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1.
The Wnt pathway is a major embryonic signaling pathway that controls cell proliferation, cell fate, and body-axis determination in vertebrate embryos. Soon after egg fertilization, Wnt pathway components play a role in microtubule-dependent dorsoventral axis specification. Later in embryogenesis, another conserved function of the pathway is to specify the anteroposterior axis. The dual role of Wnt signaling in Xenopus and zebrafish embryos is regulated at different developmental stages by distinct sets of Wnt target genes. This review highlights recent progress in the discrimination of different signaling branches and the identification of specific pathway targets during vertebrate axial development.Wnt pathways play major roles in cell-fate specification, proliferation and differentiation, cell polarity, and morphogenesis (Clevers 2006; van Amerongen and Nusse 2009). Signaling is initiated in the responding cell by the interaction of Wnt ligands with different receptors and coreceptors, including Frizzled, LRP5/6, ROR1/2, RYK, PTK7, and proteoglycans (Angers and Moon 2009; Kikuchi et al. 2009; MacDonald et al. 2009). Receptor activation is accompanied by the phosphorylation of Dishev-elled (Yanagawa et al. 1995), which appears to transduce the signal to both the cell membrane and the nucleus (Cliffe et al. 2003; Itoh et al. 2005; Bilic et al. 2007). Another common pathway component is β-catenin, an abundant component of adherens junctions (Nelson and Nusse 2004; Grigoryan et al. 2008). In response to signaling, β-catenin associates with T-cell factors (TCFs) and translocates to the nucleus to stimulate Wnt target gene expression (Behrens et al. 1996; Huber et al. 1996; Molenaar et al. 1996).This β-catenin-dependent activation of specific genes is often referred to as the “canonical” pathway. In the absence of Wnt signaling, β-catenin is destroyed by the protein complex that includes Axin, GSK3, and the tumor suppressor APC (Clevers 2006; MacDonald et al. 2009). Wnt proteins, such as Wnt1, Wnt3, and Wnt8, stimulate Frizzled and LRP5/6 receptors to inactivate this β-catenin destruction complex, and, at the same time, trigger the phosphorylation of TCF proteins by homeodomain-interacting protein kinase 2 (HIPK2) (Hikasa et al. 2010; Hikasa and Sokol 2011). Both β-catenin stabilization and the regulation of TCF protein function by phosphorylation appear to represent general strategies that are conserved in multiple systems (Sokol 2011). Thus, the signaling pathway consists of two branches that together regulate target gene expression (Fig. 1).Open in a separate windowFigure 1.Conserved Wnt pathway branches and components. In the absence of Wnt signals, glycogen synthase kinase 3 (GSK3) binds Axin and APC to form the β-catenin destruction complex. Some Wnt proteins, such as Wnt8 and Wnt3a, stimulate Frizzled and LRP5/6 receptors to inhibit GSK3 activity and stabilize β-catenin (β-cat). Stabilized β-cat forms a complex with T-cell factors (e.g., TCF1/LEF1) to activate target genes. Moreover, GSK3 inhibition leads to target gene derepression by promoting TCF3 phosphorylation by homeodomain-interacting protein kinase 2 (HIPK2) through an unknown mechanism, for which β-catenin is required as a scaffold. This phosphorylation results in TCF3 removal from target promoters and gene activation. Other Wnt proteins, such as Wnt5a and Wnt11, use distinct receptors such as ROR2 and RYK, in addition to Frizzled, to control the the cytoskeletal organization through core planar cell polarity (PCP) proteins, small GTPases (Rho/Rac/Cdc42), and c-Jun amino-terminal kinase (JNK).Other Wnt proteins, such as Wnt5a or Wnt11, strongly affect the cytoskeletal organization and morphogenesis without stabilizing β-catenin (Torres et al. 1996; Angers and Moon 2009; Wu and Mlodzik 2009). These “noncanonical” ligands do not influence TCF3 phosphorylation (Hikasa and Sokol 2011), but may use distinct receptors such as ROR1/2 and RYK instead of or in addition to Frizzled (Hikasa et al. 2002; Lu et al. 2004; Mikels and Nusse 2006; Nishita et al. 2006, 2010; Schambony and Wedlich 2007; Grumolato et al. 2010; Lin et al. 2010; Gao et al. 2011). In such cases, signaling mechanisms are likely to include planar cell polarity (PCP) components, such as Vangl2, Flamingo, Prickle, Diversin, Rho GTPases, and c-Jun amino-terminal kinases (JNKs), which do not directly affect β-catenin stability (Fig. 1) (Sokol 2000; Schwarz-Romond et al. 2002; Schambony and Wedlich 2007; Komiya and Habas 2008; Axelrod 2009; Itoh et al. 2009; Tada and Kai 2009; Sato et al. 2010; Gao et al. 2011). This simplistic dichotomy of the Wnt pathway does not preclude some Wnt ligands from using both β-catenin-dependent and -independent routes in a context-specific manner.Despite the existence of many pathway branches, only the β-catenin-dependent branch has been implicated in body-axis specification. Recent experiments in lower vertebrates have identified additional pathway components and targets and provided new insights into the underlying mechanisms.  相似文献   

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The TAM receptors—Tyro3, Axl, and Mer—comprise a unique family of receptor tyrosine kinases, in that as a group they play no essential role in embryonic development. Instead, they function as homeostatic regulators in adult tissues and organ systems that are subject to continuous challenge and renewal throughout life. Their regulatory roles are prominent in the mature immune, reproductive, hematopoietic, vascular, and nervous systems. The TAMs and their ligands—Gas6 and Protein S—are essential for the efficient phagocytosis of apoptotic cells and membranes in these tissues; and in the immune system, they act as pleiotropic inhibitors of the innate inflammatory response to pathogens. Deficiencies in TAM signaling are thought to contribute to chronic inflammatory and autoimmune disease in humans, and aberrantly elevated TAM signaling is strongly associated with cancer progression, metastasis, and resistance to targeted therapies.The name of the TAM family is derived from the first letter of its three constituents—Tyro3, Axl, and Mer (Prasad et al. 2006). As detailed in Figure 1, members of this receptor tyrosine kinase (RTK) family were independently identified by several different groups and appear in the early literature under multiple alternative names. However, Tyro3, Axl, and Mer (officially c-Mer or MerTK for the protein, Mertk for the gene) have now been adopted as the NCBI designations. The TAMs were first grouped into a distinct RTK family (the Tyro3/7/12 cluster) in 1991, through PCR cloning of their kinase domains (Lai and Lemke 1991). The isolation of full-length cDNAs for Axl (O''Bryan et al. 1991), Mer (Graham et al. 1994), and Tyro3 (Lai et al. 1994) confirmed their segregation into a structurally distinctive family of orphan RTKs (Manning et al. 2002b). The two ligands that bind and activate the TAMs—Gas6 and Protein S (Pros1)—were identified shortly thereafter (Ohashi et al. 1995; Stitt et al. 1995; Mark et al. 1996; Nagata et al. 1996).Open in a separate windowFigure 1.TAM receptors and ligands. The TAM receptors (red) are Tyro3 (Lai and Lemke 1991; Lai et al. 1994)—also designated Brt (Fujimoto and Yamamoto 1994), Dtk (Crosier et al. 1994), Rse (Mark et al. 1994), Sky (Ohashi et al. 1994), and Tif (Dai et al. 1994); Axl (O''Bryan et al. 1991)—also designated Ark (Rescigno et al. 1991), Tyro7 (Lai and Lemke 1991), and Ufo (Janssen et al. 1991); and Mer (Graham et al. 1994)—also designated Eyk (Jia and Hanafusa 1994), Nyk (Ling and Kung 1995), and Tyro12 (Lai and Lemke 1991). The TAMs are widely expressed by cells of the mature immune, nervous, vascular, and reproductive systems. The TAM ligands (blue) are Gas6 and Protein S (Pros1). The carboxy-terminal SHBG domains of the ligands bind to the immunoglobulin (Ig) domains of the receptors, induce dimerization, and activate the TAM tyrosine kinases. When γ-carboxylated in a vitamin-K-dependent reaction, the amino-terminal Gla domains of the dimeric ligands bind to the phospholipid phosphatidylserine expressed on the surface on an apposed apoptotic cell or enveloped virus. See text for details. (From Lemke and Burstyn-Cohen 2010; adapted, with permission, from the authors.)Subsequent progress on elucidating the biological roles of the TAM receptors was considerably slower and ultimately required the derivation of mouse loss-of-function mutants (Camenisch et al. 1999; Lu et al. 1999). The fact that Tyro3−/−, Axl−/−, and Mer−/− mice are all viable and fertile permitted the generation of a complete TAM mutant series that included all possible double mutants and even triple mutants that lack all three receptors (Lu et al. 1999). Remarkably, these Tyro3−/−Axl−/−Mer−/− triple knockouts (TAM TKOs) are viable, and for the first 2–3 wk after birth, superficially indistinguishable from their wild-type counterparts (Lu et al. 1999). Because many RTKs play essential roles in embryonic development, even single loss-of-function mutations in RTK genes often result in an embryonic-lethal phenotype (Gassmann et al. 1995; Lee et al. 1995; Soriano 1997; Arman et al. 1998). The postnatal viability of mice in which an entire RTK family is ablated completely—the TAM TKOs can survive for more than a year (Lu et al. 1999)—is therefore highly unusual. Their viability notwithstanding, the TAM mutants go on to develop a plethora of phenotypes, some of them debilitating (Camenisch et al. 1999; Lu et al. 1999; Lu and Lemke 2001; Scott et al. 2001; Duncan et al. 2003; Prasad et al. 2006). Almost without exception, these phenotypes are degenerative in nature and reflect the loss of TAM signaling activities in adult tissues that are subject to regular challenge, renewal, and remodeling. These activities are the subject of this review.  相似文献   

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RET (rearranged during transfection) is a receptor tyrosine kinase involved in the development of neural crest derived cell lineages, kidney, and male germ cells. Different human cancers, including papillary and medullary thyroid carcinomas, lung adenocarcinomas, and myeloproliferative disorders display gain-of-function mutations in RET. Accordingly, RET protein has become a promising molecular target for cancer treatment.The human RET (rearranged during transfection) gene maps on 10q11.2 and is composed of 21 exons spanning a region of 55,000 bp. It encodes a single-pass trans-membrane protein, RET, that belongs to the receptor tyrosine kinase (RTK) family (Pasini et al. 1995). The RET extracellular segment contains four cadherin-like domains, followed by a domain containing cysteine residues involved in the formation of intramolecular disulfide bonds (Fig. 1A) (Anders et al. 2001; Airaksinen and Saarma 2002). RET protein is highly glycosylated and N-glycosylation is necessary for its transport to the cell surface. Only the fully mature glycosylated 170 kDa RET protein isoform is exposed to the extracellular compartment, whereas the mannose-rich 150 kDa isoform is confined to the Golgi (Takahashi et al. 1993; Carlomagno et al. 1996). The transmembrane segment is composed of 22 amino acids, among which S649 and S653 mediate self-association and dimerization of RET, possibly via formation of inter-molecular hydrogen bonding (Kjaer et al. 2006). The intracellular portion of RET contains the tyrosine kinase domain split into two subdomains by the insertion of 27 amino acids. The RET COOH-terminal tail varies in length as a result of alternative splicing of the 3′ end (carboxy terminal with respect to glycine 1063), generating three different isoforms that contain 9 (RET9), 43 (RET43), or 51 (RET51) amino acids (Myers et al. 1995). RET9 and RET51 are the most abundant isoforms, and they activate similar signaling pathways through interaction with diverse protein complexes, and may exert a differential role in development (Fig. 1A) (de Graaff et al. 2001).Open in a separate windowFigure 1.Illustration of the mechanisms of activation of wild-type (wt) RET and RET-derived oncoproteins. (A) Wild-type RET activation is mediated by ligand (GFL)-induced dimerization; ligand binding to RET is not direct and mediated by GFR-α coreceptors (not shown); major RET autophosphorylation sites and downstream signaling pathways are indicated. RET extracellular cadherin-like domains are represented in red. The split intracellular RET tyrosine kinase domain, as well as the three alternative carboxy-terminal RET tails, are also depicted. (B) RET/PTC activation is mediated by coiled-coil-induced dimerization (left); activation of RET cysteine mutants associated with MEN2A or FMTC is mediated by disulfide bonds-mediated dimerization (right).RET shows several autophosphorylation sites (Fig. 1A) (Liu et al. 1996; Kawamoto et al. 2004). RET tyrosine 1062 (Y1062) functions as a multidocking site for signaling molecules containing a phosphotyrosine-binding (PTB) domain (Asai et al. 1996). Phospho-Y1062 binding proteins include SHC, N-SHC (RAI), FRS2, IRS1/2, DOK1, and DOK4/5 that, in turn, contribute to the activation of RAS-MAPK (mitogen-activated protein kinases) and PI3K (phosphatidyl inositol 3 kinase)-AKT pathways. Y1096, specific to the RET51 splicing variant, couples to the PI3K-AKT and RAS-MAPK pathways, as well. These signaling cascades mediate RET-dependent cell survival, proliferation, and motility (Alberti et al. 1998; Murakami et al. 1999; Segouffin-Cariou and Billaud 2000; Melillo et al. 2001a,b; Schuetz et al. 2004). Y905 is located in the activation loop of the RET kinase and its phosphorylation is associated with RET kinase activation (Knowles et al. 2006). Finally, Y981 and Y1015 have been shown to be coupled to important signaling molecules such as SRC and PLC-γ, respectively (Borrello et al. 1996; Encinas et al. 2004).RET is the receptor for a group of neurotrophic growth factors that belong to the glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF) family (GFLs, GDNF family ligands), namely, GDNF, Neurturin (NRT), Artemin (ART), and Persephin (PSF) (Airaksinen and Saarma 2002). GFLs mediate RET protein dimerization and activation (Fig. 1A). GFLs are presented to RET by GPI (glycosylphosphatidylinositol)-anchored coreceptors, called GFR-α (GDNF family receptor α 1-4). Differential tissue expression dictates the specificity of action displayed by alternative GLF-GFR-α pairs during development and adult life (Baloh et al. 2000; Airaksinen and Saarma 2002).Together with other membrane (DCC and p75NTR) or nuclear (androgen receptor, AR) receptors, RET belongs to the family of so-called “dependence” receptors (Mehlen and Bredesen 2011). In the absence of ligand, RET exerts a proapoptotic activity, that is blocked on ligand stimulation (Bordeaux et al. 2000). Such pro-apoptotic activity is RET kinase-independent and mediated by cleavage of RET cytosolic portion by caspase-3, which, in turn, releases a carboxy-terminal RET peptide that is able to induce cell death (Bordeaux et al. 2000). It is feasible that such activity is important for RET developmental function, because it may control migration of RET-expressing cells by limiting survival of cells that move beyond ligand availability (Bordeaux et al. 2000; Cañibano et al. 2007). Whether modulation of this function is also important for RET-associated diseases is still unknown. However, it is interesting to note that a cancer-associated RET mutant (RET-C634R, see below) does not exert cleavage-dependent proapoptotic effects, whereas RET mutants associated with defective development (Hirschsprung disease, see below) exert strong proapoptotic activity that is refractory to modulation by ligand (Bordeaux et al. 2000).RET is expressed in enteric ganglia, adrenal medulla chromaffin cells, thyroid C cells, sensory and autonomic ganglia of the peripheral nervous system, a subset of central nervous system nuclei, developing kidney and testis germ cells (Manié et al. 2001; de Graaff et al. 2001). RET null mice display impaired development of superior cervical ganglia and enteric nervous system, kidney agenesia, reduction of thyroid C cells, and impaired spermatogenesis (Manié et al. 2001). Accordingly, individuals with germline loss-of-function mutations of RET are affected by intestinal aganglionosis causing congenital megacolon (Hirschsprung disease) (Brooks et al. 2005). RET loss-of-function mutations have also been identified in congenital anomalies of kidney and urinary tract (CAKUT), either isolated or in combination with Hirschsprung disease (Jain 2009).Several genetic alterations convert RET into a dominantly transforming oncogene. This review will describe RET-derived oncogenes that are associated with different types of human neoplasia (Fig. 1B).  相似文献   

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While polar organelles hold the key to understanding the fundamentals of cell polarity and cell biological principles in general, they have served in the past merely for taxonomical purposes. Here, we highlight recent efforts in unraveling the molecular basis of polar organelle positioning in bacterial cells. Specifically, we detail the role of members of the Ras-like GTPase superfamily and coiled-coil-rich scaffolding proteins in modulating bacterial cell polarity and in recruiting effector proteins to polar sites. Such roles are well established for eukaryotic cells, but not for bacterial cells that are generally considered diffusion-limited. Studies on spatial regulation of protein positioning in bacterial cells, though still in their infancy, will undoubtedly experience a surge of interest, as comprehensive localization screens have yielded an extensive list of (polarly) localized proteins, potentially reflecting subcellular sites of functional specialization predicted for organelles.Since the first electron micrographs that revealed flagella at the cell poles of bacteria, we have known that bacterial cells are polarized and that they are able to decode the underlying positional information to confine the assembly of an extracellular organelle to a polar cellular site (Fig. 1). Foraging into this unknown territory has been challenging, but recent efforts that exploit the power of bacterial genetics along with modern imaging methods to visualize proteins in the minute bacterial cells has yielded several enticing entry points to dissect polarity-based mechanisms and explore potentially contributing subdiffusive characteristics (Golding and Cox 2006).Open in a separate windowFigure 1.Transmission electron micrograph (taken by Jeff Skerker) of a Caulobacter crescentus swarmer cell showing the polar pili (empty arrowheads), the polar flagellum with the flagellar filament (filled arrowheads), and the hook (white arrow) (see Fig. 2A).While polar organelles are a visual manifestation of polarity, it is important to point out that polarity can also be inherent to cells, at least in molecular terms, even in the absence of discernible polar structures. In other words, molecular anatomy can reveal that a bacterial cell, such as an Escherichia coli cell, features specialized protein complexes at or near the poles, despite a perfectly symmetrical morphology (Maddock and Shapiro 1993; Lindner et al. 2008). Such systemic polarization in bacteria, likely stemming from the distinctive division history of each pole, has the potential to be widespread and to be exploited for positioning of polar organelles and protein complexes. As excellent reviews have been published detailing the interplay between cell polarity and protein localization (Dworkin 2009; Shapiro et al. 2009; Kaiser et al. 2010; Rudner and Losick 2010), here we focus on recent progress in understanding the function and localization of spatial regulators of polar organelles. Considering that the ever-growing list of polar protein complexes emerging from systematic and comprehensive localization studies (Kitagawa et al. 2005; Russell and Keiler 2008; Werner et al. 2009; Hughes et al. 2010) is suggestive of multiple polarly confined (organelle-like) functions, understanding their spatial regulation is also of critical relevance in the realm of medical bacteriology, as many virulence determinants also underlie polarity (Goldberg et al. 1993; Scott et al. 2001; Judd et al. 2005; Jain et al. 2006; Jaumouille et al. 2008; Carlsson et al. 2009). Below, we highlight a few prominent examples of overtly polar organelles and the proteins known to date that regulate their polar positioning.  相似文献   

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Fibronectin (FN) is a multidomain protein with the ability to bind simultaneously to cell surface receptors, collagen, proteoglycans, and other FN molecules. Many of these domains and interactions are also involved in the assembly of FN dimers into a multimeric fibrillar matrix. When, where, and how FN binds to its various partners must be controlled and coordinated during fibrillogenesis. Steps in the process of FN fibrillogenesis including FN self-association, receptor activities, and intracellular pathways have been under intense investigation for years. In this review, the domain organization of FN including the extra domains and variable region that are controlled by alternative splicing are described. We discuss how FN–FN and cell–FN interactions play essential roles in the initiation and progression of matrix assembly using complementary results from cell culture and embryonic model systems that have enhanced our understanding of this process.As a ubiquitous component of the extracellular matrix (ECM), fibronectin (FN) provides essential connections to cells through integrins and other receptors and regulates cell adhesion, migration, and differentiation. FN is secreted as a large dimeric glycoprotein with subunits that range in size from 230 kDa to 270 kDa (Mosher 1989; Hynes 1990). Variation in subunit size depends primarily on alternative splicing. FN was first isolated from blood more than 60 years ago (Edsall 1978), and this form is called plasma FN. The other major form, called cellular FN, is abundant in the fibrillar matrices of most tissues. Although FN is probably best known for promoting attachment of cells to surfaces, this multidomain protein has many interesting structural features and functional roles beyond cell adhesion.FN is composed of three different types of modules termed type I, II, and III repeats (Fig. 1) (Petersen et al. 1983; Hynes 1990). These repeats have distinct structures. Although the conformations of type I and type II repeats are maintained by pairs of intramodule disulfide bonds, the type III repeat is a 7-stranded β-barrel structure that lacks disulfide bonds (Main et al. 1992; Leahy et al. 1996, 1992) and, therefore, can undergo conformational changes. FN type III repeats are widely distributed among animal, bacterial, and plant proteins and are found in both extracellular and intracellular proteins (Bork and Doolittle 1992; Tsyguelnaia and Doolittle 1998).Open in a separate windowFigure 1.FN domain organization and isoforms. Each FN monomer has a modular structure consisting of 12 type I repeats (cylinders), 2 type II repeats (diamonds), and 15 constitutive type III repeats (hexagons). Two additional type III repeats (EIIIA and EIIIB, green) are included or omitted by alternative splicing. The third region of alternative splicing, the V region (green box), is included (V120), excluded (V0), or partially included (V95, V64, V89). Sets of modules comprise domains for binding to other extracellular molecules as indicated. Domains required for fibrillogenesis are in red: the assembly domain (repeats I1-5) binds FN, III9-10 contains the RGD and synergy sequences for integrin binding, and the carboxy-terminal cysteines form the disulfide-bonded FN dimer (‖). The III1-2 domain (light red) has two FN binding sites that are important for fibrillogenesis. The amino-terminal 70-kDa fragment contains assembly and gelatin-binding domains and is routinely used in FN binding and matrix assembly studies.Sets of adjacent modules form binding domains for a variety of proteins and carbohydrates (Fig. 1). ECM proteins, including FN, bind to cells via integrin receptors, αβ heterodimers with two transmembrane subunits (Hynes 2002). FN-binding integrins have specificity for one of the two cell-binding sites within FN, either the RGD-dependent cell-binding domain in III10 (Pierschbacher and Ruoslahti 1984) or the CS1 segment of the alternatively spliced V region (IIICS) (Wayner et al. 1989; Guan and Hynes 1990). Some integrins require a synergy sequence in repeat III9 for maximal interactions with FN (Aota et al. 1994; Bowditch et al. 1994). Another family of cell surface receptors is the syndecans, single-chain transmembrane proteoglycans (Couchman 2010). Syndecans use their glycosaminoglycan (GAG) chains to interact with FN at its carboxy-terminal heparin-binding (HepII) domain (Fig. 1) (Saunders and Bernfield 1988; Woods et al. 2000), which binds to heparin, heparan sulfate, and chondroitin sulfate GAGs (Hynes 1990; Barkalow and Schwarzbauer 1994). Syndecan binding to the HepII domain enhances integrin-mediated cell spreading and intracellular signaling, suggesting that syndecans act as coreceptors with integrins in cell–FN binding (Woods and Couchman 1998; Morgan et al. 2007).A major site for FN self-association is within the amino-terminal assembly domain spanning the first five type I repeats (I1-5) (Fig. 1) (McKeown-Longo and Mosher 1985; McDonald et al. 1987; Schwarzbauer 1991b; Sottile et al. 1991). This domain plays an essential role in FN fibrillogenesis. As a major blood protein, FN interacts with fibrin during blood coagulation, also using the I1-5 domain (Mosher 1989; Hynes 1990). As fibrin polymerizes, factor XIII transglutaminase covalently cross-links glutamine residues near the amino terminus of FN to fibrin α chains (Mosher 1975; Corbett et al. 1997). The amino-terminal domain has multiple binding partners in addition to FN and fibrin; these include heparin, S. aureus, and other bacteria, thrombospondin-1, and tenascin-C (Hynes 1990; Ingham et al. 2004; Schwarz-Linek et al. 2006). Adjacent to this domain is the gelatin/collagen-binding domain composed of type I and type II modules (Ingham et al. 1988). This domain also binds to tissue transglutaminase (Radek et al. 1993) and fibrillin-1 (Sabatier et al. 2009). Within the 15 type III repeats reside several FN binding sites that interact with the amino-terminal assembly domain as well as three sites of alternative splicing that generate multiple isoforms. At the carboxyl terminus is a pair of cysteine residues that form the FN dimer through antiparallel disulfide bonds (Hynes 1990). This dimerization may be facilitated by disulfide isomerase activity located in the last set of type I repeats (Langenbach and Sottile 1999).The diverse set of binding domains provides FN with the ability to interact simultaneously with other FN molecules, other ECM components (e.g., collagens and proteoglycans), cell surface receptors, and extracellular enzymes (Pankov and Yamada 2002; Fogelgren et al. 2005; Hynes 2009; Singh et al. 2010). Multitasking by FN probably underlies its essential role during embryogenesis (George et al. 1993). Furthermore, FN''s interactions can be modulated by exposure or sequestration of its binding sites within matrix fibrils, through the presence of ECM proteins that bind to FN, or through variation in structure by alternative splicing.  相似文献   

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Receptor tyrosine kinases (RTKs) and their cellular signaling pathways play important roles in normal development and homeostasis. Aberrations in their activation or signaling leads to many pathologies, especially cancers, motivating the development of a variety of drugs that block RTK signaling that have been successfully applied for the treatment of many cancers. As the current field of RTKs and their signaling pathways are covered by a very large amount of literature, spread over half a century, I am focusing the scope of this review on seminal discoveries made before tyrosine phosphorylation was discovered, and on the early days of research into RTKs and their cellular signaling pathways. I review the history of the early days of research in the field of RTKs. I emphasize key early findings, which provided conceptual frameworks for addressing the questions of how RTKs are activated and how they regulate intracellular signaling pathways.The family of cell-surface receptors designated receptor tyrosine kinases (RTK) received their name more that a decade after the same molecules were already known as the cell-surface receptors for insulin (insulin receptor), epidermal growth factor (EGFR), and many other growth factor receptors. Following the pioneering discoveries of nerve growth factor and epidermal growth factor (EGF; Levi-Montalcini and Booker 1960; Cohen 1962) and the establishment of the important roles of these two growth factors in the control of neuronal differentiation and cell proliferation in vivo and in vitro, it became clear that these cytokines bind specifically to cell-surface receptors. Insulin had already been discovered by this time, and had been applied successfully to treat diabetes patients since the early twentieth century. The resulting homogenous preparations of pure insulin enabled the quantitative characterization of insulin binding to its receptor on intact cells or to solubilized insulin receptor preparations using radiolabeled insulin (De Meyts et al. 1973). These studies greatly advanced understanding of the ligand binding characteristics of insulin receptor and, later on EGFR (Carpenter et al. 1975), including the establishment of negative cooperativity in insulin binding to its receptor expressed on the surface of living cells (De Meyts et al. 1973). Moreover, these studies shed important light on the dynamic nature of the cellular behavior of these receptors. The capacities of insulin receptor and EGFR to undergo ligand-dependent down-regulation and desensitization through receptor-mediated internalization and degradation (Carpenter and Cohen 1976; Gordon et al. 1978; Schlessinger et al. 1978a,b; Carpentier et al. 1979; Haigler et al. 1979) were also established well before the realization that growth factors receptors are endowed with intrinsic protein tyrosine kinase activities (Fig. 1).Open in a separate windowFigure 1.A time line of key findings during the history of RTKs, with emphasis on findings and discoveries that produced the conceptual framework in the development of the RTK field and its application for cancer therapy. References for the key findings are also presented in the text (Lee et al. 1985; Libermann et al. 1985; Margolis et al. 1990; Bottaro et al. 1991; Bae et al. 2009).Progress was also made in elucidating the role of growth factors in normal embryonic development, wound healing, and pathological conditions such as cancer. Early studies in the 1960s and 1970s showed that growth factors play an important role in oncogenesis induced by retroviruses and in the proliferation of tumor-derived cancer cells. Pioneering studies performed by Howard Temin (1966, 1967) showed that cancer cells need less insulin and serum growth factors for cell proliferation compared with normal cells, suggesting that cancer cells produce and use their own growth factors and/or use cellular processes that in normal cells are regulated by exogenously supplied growth factors; both predictions were subsequently confirmed. A variety of new polypeptide growth factors that stimulate cell proliferation by binding to receptors at the cell surface were subsequently discovered. Those include a growth factor isolated from human platelets designated platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF; Antoniades et al. 1979; Heldin et al. 1979), a growth factor isolated from bovine brain designated fibroblast growth factor (FGF; Gospodarowicz et al. 1978), a growth factor isolated from rat platelets that stimulates the proliferation of mature hepatocytes, designated hepatocyte growth factor (HGF; Nakamura et al. 1986). In addition to EGF, another growth factor that binds selectively to cells expressing EGFR was isolated from virally and chemically transformed cells, suggesting that this growth factor—designated transforming growth factor α—may play a role in oncogenesis by an autocrine mechanism (Roberts et al. 1980, 1982). This discovery provided further support to the earlier finding that transformation by murine and feline sarcoma viruses selectively interferes with EGF binding to EGFR in transformed cells (Todaro et al. 1976). Together with many other studies published since the 1980s, this work showed that growth factors and their receptors play numerous important roles during development and in many normal cellular processes as well as in pathologies such as cancer, diabetes, atherosclerosis, severe bone disorders, and tumor angiogenesis.Visualization of dynamic cellular redistribution of ligand/receptor complexes, and rapid receptor-mediated internalization of growth factors such as insulin or EGF, led to the proposal that cell-surface receptors for these ligands may play a passive role in delivering them to intracellular compartments in which internalized EGF or insulin molecules exert their actions (Vigneri et al. 1978; Podlecki et al. 1986; Jiang and Schindler 1990). In other words, according to this hypothesis, the biological signals induced by insulin or EGF were thought to be mediated by binding of the ligands themselves to intracellular target(s) in the cytoplasm or nucleus, with the role of the cell-surface receptor being to act as a “carrier” that delivers them directly to these targets. An alternative hypothesis was that insulin or EGF activates their cognate receptors at the cell surface, which in turn stimulate the production of an intracellular second messenger molecule analogous to cAMP in signaling by the G-protein-activating β-adrenergic receptor. Indeed, several potential second messengers that are generated in cells on stimulation with insulin or other growth factors were proposed before (and even after) it became clear that insulin receptor, EGFR, and other RTKs are endowed with intrinsic tyrosine kinase activity (Larner et al. 1979; Das 1980; Saltiel and Cuatrecasas 1986).A demonstration that anti-insulin receptor antibodies from the serum of certain diabetic patients could mimic cellular responses of insulin (Flier et al. 1977; Van Obberghen et al. 1979) provided the first conclusive answer to the question of whether the biological activity of growth factors is mediated directly or indirectly through their membrane receptors. This experiment ruled out the possibility that insulin receptor functions as a passive carrier that delivers insulin to an intracellular target to induce cellular responses. Studies showing that intact, bivalent antibodies against the insulin receptor can activate its signaling, whereas monovalent Fab fragments of the same antibodies cannot further argued that ligand-induced receptor dimerization or stimulation of a particular arrangement between two receptor molecules in a dimer can activate the insulin receptor (Kahn et al. 1978).A similar conclusion was reached using certain monoclonal antibodies that bind to the extracellular region of EGFR and block ligand binding (Schreiber et al. 1981). Whereas intact antibodies were able to mimic EGF in stimulating a variety of EGF-like responses including cell proliferation, monovalent Fab fragments of the same monoclonal EGFR antibodies failed to do so—and acted instead as EGFR antagonists (Schreiber et al. 1981, 1983). These experiments provided strong evidence both that EGFR plays a crucial role in mediating EGF-induced cellular responses and that EGFR is activated by ligand-induced receptor dimerization (Schreiber 1981, 1983).  相似文献   

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Base excision repair (BER) corrects DNA damage from oxidation, deamination and alkylation. Such base lesions cause little distortion to the DNA helix structure. BER is initiated by a DNA glycosylase that recognizes and removes the damaged base, leaving an abasic site that is further processed by short-patch repair or long-patch repair that largely uses different proteins to complete BER. At least 11 distinct mammalian DNA glycosylases are known, each recognizing a few related lesions, frequently with some overlap in specificities. Impressively, the damaged bases are rapidly identified in a vast excess of normal bases, without a supply of energy. BER protects against cancer, aging, and neurodegeneration and takes place both in nuclei and mitochondria. More recently, an important role of uracil-DNA glycosylase UNG2 in adaptive immunity was revealed. Furthermore, other DNA glycosylases may have important roles in epigenetics, thus expanding the repertoire of BER proteins.Base excision repair (BER) corrects small base lesions that do not significantly distort the DNA helix structure. Such damage typically results from deamination, oxidation, or methylation (Fig. 1). Much of the damage is the result of spontaneous decay of DNA (Lindahl 1993), although similar damage may also be caused by environmental chemicals, radiation, or treatment with cytostatic drugs. BER takes place in nuclei, as well as in mitochondria, largely using different isoforms of proteins or genetically distant proteins. The identification of Escherichia coli uracil-DNA glycosylase (Ung) in 1974 by Tomas Lindahl marks the discovery of BER. Lindahl searched for an enzyme activity that would act on genomic uracil resulting from cytosine deamination. Such an activity was found, but rather unexpectedly, it was not a nuclease. Instead, Lindahl identified an enzyme that cleaved the bond between uracil and deoxyribose. The resulting abasic site (AP-site) was suggested to be further processed by an AP-endonuclease, an exonuclease, a DNA polymerase, and a ligase. Thus, the fundamental steps in the BER pathway were outlined already in the very first paper (Lindahl 1974). Enzymes that cleave the bond between deoxyribose and a modified or mismatched DNA base are now called DNA glycosylases. Collectively these enzymes initiate base excision repair of a large number of base lesions, each recognized by one or a few DNA glycosylases with overlapping specificities.Open in a separate windowFigure 1.Chemistry of common base lesions and abasic sites.This relatively brief review focuses on recent advances in the mechanism and function of BER with a focus on mammalian proteins. The current view is that BER is important in relation to cancer, neurodegeneration, and aging (Jeppesen et al. 2011; Wallace et al. 2012). Because of limited space, we have referred to reviews for the majority of results published more than 6–7 years ago. Also, for more detailed analyses of different aspects of BER, the reader is referred to excellent reviews on BER proteins and pathways published in Huffman et al. (2005), Beard and Wilson (2006), Berti and McCann (2006), Cortázar et al. (2007), Kavli et al. (2007), Sousa et al. (2007), Tubbs et al. (2007), Berger et al. (2008), Robertson et al. (2009), Friedman and Stivers (2010), Wilson et al. (2010), Svilar et al. (2011), and Jacobs and Schar (2012).  相似文献   

13.
14.
Metabotropic glutamate receptors type 1 (mGluR1s) are required for a normal function of the mammalian brain. They are particularly important for synaptic signaling and plasticity in the cerebellum. Unlike ionotropic glutamate receptors that mediate rapid synaptic transmission, mGluR1s produce in cerebellar Purkinje cells a complex postsynaptic response consisting of two distinct signal components, namely a local dendritic calcium signal and a slow excitatory postsynaptic potential. The basic mechanisms underlying these synaptic responses were clarified in recent years. First, the work of several groups established that the dendritic calcium signal results from IP3 receptor-mediated calcium release from internal stores. Second, it was recently found that mGluR1-mediated slow excitatory postsynaptic potentials are mediated by the transient receptor potential channel TRPC3. This surprising finding established TRPC3 as a novel postsynaptic channel for glutamatergic synaptic transmission.Glutamate is the predominant neurotransmitter used by excitatory synapses in the mammalian brain (Hayashi 1952; Curtis et al. 1959). At postsynaptic sites, glutamate binds to two different classes of receptors, namely the ionotropic glutamate receptors (iGluRs) and the metabotropic glutamate receptors (mGluRs) (Sladeczek et al. 1985; Nicoletti et al. 1986; Sugiyama et al. 1987). The iGluRs represent ligand-gated nonselective cation channels that underlie excitatory postsynaptic currents (EPSCs). Based on their subunit composition, gating, and permeability properties, they are subdivided into three groups named after specific agonists: AMPA- (α-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid), NMDA receptors (N-methyl D-aspartate receptors) and kainate receptors (Alexander et al. 2009). The other class of glutamate receptors, the mGluRs, consists of receptors that are coupled to G proteins and act through distinct downstream signaling cascades. They are structurally different from iGluRs and characterized by the presence of seven transmembrane domains (Houamed et al. 1991; Masu et al. 1991). The mGluRs exist as homodimers that do not by themselves form an ion-permeable pore in the membrane (Ozawa et al. 1998). To date, eight different genes (and more splice variants) encoding mGluRs have been identified and form the mGluR1 through mGluR8 subtypes (Alexander et al. 2009). Based on the amino acid sequence homology, downstream signal transduction pathways, and pharmacological properties, each of the subtypes was assigned to one of three groups. Group I receptors consist of mGluR1 and mGluR5 that positively couple to the phospholipase C (PLC). The receptors mGluR2 and mGluR3 constitute group II, whereas the remaining mGluRs, namely mGluR4, mGluR6, mGluR7, and mGluR8, belong to group III. Both groups II and III inhibit the adenylyl cyclase and thereby reduce the concentration of cAMP in the cytosol.Of all different subtypes, mGluR1 is the most abundantly expressed mGluR in the mammalian central nervous system. In the brain, mGluR1 is highly expressed in the olfactory bulb, dentate gyrus, and cerebellum (Lein et al. 2007). The highest expression level of mGluR1 in the brain is found in Purkinje cells, the principal neurons of the cerebellar cortex (Shigemoto et al. 1992; Lein et al. 2007). Together with the AMPA receptors, mGluR1s are part of the excitatory synapses formed between parallel fibers and Purkinje cells (Fig. 1A). Each Purkinje cell is innervated by 100,000–200,000 parallel fibers (Ito 2006) that are axons of the cerebellar granule cells, the most abundant type of neuron in the brain. A second type of excitatory input to Purkinje cells is represented by the climbing fibers that originate in the inferior olive in the brain stem (Ito 2006). The two excitatory synaptic inputs to Purkinje cells are important determinants for the main functions of the cerebellum, including the real-time control of movement precision, error-correction, and control of posture as well as the procedural learning of complex movement sequences and conditioned responses.Open in a separate windowFigure 1.Parallel fiber-evoked mGluR1-dependent signals. (A) Diagram showing the parallel fiber synaptic input to Purkinje cell dendrites. (B) Microelectrode recording of glutamatergic postsynaptic potentials from a Purkinje cell in an acute slice of adult rat cerebellum. Short trains of stimuli to the parallel fibers (5–6 at 50 Hz) caused summation of the early AMPA receptor-dependent EPSPs (leading to spike firing) and a slow, delayed, depolarizing potential (slow EPSP), which was reversibly inhibited by antagonist of mGluRs (+)-MCPG (1mM). (C) Confocal image of a patch-clamped Purkinje cell in a cerebellar slice of an adult mouse. The patch-clamp pipette and the glass capillary used for electrical stimulation of parallel fibers are depicted schematically. The site of stimulation is shown at higher magnification in D. (D) Left: Parallel fiber-evoked (five pulses at 200 Hz, in 10 mM CNQX) synaptic responses consisting of a dendritic mGluR1-dependent Ca2+ transient (ΔF/F, top) and an early rapid and a slow excitatory postsynaptic current (EPSC, bottom). Block of the mGluR1-dependent components by the group I-specific mGluR-antagonist CPCCOEt (200 µM) is shown as indicated. Right: Pseudocolor image of the synaptic Ca2+ signal. (B, Reprinted with modifications, with permission, from Batchelor and Gaithwaite 1997 [Nature Publishing Group].)It is expected that mGluR1 is involved in many of these cerebellar functions. This view is supported by the observation that mGluR1-deficient knockout mice show severe impairments in motor coordination. In particular, the gait of these mice is strongly affected as well as their ability for motor learning and general coordination (Aiba et al. 1994). The phenotype of the general mGluR1-knockout mice is rescued by the insertion of the gene encoding mGluR1 exclusively into cerebellar Purkinje cells (Ichise et al. 2000) and blockade of mGluR1 expression only in Purkinje cells of adult mice leads to impaired motor coordination (Nakao et al. 2007). These findings established mGluR1 in Purkinje cell as synaptic receptors that are indispensable for a normal cerebellar function.Synaptic transmission involving mGluR1s is found at both parallel fiber-Purkinje cell synapses (Batchelor and Garthwaite 1993; Batchelor et al. 1994) as well as at climbing fiber-Purkinje cell synapses (Dzubay and Otis 2002). Most of our knowledge on the mGluR1 was gained from the analysis of the parallel fiber synapses. The parallel fiber synapse is quite unique in the central nervous system regarding its endowment with neurotransmitter receptors. In contrast to most other glutamatergic synapses in the mammalian brain, it lacks functional NMDA receptors (Shin and Linden 2005). The entire synaptic transmission at these synapses relies on AMPA receptors and on mGluR1 (Takechi et al. 1998). Although AMPA receptors are effectively activated even with single shock stimuli (Konnerth et al. 1990; Llano et al. 1991b), activation of mGluRs requires repetitive stimulation (Batchelor and Garthwaite 1993; Batchelor et al. 1994; Batchelor and Garthwaite 1997; Takechi et al. 1998). A possible explanation for the need of repetitive stimulation may relate to the observation that mGluR1s are found mostly at the periphery of the subsynaptic region (Nusser et al. 1994). At these sites outside the synaptic cleft, glutamate levels that are sufficiently high for receptor activation may be reached only with repetitive stimulation.At parallel fiber-Purkinje cell synapses, repetitive stimulation produces an initial AMPA receptor postsynaptic signal component, followed by a more prolonged mGluR1 component (Fig. 1). Figure 1B shows a current clamp recording of this response consisting of an early burst of action potentials, followed by a prolonged depolarization known as a “slow excitatory postsynaptic potential” (slow EPSP) (Batchelor and Garthwaite 1993; Batchelor et al. 1994; Batchelor and Garthwaite 1997). Voltage-clamp recordings allow a clear separation of the initial rapid, AMPA receptor mediated excitatory postsynaptic current (EPSC) and the mGluR1-mediated slow EPSC (Fig. 1D) (Takechi et al. 1998; Hartmann et al. 2008). In addition of inducing the slow EPSPs, mGluR1s mediate a large and highly localized dendritic calcium transient in cerebellar Purkinje cells (Fig. 1D) (Llano et al. 1991a; Finch and Augustine 1998; Takechi et al. 1998).  相似文献   

15.
16.
Microglia are the resident macrophages of the central nervous system (CNS), which sit in close proximity to neural structures and are intimately involved in brain homeostasis. The microglial population also plays fundamental roles during neuronal expansion and differentiation, as well as in the perinatal establishment of synaptic circuits. Any change in the normal brain environment results in microglial activation, which can be detrimental if not appropriately regulated. Aberrant microglial function has been linked to the development of several neurological and psychiatric diseases. However, microglia also possess potent immunoregulatory and regenerative capacities, making them attractive targets for therapeutic manipulation. Such rationale manipulations will, however, require in-depth knowledge of their origins and the molecular mechanisms underlying their homeostasis. Here, we discuss the latest advances in our understanding of the origin, differentiation, and homeostasis of microglial cells and their myelomonocytic relatives in the CNS.Microglia are the resident macrophages of the central nervous system (CNS), which are uniformly distributed throughout the brain and spinal cord with increased densities in neuronal nuclei, including the Substantia nigra in the midbrain (Lawson et al. 1990; Perry 1998). They belong to the nonneuronal glial cell compartment and their function is crucial to maintenance of the CNS in both health and disease (Ransohoff and Perry 2009; Perry et al. 2010; Ransohoff and Cardona 2010; Prinz and Priller 2014).Two key functional features define microglia: immune defense and maintenance of CNS homeostasis. As part of the innate immune system, microglia constantly sample their environment, scanning and surveying for signals of external danger (Davalos et al. 2005; Nimmerjahn et al. 2005; Lehnardt 2010), such as those from invading pathogens, or internal danger signals generated locally by damaged or dying cells (Bessis et al. 2007; Hanisch and Kettenmann 2007). Detection of such signals initiates a program of microglial responses that aim to resolve the injury, protect the CNS from the effects of the inflammation, and support tissue repair and remodeling (Minghetti and Levi 1998; Goldmann and Prinz 2013).Microglia are also emerging as crucial contributors to brain homeostasis through control of neuronal proliferation and differentiation, as well as influencing formation of synaptic connections (Lawson et al. 1990; Perry 1998; Hughes 2012; Blank and Prinz 2013). Recent imaging studies revealed dynamic interactions between microglia and synaptic connections in the healthy brain, which contributed to the modification and elimination of synaptic structures (Perry et al. 2010; Tremblay et al. 2010; Bialas and Stevens 2013). In the prenatal brain, microglia regulate the wiring of forebrain circuits, controlling the growth of dopaminergic axons in the forebrain and the laminar positioning of subsets of neocortical interneurons (Squarzoni et al. 2014). In the postnatal brain, microglia-mediated synaptic pruning is similarly required for the remodeling of neural circuits (Paolicelli et al. 2011; Schafer et al. 2012). In summary, microglia occupy a central position in defense and maintenance of the CNS and, as a consequence, are a key target for the treatment of neurological and psychiatric disorders.Although microglia have been studied for decades, a long history of experimental misinterpretation meant that their true origins remained debated until recently. Although we knew that microglial progenitors invaded the brain rudiment at very early stages of embryonic development (Alliot et al. 1999; Ransohoff and Perry 2009), it has now been established that microglia arise from yolk sac (YS)-primitive macrophages, which persist in the CNS into adulthood (Davalos et al. 2005; Nimmerjahn et al. 2005; Ginhoux et al. 2010, 2013; Kierdorf and Prinz 2013; Kierdorf et al. 2013a). Moreover, early embryonic brain colonization by microglia is conserved across vertebrate species, implying that it is essential for early brain development (Herbomel et al. 2001; Bessis et al. 2007; Hanisch and Kettenmann 2007; Verney et al. 2010; Schlegelmilch et al. 2011; Swinnen et al. 2013). In this review, we will present the latest findings in the field of microglial ontogeny, which provide new insights into their roles in health and disease.  相似文献   

17.
The nuclear factor κB (NF-κB) pathways play a major role in Drosophila host defense. Two recognition and signaling cascades control this immune response. The Toll pathway is activated by Gram-positive bacteria and by fungi, whereas the immune deficiency (Imd) pathway responds to Gram-negative bacterial infection. The basic mechanisms of recognition of these various types of microbial infections by the adult fly are now globally understood. Even though some elements are missing in the intracellular pathways, numerous proteins and interactions have been identified. In this article, we present a general picture of the immune functions of NF-κB in Drosophila with all the partners involved in recognition and in the signaling cascades.The paramount roles of NF-κB family members in Drosophila development and host defense are now relatively well established and have been the subject of several in-depth reviews in recent years, including some from this laboratory (e.g., Hoffmann 2003; Minakhina and Steward 2006; Ferrandon et al. 2007; Lemaitre and Hoffmann 2007; Aggarwal and Silverman 2008). To avoid excessive duplication, we limit this text to the general picture that has evolved over nearly two decades—since the initial demonstration that the dorsal gene plays a role in dorsoventral patterning in embryogenesis of Drosophila and that it encodes a member of the NF-κB family of inducible transactivators (Nüsslein-Volhard et al. 1980; Steward 1987; Roth et al. 1989). In the early nineties, it became apparent that NF-κB also plays a role in the antimicrobial host defense of Drosophila (Engström et al. 1993; Ip et al. 1993; Kappler et al. 1993; Reichhart et al. 1993). We focus in this article on the immune functions of NF-κB and refer the reader to recent reviews for the roles of NF-κB in development (Roth 2003; Brennan and Anderson 2004; Moussian and Roth 2005; Minakhina and Steward 2006).The Drosophila genome codes for three NF-κB family members (Fig. 1). Dorsal and DIF (for dorsal-related immunity factor) are 70 kDa proteins, with a typical Rel homology domain, which is 45% identical to that of the mammalian counterparts c-Rel, Rel A, and Rel B. Dorsal and DIF lie some 10 kbp apart on the second chromosome and probably arose from a recent duplication (Meng et al. 1999). Both proteins are retained in the cytoplasm by binding to the same 54-kDa inhibitor protein Cactus, which is homologous to mammalian IκBs (Schüpbach and Wieshaus 1989; Geisler et al. 1992). The single Drosophila Cactus gene is closest to mammalian IκBα (Huguet et al. 1997). The third member of the family in Drosophila, Relish, is a 100-kDa protein with an amino-terminal Rel domain and a carboxy-terminal extension with typical ankyrin repeats, as found in Cactus and mammalian IκBs. Relish is similar to mammalian p100 and p105 and its activation requires proteolytic cleavage as in the case for these mammalian counterparts (reviewed in Hultmark 2003).Open in a separate windowFigure 1.The NF-κB and IκB proteins in Drosophila. The length in amino acids is indicated by numbers. REL, Rel-homology domain; NLS, nuclear localization sequence; PEST, proline, glutamic acid, serine, and threonine-rich segment; Ac, acidic domain.Put in simple terms, NF-κB family members function in the host defense of Drosophila to control the expression of genes encoding immune-responsive peptides and proteins. Prominent among the induced genes are those encoding peptides with direct antimicrobial activity. To exert this function, Dorsal and DIF are translocated to the nucleus following stimulus-induced degradation of the inhibitor Cactus, whereas Relish requires stimulus-induced proteolytic cleavage for nuclear translocation of its amino-terminal Rel domain. This paradigm is similar to that observed in mammalian immunity. Again, for the sake of simplicity, we may say that the stimulus-induced degradation of Cactus, and the concomitant release of Dorsal or DIF, is primarily observed during Gram-positive bacterial and fungal infections and mediated by the Toll signaling pathway. In contrast, stimulus-induced proteolytic cleavage of Relish, and concomitant nuclear translocation of its amino-terminal Rel domain, is the hallmark of the response to Gram-negative bacterial infection and mediated by the Imd signaling pathway. Whether these pathways are also involved in the multifaceted defense against viruses remains an open question (Zambon et al. 2005). The Toll pathway was further shown to be involved in hematopoiesis of flies (Qiu et al. 1998). Of note, the Cactus-NF-κB module also plays a central role in the elimination of Plasmodium parasites in infected mosquitoes (Frolet et al. 2006). In the following, we review our information of the two established signaling pathways, Toll and Imd, which lead to gene reprogramming through NF-κB in response to bacterial and fungal infections. We first consider the upstream mechanisms that mediate the recognition of infection and allow for a certain level of discrimination between invading microorganisms. Gene reprogramming in this context is best illustrated by the induction of the antimicrobial peptide genes, which serve as the most convenient readouts of the antimicrobial defense of Drosophila (see Samakovlis et al. 1990; Reichhart et al. 1992; Ferrandon et al. 1998). Flies produce at least seven families of mostly cationic, small-sized, membrane-active peptides, with spectra variously directed against Gram-positive (defensins) and Gram-negative (diptericins, attacins, and drosocin) bacteria, and against fungi (drosomycins and metchnikowins), or with overlapping spectra (cecropins) (reviewed in Bulet et al. 1999; Hetru et al. 2003). The primary site of biosynthesis of these peptides is the fat body, a functional equivalent of the mammalian liver. Blood cells also participate in the production of antimicrobial peptides. As a rule, these molecules are secreted into the hemolymph where they reach remarkably high concentrations to oppose invading microorganisms (Hetru et al. 2003). This facet of the antimicrobial host defense is generally referred to as systemic immune response. Of note, the gut and the tracheae also produce antimicrobial peptides in response to microbes (see Tzou et al. 2000; Onfelt Tingvall et al. 2001; Liehl et al. 2006; Nehme et al. 2007).During infection, the Toll and Imd pathways control the expression of hundreds of genes. In addition to the antimicrobial peptides, these genes encode proteases, putative cytokines, cytoskeletal proteins, and many peptides and proteins whose function in the host defense are still not understood (De Gregorio et al. 2001; Irving et al. 2001).  相似文献   

18.
The Desmosome     
Desmosomes are intercellular junctions that tether intermediate filaments to the plasma membrane. Desmogleins and desmocollins, members of the cadherin superfamily, mediate adhesion at desmosomes. Cytoplasmic components of the desmosome associate with the desmosomal cadherin tails through a series of protein interactions, which serve to recruit intermediate filaments to sites of desmosome assembly. These desmosomal plaque components include plakoglobin and the plakophilins, members of the armadillo gene family. Linkage to the cytoskeleton is mediated by the intermediate filament binding protein, desmoplakin, which associates with both plakoglobin and plakophilins. Although desmosomes are critical for maintaining stable cell–cell adhesion, emerging evidence indicates that they are also dynamic structures that contribute to cellular processes beyond that of cell adhesion. This article outlines the structure and function of the major desmosomal proteins, and explores the contributions of this protein complex to tissue architecture and morphogenesis.The desmosome is an adhesive intercellular junction that is crucial to tissues that experience mechanical stress, such as the myocardium, bladder, gastrointestinal mucosa, and skin (Getsios et al. 2004b; Holthofer et al. 2007). The desmosome was first observed in the spinous layer of epidermis by the Italian pathologist Giulio Bizzozero (1846–1901). Bizzozero''s observations of these small dense nodules, subsequently named “nodes of Bizzozero,” led him to the insightful interpretation of these structures as adhesive cell–cell contact points. The term desmosome was later coined by Josef Schaffer in 1920 and is derived from the Greek words “desmo,” meaning bond or fastening, and “soma,” meaning body (Wells 2005; Calkins and Setzer 2007). The introduction of electron microscopy yielded a series of advances by Porter, Odland, and Kelly in the 1950s and 1960s, which revealed desmosome organization at the ultrastructural level. These studies and others indicated that the desmosome can be divided into three morphologically identifiable zones: the extracellular core region (desmoglea), the outer dense plaque (ODP), and the inner dense plaque (IDP) (Fig. 1A) (Kowalczyk et al. 1994; Schmidt et al. 1994; Green and Jones 1996; North et al. 1999; Garrod and Chidgey 2008).Open in a separate windowFigure 1.A model for the structure of desmosomes. (A) Electron micrograph of a desmosome. (B) Schematic of desmosomal proteins and relative distance from the plasma membrane (PM). The desmosomal cadherins, the desmogleins and desmocollins, extend into extracellular core and outer dense plaque (ODP) to establish contact and adhere to neighboring cells in a Ca2+-dependent manner. The cadherin cytoplasmic tails associate linker proteins, plakoglobin (PG), the plakophilins (PKP), and desmoplakin (DP). DP binds to keratin intermediate filaments (KIF) within the inner dense plaque (IDP), serving to tether the intermediate filaments to the plasma membrane. (Adapted with permission from Kottke et al. 2006.)In the mid 1970s, Skerrow and Matoltsy (Skerrow and Matoltsy 1974a; Skerrow and Matoltsy 1974b) advanced the field by isolating desmosomes using biochemical approaches (Bass-Zubek and Green 2007).These landmark studies provided a foundation for the Franke and Steinberg laboratories to characterize the transmembrane glycoproteins and cytoplasmic plaque proteins that linked the structure to the intermediate filament cytoskeleton, and to develop immunological tools for localizing specific components (Franke et al. 1981; Kapprell et al. 1985; Steinberg et al. 1987). Collectively, these and other studies shaped our current view of how desmosomal components are organized.The transmembrane glycoproteins, termed desmogleins and desmocollins (Garrod and Chidgey 2008), represent separate subfamilies of the cadherin superfamily of calcium dependent adhesion molecules. The extracellular domains of the desmogleins and desmocollins mediate adhesion, whereas the cytoplasmic tails of these cadherins associate with the desmosomal plaque proteins. The outer dense plaque consists of the cytoplasmic tails of the desmosomal cadherins, which bind to members of the armadillo and plakin family of linker proteins (Kowalczyk et al. 1994; Getsios et al. 2004b; Garrod and Chidgey 2008). Plakoglobin, a member of the armadillo family, binds directly to the cytoplasmic tails of both the desmogleins and the desmocollins (Wahl et al. 1996; Witcher et al. 1996). Desmoplakin, a member of the plakin family, interacts with both plakoglobin and another subgroup of armadillo family proteins, the plakophilins (Cowin and Burke 1996). Finally, the interaction between desmoplakin and the keratin filaments forms the inner dense plaque, tethering the cytoskeletal network to the adhesion complex (Fig. 1B) (Kowalczyk et al. 1994; Getsios et al. 2004b; Garrod and Chidgey 2008).The following sections of this article describe the structural and functional characteristics of the major desmosomal proteins. In addition, we discuss differences in tissue expression patterns of desmosomal proteins and the role of desmosomes in human disease. A comprehensive review of additional proteins found to regulate or associate with desmosomes is provided elsewhere (Holthofer et al. 2007) and discussion of desmosome dynamics is provided in Green et al. 2009.  相似文献   

19.
The zebrafish is a premier vertebrate model system that offers many experimental advantages for in vivo imaging and genetic studies. This review provides an overview of glial cell types in the central and peripheral nervous system of zebrafish. We highlight some recent work that exploited the strengths of the zebrafish system to increase the understanding of the role of Gpr126 in Schwann cell myelination and illuminate the mechanisms controlling oligodendrocyte development and myelination. We also summarize similarities and differences between zebrafish radial glia and mammalian astrocytes and consider the possibility that their distinct characteristics may represent extremes in a continuum of cell identity. Finally, we focus on the emergence of zebrafish as a model for elucidating the development and function of microglia. These recent studies have highlighted the power of the zebrafish system for analyzing important aspects of glial development and function.Following the pioneering work of George Streisinger in the early 1980s, the zebrafish has emerged as a premier vertebrate model system (Streisinger et al. 1981). A key strength of the zebrafish is that the embryos and early larvae are transparent, allowing exquisite cellular analysis of many dynamic processes, including cell migration, axonal pathfinding, and myelination, among many others (e.g., Gilmour et al. 2002; Lyons et al. 2005; Czopka et al. 2013). The zebrafish also has many advantages for large-scale genetic studies, including relatively small size and rapid development, high fecundity, and the ability to manipulate the ploidy of gametes and early embryos (Kimmel 1989). Through the 1980s and early 1990s, insightful studies of several interesting mutations elegantly exploited these experimental advantages (e.g., Kimmel et al. 1989; Ho and Kane 1990; Hatta et al. 1991; Grunwald and Eisen 2002), attracting many researchers from other fields to the zebrafish system. Following the explosion of interest in the zebrafish in the 1990s, advances in many areas have added to the strengths of the system, including large-scale screens that identified thousands of new mutations (Driever et al. 1996; Haffter et al. 1996), rapid transgenesis (Kawakami et al. 2004), new methods for imaging and tracking all cells during development (Huisken 2012), genetic mapping and sequencing to identify genes and mutated loci (Postlethwait et al. 1994; Howe et al. 2013), optogenetic methods to control neural activity (Portugues et al. 2013), the advent of targeted nucleases to create mutations in genes of interest (Huang et al. 2011; Sander et al. 2011; Bedell et al. 2012; Chang et al. 2013; Hwang et al. 2013), and small molecule screening approaches to isolate compounds with novel biological activities in vivo (Peterson and Fishman 2011).Many fundamental similarities in physiology and body plan unite the zebrafish and other vertebrates (Kimmel 1989). In addition, analysis of genes and genomes has revealed that sequence, expression, and function of many genes are conserved among zebrafish and other vertebrates (Postlethwait and Talbot 1997; Howe et al. 2013). Thus, insights from studies in zebrafish will apply broadly to other vertebrates, including humans. On the other hand, there are important genetic, genomic, and physiological differences among vertebrates. It is, therefore, important to keep possible differences in mind and to recognize that analyzing the diversity among different species may enhance overall understanding of important processes. For example, zebrafish and other teleosts have a much more extensive regenerative ability than mammals, so that studies of fin, heart, and spinal cord regeneration in zebrafish may suggest avenues toward new therapeutic approaches in humans (Gemberling et al. 2013; Becker and Becker 2014).In this review, we provide an overview of different types of glia in the zebrafish, with a focus on some recent studies that highlight the power of the zebrafish system to analyze different aspects of glial development and function.  相似文献   

20.
Nodes of Ranvier and axon initial segments of myelinated nerves, sites of cell–cell contact in early embryos and epithelial cells, and neuromuscular junctions of skeletal muscle all perform physiological functions that depend on clustering of functionally related but structurally diverse ion transporters and cell adhesion molecules within microdomains of the plasma membrane. These specialized cell surface domains appeared at different times in metazoan evolution, involve a variety of cell types, and are populated by distinct membrane-spanning proteins. Nevertheless, recent work has shown that these domains all share on their cytoplasmic surfaces a membrane skeleton comprised of members of the ankyrin and spectrin families. This review will summarize basic features of ankyrins and spectrins, and will discuss emerging evidence that these proteins are key players in a conserved mechanism responsible for assembly and maintenance of physiologically important domains on the surfaces of diverse cells.Spectrins are flexible rods 0.2 microns in length with actin-binding sites at each end (Shotton et al. 1979; Bennett et al. 1982) (Fig. 1A). Spectrins are assembled from α and β subunits, each comprised primarily of multiple copies of a 106-amino acid repeat (Speicher and Marchesi 1984). In addition to the canonical 106-residue repeat, β spectrins also have a carboxy-terminal pleckstrin homology domain (Zhang et al. 1995; Macias et al. 1994) and tandem amino-terminal calponin homology domains (Bañuelos et al. 1998), whereas α spectrins contain an Src homology domain 3 (SH3) site (Musacchio et al. 1992), a calmodulin-binding site (Simonovic et al. 2006), and EF hands (Travé et al. 1995) (Fig. 1A). Spectrin α and β subunits are assembled antiparallel and side-to-side into heterodimers, which in turn are associated head-to-head to form tetramers (Clarke 1971; Shotton et al. 1979; Davis and Bennett 1983) (Fig. 1A). In human erythrocytes, in which spectrin was first characterized (Marchesi and Steers 1968; Clarke 1971), actin oligomers containing 10–14 monomers are each linked to five to six spectrin tetramers by accessory proteins to form a geodesic domelike structure that has been resolved by electron microscopy (Byers and Branton 1985). The principal proteins at the spectrin–actin junction are protein 4.1, adducin, tropomyosin, tropomodulin, and dematin (Bennett and Baines 2001) (Open in a separate windowFigure 1.Domain structure and variants of spectrin and ankyrin proteins. (A) Molecular domains of spectrins: Two α spectrins and five β spectrins are shown. Spectrins are comprised of modular units called spectrin repeats (yellow). Other domains such as the ankyrin binding domain (purple), Src-homology domain 3 (SH3, blue), EF-hand domain (red), and calmodulin-binding domain (green) promote interactions with binding targets important for spectrin function. The pleckstrin homology domain (black) promotes association with the plasma membrane and the actin binding domain (grey) tethers the spectrin-based membrane skeleton to the underlying actin cytoskeleton. (B) The spectrin tetramer, the fundamental unit of the spectrin-based membrane skeleton. The spectrin repeat domains of α and β spectrin associate end-to-end to form heterodimers. Heterodimers associate laterally in an antiparallel fashion to form tetramers. The tetramers can then associate end-to-end to form extended macromolecules that link into a geodesic dome shape directly underneath the plasma membrane. (C) Molecular domains present in canonical ankyrins. The membrane binding domain of ankyrin isoforms (orange) is comprised of 24 ANK repeats. The spectrin binding domain (green-blue) allows ankyrins to coordinate integral membrane proteins to the membrane skeleton. The death domain (pink) is the most highly conserved domain. The regulatory domain (brown) is the most variable region of ankyrins. The regulatory domain interacts intramolecularly with the membrane binding domain to modulate ankyrin’s affinity for other binding partners. All ankyrins and spectrins are subject to alternative splicing, which further increases their functional diversity.

Table 1.

Binding partners of spectrin and ankyrins
Spectrin Binding Partners
AlphaBeta
Transporters/ion channels
EnNaC (sodium)
NHE2 (ammonium)
Membrane anchors
PI lipids
Band 4.1
Ankyrin
EAAT4 (glutamate)
Membrane receptors
NMDA receptor
Signaling
RACK-1
Signaling
HsSH3pb1
Calmodulin
Cytoskeleton/cellular transport
F-actin
Adducin
Dynactin
Ankyrin Binding Partners
Membrane BDSpectrin BDDDREG D
Ion channels:
Anion exchanger
Na+/K+ATPase
Voltage-gated
Na+ channels
Na+/Ca2+ Exchanger
KCNG2/3
Rh antigen
IP3 receptor
Ryanodine receptor
Cell adhesion molecules:
L1-CAMs
CD44
E-cadherin
Dystroglycan
Cellular transport:
Tubulin
Clathrin
SpectrinFasLHsp40
Obscurin
PP2A
Open in a separate windowSpectrin is coupled to the inner surface of the erythrocyte membrane primarily through association with ankyrin, which is in turn linked to the cytoplasmic domains of the anion exchanger (Bennett 1978; Bennett and Stenbuck 1979a,b) and Rh/RhAG ammonium transporter (Nicolas et al. 2003). The spectrin-based membrane skeleton and its connections through ankyrin to membrane-spanning proteins are essential for survival of erythrocytes in the circulation, and mutations in these proteins result in hereditary hemolytic anemia (Bennett and Healy 2008). The ankyrin-binding sites of β spectrins 1–4 are located in the 15th spectrin repeat, which is folded identically to other repeats but has distinct surface-exposed residues (Davis et al. 2008; Ipsaro et al. 2009; Stabach et al. 2009) (Figs. 1A, A,2A).2A). Mammalian β-5 spectrin and its ortholog β-H spectrin in Drosophila and Caenorhabditis elegans are the only β spectrins lacking ankyrin-binding activity (Dubreuil et al. 1990; Thomas et al. 1998; McKeown et al. 1998; Stabach and Morrow 2000).Open in a separate windowFigure 2.Ankyrins and spectrins organize macromolecular complexes in diverse types of specialized membranes. (A) Ankyrin-G forms a complex with β-IV spectrin, neurofascin (a cell adhesion protein), and ion channels (KCNQ2/3 and voltage-gated sodium channel) at axon initial segments in Purkinje neurons. (B) In force buffering costameres of skeletal muscle, ankyrins -B and -G cooperate to target and stabilize key components of the dystroglycoprotein complex. At the membrane, ankyrin-G binds to dystrophin and β-dystroglycan. (C) In cardiomyocyte transverse tubules, ankyrins -B and -G coordinate separate microdomains. Ankyrin-B binds Na+/K+ ATPase, Na+/Ca2+ exchanger (NCX-1), and the inositol triphosphate receptor (IP3R). Ankyrin-G forms a complex with Nav1.5 and spectrin. (D) Ankyrin-G in epithelial lateral membrane assembly. Ankyrin-G binds to E-cadherin, β-2 spectrin, and the Na+/K+ ATPase. Spectrins are connected via F-actin bridges bound to α/γ adducin and tropomodulin.Ankyrin interacts with β spectrins through a ZU5 domain (Mohler et al. 2004a; Kizhatil et al. 2007a; Ipsaro et al. 2009) (Fig. 1B), and with most of its membrane partners through ANK repeats (Bennett and Baines 2001) (Fig. 2C,D). In addition, ankyrins have a highly conserve “death domain” and a carboxy-terminal regulatory domain (see the following discussion). The 24 ANK repeats are stacked in a superhelical array to form a solenoid (Michaely et al. 2002). Interestingly, the ANK repeat stack behaves like a reversible spring when stretched by atomic force microscopy, and may function in mechano-coupling in tissues such as the heart (Lee et al. 2006). ANK repeats are components of many proteins and participate in highly diverse protein interactions (Mosavi et al. 2004) (Fig. 2C). This versatile motif currently is being exploited using designed ANK repeat proteins (DARPins) engineered to interact with specific ligands that can function as substitutes for antibodies (Stumpp and Amstutz 2007; Steiner et al. 2008).Spectrin and ankyrin family members are expressed in most, if not all, animal (metazoan) cells, but are not present in bacteria, plants, or fungi. Spectrins are believed to have evolved from an ancestral α-actinin containing calponin homology domains and two spectrin repeats but not other domains (Thomas et al. 1997; Pascual et al. 1997). Ankyrin repeats are expressed in all phyla, presumably because of a combination of evolutionary relationships and in cases of bacteria and viruses by horizontal gene transfer. However, the spectrin-binding domain of ankyrin is present only in metazoans (Fig 1B). It is possible that evolution of ankyrins and spectrins could have been one of the adaptations required for organization of cells into tissues in multicellular animals.The human spectrin family includes two α subunits and five β subunits, whereas Drosophila and C. elegans have a single α subunit and two β subunits (Bennett and Baines 2001). Vertebrate ankyrins are encoded by three genes: ankyrin-R (ANK1) (the isoform first characterized in erythrocytes and also present in a restricted distribution in brain and muscle), ankyrin-B (ANK2), and ankyrin-G (ANK3). Vertebrate ankyrins evolved from a single gene in early chordates (Cai and Zhang 2006). C. elegans ankyrin is encoded by a single gene termed unc-44 (Otsuka et al. 1995), whereas the Drosophila genome contains two ankyrin genes: ankyrin (Dubreuil and Yu 1994) and ankyrin2 (Bouley et al. 2000).Mammalian ankyrins -B and -G are co-expressed in most cells, although they have distinct functions (Mohler et al. 2002; Abdi et al. 2006). Ankyrins -B and -G are closely related in their ANK repeats, and spectrin-binding domains, but diverge in their carboxy-terminal regulatory domains. Regulatory domains are natively unstructured and extended (Abdi et al. 2006). These flexible domains engage in intramolecular interactions with the membrane-binding and spectrin-binding domains (Hall and Bennett 1987; Davis et al. 1992; Abdi et al. 2006) that modulate protein associations and provide functional diversity between otherwise conserved ankyrins.In addition to the standard versions of ankyrins and spectrin subunits depicted in Figure 1, many variants of these proteins are expressed with the addition and/or deletion of functional domains because of alternative splicing of pre-mRNAs. For example, β spectrins can lack PH domains (Hayes et al. 2000), and giant ankyrins have insertions of up to 2000 residues (Kordeli et al. 1995; Chan et al. 1993; Pielage et al. 2008; Koch et al. 2008), whereas other ankyrins lack either the entire membrane-binding domain (Hoock et al. 1997), or both membrane- and spectrin-binding domains (Zhou et al. 1997). The insertions in 440 kDa ankyrin-B and 480 kDa ankyrin-G (Fig. 1B) have an extended conformation that potentially could have specialized roles in connections between the plasma membrane and cytoskeleton of axons where these giant ankyrins reside (Chan et al. 1993; Kordeli et al. 1995) (Fig. 1B). Interestingly, the inserted sequences in Drosophila giant ankyrins interact with microtubules at the presynaptic neuromuscular junction (Pielage et al. 2008) (see the following section).  相似文献   

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