showed considerable homology to those of Gap1/Sar1 from fission yeast and the COOH-terminal half of mammalian IQGAPs, the similarity extending beyond the RasGAP-related domain. In suspension culture, gapA cells showed normal growth in terms of the increase in cell mass, but cytokinesis inefficiently occurred to produce spherical giant cells. Time-lapse recording of the dynamics of cell division in a dish culture revealed that, in the case of gapA cells, cytokinesis was very frequently reversed at the step in which the midbody connecting the daughter cells should be severed. Earlier steps of cytokinesis in the gapA cells seemed to be normal, since myosin II was accumulated at the cleavage furrow. Upon starvation, gapA cells developed and formed fruiting bodies with viable spores, like the wild-type cells. These results indicate that the GAPA protein is specifically involved in the completion of cytokinesis. Recently, it was reported that IQGAPs are putative effectors for Rac and CDC42, members of the Rho family of GTPases, and participate in reorganization of the actin cytoskeleton. Thus, it is possible that Dictyostelium GAPA participates in the severing of the midbody by regulating the actin cytoskeleton through an interaction with a member of small GTPases.  相似文献   

15.
We investigated the function of cyclin-dependent kinase 2 (Cdk2) in neural progenitor cells during postnatal development. Chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan (NG2)–expressing progenitor cells of the subventricular zone (SVZ) show no significant difference in density and proliferation between Cdk2−/− and wild-type mice at perinatal ages and are reduced only in adult Cdk2−/− mice. Adult Cdk2−/− SVZ cells in culture display decreased self-renewal capacity and enhanced differentiation. Compensatory mechanisms in perinatal Cdk2−/− SVZ cells, which persist until postnatal day 15, involve increased Cdk4 expression that results in retinoblastoma protein inactivation. A subsequent decline in Cdk4 activity to wild-type levels in postnatal day 28 Cdk2−/− cells coincides with lower NG2+ proliferation and self-renewal capacity similar to adult levels. Cdk4 silencing in perinatal Cdk2−/− SVZ cells abolishes Cdk4 up-regulation and reduces cell proliferation and self- renewal to adult levels. Conversely, Cdk4 overexpression in adult SVZ cells restores proliferative capacity to wild-type levels. Thus, although Cdk2 is functionally redundant in perinatal SVZ, it is important for adult progenitor cell proliferation and self-renewal through age-dependent regulation of Cdk4.  相似文献   

16.
To avoid excessive activation, immune signals are tightly controlled by diverse inhibitory proteins. TRIM30, a tripartite motif (TRIM)-containing protein is one of such inhibitors known to function in macrophages. To define the roles of TRIM30, we generated Trim30 knockout (Trim30 −/−) mice. Trim30 deletion caused no major developmental defects in any organs, nor showed any discernable defect in the activation of macrophages. But, Trim30 −/− mice showed increased CD4/CD8 ratio when aged and Trim30 −/− CD4+ T cells exhibited an abnormal response upon TCR activation, in particular in the absence of a costimulatory signal. Adoptive transfer of wild-type and Trim30 −/− CD4+ T cells together into lymphopenic hosts confirmed higher proliferation of the Trim30 −/− CD4+ T cells in vivo. Despite the enhanced proliferation, Trim30 −/− T cells showed decreased levels of NF-κB activation and IL-2 production compared to wild-type cells. These results indicate a distinct requirement for TRIM30 in modulation of NF-κB activation and cell proliferation induced by TCR stimulation.  相似文献   

17.
Wang B  Kuspa A 《Eukaryotic cell》2002,1(1):126-136
Dictyostelium amoebae accomplish a starvation-induced developmental process by aggregating into a mound and forming a single fruiting body with terminally differentiated spores and stalk cells. culB was identified as the gene disrupted in a developmental mutant with an aberrant prestalk cell differentiation phenotype. The culB gene product appears to be a homolog of the cullin family of proteins that are known to be involved in ubiquitin-mediated protein degradation. The culB mutants form supernumerary prestalk tips atop each developing mound that result in the formation of multiple small fruiting bodies. The prestalk-specific gene ecmA is expressed precociously in culB mutants, suggesting that prestalk cell differentiation occurs earlier than normal. In addition, when culB mutant cells are mixed with wild-type cells, they display a cell-autonomous propensity to form stalk cells. Thus, CulB appears to ensure that the proper number of prestalk cells differentiate at the appropriate time in development. Activation of cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA) by disruption of the regulatory subunit gene (pkaR) or by overexpression of the catalytic subunit gene (pkaC) enhances the prestalk/stalk cell differentiation phenotype of the culB mutant. For example, culB pkaR cells form stalk cells without obvious multicellular morphogenesis and are more sensitive to the prestalk O (pstO) cell inducer DIF-1. The sensitized condition of PKA activation reveals that CulB may govern prestalk cell differentiation in Dictyostelium, in part by controlling the sensitivity of cells to DIF-1, possibly by regulating the levels of one or more proteins that are rate limiting for prestalk differentiation.  相似文献   

18.
Cell migration is involved in various physiological and pathogenic events, and the complex underlying molecular mechanisms have not been fully elucidated. The simple eukaryote Dictyostelium discoideum displays chemotactic locomotion in stages of its life cycle. By characterizing a Dictyostelium mutant defective in chemotactic responses, we identified a novel actin-binding protein serving to modulate cell migration and named it actin-binding protein G (AbpG); this 971–amino acid (aa) protein contains an N-terminal type 2 calponin homology (CH2) domain followed by two large coiled-coil regions. In chemoattractant gradients, abpG cells display normal directional persistence but migrate significantly more slowly than wild-type cells; expressing Flag-AbpG in mutant cells eliminates the motility defect. AbpG is enriched in cortical/lamellipodial regions and colocalizes well with F-actin; aa 401–600 and aa 501–550 fragments of AbpG show the same distribution as full-length AbpG. The aa 501–550 region of AbpG, which is essential for AbpG to localize to lamellipodia and to rescue the phenotype of abpG cells, is sufficient for binding to F-actin and represents a novel actin-binding protein domain. Compared with wild-type cells, abpG cells have significantly higher F-actin levels. Collectively our results suggest that AbpG may participate in modulating actin dynamics to optimize cell locomotion.  相似文献   

19.
Ceroid lipofuscinosis neuronal 5 (CLN5) is a member of a family of proteins that are linked to neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis (NCL). This devastating neurological disorder, known commonly as Batten disease, affects all ages and ethnicities and is currently incurable. The precise function of CLN5, like many of the NCL proteins, remains to be elucidated. In this study, we report the localization, molecular function, and interactome of Cln5, the CLN5 homolog in the social amoeba Dictyostelium discoideum. Residues that are glycosylated in human CLN5 are conserved in the Dictyostelium homolog as are residues that are mutated in patients with CLN5 disease. Dictyostelium Cln5 contains a putative signal peptide for secretion and we show that the protein is secreted during growth and starvation. We also reveal that both Dictyostelium Cln5 and human CLN5 are glycoside hydrolases, providing the first evidence in any system linking a molecular function to CLN5. Finally, immunoprecipitation coupled with mass spectrometry identified 61 proteins that interact with Cln5 in Dictyostelium. Of the 61 proteins, 67% localize to the extracellular space, 28% to intracellular vesicles, and 20% to lysosomes. A GO term enrichment analysis revealed that a majority of the interacting proteins are involved in metabolism, catabolism, proteolysis, and hydrolysis, and include other NCL-like proteins (e.g., Tpp1/Cln2, cathepsin D/Cln10, cathepsin F/Cln13) as well as proteins linked to Cln3 function in Dictyostelium (e.g., AprA, CfaD, CadA). In total, this work reveals a CLN5 homolog in Dictyostelium and further establishes this organism as a complementary model system for studying the functions of proteins linked to NCL in humans.  相似文献   

20.
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