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《Autophagy》2013,9(7):671-672
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Beclin 1, the mammalian orthologue of yeast Atg6, has a central role in autophagy, a process of programmed cell survival, which is increased during periods of cell stress and extinguished during the cell cycle. It interacts with several cofactors (Atg14L, UVRAG, Bif-1, Rubicon, Ambra1, HMGB1, nPIST, VMP1, SLAM, IP(3)R, PINK and survivin) to regulate the lipid kinase Vps-34 protein and promote formation of Beclin 1-Vps34-Vps15 core complexes, thereby inducing autophagy. In contrast, the BH3 domain of Beclin 1 is bound to, and inhibited by Bcl-2 or Bcl-XL. This interaction can be disrupted by phosphorylation of Bcl-2 and Beclin 1, or ubiquitination of Beclin 1. Interestingly, caspase-mediated cleavage of Beclin 1 promotes crosstalk between apoptosis and autophagy. Beclin 1 dysfunction has been implicated in many disorders, including cancer and neurodegeneration. Here, we summarize new findings regarding the organization and function of the Beclin 1 network in cellular homeostasis, focusing on the cross-regulation between apoptosis and autophagy.  相似文献   

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In a recent paper published in Cell, He and colleagues reported the identification and functional characterization of Beclin 2, a mammal-specific homolog of the evolutionarily conserved autophagy-regulatory and oncosuppressive factor Beclin 1. In spite of a non-negligible degree of sequence identity, Beclin 1 and Beclin 2 differ from each other in multiple aspects, including their functional profile as well as the genomic organization of the respective loci.Originally identified as a BCL-2-interacting partner capable of protecting mice from viral encephalitis1, Beclin 1 — the mammalian ortholog of yeast Atg6 — is nowadays well known as a core component of the class III phosphoinosite-3-kinase (PI3K) enzymatic complex that initiates the formation of autophagosomes in the course of macroautophagy (hereafter referred to as autophagy)2. Presumably owing to the critical function of autophagy in embryonic development, mice lacking both copies of the Beclin 1-coding gene (Becn1) die early during embryogenesis. Moreover, Becn1+/− mice suffer from a high incidence of spontaneous tumors, indicating that Beclin 1 acts as a haploinsufficient tumor suppressor3. At least in part, this reflects the central role that autophagy plays in the maintenance of intracellular homeostasis. Indeed, baseline levels of autophagy mediate the removal of various cytoplasmic entities that might favor oncogenesis, including damaged mitochondria and protein aggregates4. Conversely, established neoplasms often harness the cytoprotective functions of autophagy to their own benefit2. The pathophysiological relevance of autophagy is not limited to cancer, but extends to a large panel of human diseases, including neurodegenerative, cardiovascular and infectious conditions5. Thus, during the last decade autophagy-regulatory signaling pathways have been intensively investigated.Until now, Beclin 1 was considered as the only Beclin encoded by the mammalian genome, sharing some degree of structural homology with so-called “BH3-only” proteins, pro-apoptotic members of the BCL-2 family that are involved in the activation of cell death in response to stress6. In a recent paper published in Cell, the research group led by Beth Levine7 identified a human and a mouse protein sharing 57% and 44% sequence identity with human and mouse Beclin 1, respectively, de facto unveiling the existence of an additional, mammal-specific ortholog of Atg6, Beclin 2. The mouse Beclin 2 mRNA was detected in multiple organs including the brain, skeletal muscle, placenta, thymus and uterus, as was the human protein in both fetal and adult brain tissues. These data demonstrate that the current classification of mouse and human Beclin 2-encoding genes (i.e., NG_022940 and NG_028451) as pseudogenes is incorrect.The knockdown of Beclin 2 reduced several manifestations of basal or starvation-induced autophagy in cultured mammalian cells, including the degradation of the autophagic substrate p62, the aggregation of a fluorescent form of LC3 into cytoplasmic dots and the lipidation of endogenous LC3. All such effects, which were not due to an increased autophagosomal turnover (as verified in the presence of the lysosomal inhibitor bafilomycin A1), could be rescued upon the transgene-driven expression of a non-interferable Beclin 2 variant. Thus, similar to Beclin 1, Beclin 2 regulates autophagy7. In fact, Beclin 2 turned out to physically interact with several (but not all) components of the class III PI3K complex organized around Beclin 1, including the catalytic subunit VPS34 as well as the regulatory factors ATG14, AMBRA1 and UVRAG, but not RUBICON (Figure 1A). Beclin 2 also appeared to share with Beclin 1 the ability to bind BCL-2, although only the latter gets dissociated from such an interaction in the course of stress-induced autophagy7,8. As the greatest divergence between mammalian Beclins involves their N terminus, He and colleagues employed the N-terminal domain of Beclin 2 as a bait in a yeast two-hybrid screen, and identified G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR)-associated sorting protein 1 (GASP1) as a Beclin 2-specific interactor. Thus, similar to GASP1 (but not to Beclin 1), Beclin 2 was required for the agonist-induced lysosomal degradation of a subset of GPCRs including opioid receptor δ1 (DOR) and cannabinoid receptor 1 (CB1R). Importantly, such an activity, but not the capacity of Beclin 2 to regulate autophagic responses, appears to rely on the physical interaction between Beclin 2 and GASP1.Open in a separate windowFigure 1Common and divergent functions of mammalian Beclins. Specificity of the main interactors (A) and functions (B) ascribed to mammalian Beclin 1 and Beclin 2 to date. GPCR, G protein-coupled receptor; RTK, receptor tyrosine kinase.To obtain insights into the physiological functions of Beclin 2, He and colleagues attempted to generate Becn2−/− mice, finding that these animals survived embryonic and early post-natal development at sub-Mendelian rates (approximately 4%). Not only Becn2+/− and Becn2−/− mouse embryonic fibroblasts, but also the brain of Becn2+/− animals exhibited significant autophagic defects, corroborating the role of Beclin 2 in the regulation of autophagy in vivo. Moreover, these genotypes were associated with increased basal levels of multiple GPCRs, including CB1R and dopamine receptor D2 (DRD2)7. In line with the notion that increased CB1R signaling accrues food intake and hence favors obesity and insulin resistance, while pharmacological or genetic CB1R inhibition has opposite effects9, Becn2+/− mice accumulated more weight than their wild-type littermates in response to a standard (as well as to a high-fat) diet. At odds with their Becn1+/− counterparts, Becn2+/− mice also exhibited impaired glucose tolerance and decreased insulin sensitivity, two effects that could be reverted by a chemical CB1R antagonist7. Taken together, these data demonstrate that besides regulating autophagy, Beclin 2 plays a unique role in glucose metabolism.Beclin 1 is known to regulate various processes other than autophagy, including vacuolar protein sorting and the degradation of specific growth factor receptors10. Thus, in spite of 44% - 57% sequence identity, the two mammalian Beclins described to date are relatively different from each other, exhibiting functional profiles that overlap to a limited degree (Figure 1B). Interestingly, He and colleagues have previously shown that defects in stimulus-induced autophagy (including those introduced by the Becn1+/− genotype) are coupled to decreased endurance and altered glucose metabolism during acute exercise, as well as with an impaired capacity of training to protect mice against diet-induced glucose intolerance8. Part of these phenomena were shown to reflect defects in the AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK)-dependent exposure of glucose transporters on the plasma membrane of skeletal muscle cells. It is therefore tempting to speculate that the metabolic phenotype of Becn2+/− may in part originate from peripheral defects in glucose handling linked to autophagy. Thus, although the force driving the divergence of mammalian Beclins remains to be elucidated, it may reflect the need for an integrated regulation of central and peripheral mechanisms of metabolic homeostasis. Further studies are required to address this hypothesis.  相似文献   

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DAP-kinase (DAPK) is a Ca2+/calmodulin regulated Ser/Thr kinase that activates a diverse range of cellular activities. It is subject to multiple layers of regulation involving both intramolecular signaling, and interactions with additional proteins, including other kinases and phosphatases. Its protein stability is modulated by at least three distinct ubiquitin-dependent systems. Like many kinases, DAPK participates in several signaling cascades, by phosphorylating additional kinases such as ZIP-kinase and protein kinase D (PKD), or Pin1, a phospho-directed peptidyl-prolyl isomerase that regulates the function of many phosphorylated proteins. Other substrate targets have more direct cellular effects; for example, phosphorylation of the myosin II regulatory chain and tropomyosin mediate some of DAPK’s cytoskeletal functions, including membrane blebbing during cell death and cell motility. DAPK induces distinct death pathways of apoptosis, autophagy and programmed necrosis. Among the substrates implicated in these processes, phosphorylation of PKD, Beclin 1, and the NMDA receptor has been reported. Interestingly, not all cellular effects are mediated by DAPK’s catalytic activity. For example, by virtue of protein–protein interactions alone, DAPK activates pyruvate kinase isoform M2, the microtubule affinity regulating kinases and inflammasome protein NLRP3, to promote glycolysis, influence microtubule dynamics, and enhance interleukin-1β production, respectively. In addition, a number of other substrates and interacting proteins have been identified, the physiological significance of which has not yet been established. All of these substrates, effectors and regulators together comprise the DAPK interactome. By presenting the components of the interactome network, this review will clarify both the mechanisms by which DAPK function is regulated, and by which it mediates its various cellular effects.  相似文献   

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The secreted glycoprotein, sclerostin alters bone formation. To gain insights into the mechanism of action of sclerostin, we examined the interactions of sclerostin with bone proteins using a sclerostin affinity capture technique. Proteins from decalcified rat bone were captured on a sclerostin-maltose binding protein (MBP) amylose column, or on a MBP amylose column. The columns were extensively washed with low ionic strength buffer, and bound proteins were eluted with buffer containing 1M sodium chloride. Eluted proteins were separated by denaturing sodium-dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis and were identified by mass spectrometry. Several previously unidentified full-length sclerostin-interacting proteins such as alkaline phosphatase, carbonic anhydrase, gremlin-1, fetuin A, midkine, annexin A1 and A2, and collagen α1, which have established roles in bone formation or resorption processes, were bound to the sclerostin-MBP amylose resin but not to the MBP amylose resin. Other full-length sclerostin-interacting proteins such as casein kinase II and secreted frizzled related protein 4 that modulate Wnt signaling were identified. Several peptides derived from proteins such as Phex, asporin and follistatin that regulate bone metabolism also bound sclerostin. Sclerostin interacts with multiple proteins that alter bone formation and resorption and is likely to function by altering several biologically relevant pathways in bone.  相似文献   

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Mass spectrometry analysis of Streptococcus pneumoniae bacteriophage Cp-1 identified a total of 12 proteins, and proteome-wide yeast two-hybrid screens revealed 17 binary interactions mainly among these structural proteins. On the basis of the resulting linkage map, we suggest an improved structural model of the Cp-1 virion.  相似文献   

11.
The elusive yeast interactome   总被引:2,自引:2,他引:0  
Goll J  Uetz P 《Genome biology》2006,7(6):223-6
Simple eukaryotic cells such as yeast could contain around 800 protein complexes, as two new comprehensive studies show. But slightly different approaches resulted in surprising differences between the two datasets, showing that more work is required to get a complete picture of the yeast interactome.  相似文献   

12.
Beclin 1是自噬关键调控蛋白之一,参与自噬体膜形成.近期,大量研究结果指出, Beclin 1是caspase家族蛋白酶的全新底物,可被caspase剪切.剪切后的Beclin 1失去自噬调节功能,转而加剧凋亡进程.因而,Beclin 1对细胞凋亡和自噬起着重要的调控作用. 本文主要对细胞凋亡和自噬的相关性,以及Beclin 1在两通路中的调控作用进行了回顾与总结.在此基础上,进一步讨论了Beclin 1与人类疾病如肿瘤、神经系统退行性疾病的关联.最后,简要介绍了实验室常用于Beclin 1研究的工具.  相似文献   

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《Autophagy》2013,9(5):713-716
Class III phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3KC3) plays a pleiotropic role in autophagy and protein sorting pathways. The human core complex of PI3KC3 consists of three major components including PI3KC3/hVps34, p150 and Beclin 1. How the specificity of PI3KC3 complex is derived towards autophagy is not clear. Utilizing a sequential affinity purification coupled with Mass spectrometry approach, we have successfully purified a human Beclin 1 complex and cloned a novel protein we called Barkor (Beclin 1-associated autophagy-related key regulator). The function of Barkor in autophagy has been manifested in several assays, including stress-induced LC3 lipidation, autophagosome formation, and Salmonella typhimurium amplification. Mechanistically, Barkor competes with UV radiation resistance associated gene product (UVRAG) for interaction with Beclin 1, and orients Beclin1 to autophagosomes. Barkor shares considerable sequence homology with Atg14 in yeast, representing an evolutionary conserved autophagy specific regulatory step in early autophagosome formation.  相似文献   

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《Autophagy》2013,9(1):49-51
Autophagy, a bulk degradation of subcellular constituents, is activated in normal cell growth and development, and represents the major pathway by which the cell maintains a balance between protein synthesis and protein degradation. Autophagy was documented in several neurodegenerative diseases, and under stress conditions the autophagic process can lead to cell death (type II programmed cell death). Beclin 1 is a Bcl-2 interacting protein that was previously found to promote autophagy. We have used Beclin 1 protein as a marker for autophagy following traumatic brain injury in mice. We demonstrated a dramatic elevation in Beclin 1 levels near the injury site. Interestingly Beclin 1 elevation starts at early stages post injury (4 h) in neurons and 3 days later in astrocytes. In both cell types it lasts for at least three weeks. Neuronal cells, but not astrocytes, that overexpress Beclin 1 may exhibit damaged DNA but without changes in nuclear morphology. These observations may indicate that not all the Beclin 1 overexpressing cells will die. The elevation of Beclin 1 at the site of injury may represent enhanced autophagy as a mechanism to discard injured cells and reduce damage to cells by disposing of injured components.

Addenda to:

Closed Head Injury Induces Upregulation of Beclin 1 at the Cortical Site of Injury

T. Diskin, P. Tal-Or, S. Erlich, L. Mizrachy, A. Alexandrovich, E. Shohami and R. Pinkas-Kramarski

J Neurotrauma 2005; 22:750-62  相似文献   

15.
Gossypol, a natural Bcl-2 homology domain 3 mimetic compound isolated from cottonseeds, is currently being evaluated in clinical trials. Here, we provide evidence that gossypol induces autophagy followed by apoptotic cell death in both the MCF-7 human breast adenocarcinoma and HeLa cell lines. We first show that knockdown of the Bcl-2 homology domain 3-only protein Beclin 1 reduces gossypol-induced autophagy in MCF-7 cells, but not in HeLa cells. Gossypol inhibits the interaction between Beclin 1 and Bcl-2 (B-cell leukemia/lymphoma 2), antagonizes the inhibition of autophagy by Bcl-2, and hence stimulates autophagy. We then show that knockdown of Vps34 reduces gossypol-induced autophagy in both cell lines, and consistent with this, the phosphatidylinositol 3-phosphate-binding protein WIPI-1 is recruited to autophagosomal membranes. Further, Atg5 knockdown also reduces gossypol-mediated autophagy. We conclude that gossypol induces autophagy in both a canonical and a noncanonical manner. Notably, we found that gossypol-mediated apoptotic cell death was potentiated by treatment with the autophagy inhibitor wortmannin or with small interfering RNA against essential autophagy genes (Vps34, Beclin 1, and Atg5). Our findings support the notion that gossypol-induced autophagy is cytoprotective and not part of the cell death process induced by this compound.  相似文献   

16.
Autophagy, a bulk degradation of subcellular constituents, is activated in normal cell growth and development, and represents the major pathway by which the cell maintains a balance between protein synthesis and protein degradation. Autophagy was documented in several neurodegenerative diseases, and under stress conditions the autophagic process can lead to cell death (type II programmed cell death). Beclin 1 is a Bcl-2 interacting protein that was previously found to promote autophagy. We have used Beclin 1 protein as a marker for autophagy following traumatic brain injury in mice. We demonstrated a dramatic elevation in Beclin 1 levels near the injury site. Interestingly Beclin 1 elevation starts at early stages post injury (4 h) in neurons and 3 days later in astrocytes. In both cell types it lasts for at least three weeks. Neuronal cells, but not astrocytes, that overexpress Beclin 1 may exhibit damaged DNA but without changes in nuclear morphology. These observations may indicate that not all the Beclin1 overexpressing cells will die. The elevation of Beclin 1 at the site of injury may represent enhanced autophagy as a mechanism to discard injured cells and reduce damage to cells by disposing of injured components.  相似文献   

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Beclin 1/Atg6 is an essential component of the evolutionary conserved PtdIns(3)-kinase (Vps34) protein complex that regulates macroautophagy (autophagy) in eukaryotic cells and also interacts with antiapoptotic Bcl-2 family members, Bcl-2, and Bcl-x(L). To elucidate the physiological function of Beclin 1, we generated transgenic mice producing a green fluorescent Beclin 1 protein (Beclin 1-GFP) under Beclin 1 endogenous regulation. The beclin 1-GFP transgene is functional because it completely rescues early embryonic lethality in beclin 1-deficient mice. The transgenic mice appear normal, with undetected change in basal autophagy levels in different tissues, despite the additional expression of functional Beclin 1-GFP. Staining of Beclin 1-GFP shows mostly diffuse cytoplasmic distribution in various tissues. Detailed analysis of the transgene expression by flow cytometry reveals a Bcl-2-like biphasic expression pattern in developing T and B cells, as well as differential regulation of expression in mature versus immature thymocytes following in vitro stimulation. Moreover, thymocytes expressing high Beclin 1-GFP levels appear increasingly sensitive to glucocorticoid-induced apoptosis in vitro. Our results, therefore, support a role for Beclin 1 in lymphocyte development involving cross talk between autophagy and apoptosis.  相似文献   

20.
《Autophagy》2013,9(7):930-936
High Grade Gliomas (HGG) have a poor outcome, however, prognostic sub-groups of patients may be individuated by some clinico-biological parameters. It was recently demonstrated that the main response of HGG to therapy is autophagic death. Autophagy is involved in tumor suppression, and is defective in HGG, in which we previously found an underexpression of beclin 1 autophagic gene protein product. Underexpression of Beclin 1 protein has been correlated to poor patient outcome in other tumor types. In this paper, the prognostic role of beclin 1 expression in HGG patients was investigated. We firstly evaluated the tumor cell cytoplasmic expression of Beclin 1 protein (BPCE), in a sample of 76 HGG by immunohistochemistry, and compared it with cell proliferation and apoptosis. We found high BPCE score positively correlated with apoptosis, and negatively with cell proliferation (p < 0,05). We then correlated BPCE score with survival and other prognostic parameters (histological grading , MGMT gene methylation status, age, patient performance status according to the Karnofski classification (KPS), extent of surgery, radiation therapy (RT) modality, temozolomide chemotherapy (TMZ CHT), and optimal/suboptimal post-surgical treatment). Forty-seven (61.8%) and twenty-nine (38.2%) patients showed high and low BPCE scores, respectively. BPCE showed statistically significant correlations with survival both at the univariate (p = 0.03) and multivariate analysis (p = 0.037). High BPCE was also positively correlated with high KPS values (p = 0.023), and with the accomplishment of an optimal post-operative therapy (p = 0.037). Furthermore, among patients showing a MGMT methylated gene, survival was significantly higher in cases with a higher BPCE score. BPCE score might be added to pathological evaluation of HGG for prognostic purposes.  相似文献   

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