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1.
We show that in Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) cells, an apical ceramide-enriched compartment (ACEC) at the base of primary cilia is colocalized with Rab11a. Ceramide and Rab11a vesicles isolated by magnetic sorting contain a highly similar profile of proteins (atypical protein kinase C [aPKC], Cdc42, Sec8, Rab11a, and Rab8) and ceramide species, suggesting the presence of a ciliogenic protein complex associated with ceramide at the ACEC. It is intriguing that C16 and C18 ceramide, although less abundant ceramide species in MDCK cells, are highly enriched in ceramide and Rab11a vesicles. Expression of a ceramide-binding but dominant-negative mutant of aPKC suppresses ciliogenesis, indicating that the association of ceramide with aPKC is critical for the formation of this complex. Our results indicate that ciliogenic ceramide is derived from apical sphingomyelin (SM) that is endocytosed and then converted to the ACEC. Consistently, inhibition of acid sphingomyelinase with imipramine disrupts ACEC formation, association of ciliogenic proteins with Rab11a vesicles, and cilium formation. Ciliogenesis is rescued by the histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitor trichostatin A, indicating that ceramide promotes tubulin acetylation in cilia. Taken together, our results suggest that the ACEC is a novel compartment in which SM-derived ceramide induces formation of a ciliogenic lipid-protein complex that sustains primary cilia by preventing deacetylation of microtubules.  相似文献   

2.
We show here that human embryonic stem (ES) and induced pluripotent stem cell–derived neuroprogenitors (NPs) develop primary cilia. Ciliogenesis depends on the sphingolipid ceramide and its interaction with atypical PKC (aPKC), both of which distribute to the primary cilium and the apicolateral cell membrane in NP rosettes. Neural differentiation of human ES cells to NPs is concurrent with a threefold elevation of ceramide—in particular, saturated, long-chain C16:0 ceramide (N-palmitoyl sphingosine) and nonsaturated, very long chain C24:1 ceramide (N-nervonoyl sphingosine). Decreasing ceramide levels by inhibiting ceramide synthase or neutral sphingomyelinase 2 leads to translocation of membrane-bound aPKC to the cytosol, concurrent with its activation and the phosphorylation of its substrate Aurora kinase A (AurA). Inhibition of aPKC, AurA, or a downstream target of AurA, HDAC6, restores ciliogenesis in ceramide-depleted cells. Of importance, addition of exogenous C24:1 ceramide reestablishes membrane association of aPKC, restores primary cilia, and accelerates neural process formation. Taken together, these results suggest that ceramide prevents activation of HDAC6 by cytosolic aPKC and AurA, which promotes acetylation of tubulin in primary cilia and, potentially, neural processes. This is the first report on the critical role of ceramide generated by nSMase2 in stem cell ciliogenesis and differentiation.  相似文献   

3.
Atypical protein kinase Cs (PKCs) (aPKCζ and λ/ι) have emerged as important binding partners for ceramide, a membrane-resident cell signaling lipid that is involved in the regulation of apoptosis as well as cell polarity. Using ceramide overlay assays with proteolytic fragments of PKCζ and vesicle binding assays with ectopically expressed protein, we show that a protein fragment comprising the carboxyl-terminal 20-kDa sequence of PKCζ (C20ζ, amino acids 405–592) bound to C16:0 ceramide. This sequence is not identical to the C1 domain (amino acids 131–180), which has been suggested to serve as a potential ceramide binding domain. Using immunocytochemistry, we found that a C20ζ protein fragment ectopically expressed in two epithelial cell types (neural progenitors and Madin-Darby canine kidney cells) co-distributed with ceramide. Stable expression of C20ζ-EGFP in Madin-Darby canine kidney cells disrupted the formation of adherens and tight junctions and impaired the epithelium integrity by reducing transepithelial electrical resistance. Disruption of cell adhesion and loss of transepithelial electrical resistance was prevented by incubation with C16:0 ceramide. Our results show, for the first time, that there is a novel ceramide binding domain (C20ζ) in the carboxyl terminus of aPKC. Our results also show that the interaction of ceramide with this binding domain is essential for cell-to-cell contacts in epithelia. Therefore, ceramide interaction with the C20ζ binding domain is a potential mechanism by which ceramide and aPKC regulate the formation of junctional complexes in epithelial cells.Epithelial cells play essential roles in multicellular organisms by forming physiological and mechanical barriers and controlling tissue architecture, because they acquire apicobasal and cell-to-cell (planar) polarity (1, 2). Adherens junctions (AJs)2 and tight junctions (TJs) are major structures responsible for cell-to-cell adhesion in epithelial cells (3). The regulation of junction formation requires endocytosis, redistribution, and recycling of junctional proteins, such as E-cadherin (4), and ZO-1. Many factors, including EGF, EGFR, Src kinase, Rho family GTPases Cdc42 and Rac1, and atypical PKC (aPKC), have been found to regulate junction formation (59). In Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) cells, Cdc42 modulates AJs by regulating E-cadherin ubiquitination and degradation (9), whereas aPKC directly localized at TJs is required for the asymmetric differentiation of the premature junction complex during epithelial cell polarization (1, 10).The protein kinase C (PKC) family comprises serine/threonine kinases, which consist of a carboxyl-terminal catalytic domain and an amino-terminal regulatory domain (Fig. 1A). The regulatory domain includes an inhibitory pseudosubstrate domain and allosteric sites for activation by phosphatidylserine and, depending on the isoform, calcium (C2 domain) and/or diacylglycerol (C1 domain). aPKC is a subfamily of PKC, which consists of the isoforms ζ and λ/ι. The aPKC isoforms contain only half of the C1 domain, and hence, their activity is not affected by calcium or diacylglycerol/phorbol esters (see Fig. 1A and Refs. 1113).Open in a separate windowFIGURE 1.Binding of ceramide to the COOH terminus of PKCζ. A, primary structure of aPKC, the caspase 3 proteolytic fragment ζCasp II, and the NH2-terminal deletion mutant C20ζ-EGFP. B, 2 μg of recombinant His-tagged PKCζ was proteolytically digested by 20 ng of recombinant caspase 3. Proteolysis by caspase 3 occurred first after amino acid 239 (4-h incubation) and then after amino acid 459 (10-h incubation, ζCasp II). C, binding to ceramide spotted on nitrocellulose (overlay assay). FL PKCζ and the COOH-terminal proteolytic fragment ζCasp II bound to C16 ceramide. D, C16 ceramide vesicle binding assay (LIMAC). Ectopically expressed C20ζ-EGFP prepared from a cell lysate was bound to ceramide vesicles; EGFP was not. Protein was detected using anti-aPKC and anti-GFP antibodies. Lanes 1–3, loading input for ceramide vesicles; lanes 4–6, eluate of vesicle binding columns (output). Lanes 7 (input) and 8 (output) show that PKCζ-EGFP did not bind to vesicles prepared with sphingomyelin (SM) instead of ceramide. E, subcellular fractionation of cells expressing FL PKCζ-EGFP or C20ζ-EGFP.Apart from its function in apoptosis (1315) and cell growth (16), aPKC has been found to play a pivotal role in cell polarity, both in neuroepithelial cells (1720) or other epithelial cell types (1, 10). Consistently, the gene knock-out of aPKC shows loss of cell junction formation and detachment of neural progenitor cells from the neuroepithelium (8, 2123). We and others have found that the sphingolipid ceramide activates aPKC, recruits it to structured microdomains, and regulates cell polarity and motility (2428). Using lipid vesicle-mediated affinity chromatography (LIMAC) assays, we showed for the first time that ceramide directly binds to aPKC (25). Yet which domain of aPKC binds to ceramide is not known.Using lipid overlay and LIMAC assays, we show here that a COOH-terminal 20-kDa domain of PKCζ (C20ζ) binds to ceramide. Similar to its full-length counterpart, the C20ζ protein fragment resides in cellular membranes, where it co-distributes with ceramide in both C17.2 (neural progenitor) and MDCK cells. To study the function of this ceramide binding domain, we established a stably transfected MDCK cell line expressing C20ζ-EGFP. In these cells, the protein level of E-cadherin is reduced, and the cellular distribution of E-cadherin, ZO-1, and β-catenin is disrupted when compared with EGFP-transfected cell lines. Further, transepithelial electrical resistance (TER) assays show that the C20ζ-EGFP cell line has reduced impedance when compared with the control cell line expressing EGFP. This finding suggests that the C20ζ protein fragment is a dominant negative mutant of PKCζ. The effects of this dominant negative mutant can be, at least partially, rescued by incubation with C16:0 ceramide, suggesting that ceramide regulates aPKC and aPKC-dependent cell junction formation by interaction with the COOH-terminal domain.  相似文献   

4.
5.
Primary cilia are found on many epithelial cell types, including renal tubular epithelial cells, where they participate in flow sensing. Disruption of cilia function has been linked to the pathogenesis of polycystic kidney disease. We demonstrated previously that the exocyst, a highly conserved eight-protein membrane trafficking complex, localizes to primary cilia of renal tubular epithelial cells, is required for ciliogenesis, biochemically and genetically interacts with polycystin-2 (the protein product of the polycystic kidney disease 2 gene), and, when disrupted, results in MAPK pathway activation both in vitro and in vivo. The small GTPase Cdc42 is a candidate for regulation of the exocyst at the primary cilium. Here, we demonstrate that Cdc42 biochemically interacts with Sec10, a crucial component of the exocyst complex, and that Cdc42 colocalizes with Sec10 at the primary cilium. Expression of dominant negative Cdc42 and shRNA-mediated knockdown of both Cdc42 and Tuba, a Cdc42 guanine nucleotide exchange factor, inhibit ciliogenesis in Madin-Darby canine kidney cells. Furthermore, exocyst Sec8 and polycystin-2 no longer localize to primary cilia or the ciliary region following Cdc42 and Tuba knockdown. We also show that Sec10 directly interacts with Par6, a member of the Par complex that itself directly interacts with Cdc42. Finally, we show that Cdc42 knockdown results in activation of the MAPK pathway, something observed in cells with dysfunctional primary cilia. These data support a model in which Cdc42 localizes the exocyst to the primary cilium, whereupon the exocyst then targets and docks vesicles carrying proteins necessary for ciliogenesis.  相似文献   

6.
We provide evidence that the sphingolipid ceramide, in addition to its pro-apoptotic function, regulates neural progenitor (NP) motility in vitro and brain development in vivo . Ceramide ( N -palmitoyl d -erythro sphingosine and N -oleoyl d -erythro sphingosine) and the ceramide analog N -oleoyl serinol (S18) stimulate migration of NPs in scratch (wounding) migration assays. Sphingolipid depletion by inhibition of de novo ceramide biosynthesis, or ceramide inactivation using an anti-ceramide antibody, obliterates NP motility, which is restored by ceramide or S18. These results suggest that ceramide is crucial for NP motility. Wounding of the NP monolayer activates neutral sphingomyelinase indicating that ceramide is generated from sphingomyelin. In membrane processes, ceramide is co-distributed with its binding partner atypical protein kinase C ζ/λ (aPKC), and Cdc42, α/β-tubulin, and β-catenin, three proteins involved in aPKC-dependent regulation of cell polarity and motility. Sphingolipid depletion by myriocin prevents membrane translocation of aPKC and Cdc42, which is restored by ceramide or S18. These results suggest that ceramide-mediated membrane association of aPKC/Cdc42 is important for NP motility. In vivo , sphingolipid depletion leads to ectopic localization of mitotic or post-mitotic neural cells in the embryonic brain, while S18 restores the normal brain organization. In summary, our study provides novel evidence that ceramide is critical for NP motility and polarity in vitro and in vivo .  相似文献   

7.
In mammals, the primitive ectoderm is an epithelium of polarized cells that differentiates into all embryonic tissues. Our study shows that in primitive ectoderm cells, the sphingolipid ceramide was elevated and co-distributed with the small GTPase Cdc42 and cortical F-actin at the apicolateral cell membrane. Pharmacological or RNA interference-mediated inhibition of ceramide biosynthesis enhanced apoptosis and impaired primitive ectoderm formation in embryoid bodies differentiated from mouse embryonic stem cells. Primitive ectoderm formation was restored by incubation with ceramide or a ceramide analog. Ceramide depletion prevented plasma membrane translocation of PKCzeta/lambda, its interaction with Cdc42, and phosphorylation of GSK-3beta, a substrate of PKCzeta/lambda. Recombinant PKCzeta formed a complex with the polarity protein Par6 and Cdc42 when bound to ceramide containing lipid vesicles. Our data suggest a novel mechanism by which a ceramide-induced, apicolateral polarity complex with PKCzeta/lambda regulates primitive ectoderm cell polarity and morphogenesis.  相似文献   

8.
Many cells possess a single, nonmotile, primary cilium highly enriched in receptors and sensory transduction machinery that plays crucial roles in cellular morphogenesis. Although sensory transduction requires ion channels, relatively little is known about ion channels in the primary cilium (with the exception of TRPP2). Here we show that the Ca2+-activated Cl channel anoctamin-1 (ANO1/TMEM16A) is located in the primary cilium and that blocking its channel function pharmacologically or knocking it down with short hairpin RNA interferes with ciliogenesis. Before ciliogenesis, the channel becomes organized into a torus-shaped structure (“the nimbus”) enriched in proteins required for ciliogenesis, including the small GTPases Cdc42 and Arl13b and the exocyst complex component Sec6. The nimbus excludes F-actin and coincides with a ring of acetylated microtubules. The nimbus appears to form before, or independent of, apical docking of the mother centriole. Our data support a model in which the nimbus provides a scaffold for staging of ciliary components for assembly very early in ciliogenesis and chloride transport by ANO1/TMEM16A is required for the genesis or maintenance of primary cilia.  相似文献   

9.
Hepatocytes differ from columnar epithelial cells by their multipolar organization, which follows the initial formation of central lumen-sharing clusters of polarized cells as observed during liver development and regeneration. The molecular mechanism for hepatocyte polarity establishment, however, has been comparatively less studied than those for other epithelial cell types. Here, we show that the tight junction protein Par3 organizes hepatocyte polarization via cooperating with the small GTPase Cdc42 to target atypical protein kinase C (aPKC) to a cortical site near the center of cell–cell contacts. In 3D Matrigel culture of human hepatocytic HepG2 cells, which mimics a process of liver development and regeneration, depletion of Par3, Cdc42, or aPKC results in an impaired establishment of apicobasolateral polarity and a loss of subsequent apical lumen formation. The aPKC activity is also required for bile canalicular (apical) elongation in mouse primary hepatocytes. The lateral membrane-associated proteins Lgl1 and Lgl2, major substrates of aPKC, seem to be dispensable for hepatocyte polarity establishment because Lgl-depleted HepG2 cells are able to form a single apical lumen in 3D culture. On the other hand, Lgl depletion leads to lateral invasion of aPKC, and overexpression of Lgl1 or Lgl2 prevents apical lumen formation, indicating that they maintain proper lateral integrity. Thus, hepatocyte polarity establishment and apical lumen formation are organized by Par3, Cdc42, and aPKC; Par3 cooperates with Cdc42 to recruit aPKC, which plays a crucial role in apical membrane development and regulation of the lateral maintainer Lgl.  相似文献   

10.
The signaling mechanisms facilitating cardiomyocyte (CM) differentiation from bone marrow (BM)-derived mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) are not well understood. 5-Azacytidine (5-Aza), a DNA demethylating agent, induces expression of cardiac-specific genes, such as Nkx2.5 and α-MHC, in mouse BM-derived MSCs. 5-Aza treatment caused significant up-regulation of glycogen synthase kinase (GSK)-3β and down-regulation of β-catenin, whereas it stimulated GSK-3α expression only modestly. The promoter region of GSK-3β was heavily methylated in control MSCs, but was demethylated by 5-Aza. Although overexpression of GSK-3β potently induced CM differentiation, that of GSK-3α induced markers of neuronal and chondrocyte differentiation. GSK-3 inhibitors, including LiCl, SB 216743, and BIO, abolished 5-Aza-induced up-regulation of CM-specific genes, suggesting that GSK-3 is necessary and sufficient for CM differentiation in MSCs. Although specific knockdown of endogenous GSK-3β abolished 5-Aza-induced expression of cardiac specific genes, surprisingly, that of GSK-3α facilitated CM differentiation in MSCs. Although GSK-3β is found in both the cytosol and nucleus in MSCs, GSK-3α is localized primarily in the nucleus. Nuclear-specific overexpression of GSK-3β failed to stimulate CM differentiation. Down-regulation of β-catenin mediates GSK-3β-induced CM differentiation in MSCs, whereas up-regulation of c-Jun plays an important role in mediating CM differentiation induced by GSK-3α knockdown. These results suggest that GSK-3α and GSK-3β have distinct roles in regulating CM differentiation in BM-derived MSCs. GSK-3β in the cytosol induces CM differentiation of MSCs through down-regulation of β-catenin. In contrast, GSK-3α in the nucleus inhibits CM differentiation through down-regulation of c-Jun.  相似文献   

11.

Background

The primary cilium is a sensory organelle generated from the centrosome in quiescent cells and found at the surface of most cell types, from where it controls important physiological processes. Specific sets of membrane proteins involved in sensing the extracellular milieu are concentrated within cilia, including G protein coupled receptors (GPCRs). Most GPCRs are regulated by β-arrestins, βarr1 and βarr2, which control both their signalling and endocytosis, suggesting that βarrs may also function at primary cilium.

Methodology/Principal Findings

In cycling cells, βarr2 was observed at the centrosome, at the proximal region of the centrioles, in a microtubule independent manner. However, βarr2 did not appear to be involved in classical centrosome-associated functions. In quiescent cells, both in vitro and in vivo, βarr2 was found at the basal body and axoneme of primary cilia. Interestingly, βarr2 was found to interact and colocalize with 14-3-3 proteins and Kif3A, two proteins known to be involved in ciliogenesis and intraciliary transport. In addition, as suggested for other centrosome or cilia-associated proteins, βarrs appear to control cell cycle progression. Indeed, cells lacking βarr2 were unable to properly respond to serum starvation and formed less primary cilia in these conditions.

Conclusions/Significance

Our results show that βarr2 is localized to the centrosome in cycling cells and to the primary cilium in quiescent cells, a feature shared with other proteins known to be involved in ciliogenesis or primary cilium function. Within cilia, βarr2 may participate in the signaling of cilia-associated GPCRs and, therefore, in the sensory functions of this cell “antenna”.  相似文献   

12.
The atypical protein kinase C (aPKC) is part of the conserved aPKC/PAR6/PAR3 protein complex, which regulates many cell polarity events, including the formation of a primary cilium at the apical surface of epithelial cells. Cilia are highly organized, conserved, microtubule-based structures involved in motility, sensory processes, signaling, and cell polarity. We examined the distribution and function of aPKC in the sea urchin embryo, which forms a swimming blastula covered with motile cilia. We found that in the early embryo aPKC is uniformly cortical and becomes excluded from the vegetal pole during unequal cleavages at the 8- to 64-cell stages. During the blastula and gastrula stages the kinase localizes at the base of cilia, forming a ring at the transition zone between the basal body and the elongating axoneme. A dose-dependent and reversible inhibition of aPKC results in mislocalization of the kinase, defective ciliogenesis, and lack of swimming. Thus, as in the primary cilium of differentiated mammalian cells, aPKC controls the growth of motile cilia in invertebrate embryos. We suggest that aPKC might function to phosphorylate kinesin and so activate the transport of intraflagellar vesicles.  相似文献   

13.
We have established a cell-free system to investigate pathways that regulate actin polymerization. Addition of GTPγS to lysates of polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMNs) or Dictyostelium discoideum amoeba induced formation of filamentous actin. The GTPγS appeared to act via a small G-protein, since it was active in lysates ofD. discoideum mutants missing either the α2- or β-subunit of the heterotrimeric G-protein required for chemoattractant-induced actin polymerization in living cells. Furthermore, recombinant Cdc42, but not Rho or Rac, induced polymerization in the cell-free system. The Cdc42-induced increase in filamentous actin required GTPγS binding and was inhibited by a fragment of the enzyme PAK1 that binds Cdc42.

In a high speed supernatant, GTPγS alone was ineffective, but GTPγS-loaded Cdc42 induced actin polymerization, suggesting that the response was limited by guanine nucleotide exchange. Stimulating exchange by chelating magnesium, by adding acidic phospholipids, or by adding the exchange factors Cdc24 or Dbl restored the ability of GTPγS to induce polymerization. The stimulation of actin polymerization did not correlate with PIP2 synthesis.

  相似文献   

14.
Cdc42 plays an evolutionarily conserved role in promoting cell polarity and is indispensable during epithelial morphogenesis. To further investigate the role of Cdc42, we have used a three-dimensional matrigel model, in which single Caco-2 cells develop to form polarized cysts. Using this system, we previously reported that Cdc42 controls mitotic spindle orientation during cell division to correctly position the apical surface in a growing epithelial structure. In the present study, we have investigated the specific downstream effectors through which Cdc42 controls this process. Here, we report that Par6B and its binding partner, atypical protein kinase C (aPKC), are required to regulate Caco-2 morphogenesis. Depletion or inhibition of Par6B or aPKC phenocopies the loss of Cdc42, inducing misorientation of the mitotic spindle, mispositioning of the nascent apical surface, and ultimately, the formation of aberrant cysts with multiple lumens. Mechanistically, Par6B and aPKC function interdependently in this context. Par6B localizes to the apical surface of Caco-2 cysts and is required to recruit aPKC to this compartment. Conversely, aPKC protects Par6B from proteasomal degradation, in a kinase-independent manner. In addition, we report that depletion or inhibition of aPKC induces robust apoptotic cell death in Caco-2 cells, significantly reducing both cyst size and number. Cell survival and apical positioning depend upon different thresholds of aPKC expression, suggesting that they are controlled by distinct downstream pathways. We conclude that Par6B and aPKC control mitotic spindle orientation in polarized epithelia and, furthermore, that aPKC coordinately regulates multiple processes to promote morphogenesis.  相似文献   

15.
Cell-cell contacts are crucial for the integrity of all tissues. Contrasting reports have been published about the role of Cdc42 in epithelial cell-cell contacts in vitro. In keratinocytes, it was suggested that Rac1 and not Cdc42 is crucial for the formation of mature epithelial junctions, based on dominant negative inhibition experiments. Deletion of the Cdc42 gene in keratinocytes in vivo slowly impaired the maintenance of cell-cell contacts by an increased degradation of β-catenin. Whether Cdc42 is required for the formation of mature junctions was not tested.We show now that Cdc42-deficient immortalized and primary keratinocytes form only punctate primordial cell contacts in vitro, which cannot mature into belt-like junctions. This defect was independent of enhanced degradation of β-catenin, but correlated to an impaired activation and localization of aPKCζ in the Cdc42-null keratinocytes. Inhibition of aPKCζ by the inhibitor Gö6983 reproduced the phenotype, suggesting that decreased activation of aPKCζ was sufficient to explain the defective junctional maturation. In the absence of Cdc42, Rac1 activation was strongly decreased, indicating that Cdc42 is upstream of Rac1 activation. These data reveal that Cdc42 is crucial for the formation of mature epithelial cell junctions between keratinocytes by regulating activation of aPKCζ.  相似文献   

16.
17.
Aβ peptide accumulation is thought to be the primary event in the pathogenesis of Alzheimer''s disease (AD), with downstream neurotoxic effects including the hyperphosphorylation of tau protein. Glycogen synthase kinase-3 (GSK-3) is increasingly implicated as playing a pivotal role in this amyloid cascade. We have developed an adult-onset Drosophila model of AD, using an inducible gene expression system to express Arctic mutant Aβ42 specifically in adult neurons, to avoid developmental effects. Aβ42 accumulated with age in these flies and they displayed increased mortality together with progressive neuronal dysfunction, but in the apparent absence of neuronal loss. This fly model can thus be used to examine the role of events during adulthood and early AD aetiology. Expression of Aβ42 in adult neurons increased GSK-3 activity, and inhibition of GSK-3 (either genetically or pharmacologically by lithium treatment) rescued Aβ42 toxicity. Aβ42 pathogenesis was also reduced by removal of endogenous fly tau; but, within the limits of detection of available methods, tau phosphorylation did not appear to be altered in flies expressing Aβ42. The GSK-3–mediated effects on Aβ42 toxicity appear to be at least in part mediated by tau-independent mechanisms, because the protective effect of lithium alone was greater than that of the removal of tau alone. Finally, Aβ42 levels were reduced upon GSK-3 inhibition, pointing to a direct role of GSK-3 in the regulation of Aβ42 peptide level, in the absence of APP processing. Our study points to the need both to identify the mechanisms by which GSK-3 modulates Aβ42 levels in the fly and to determine if similar mechanisms are present in mammals, and it supports the potential therapeutic use of GSK-3 inhibitors in AD.  相似文献   

18.
Previously we demonstrated that c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK) plays a central role in acetaminophen (APAP)-induced liver injury. In the current work, we examined other possible signaling pathways that may also contribute to APAP hepatotoxicity. APAP treatment to mice caused glycogen synthase kinase-3β (GSK-3β) activation and translocation to mitochondria during the initial phase of APAP-induced liver injury (∼1 h). The silencing of GSK-3β, but not Akt-2 (protein kinase B) or glycogen synthase kinase-3α (GSK-3α), using antisense significantly protected mice from APAP-induced liver injury. The silencing of GSK-3β affected several key pathways important in conferring protection against APAP-induced liver injury. APAP treatment was observed to promote the loss of glutamate cysteine ligase (GCL, rate-limiting enzyme in GSH synthesis) in liver. The silencing of GSK-3β decreased the loss of hepatic GCL, and promoted greater GSH recovery in liver following APAP treatment. Silencing JNK1 and -2 also prevented the loss of GCL. APAP treatment also resulted in GSK-3β translocation to mitochondria and the degradation of myeloid cell leukemia sequence 1 (Mcl-1) in mitochondrial membranes in liver. The silencing of GSK-3β reduced Mcl-1 degradation caused by APAP treatment. The silencing of GSK-3β also resulted in an inhibition of the early phase (0–2 h), and blunted the late phase (after 4 h) of JNK activation and translocation to mitochondria in liver following APAP treatment. Taken together our results suggest that activation of GSK-3β is a key mediator of the initial phase of APAP-induced liver injury through modulating GCL and Mcl-1 degradation, as well as JNK activation in liver.  相似文献   

19.
Primary cilia are specialized, acetylated microtubule-based signaling processes. Cilium assembly is activated by cellular quiescence and requires reconfiguration of microtubules, the actin cytoskeleton, and vesicular trafficking machinery. How these components are coordinated to activate ciliogenesis remains unknown. Here we identify the microtubule acetyltransferase Mec-17 and myosin II motors as the key effectors in primary cilium biogenesis. We found that myosin IIB (Myh10) is required for cilium formation; however, myosin IIA (Myh9) suppresses it. Myh10 binds and antagonizes Myh9 to increase actin dynamics, which facilitates the assembly of the pericentrosomal preciliary complex (PPC) that supplies materials for cilium growth. Importantly, Myh10 expression is upregulated by serum-starvation and this induction requires Mec-17, which is itself accumulated upon cellular quiescence. Pharmacological stimulation of microtubule acetylation also induces Myh10 expression and cilium formation. Thus cellular quiescence induces Mec17 to couple the production of acetylated microtubules and Myh10, whose accumulation overcomes the inhibitory role of Myh9 and initiates ciliogenesis.  相似文献   

20.

Background

Over-activity and elevated expression of glycogen synthase kinase-3 (GSK-3) has been implicated in the etiology of insulin resistance and Type 2 diabetes. Administration of specific GSK-3 inhibitors to diabetic or obese rodent models improves glycaemic control and insulin sensitivity. However, due to the indiscriminatory nature of these inhibitors, the relative contribution of the two isoforms of GSK-3 (GSK-3α and GSK-3β) is not known. Recently, we demonstrated that an out-bred strain of mice (ICR) lacking expression of GSK-3α in all tissues displayed improved insulin sensitivity and enhanced hepatic glucose metabolism. We also found that muscle (but not liver) inactivation of GSK-3β conferred insulin and glucose sensitization in an in-bred strain of mice (C57BL/6).

Methodology/Principal Findings

Here, we have employed tissue-specific deletion of GSK-3α, to examine the relative contribution of two insulin-sensitive tissues, muscle and liver, towards the insulin sensitization phenotype originally observed in the global GSK-3α KO animals. We found that mice in which GSK-3α has been inactivated in either skeletal-muscle or liver displayed no differences in glucose tolerance or insulin sensitivity compared to wild type littermates. Given the strain differences in our original analyses, we examined the insulin and glucose sensitivity of global GSK-3α KO animals bred onto a C57BL/6 background. These animals also revealed no significant differences in glucose metabolism/insulin sensitivity compared to their wild type littermates. Furthermore, deletion of hepatic GSK-3α on the out-bred, ICR background failed to reproduce the insulin sensitivity manifested by the global deletion of this isoform.

Conclusions/Significance

From these data we conclude that the improved insulin sensitivity and hepatic glucose homeostasis phenotype observed upon global inactivation of GSK-3α is strain-specific. We surmise that the insulin-sensitization observed in the out-bred strain of mice lacking GSK-3α is mediated by indirect means that do not require intrinsic function of GSK-3α in skeletal muscle and liver tissues.  相似文献   

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