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The dysfunction of proteasomes and mitochondria has been implicated in the pathogenesis of Parkinson disease. However, the mechanism by which this dysfunction causes neuronal cell death is unknown. We studied the role of cyclin-dependent kinase 5 (Cdk5)-p35 in the neuronal cell death induced by 1-methyl-4-phenylpyrinidinium ion (MPP+), which has been used as an in vitro model of Parkinson disease. When cultured neurons were treated with 100 μm MPP+, p35 was degraded by proteasomes at 3 h, much earlier than the neurons underwent cell death at 12–24 h. The degradation of p35 was accompanied by the down-regulation of Cdk5 activity. We looked for the primary target of MPP+ that triggered the proteasome-mediated degradation of p35. MPP+ treatment for 3 h induced the fragmentation of the mitochondria, reduced complex I activity of the respiratory chain without affecting ATP levels, and impaired the mitochondrial import system. The dysfunction of the mitochondrial import system is suggested to up-regulate proteasome activity, leading to the ubiquitin-independent degradation of p35. The overexpression of p35 attenuated MPP+-induced neuronal cell death. In contrast, depletion of p35 with short hairpin RNA not only induced cell death but also sensitized to MPP+ treatment. These results indicate that a brief MPP+ treatment triggers the delayed neuronal cell death by the down-regulation of Cdk5 activity via mitochondrial dysfunction-induced up-regulation of proteasome activity. We propose a role for Cdk5-p35 as a survival factor in countering MPP+-induced neuronal cell death.Parkinson disease (PD)3 is the second most common neurodegenerative disease, characterized pathologically by degenerated dopaminergic neurons and ubiquitin-positive aggregates known as Lewy bodies (1). Most cases of PD are sporadic, but a small proportion of patients with PD have the familial form. Several causative genes have been identified for familial PDs, including α-synuclein (2), ubiquitin C-terminal hydrolase L1 (UCH-L1) (3), and parkin, an ubiquitin ligase E3 of the ubiquitin-proteasome system (4), implicating the impairment of the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway in the pathogenesis of PD. However, the mechanisms underlying the involvement of the ubiquitin-proteasome system in the development of PD are not yet understood.The 1-methyl-4-phenylpyrinidinium ion (MPP+), a toxic metabolite of 1-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine (MPTP), is a neurotoxin used widely to induce dopaminergic neuronal cell death in in vitro models of PD (5). Previous studies have indicated that MPP+ induces neuronal cell death via several pathways, including the inhibition of complex I activity of the respiratory chain in mitochondria, leading to energy depletion, protein peroxidation, and DNA damage by producing reactive oxygen species and the induction of cytotoxic glutamate secretion (6, 7). However, the precise molecular pathway resulting in neuronal cell death remains to be identified.Cyclin-dependent kinase 5 (Cdk5) is a member of the Cdk serine/threonine kinase family. Cdk5 plays a role in a variety of neuronal activities including neuronal migration during central nervous system development (8, 9), synaptic activity in matured neurons (10), and neuronal cell death in neurodegenerative diseases (11, 12). Generally, when Cdk5 are activated by their respective activator cyclins, they function in cell cycle progression. However, unlike those cell cycle Cdk5, the kinase activity of Cdk5 is detected mainly in post mitotic neurons. This is because Cdk5 activators p35 and p39 are expressed predominantly in neurons (13, 14). The amount of p35 is the major determinant of Cdk5 activity, and it is normally a short-lived protein degraded by the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway (15, 16). However, in stressed neurons, the calcium-activated protease calpain cleaves p35 to the more stable and active form, p25 (1721). Hyperactivated or mislocalized Cdk5-p25 has been implicated in the pathogenesis of numerous neurodegenerative disorders including PD and Alzheimer disease. In the case of PD, Cdk5 and p35 are found in the Lewy bodies of the dopaminergic neurons of the brain (22, 23). Cdk5 is activated by p25 and is required for cell death in mouse models of PD induced with MPTP (24) or 6-hydroxydopamine (25). It has been shown that Cdk5-p25 in MPTP-treated neurons phosphorylates the survival factor, myocyte enhancer factor 2 (MEF2), to inactivate it, leading to cell death (26, 27). However, further studies are required to clarify the involvement of p35 metabolism in the PD pathway.Contrary to its role in cell death progression, recent studies have also suggested a survival function for Cdk5 in maintaining survival signals or counteracting apoptotic signals. For example, Cdk5 inhibits c-Jun phosphorylation by c-Jun-N-terminal protein kinase 3, which is activated by UV irradiation (28). Cdk5 also promotes the survival of neurons by activating Akt through the well known neuregulin/phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K) survival pathway, which leads to the down-regulation of proapoptotic factors (29). Cdk5 attenuates cell death either by up-regulating Bcl-2 through the phosphorylation of ERK (30) or by phosphorylating Bcl-2 to maintain its neuroprotective effect (31). However, whether Cdk5 acts as the anti-apoptotic factor in the PD model of neuronal cell death has not been determined.Here, we studied the role of Cdk5-p35 in the cell death of neurons treated with MPP+. We found that p35 was proteolysed in cultured neurons by either calpain or proteasomes depending on the concentration of MPP+ used. The proteasomal MPP+-induced degradation of p35 occurred earlier and at lower MPP+ concentrations than did its cleavage by calpain. MPP+ up-regulated the overall proteasome activity in the neurons by impairing the mitochondrial protein import system. A brief MPP+ treatment for up to ∼3 h was sufficient to induce delayed cell death at 24 h. The overexpression of p35 suppressed this MPP+-induced cell death, and depletion of p35 increased cell death. Together, these results implicate a role for Cdk5-p35 as a survival factor in MPP+-treated neurons.  相似文献   

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Physiological cell deaths occur ubiquitously throughout biology and have common attributes, including apoptotic morphology with mitosis-like chromatin condensation and prelytic genome digestion. The fundamental question is whether a common mechanism of dying underlies these common hallmarks of death. Here we describe evidence of such a conserved mechanism in different cells induced by distinct stimuli to undergo physiological cell death. Our genetic and quantitative biochemical analyses of T- and B-cell deaths reveal a conserved pattern of requisite components. We have dissected the role of cysteine proteases (caspases) in cell death to reflect two obligate classes of cytoplasmic activities functioning in an amplifying cascade, with upstream interleukin-1β-converting enzyme-like proteases activating downstream caspase 3-like caspases. Bcl-2 spares cells from death by punctuating this cascade, preventing the activation of downstream caspases while leaving upstream activity undisturbed. This observation permits an operational definition of the stages of the cell death process. Upstream steps, which are necessary but not themselves lethal, are modulators of the death process. Downstream steps are effectors of, and not dissociable from, actual death; the irreversible commitment to cell death reflects the initiation of this downstream phase. In addition to caspase 3-like proteases, the effector phase of death involves the activation in the nucleus of cell cycle kinases of the cyclin-dependent kinase (Cdk) family. Nuclear recruitment and activation of Cdk components is dependent on the caspase cascade, suggesting that catastrophic Cdk activity may be the actual effector of cell death. The conservation of the cell death mechanism is not reflected in the molecular identity of its individual components, however. For example, we have detected different cyclin-Cdk pairs in different instances of cell death. The ordered course of events that we have observed in distinct cases reflects essential thematic elements of a conserved sequence of modulatory and effector activities comprising a common pathway of physiological cell death.Although interest in the process of physiological cell death has grown enormously in recent years, the mechanism of death has remained enigmatic. While the induction of physiological death in diverse cell types is effected by a wide variety of stimuli, a common morphology, described as apoptosis, ensues in all cases. The commonality of morphology has led to the belief that disparate inducers trigger distinct signaling events which ultimately converge in a common biochemical pathway of death. This hypothesis suggests a division of the biochemical process into upstream events that are specific for individual inducers and downstream steps, comprising the common pathway, which bring about the actual demise of the cell.Since most cell deaths in the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans are induced in a lineage-determined program, the simple pathway of death elucidated in that species (17) is likely to be revealing of downstream steps. Cell death in C. elegans is dependent on the activation of Ced3, a cysteine protease (77, 79), and is inhibited by Ced9 (27). In mammalian cells, a group of Ced3 homologs, termed caspases (1), appears to play a role in virtually all of the physiological cell deaths studied to date. These enzymes cleave on the carboxyl-terminal side of aspartate residues within distinct recognition motifs. Each caspase is synthesized as a proenzyme and activated by cleavage at internal sites, potentially by the same or another caspase class (66, 77). This leads to the notion that caspases function in an ordered cascade, with members of one family activating members of the next. Data consistent with this pattern have been obtained from studies in vitro (41, 60, 65).Of the large family of mammalian caspases, caspase 3 is closely homologous to Ced3 and appears to be involved widely in cell deaths (50, 65). Nonetheless, specific caspases seem not to be associated uniquely with distinct cases of death, and gene-targeting experiments reveal that the absence of a single caspase has extremely limited consequences for cell death responsiveness (38, 39).Similarly, a family of ced9-related death response modulatory genes exists in mammals; the most closely related homolog, bcl-2, is functionally interchangeable with ced9 in the worm (28, 73). These gene products do not function in all mammalian cell deaths (61, 72). Moreover, while the products of some bcl-2 gene family members have death-sparing activity (6, 7), others exert the opposite effect (52, 78).Several cellular proteins, among them poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP), nuclear lamins, fodrin, and DNA-dependent protein kinase (10, 16, 34), are targets for cleavage by various caspases. In cells spared from death, for example by Bcl-2, these proteolytic events do not occur (9, 13, 18). Still, the cleavage of none of these proteins has been shown to be essential for the cell death response (42, 54, 74). The specific consequences of caspase activation which are lethal are unknown.It may be that the consequence of protease activity is the specific activation of distinct death effectors. We have proposed that essential genes involved in cell division may be critically involved in cell death as well and that the difficulty in identifying distal effector steps genetically reflects the indispensable function of those gene products in cell life (67). Data from several groups have shown that cell cycle catastrophes, the precocious expression of mitosis-like cyclin-dependent histone kinases (Cdks), are associated with a variety of physiological cell deaths and that the inhibition of death by Bcl-2 is associated with alterations in the expression and localization of these Cdk proteins (22, 23, 29, 36, 40, 46, 47, 58, 59, 70).We have taken advantage of the death-sparing activities of Bcl-2 and two viral caspase inhibitors, CrmA and p35 (64, 77), to dissect the mechanism of cell death in two separate cellular paradigms. These studies allow us to draw a generalized skeletal pathway of the death-associated biochemical activities discussed above and demonstrate the requisite involvement of these different classes of activities in a conserved and ordered pathway by which cells die physiologically.  相似文献   

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During mitosis, establishment of structurally and functionally sound bipolar spindles is necessary for maintaining the fidelity of chromosome segregation. Tumor-associated microtubule-associated protein (TMAP), also known as cytoskeleton-associated protein 2 (CKAP2), is a mitotic spindle-associated protein whose level is frequently up-regulated in various malignancies. Previous reports have suggested that TMAP is a potential regulator of mitotic spindle assembly and dynamics and that it is required for chromosome segregation to occur properly. So far, there have been no reports on how its mitosis-related functions are regulated. Here, we report that TMAP is hyper-phosphorylated at the C terminus specifically during mitosis. At least four different residues (Thr-578, Thr-596, Thr-622, and Ser-627) were responsible for the mitosis-specific phosphorylation of TMAP. Among these, Thr-622 was specifically phosphorylated by Cdk1-cyclin B1 both in vitro and in vivo. Interestingly, compared with the wild type, a phosphorylation-deficient mutant form of TMAP, in which Thr-622 had been replaced with an alanine (T622A), induced a significant increase in the frequency of metaphase cells with abnormal bipolar spindles, which often displayed disorganized, asymmetrical, or narrow and elongated morphologies. Formation of these abnormal bipolar spindles subsequently resulted in misalignment of metaphase chromosomes and ultimately caused a delay in the entry into anaphase. Moreover, such defects resulting from the T622A mutation were associated with a decrease in the rate of protein turnover at spindle microtubules. These findings suggest that Cdk1-cyclin B1-mediated phosphorylation of TMAP is important for and contributes to proper regulation of microtubule dynamics and establishment of functional bipolar spindles during mitosis.Tumor-associated microtubule-associated protein (TMAP),3 also known as cytoskeleton-associated protein 2 (CKAP2), LB-1, and se20-10, is frequently up-regulated in various malignancies, including gastric adenocarcinoma, diffuse B-cell lymphoma, and cutaneous T-cell lymphoma (13), and detected in various cancer cell lines (1, 4). Knockdown of TMAP significantly reduces the rate of cell growth (5, 6), indicating that it is essential for normal cell growth. However, the cellular functions of TMAP remain largely unknown. Recent findings indicate that TMAP plays an essential role in mitosis. Expression of TMAP changes in a cell cycle-dependent manner; its expression is relatively low during G1, starts to incline during G1/S transition, and peaks at G2/M phases of the cell cycle (5, 7). TMAP primarily localizes at mitotic spindle and spindle poles during mitosis (1, 4, 8, 9). During late stages of mitosis, however, TMAP localizes near the chromatin region and to the midbody microtubules (8). TMAP has microtubule-stabilizing properties (4, 8, 9), and its overexpression induces mitotic spindle defects, including monopolar spindle formation, and arrests cells at mitosis as a result (8). Similar to other mitotic regulators, TMAP is a substrate of the anaphase-promoting complex (8). TMAP is degraded during mitotic exit by the anaphase-promoting complex-Cdh1 in a KEN box-dependent manner. Results of the experiments using a nondegradable mutant of TMAP suggested that proper regulation of the TMAP protein level is functionally important for establishment of bipolar spindles and completion of cytokinesis. Recently, we also have shown that siRNA-mediated depletion of TMAP in mammalian cells results in chromosome missegregation, characterized by chromatin bridge formation and malformation of interphase nuclei, and such phenotype was associated with a reduction in the spindle assembly checkpoint activity (6). These findings suggest that TMAP is a potential regulator of mitotic spindle function and dynamics and that proper regulation of its protein level and functions is necessary for establishment of bipolar spindles as well as for maintaining the fidelity of the chromosome segregation process.At the onset of mitosis, the microtubule network undergoes extensive rearrangements to form a unique bipolar structure, called the mitotic spindle. Multiple factors have been shown to associate with the mitotic spindle and regulate its function by influencing its assembly and dynamics (10, 11). Establishment of a functional bipolar mitotic spindle is critical for faithful segregation of sister chromatids and maintenance of genomic stability. In support of this notion, disruption or depletion of factors involved in regulation of the spindle microtubule dynamics or establishment of spindle bipolarity have been shown to induce spindle dysfunction and ultimately chromosome missegregation (1214).The cyclin-dependent kinase 1 (Cdk1) in complex with cyclin B1 (Cdk1-cyclin B1) is one of the key mitotic kinases. The kinase activity of Cdk1-cyclin B1 governs the entry into mitosis from G2 phase of the cell cycle (15, 16). Through mediating phosphorylation of a variety of substrates, Cdk1-cyclin B1 also plays an important role in multiple processes during mitosis, including chromosome condensation, nuclear envelope breakdown, centrosome separation, regulation of spindle microtubule dynamics, and metaphase to anaphase transition (1720). In particular, a number of regulators of microtubules are among Cdk1-cyclin B1 substrates (21). For instance, phosphorylation of a kinesin-related motor protein, Eg5, by Cdk1-cyclin B1 is necessary for its centrosomal localization and ultimately for the centrosome separation process to occur properly (18). Also, Cdk1-cyclin B1-mediated phosphorylation of some of the effectors of microtubule dynamics has been shown to regulate their microtubule-stabilizing or -destabilizing activities during mitosis (22, 23). These suggest that the assembly and maintenance of bipolar spindles during mitosis are under regulation of Cdk1-cyclin B1.We have recently reported that TMAP is phosphorylated specifically during mitosis (24), which led us to hypothesize that the mitotic functions of TMAP are regulated by timely phosphorylation. In the present study, we identified multiple, mitosis-specific phosphorylation sites on TMAP, one of which is phosphorylated by Cdk1-cyclin B1, and investigated the functional importance of Cdk1-cyclin B1-mediated phosphorylation of TMAP during mitosis.  相似文献   

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Collapsin response mediator protein 2 (CRMP2) is an intracellular protein that mediates signaling of Semaphorin3A (Sema3A), a repulsive axon guidance molecule. Fyn, a Src-type tyrosine kinase, is involved in the Sema3A signaling. However, the relationship between CRMP2 and Fyn in this signaling pathway is still unknown. In our research, we demonstrated that Fyn phosphorylated CRMP2 at Tyr32 residues in HEK293T cells. Immunohistochemical analysis using a phospho-specific antibody at Tyr32 of CRMP showed that Tyr32-phosphorylated CRMP was abundant in the nervous system, including dorsal root ganglion neurons, the molecular and Purkinje cell layer of adult cerebellum, and hippocampal fimbria. Overexpression of a nonphosphorylated mutant (Tyr32 to Phe32) of CRMP2 in dorsal root ganglion neurons interfered with Sema3A-induced growth cone collapse response. These results suggest that Fyn-dependent phosphorylation of CRMP2 at Tyr32 is involved in Sema3A signaling.Collapsin response mediator proteins (CRMPs)4 have been identified as intracellular proteins that mediate Semaphorin3A (Sema3A) signaling in the nervous system (1). CRMP2 is one of the five members of the CRMP family. CRMPs also mediate signal transduction of NT3, Ephrin, and Reelin (24). CRMPs interact with several intracellular molecules, including tubulin, Numb, kinesin1, and Sra1 (58). CRMPs are involved in axon guidance, axonal elongation, cell migration, synapse maturation, and the generation of neuronal polarity (1, 2, 4, 5).CRMP family proteins are known to be the major phosphoproteins in the developing brain (1, 9). CRMP2 is phosphorylated by several Ser/Thr kinases, such as Rho kinase, cyclin-dependent kinase 5 (Cdk5), and glycogen synthase kinase 3β (GSK3β) (2, 1013). The phosphorylation sites of CRMP2 by these kinases are clustered in the C terminus and have already been identified. Rho kinase phosphorylates CRMP2 at Thr555 (10). Cdk5 phosphorylates CRMP2 at Ser522, and this phosphorylation is essential for sequential phosphorylations by GSK3β at Ser518, Thr514, and Thr509 (2, 1113). These phosphorylations disrupt the interaction of CRMP2 with tubulin or Numb (2, 3, 13). The sequential phosphorylation of CRMP2 by Cdk5 and GSK3β is an essential step in Sema3A signaling (11, 13). Furthermore, the neurofibrillary tangles in the brains of people with Alzheimer disease contain hyperphosphorylated CRMP2 at Thr509, Ser518, and Ser522 (14, 15).CRMPs are also substrates of several tyrosine kinases. The phosphorylation of CRMP2 by Fes/Fps and Fer has been shown to be involved in Sema3A signaling (16, 17). Phosphorylation of CRMP2 at Tyr479 by a Src family tyrosine kinase Yes regulates CXCL12-induced T lymphocyte migration (18). We reported previously that Fyn is involved in Sema3A signaling (19). Fyn associates with PlexinA2, one of the components of the Sema3A receptor complex. Fyn also activates Cdk5 through the phosphorylation at Tyr15 of Cdk5 (19). In dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neurons from fyn-deficient mice, Sema3A-induced growth cone collapse response is attenuated compared with control mice (19). Furthermore, we recently found that Fyn phosphorylates CRMP1 and that this phosphorylation is involved in Reelin signaling (4). Although it has been shown that CRMP2 is involved in Sema3A signaling (1, 11, 13), the relationship between Fyn and CRMP2 in Sema3A signaling and the tyrosine phosphorylation site(s) of CRMPs remain unknown.Here, we show that Fyn phosphorylates CRMP2 at Tyr32. Using a phospho-specific antibody against Tyr32, we determined that the residue is phosphorylated in vivo. A nonphosphorylated mutant CRMP2Y32F inhibits Sema3A-induced growth cone collapse. These results indicate that tyrosine phosphorylation by Fyn at Tyr32 is involved in Sema3A signaling.  相似文献   

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A decoding algorithm is tested that mechanistically models the progressive alignments that arise as the mRNA moves past the rRNA tail during translation elongation. Each of these alignments provides an opportunity for hybridization between the single-stranded, -terminal nucleotides of the 16S rRNA and the spatially accessible window of mRNA sequence, from which a free energy value can be calculated. Using this algorithm we show that a periodic, energetic pattern of frequency 1/3 is revealed. This periodic signal exists in the majority of coding regions of eubacterial genes, but not in the non-coding regions encoding the 16S and 23S rRNAs. Signal analysis reveals that the population of coding regions of each bacterial species has a mean phase that is correlated in a statistically significant way with species () content. These results suggest that the periodic signal could function as a synchronization signal for the maintenance of reading frame and that codon usage provides a mechanism for manipulation of signal phase.[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25,26,27,28,29,30,31,32]  相似文献   

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To quantify cell cycle-dependent fluctuations on a proteome-wide scale, we performed integrative analysis of the proteome and phosphoproteome during the four major phases of the cell cycle in Schizosaccharomyces pombe. In highly synchronized cells, we identified 3753 proteins and 3682 phosphorylation events and relatively quantified 65% of the data across all phases. Quantitative changes during the cell cycle were infrequent and weak in the proteome but prominent in the phosphoproteome. Protein phosphorylation peaked in mitosis, where the median phosphorylation site occupancy was 44%, about 2-fold higher than in other phases. We measured copy numbers of 3178 proteins, which together with phosphorylation site stoichiometry enabled us to estimate the absolute amount of protein-bound phosphate, as well as its change across the cell cycle. Our results indicate that 23% of the average intracellular ATP is utilized by protein kinases to phosphorylate their substrates to drive regulatory processes during cell division. Accordingly, we observe that phosphate transporters and phosphate-metabolizing enzymes are phosphorylated and therefore likely to be regulated in mitosis.Cell replication involves a complex series of highly regulated and evolutionary conserved events, called the “cell cycle.” Aberrations in the cell cycle have severe implications and can cause cancerous growth. A detailed understanding of the cell cycle and its regulation may identify additional targets for cancer therapy (13). The cell cycle has been the subject of previous proteomics studies. Olsen et al. (4) measured the dynamics of thousands of proteins and phosphorylation events across cell cycle phases of HeLa cells, providing insights into the underlying regulatory mechanisms and pointing to a general increase in phosphorylation site occupancy during M phase. In a targeted study, Pagliuca et al. (5) investigated interactors of cyclins E1, A2, and B1 in HeLa cells, revealing key mechanistic links between DNA replication and mitosis.Schizosaccharomyces pombe (fission yeast) is a unicellular organism, which can easily be genetically manipulated and carries many cell cycle features similar to metazoan cells. It is an important model organism to study the cell cycle and its checkpoint controls (6). Recent global proteomics studies of yeasts and their cell cycle (713) have mainly focused on Saccharomyces cerevisiae (budding yeast), with only a few studies of fission yeast (14, 15), although the fission yeast cell cycle may be more representative of eukaryotic cell cycles (16). However, attention of the proteomics community toward S. pombe is increasing. Recent proteomics studies covered up to 4087 S. pombe proteins (71% of the predicted proteome) and 1544 phosphoproteins in both asynchronous and synchronized cell cultures (1722); however, a comprehensive analysis of the S. pombe cell cycle is so far missing.Here, we use high resolution mass spectrometry in combination with stable isotope labeling by amino acids in the cell culture (SILAC)1 method, termed super-SILAC (23), and intensity-based absolute quantification (iBAQ) (24) to measure relative and absolute dynamics of the proteome and phosphoproteome during the cell cycle of fission yeast. We estimate copy numbers for 3178 S. pombe proteins, and we combine these data with calculated phosphorylation site stoichiometry to estimate the total amount of protein-bound phosphate and its dynamics across the cell cycle. Providing the global absolute dynamics and stoichiometry of proteins and their modifications will be a valuable resource for classical and systems biologists alike.  相似文献   

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Insulin plays a central role in the regulation of vertebrate metabolism. The hormone, the post-translational product of a single-chain precursor, is a globular protein containing two chains, A (21 residues) and B (30 residues). Recent advances in human genetics have identified dominant mutations in the insulin gene causing permanent neonatal-onset DM2 (14). The mutations are predicted to block folding of the precursor in the ER of pancreatic β-cells. Although expression of the wild-type allele would in other circumstances be sufficient to maintain homeostasis, studies of a corresponding mouse model (57) suggest that the misfolded variant perturbs wild-type biosynthesis (8, 9). Impaired β-cell secretion is associated with ER stress, distorted organelle architecture, and cell death (10). These findings have renewed interest in insulin biosynthesis (1113) and the structural basis of disulfide pairing (1419). Protein evolution is constrained not only by structure and function but also by susceptibility to toxic misfolding.Insulin plays a central role in the regulation of vertebrate metabolism. The hormone, the post-translational product of a single-chain precursor, is a globular protein containing two chains, A (21 residues) and B (30 residues). Recent advances in human genetics have identified dominant mutations in the insulin gene causing permanent neonatal-onset DM2 (14). The mutations are predicted to block folding of the precursor in the ER of pancreatic β-cells. Although expression of the wild-type allele would in other circumstances be sufficient to maintain homeostasis, studies of a corresponding mouse model (57) suggest that the misfolded variant perturbs wild-type biosynthesis (8, 9). Impaired β-cell secretion is associated with ER stress, distorted organelle architecture, and cell death (10). These findings have renewed interest in insulin biosynthesis (1113) and the structural basis of disulfide pairing (1419). Protein evolution is constrained not only by structure and function but also by susceptibility to toxic misfolding.  相似文献   

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A Boolean network is a model used to study the interactions between different genes in genetic regulatory networks. In this paper, we present several algorithms using gene ordering and feedback vertex sets to identify singleton attractors and small attractors in Boolean networks. We analyze the average case time complexities of some of the proposed algorithms. For instance, it is shown that the outdegree-based ordering algorithm for finding singleton attractors works in time for , which is much faster than the naive time algorithm, where is the number of genes and is the maximum indegree. We performed extensive computational experiments on these algorithms, which resulted in good agreement with theoretical results. In contrast, we give a simple and complete proof for showing that finding an attractor with the shortest period is NP-hard.[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25,26,27,28,29,30,31,32]  相似文献   

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During the mitotic cell cycle, Geminin can act both as a promoter and inhibitor of initiation of DNA replication. As a promoter, Geminin stabilizes Cdt1 and facilitates its accumulation leading to the assembly of the pre-replication complex on DNA. As an inhibitor, Geminin prevents Cdt1 from loading the mini-chromosome maintenance complex onto pre-replication complexes in late S, G2, and M phases. Here we show that during meiosis Geminin functions as a stabilizer of Cdt1 promoting its accumulation for the early division cycles of the embryo. Depletion of Geminin in Xenopus immature oocytes leads to a decrease of Cdt1 protein levels during maturation and after activation of these oocytes. Injection of exogenous recombinant Geminin into the depleted oocytes rescues Cdt1 levels demonstrating that Geminin stabilizes Cdt1 during meiosis and after fertilization. Furthermore, Geminin-depleted oocytes did not replicate their DNA after meiosis I indicating that Geminin does not act as an inhibitor of initiation of DNA replication between meiosis I and meiosis II.In eukaryotes, initiation of DNA replication involves the formation and activation of the pre-replication complex (pre-RC)3 at the origins of replication. Pre-RCs are formed by the sequential binding of the origin recognition complex components, Cdc6, Cdt1, and mini-chromosome maintenance complex (MCM 2–7) proteins, to DNA. After loading the MCM complex, the pre-RCs are activated by S phase kinases (Dbf4-dependent kinase and Cdks) to initiate DNA replication (1). Replication of DNA, limited to only once per cell cycle, is critical to maintain genomic stability. Redundant mechanisms exist to ensure that DNA replication is tightly regulated during the cell cycle (1, 2). A small protein named Geminin has been shown to play a significant role in such regulatory mechanisms during mitosis (26). Geminin, a multifunctional 25-kDa protein, was first identified in a screen for proteins degraded during mitosis in Xenopus laevis egg extracts (7). Geminin is present in higher eukaryotes, but its presence in yeast has not yet been reported (710). Geminin plays a major role in regulating the function of Cdt1, one of the pre-RC components (8, 1113). Numerous studies suggest that in higher eukaryotes the interaction between Geminin and Cdt1 is pivotal to restrict DNA replication to only once per cell cycle (6, 1422). Furthermore, in Xenopus egg extracts, the Geminin/Cdt1 ratio seems to control the assembly of pre-RCs at replication origins and to determine whether the origins are licensed or not (23). The positive and negative roles of Geminin in origin licensing and DNA replication are made possible by their temporal separation during the cell cycle. Pre-RC formation occurs during late M and early G1 phase, whereas pre-RC inhibition occurs from late S to mid M phase.As a positive regulator of DNA replication, Geminin has been shown to stabilize Cdt1. In human osteosarcoma cells, silencing of GEMININ expression limits CDT1 accumulation during mitosis and therefore the formation of pre-RCs in the subsequent cell cycle. This stabilizing effect is the result of a direct interaction between CDT1 and GEMININ preventing CDT1 ubiquitination and degradation (13). Similar findings were also recently observed in normal human cells and various cancer cells (24). However, in both human normal and tumor cells, the low level of CDT1, generated by the absence of GEMININ, did not always prevent cellular proliferation or re-replication of the genome (5, 24, 25). Therefore, one might question the importance of the role of GEMININ in stabilizing CDT1 in human cells. Beyond its role as a stabilizer of Cdt1 levels, Geminin has also been shown to participate directly in the formation of pre-RCs in Xenopus egg extracts. A complex between Cdt1 and Geminin binds to chromatin and supports pre-RC assembly. However, the recruitment of additional Geminin molecules to this complex on the chromatin blocks further pre-RC formation. These results indicate that the stoichiometry of Cdt1 and Geminin in this complex regulates its activity as a promoter or inhibitor of pre-RC assembly and DNA replication (23, 26). Several mechanisms have been shown to modulate the Geminin/Cdt1 balance on the chromatin. In Xenopus the binding of Cdt1 to the MCM9 protein seems to block the recruitment of an excess of Geminin to the chromatin and therefore favors pre-RC assembly (27). Similarly, the inactivation of Geminin by either ubiquitination or degradation also has a positive effect on pre-RC assembly (8, 11, 2830). On the other hand, the replication-dependent degradation of Cdt1 has the opposite effect and prevents refiring of replication origins during S and G2 phases of the mitotic cell cycle (18, 20, 31).Although the role of Geminin during mitosis has been extensively studied, not much is known about its function during meiosis. The expression pattern of Geminin during oocyte maturation is unclear. The presence of Geminin in immature stage VI Xenopus oocytes is controversial, but the protein is fully expressed in mature oocytes arrested in metaphase of meiosis II (7, 32). To form haploid gametes, DNA replication has to be inhibited between meiosis I (MI) and meiosis II (MII). In Xenopus oocytes, cyclin B-dependent kinase 1 (Cdk1) also known as maturation-promoting factor (MPF) plays a role in preventing DNA replication between the two meiotic divisions (3336). Inhibition of Cdk1 activity between MI and MII leads to the formation of interphase nucleus and DNA replication. However, the role of Geminin in preventing DNA replication between meiotic divisions has not been tested so far. Finally, the possibility that Geminin stabilizes Cdt1 during meiosis and ensures its accumulation for the early embryonic divisions has not been formally examined.Here we show that the levels of Geminin and Cdt1 proteins increase significantly during meiosis in Xenopus oocytes and that the primary role of geminin is to promote the accumulation of Cdt1 and not to repress DNA replication between meiosis I and meiosis II. Depletion of Geminin in Xenopus immature oocytes does not lead to DNA replication after the first meiotic division but to a decrease in Cdt1 stability during the maturation and activation of these oocytes. Rescue of Cdt1 levels in these Geminin-depleted oocytes is achieved by injection of exogenous recombinant Geminin protein confirming the role of Geminin as a stabilizer of Cdt1 during meiosis and the early embryonic division cycles. These results provide further support for the idea that Geminin functions universally in stabilizing Cdt1. Although the stabilizing role of Geminin might not be its most important function in somatic cells, we show here that stabilizing Cdt1 is a dominant function for Geminin in Xenopus oocytes undergoing meiosis. This stabilizing role of Geminin is essential for the stockpiling of Cdt1 before fertilization that is required to sustain the rapid divisions of the early embryo.  相似文献   

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