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Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is one of the most common and aggressive human malignancies. Recombinant tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL) is a promising anti-tumor agent. However, many HCC cells show resistance to TRAIL-induced apoptosis. In this study, we showed that bortezomib, a proteasome inhibitor, overcame TRAIL resistance in HCC cells, including Huh-7, Hep3B, and Sk-Hep1. The combination of bortezomib and TRAIL restored the sensitivity of HCC cells to TRAIL-induced apoptosis. Comparing the molecular change in HCC cells treated with these agents, we found that down-regulation of phospho-Akt (P-Akt) played a key role in mediating TRAIL sensitization of bortezomib. The first evidence was that bortezomib down-regulated P-Akt in a dose- and time-dependent manner in TRAIL-treated HCC cells. Second, LY294002, a PI3K inhibitor, also sensitized resistant HCC cells to TRAIL-induced apoptosis. Third, knocking down Akt1 by small interference RNA also enhanced TRAIL-induced apoptosis in Huh-7 cells. Finally, ectopic expression of mutant Akt (constitutive active) in HCC cells abolished TRAIL sensitization effect of bortezomib. Moreover, okadaic acid, a protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A) inhibitor, reversed down-regulation of P-Akt in bortezomib-treated cells, and PP2A knockdown by small interference RNA also reduced apoptosis induced by the combination of TRAIL and bortezomib, indicating that PP2A may be important in mediating the effect of bortezomib on TRAIL sensitization. Together, bortezomib overcame TRAIL resistance at clinically achievable concentrations in hepatocellular carcinoma cells, and this effect is mediated at least partly via inhibition of the PI3K/Akt pathway.Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC)2 is currently the fifth most common solid tumor worldwide and the fourth leading cause of cancer-related death. To date, surgery is still the only curative treatment but is only feasible in a small portion of patients (1). Drug treatment is the major therapy for patients with advanced stage disease. Unfortunately, the response rate to traditional chemotherapy for HCC patients is unsatisfactory (1). Novel pharmacological therapy is urgently needed for patients with advanced HCC. In this regard, the approval of sorafenib might open a new era of molecularly targeted therapy in the treatment of HCC patients.Tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL), a type II transmembrane protein and a member of the TNF family, is a promising anti-tumor agent under clinical investigation (2). TRAIL functions by engaging its receptors expressed on the surface of target cells. Five receptors specific for TRAIL have been identified, including DR4/TRAIL-R1, DR5/TRAIL-R2, DcR1, DcR2, and osteoprotegerin. Among TRAIL receptors, only DR4 and DR5 contain an effective death domain that is essential to formation of death-inducing signaling complex (DISC), a critical step for TRAIL-induced apoptosis. Notably, the trimerization of the death domains recruits an adaptor molecule, Fas-associated protein with death domain (FADD), which subsequently recruits and activates caspase-8. In type I cells, activation of caspase-8 is sufficient to activate caspase-3 to induce apoptosis; however, in another type of cells (type II), the intrinsic mitochondrial pathway is essential for apoptosis characterized by cleavage of Bid and release of cytochrome c from mitochondria, which subsequently activates caspase-9 and caspase-3 (3).Although TRAIL induces apoptosis in malignant cells but sparing normal cells, some tumor cells are resistant to TRAIL-induced apoptosis. Mechanisms responsible for the resistance include receptors and intracellular resistance. Although the cell surface expression of DR4 or DR5 is absolutely required for TRAIL-induced apoptosis, tumor cells expressing these death receptors are not always sensitive to TRAIL due to intracellular mechanisms. For example, the cellular FLICE-inhibitory protein (c-FLIP), a homologue to caspase-8 but without protease activity, has been linked to TRAIL resistance in several studies (4, 5). In addition, inactivation of Bax, a proapoptotic Bcl-2 family protein, resulted in resistance to TRAIL in MMR-deficient tumors (6, 7), and reintroduction of Bax into Bax-deficient cells restored TRAIL sensitivity (8), indicating that the Bcl-2 family plays a critical role in intracellular mechanisms for resistance of TRAIL.Bortezomib, a proteasome inhibitor approved clinically for multiple myeloma and mantle cell lymphoma, has been investigated intensively for many types of cancer (9). Accumulating studies indicate that the combination of bortezomib and TRAIL overcomes the resistance to TRAIL in various types of cancer, including acute myeloid leukemia (4), lymphoma (1013), prostate (1417), colon (15, 18, 19), bladder (14, 16), renal cell carcinoma (20), thyroid (21), ovary (22), non-small cell lung (23, 24), sarcoma (25), and HCC (26, 27). Molecular targets responsible for the sensitizing effect of bortezomib on TRAIL-induced cell death include DR4 (14, 27), DR5 (14, 20, 2223, 28), c-FLIP (4, 11, 2123, 29), NF-κB (12, 24, 30), p21 (16, 21, 25), and p27 (25). In addition, Bcl-2 family also plays a role in the combinational effect of bortezomib and TRAIL, including Bcl-2 (10, 21), Bax (13, 22), Bak (27), Bcl-xL (21), Bik (18), and Bim (15).Recently, we have reported that Akt signaling is a major molecular determinant in bortezomib-induced apoptosis in HCC cells (31). In this study, we demonstrated that bortezomib overcame TRAIL resistance in HCC cells through inhibition of the PI3K/Akt pathway.  相似文献   

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Mitochondrial dysregulation is strongly implicated in Parkinson disease. Mutations in PTEN-induced kinase 1 (PINK1) are associated with familial parkinsonism and neuropsychiatric disorders. Although overexpressed PINK1 is neuroprotective, less is known about neuronal responses to loss of PINK1 function. We found that stable knockdown of PINK1 induced mitochondrial fragmentation and autophagy in SH-SY5Y cells, which was reversed by the reintroduction of an RNA interference (RNAi)-resistant plasmid for PINK1. Moreover, stable or transient overexpression of wild-type PINK1 increased mitochondrial interconnectivity and suppressed toxin-induced autophagy/mitophagy. Mitochondrial oxidant production played an essential role in triggering mitochondrial fragmentation and autophagy in PINK1 shRNA lines. Autophagy/mitophagy served a protective role in limiting cell death, and overexpressing Parkin further enhanced this protective mitophagic response. The dominant negative Drp1 mutant inhibited both fission and mitophagy in PINK1-deficient cells. Interestingly, RNAi knockdown of autophagy proteins Atg7 and LC3/Atg8 also decreased mitochondrial fragmentation without affecting oxidative stress, suggesting active involvement of autophagy in morphologic remodeling of mitochondria for clearance. To summarize, loss of PINK1 function elicits oxidative stress and mitochondrial turnover coordinated by the autophagic and fission/fusion machineries. Furthermore, PINK1 and Parkin may cooperate through different mechanisms to maintain mitochondrial homeostasis.Parkinson disease is an age-related neurodegenerative disease that affects ∼1% of the population worldwide. The causes of sporadic cases are unknown, although mitochondrial or oxidative toxins such as 1-methyl-4-phenylpyridinium, 6-hydroxydopamine (6-OHDA),3 and rotenone reproduce features of the disease in animal and cell culture models (1). Abnormalities in mitochondrial respiration and increased oxidative stress are observed in cells and tissues from parkinsonian patients (2, 3), which also exhibit increased mitochondrial autophagy (4). Furthermore, mutations in parkinsonian genes affect oxidative stress response pathways and mitochondrial homeostasis (5). Thus, disruption of mitochondrial homeostasis represents a major factor implicated in the pathogenesis of sporadic and inherited parkinsonian disorders (PD).The PARK6 locus involved in autosomal recessive and early-onset PD encodes for PTEN-induced kinase 1 (PINK1) (6, 7). PINK1 is a cytosolic and mitochondrially localized 581-amino acid serine/threonine kinase that possesses an N-terminal mitochondrial targeting sequence (6, 8). The primary sequence also includes a putative transmembrane domain important for orientation of the PINK1 domain (8), a conserved kinase domain homologous to calcium calmodulin kinases, and a C-terminal domain that regulates autophosphorylation activity (9, 10). Overexpression of wild-type PINK1, but not its PD-associated mutants, protects against several toxic insults in neuronal cells (6, 11, 12). Mitochondrial targeting is necessary for some (13) but not all of the neuroprotective effects of PINK1 (14), implicating involvement of cytoplasmic targets that modulate mitochondrial pathobiology (8). PINK1 catalytic activity is necessary for its neuroprotective role, because a kinase-deficient K219M substitution in the ATP binding pocket of PINK1 abrogates its ability to protect neurons (14). Although PINK1 mutations do not seem to impair mitochondrial targeting, PD-associated mutations differentially destabilize the protein, resulting in loss of neuroprotective activities (13, 15).Recent studies indicate that PINK1 and Parkin interact genetically (3, 16-18) to prevent oxidative stress (19, 20) and regulate mitochondrial morphology (21). Primary cells derived from PINK1 mutant patients exhibit mitochondrial fragmentation with disorganized cristae, recapitulated by RNA interference studies in HeLa cells (3).Mitochondria are degraded by macroautophagy, a process involving sequestration of cytoplasmic cargo into membranous autophagic vacuoles (AVs) for delivery to lysosomes (22, 23). Interestingly, mitochondrial fission accompanies autophagic neurodegeneration elicited by the PD neurotoxin 6-OHDA (24, 25). Moreover, mitochondrial fragmentation and increased autophagy are observed in neurodegenerative diseases including Alzheimer and Parkinson diseases (4, 26-28). Although inclusion of mitochondria in autophagosomes was once believed to be a random process, as observed during starvation, studies involving hypoxia, mitochondrial damage, apoptotic stimuli, or limiting amounts of aerobic substrates in facultative anaerobes support the concept of selective mitochondrial autophagy (mitophagy) (29, 30). In particular, mitochondrially localized kinases may play an important role in models involving oxidative mitochondrial injury (25, 31, 32).Autophagy is involved in the clearance of protein aggregates (33-35) and normal regulation of axonal-synaptic morphology (36). Chronic disruption of lysosomal function results in accumulation of subtly impaired mitochondria with decreased calcium buffering capacity (37), implicating an important role for autophagy in mitochondrial homeostasis (37, 38). Recently, Parkin, which complements the effects of PINK1 deficiency on mitochondrial morphology (3), was found to promote autophagy of depolarized mitochondria (39). Conversely, Beclin 1-independent autophagy/mitophagy contributes to cell death elicited by the PD toxins 1-methyl-4-phenylpyridinium and 6-OHDA (25, 28, 31, 32), causing neurite retraction in cells expressing a PD-linked mutation in leucine-rich repeat kinase 2 (40). Whereas properly regulated autophagy plays a homeostatic and neuroprotective role, excessive or incomplete autophagy creates a condition of “autophagic stress” that can contribute to neurodegeneration (28).As mitochondrial fragmentation (3) and increased mitochondrial autophagy (4) have been described in human cells or tissues of PD patients, we investigated whether or not the engineered loss of PINK1 function could recapitulate these observations in human neuronal cells (SH-SY5Y). Stable knockdown of endogenous PINK1 gave rise to mitochondrial fragmentation and increased autophagy and mitophagy, whereas stable or transient overexpression of PINK1 had the opposite effect. Autophagy/mitophagy was dependent upon increased mitochondrial oxidant production and activation of fission. The data indicate that PINK1 is important for the maintenance of mitochondrial networks, suggesting that coordinated regulation of mitochondrial dynamics and autophagy limits cell death associated with loss of PINK1 function.  相似文献   

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Intersectin-short (intersectin-s) is a multimodule scaffolding protein functioning in constitutive and regulated forms of endocytosis in non-neuronal cells and in synaptic vesicle (SV) recycling at the neuromuscular junction of Drosophila and Caenorhabditis elegans. In vertebrates, alternative splicing generates a second isoform, intersectin-long (intersectin-l), that contains additional modular domains providing a guanine nucleotide exchange factor activity for Cdc42. In mammals, intersectin-s is expressed in multiple tissues and cells, including glia, but excluded from neurons, whereas intersectin-l is a neuron-specific isoform. Thus, intersectin-I may regulate multiple forms of endocytosis in mammalian neurons, including SV endocytosis. We now report, however, that intersectin-l is localized to somatodendritic regions of cultured hippocampal neurons, with some juxtanuclear accumulation, but is excluded from synaptophysin-labeled axon terminals. Consistently, intersectin-l knockdown (KD) does not affect SV recycling. Instead intersectin-l co-localizes with clathrin heavy chain and adaptor protein 2 in the somatodendritic region of neurons, and its KD reduces the rate of transferrin endocytosis. The protein also co-localizes with F-actin at dendritic spines, and intersectin-l KD disrupts spine maturation during development. Our data indicate that intersectin-l is indeed an important regulator of constitutive endocytosis and neuronal development but that it is not a prominent player in the regulated endocytosis of SVs.Clathrin-mediated endocytosis (CME)4 is a major mechanism by which cells take up nutrients, control the surface levels of multiple proteins, including ion channels and transporters, and regulate the coupling of signaling receptors to downstream signaling cascades (1-5). In neurons, CME takes on additional specialized roles; it is an important process regulating synaptic vesicle (SV) availability through endocytosis and recycling of SV membranes (6, 7), it shapes synaptic plasticity (8-10), and it is crucial in maintaining synaptic membranes and membrane structure (11).Numerous endocytic accessory proteins participate in CME, interacting with each other and with core components of the endocytic machinery such as clathrin heavy chain (CHC) and adaptor protein-2 (AP-2) through specific modules and peptide motifs (12). One such module is the Eps15 homology domain that binds to proteins bearing NPF motifs (13, 14). Another is the Src homology 3 (SH3) domain, which binds to proline-rich domains in protein partners (15). Intersectin is a multimodule scaffolding protein that interacts with a wide range of proteins, including several involved in CME (16). Intersectin has two N-terminal Eps15 homology domains that are responsible for binding to epsin, SCAMP1, and numb (17-19), a central coil-coiled domain that interacts with Eps15 and SNAP-23 and -25 (17, 20, 21), and five SH3 domains in its C-terminal region that interact with multiple proline-rich domain proteins, including synaptojanin, dynamin, N-WASP, CdGAP, and mSOS (16, 22-25). The rich binding capability of intersectin has linked it to various functions from CME (17, 26, 27) and signaling (22, 28, 29) to mitogenesis (30, 31) and regulation of the actin cytoskeleton (23).Intersectin functions in SV recycling at the neuromuscular junction of Drosophila and C. elegans where it acts as a scaffold, regulating the synaptic levels of endocytic accessory proteins (21, 32-34). In vertebrates, the intersectin gene is subject to alternative splicing, and a longer isoform (intersectin-l) is generated that is expressed exclusively in neurons (26, 28, 35, 36). This isoform has all the binding modules of its short (intersectin-s) counterpart but also has additional domains: a DH and a PH domain that provide guanine nucleotide exchange factor (GEF) activity specific for Cdc42 (23, 37) and a C2 domain at the C terminus. Through its GEF activity and binding to actin regulatory proteins, including N-WASP, intersectin-l has been implicated in actin regulation and the development of dendritic spines (19, 23, 24). In addition, because the rest of the binding modules are shared between intersectin-s and -l, it is generally thought that the two intersectin isoforms have the same endocytic functions. In particular, given the well defined role for the invertebrate orthologs of intersectin-s in SV endocytosis, it is thought that intersectin-l performs this role in mammalian neurons, which lack intersectin-s. Defining the complement of intersectin functional activities in mammalian neurons is particularly relevant given that the protein is involved in the pathophysiology of Down syndrome (DS). Specifically, the intersectin gene is localized on chromosome 21q22.2 and is overexpressed in DS brains (38). Interestingly, alterations in endosomal pathways are a hallmark of DS neurons and neurons from the partial trisomy 16 mouse, Ts65Dn, a model for DS (39, 40). Thus, an endocytic trafficking defect may contribute to the DS disease process.Here, the functional roles of intersectin-l were studied in cultured hippocampal neurons. We find that intersectin-l is localized to the somatodendritic regions of neurons, where it co-localizes with CHC and AP-2 and regulates the uptake of transferrin. Intersectin-l also co-localizes with actin at dendritic spines and disrupting intersectin-l function alters dendritic spine development. In contrast, intersectin-l is absent from presynaptic terminals and has little or no role in SV recycling.  相似文献   

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Cytokinesis in bacteria depends upon the contractile Z ring, which is composed of dynamic polymers of the tubulin homolog FtsZ as well as other membrane-associated proteins such as FtsA, a homolog of actin that is required for membrane attachment of the Z ring and its subsequent constriction. Here we show that a previously characterized hypermorphic mutant FtsA (FtsA*) partially disassembled FtsZ polymers in vitro. This effect was strictly dependent on ATP or ADP binding to FtsA* and occurred at substoichiometric levels relative to FtsZ, similar to cellular levels. Nucleotide-bound FtsA* did not affect FtsZ GTPase activity or the critical concentration for FtsZ assembly but was able to disassemble preformed FtsZ polymers, suggesting that FtsA* acts on FtsZ polymers. Microscopic examination of the inhibited FtsZ polymers revealed a transition from long, straight polymers and polymer bundles to mainly short, curved protofilaments. These results indicate that a bacterial actin, when activated by adenine nucleotides, can modify the length distribution of bacterial tubulin polymers, analogous to the effects of actin-depolymerizing factor/cofilin on F-actin.Bacterial cell division requires a large number of proteins that colocalize to form a putative protein machine at the cell membrane (1). This machine, sometimes called the divisome, recruits enzymes to synthesize the septum cell wall and to initiate and coordinate the invagination of the cytoplasmic membrane (and in Gram-negative bacteria, the outer membrane). The most widely conserved and key protein for this process is FtsZ, a homolog of tubulin that forms a ring structure called the Z ring, which marks the site of septum formation (2, 3). Like tubulin, FtsZ assembles into filaments with GTP but does not form microtubules (4). The precise assembly state and conformation of these FtsZ filaments at the division ring is not clear, although recent electron tomography work suggests that the FtsZ ring consists of multiple short filaments tethered to the membrane at discrete junctures (5), which may represent points along the filaments bridged by membrane anchor proteins.In Escherichia coli, two of these anchor proteins are known. One of these, ZipA, is not well conserved but is an essential protein in E. coli. ZipA binds to the C-terminal tail of FtsZ (68), and purified ZipA promotes bundling of FtsZ filaments in vitro (9, 10). The other, FtsA, is also essential in E. coli and is more widely conserved among bacterial species. FtsA is a member of the HSP70/actin superfamily (11, 12), and like ZipA, it interacts with the C-terminal tail of FtsZ (7, 1315). FtsA can self-associate (16, 17) and bind ATP (12, 18), but reports of ATPase activity vary, with Bacillus subtilis FtsA having high activity (19) and Streptococcus pneumoniae FtsA exhibiting no detectable activity (20). There are no reports of any other in vitro activities of FtsA, including effects on FtsZ assembly.Understanding how FtsA affects FtsZ assembly is important because FtsA has a number of key activities in the cell. It is required for recruitment of a number of divisome proteins (21, 22) and helps to tether the Z ring to the membrane via a C-terminal membrane-targeting sequence (23). FtsA, like ZipA and other divisome proteins, is necessary to activate the contraction of the Z ring (24, 25). In E. coli, the FtsA:FtsZ ratio is crucial for proper cell division, with either too high or too low a ratio inhibiting septum formation (26, 27). This ratio is roughly 1:5, with ∼700 molecules of FtsA and 3200 molecules of FtsZ per cell (28), which works out to concentrations of 1–2 and 5–10 μm, respectively.Another interesting property of FtsA is that single residue alterations in the protein can result in significant enhancement of divisome activity. For example, the R286W mutation of FtsA, also called FtsA*, can substitute for the native FtsA and divide the cell. However, this mutant FtsA causes E. coli cells to divide at less than 80% of their normal length (29) and allows efficient division of E. coli cells in the absence of ZipA (30), indicating that it has gain-of-function activity. FtsA* and other hypermorphic mutations such as E124A and I143L can also increase division activity in cells lacking other essential divisome components (3133). The R286W and E124A mutants of FtsA also bypass the FtsA:FtsZ ratio rule, allowing cell division to occur at higher ratios than with WT2 FtsA. This may be because the altered FtsA proteins self-associate more readily than WT FtsA, which may cause different changes in FtsZ assembly state as compared with WT FtsA (17, 34).In this study, we use an in vitro system with purified FtsZ and a purified tagged version of FtsA* to elucidate the role of FtsA in activating constriction of the Z ring in vivo. We show that FtsA*, at physiological concentrations in the presence of ATP or ADP, has significant effects on the assembly of FtsZ filaments.  相似文献   

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Thimet oligopeptidase (EC 3.4.24.15; EP24.15) is an intracellular enzyme that has been proposed to metabolize peptides within cells, thereby affecting antigen presentation and G protein-coupled receptor signal transduction. However, only a small number of intracellular substrates of EP24.15 have been reported previously. Here we have identified over 100 peptides in human embryonic kidney 293 (HEK293) cells that are derived from intracellular proteins; many but not all of these peptides are substrates or products of EP24.15. First, cellular peptides were extracted from HEK293 cells and incubated in vitro with purified EP24.15. Then the peptides were labeled with isotopic tags and analyzed by mass spectrometry to obtain quantitative data on the extent of cleavage. A related series of experiments tested the effect of overexpression of EP24.15 on the cellular levels of peptides in HEK293 cells. Finally, synthetic peptides that corresponded to 10 of the cellular peptides were incubated with purified EP24.15 in vitro, and the cleavage was monitored by high pressure liquid chromatography and mass spectrometry. Many of the EP24.15 substrates identified by these approaches are 9–11 amino acids in length, supporting the proposal that EP24.15 can function in the degradation of peptides that could be used for antigen presentation. However, EP24.15 also converts some peptides into products that are 8–10 amino acids, thus contributing to the formation of peptides for antigen presentation. In addition, the intracellular peptides described here are potential candidates to regulate protein interactions within cells.Intracellular protein turnover is a crucial step for cell functioning, and if this process is impaired, the elevated levels of aged proteins usually lead to the formation of intracellular insoluble aggregates that can cause severe pathologies (1). In mammalian cells, most proteins destined for degradation are initially tagged with a polyubiquitin chain in an energy-dependent process and then digested to small peptides by the 26 S proteasome, a large proteolytic complex involved in the regulation of cell division, gene expression, and other key processes (2, 3). In eukaryotes, 30–90% of newly synthesized proteins may be degraded by proteasomes within minutes of synthesis (3, 4). In addition to proteasomes, other extralysosomal proteolytic systems have been reported (5, 6). The proteasome cleaves proteins into peptides that are typically 2–20 amino acids in length (7). In most cases, these peptides are thought to be rapidly hydrolyzed into amino acids by aminopeptidases (810). However, some intracellular peptides escape complete degradation and are imported into the endoplasmic reticulum where they associate with major histocompatibility complex class I (MHC-I)3 molecules and traffic to the cell surface for presentation to the immune system (1012). Additionally, based on the fact that free peptides added to the intracellular milieu can regulate cellular functions mediated by protein interactions such as gene regulation, metabolism, cell signaling, and protein targeting (13, 14), intracellular peptides generated by proteasomes that escape degradation have been suggested to play a role in regulating protein interactions (15). Indeed, oligopeptides isolated from rat brain tissue using the catalytically inactive EP24.15 (EC 3.4.24.15) were introduced into Chinese hamster ovarian-S and HEK293 cells and were found capable of altering G protein-coupled receptor signal transduction (16). Moreover, EP24.15 overexpression itself changed both angiotensin II and isoproterenol signal transduction, suggesting a physiological function for its intracellular substrates/products (16).EP24.15 is a zinc-dependent peptidase of the metallopeptidase M3 family that contains the HEXXH motif (17). This enzyme was first described as a neuropeptide-degrading enzyme present in the soluble fraction of brain homogenates (18). Whereas EP24.15 can be secreted (19, 20), its predominant location in the cytosol and nucleus suggests that the primary function of this enzyme is not the extracellular degradation of neuropeptides and hormones (21, 22). EP24.15 was shown in vivo to participate in antigen presentation through MHC-I (2325) and in vitro to bind (26) or degrade (27) some MHC-I associated peptides. EP24.15 has also been shown in vitro to degrade peptides containing 5–17 amino acids produced after proteasome digestion of β-casein (28). EP24.15 shows substrate size restriction to peptides containing from 5 to 17 amino acids because of its catalytic center that is located in a deep channel (29). Despite the size restriction, EP24.15 has a broad substrate specificity (30), probably because a significant portion of the enzyme-binding site is lined with potentially flexible loops that allow reorganization of the active site following substrate binding (29). Recently, it has also been suggested that certain substrates may be cleaved by an open form of EP24.15 (31). This characteristic is supported by the ability of EP24.15 to accommodate different amino acid residues at subsites S4 to S3′, which even includes the uncommon post-proline cleavage (30). Such biochemical and structural features make EP24.15 a versatile enzyme to degrade structurally unrelated oligopeptides.Previously, brain peptides that bound to catalytically inactive EP24.15 were isolated and identified using mass spectrometry (22). The majority of peptides captured by the inactive enzyme were intracellular protein fragments that efficiently interacted with EP24.15; the smallest peptide isolated in these assays contained 5 and the largest 17 amino acids (15, 16, 22, 32), which is within the size range previously reported for natural and synthetic substrates of EP24.15 (18, 30, 33, 34). Interestingly, the peptides released by the proteasome are in the same size range of EP24.15 competitive inhibitors/substrates (7, 35, 36). Taken altogether, these data suggest that in the intracellular environment EP24.15 could further cleave proteasome-generated peptides unrelated to MHC-I antigen presentation (15).Although the mutated inactive enzyme “capture” assay was successful in identifying several cellular protein fragments that were substrates for EP24.15, it also found some interacting peptides that were not substrates. In this study, we used several approaches to directly screen for cellular peptides that were cleaved by EP24.15. The first approach involved the extraction of cellular peptides from the HEK293 cell line, incubation in vitro with purified EP24.15, labeling with isotopic tags, and analysis by mass spectrometry to obtain quantitative data on the extent of cleavage. The second approach examined the effect of EP24.15 overexpression on the cellular levels of peptides in the HEK293 cell line. The third set of experiments tested synthetic peptides with purified EP24.15 in vitro, and examined cleavage by high pressure liquid chromatography and mass spectrometry. Collectively, these studies have identified a large number of intracellular peptides, including those that likely represent the endogenous substrates and products of EP24.15, and this original information contributes to a better understanding of the function of this enzyme in vivo.  相似文献   

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NHE5 is a brain-enriched Na+/H+ exchanger that dynamically shuttles between the plasma membrane and recycling endosomes, serving as a mechanism that acutely controls the local pH environment. In the current study we show that secretory carrier membrane proteins (SCAMPs), a group of tetraspanning integral membrane proteins that reside in multiple secretory and endocytic organelles, bind to NHE5 and co-localize predominantly in the recycling endosomes. In vitro protein-protein interaction assays revealed that NHE5 directly binds to the N- and C-terminal cytosolic extensions of SCAMP2. Heterologous expression of SCAMP2 but not SCAMP5 increased cell-surface abundance as well as transporter activity of NHE5 across the plasma membrane. Expression of a deletion mutant lacking the SCAMP2-specific N-terminal cytosolic domain, and a mini-gene encoding the N-terminal extension, reduced the transporter activity. Although both Arf6 and Rab11 positively regulate NHE5 cell-surface targeting and NHE5 activity across the plasma membrane, SCAMP2-mediated surface targeting of NHE5 was reversed by dominant-negative Arf6 but not by dominant-negative Rab11. Together, these results suggest that SCAMP2 regulates NHE5 transit through recycling endosomes and promotes its surface targeting in an Arf6-dependent manner.Neurons and glial cells in the central and peripheral nervous systems are especially sensitive to perturbations of pH (1). Many voltage- and ligand-gated ion channels that control membrane excitability are sensitive to changes in cellular pH (1-3). Neurotransmitter release and uptake are also influenced by cellular and organellar pH (4, 5). Moreover, the intra- and extracellular pH of both neurons and glia are modulated in a highly transient and localized manner by neuronal activity (6, 7). Thus, neurons and glia require sophisticated mechanisms to finely tune ion and pH homeostasis to maintain their normal functions.Na+/H+ exchangers (NHEs)3 were originally identified as a class of plasma membrane-bound ion transporters that exchange extracellular Na+ for intracellular H+, and thereby regulate cellular pH and volume. Since the discovery of NHE1 as the first mammalian NHE (8), eight additional isoforms (NHE2-9) that share 25-70% amino acid identity have been isolated in mammals (9, 10). NHE1-5 commonly exhibit transporter activity across the plasma membrane, whereas NHE6-9 are mostly found in organelle membranes and are believed to regulate organellar pH in most cell types at steady state (11). More recently, NHE10 was identified in human and mouse osteoclasts (12, 13). However, the cDNA encoding NHE10 shares only a low degree of sequence similarity with other known members of the NHE gene family, raising the possibility that this sodium-proton exchanger may belong to a separate gene family distantly related to NHE1-9 (see Ref. 9).NHE gene family members contain 12 putative transmembrane domains at the N terminus followed by a C-terminal cytosolic extension that plays a role in regulation of the transporter activity by protein-protein interactions and phosphorylation. NHEs have been shown to regulate the pH environment of synaptic nerve terminals and to regulate the release of neurotransmitters from multiple neuronal populations (14-16). The importance of NHEs in brain function is further exemplified by the findings that spontaneous or directed mutations of the ubiquitously expressed NHE1 gene lead to the progression of epileptic seizures, ataxia, and increased mortality in mice (17, 18). The progression of the disease phenotype is associated with loss of specific neuron populations and increased neuronal excitability. However, NHE1-null mice appear to develop normally until 2 weeks after birth when symptoms begin to appear. Therefore, other mechanisms may compensate for the loss of NHE1 during early development and play a protective role in the surviving neurons after the onset of the disease phenotype.NHE5 was identified as a unique member of the NHE gene family whose mRNA is expressed almost exclusively in the brain (19, 20), although more recent studies have suggested that NHE5 might be functional in other cell types such as sperm (21, 22) and osteosarcoma cells (23). Curiously, mutations found in several forms of congenital neurological disorders such as spinocerebellar ataxia type 4 (24-26) and autosomal dominant cerebellar ataxia (27-29) have been mapped to chromosome 16q22.1, a region containing NHE5. However, much remains unknown as to the molecular regulation of NHE5 and its role in brain function.Very few if any proteins work in isolation. Therefore identification and characterization of binding proteins often reveal novel functions and regulation mechanisms of the protein of interest. To begin to elucidate the biological role of NHE5, we have started to explore NHE5-binding proteins. Previously, β-arrestins, multifunctional scaffold proteins that play a key role in desensitization of G-protein-coupled receptors, were shown to directly bind to NHE5 and promote its endocytosis (30). This study demonstrated that NHE5 trafficking between endosomes and the plasma membrane is regulated by protein-protein interactions with scaffold proteins. More recently, we demonstrated that receptor for activated C-kinase 1 (RACK1), a scaffold protein that links signaling molecules such as activated protein kinase C, integrins, and Src kinase (31), directly interacts with and activates NHE5 via integrin-dependent and independent pathways (32). These results further indicate that NHE5 is partly associated with focal adhesions and that its targeting to the specialized microdomain of the plasma membrane may be regulated by various signaling pathways.Secretory carrier membrane proteins (SCAMPs) are a family of evolutionarily conserved tetra-spanning integral membrane proteins. SCAMPs are found in multiple organelles such as the Golgi apparatus, trans-Golgi network, recycling endosomes, synaptic vesicles, and the plasma membrane (33, 34) and have been shown to play a role in exocytosis (35-38) and endocytosis (39). Currently, five isoforms of SCAMP have been identified in mammals. The extended N terminus of SCAMP1-3 contain multiple Asn-Pro-Phe (NPF) repeats, which may allow these isoforms to participate in clathrin coat assembly and vesicle budding by binding to Eps15 homology (EH)-domain proteins (40, 41). Further, SCAMP2 was shown recently to bind to the small GTPase Arf6 (38), which is believed to participate in traffic between the recycling endosomes and the cell surface (42, 43). More recent studies have suggested that SCAMPs bind to organellar membrane type NHE7 (44) and the serotonin transporter SERT (45) and facilitate targeting of these integral membrane proteins to specific intracellular compartments. We show in the current study that SCAMP2 binds to NHE5, facilitates the cell-surface targeting of NHE5, and elevates Na+/H+ exchange activity at the plasma membrane, whereas expression of a SCAMP2 deletion mutant lacking the N-terminal domain containing the NPF repeats suppresses the effect. Further we show that this activity of SCAMP2 requires an active form of a small GTPase Arf6, but not Rab11. We propose a model in which SCAMPs bind to NHE5 in the endosomal compartment and control its cell-surface abundance via an Arf6-dependent pathway.  相似文献   

12.
JIPs (c-Jun N-terminal kinase interacting proteins), which scaffold JNK/p38 MAP kinase signaling modules, also bind conventional kinesins and are implicated in microtubule-based membrane trafficking in neuronal cells. Here we have identified a novel splice variant of the Jip4 gene product JLPL (JNK-interacting leucine zipper protein) in yeast-two hybrid screens with the phosphoinositide kinase PIKfyve. The interaction was confirmed by pulldown and coimmunoprecipitation assays in native cells. It engages the PIKfyve cpn60_TCP1 consensus sequence and the last 75 residues of the JLP C terminus. Subpopulations of both proteins cofractionated and populated similar structures at the cell perinuclear region. Because PIKfyve is essential in endosome-to-trans-Golgi network (TGN) cargo transport, we tested whether JLP is a PIKfyve functional partner in this trafficking pathway. Short interfering RNA (siRNA)-mediated depletion of endogenous JLP or PIKfyve profoundly delayed the microtubule-based transport of chimeric furin (Tac-furin) from endosomes to the TGN in a CHO cell line, which was rescued upon ectopic expression of siRNA-resistant JLP or PIKfyve constructs. Peptides from the contact sites in PIKfyve and JLP, or a dominant-negative PIKfyve mutant introduced into cells by ectopic expression or microinjection, induced a similar defect. Because Tac-TGN38 delivery from endosomes to the TGN, unlike that of Tac-furin, does not require intact microtubules, we monitored the effect of JLP and PIKfyve depletion or the interacting peptides administration on Tac-TGN38 trafficking. Remarkably, neither maneuver altered the Tac-TGN38 delivery to the TGN. Our data indicate that JLP interacts with PIKfyve and that both proteins and their association are required in microtubule-based, but not in microtubule-independent, endosome-to-TGN cargo transport.In mammalian cells, the endosomal/endocytic system comprises an interconnected and morphologically complex network of membrane organelles that supports fundamental functions such as nutrient entry and delivery for degradation, removal and degradation of plasma membrane or Golgi proteins, regulation and integration of signaling pathways, and protein recycling to the cell surface or the TGN2 (14). From the plasma membrane, the endocytosed cargo is first delivered to early endosomes/sorting endosomes. Cargoes destined for recycling to the cell surface then enter the endocytic recycling compartment, whereas others, intended for degradation, remain in early endosomes. Early endosomes undergo a series of changes, known as maturation, to give rise to maturing transport intermediates (herein ECV/MVBs; also Ref. 5) and to late endosomes that fuse with lysosomes to deliver cargo for degradation. Recycling or degradation is not the only outcome of the cell surface-originated cargoes. A set of internalized transmembrane proteins, including intracellular sorting receptors, enzymes, and toxins, are retrieved from the endosomal system and transported to the TGN. The endosome-to-TGN trafficking of the acid-hydrolase-sorting receptor, CI-MPR, the endopeptidase furin, and the putative cargo receptor TGN38 are the best studied examples. These cargoes are highly enriched in the TGN at steady state but arrive there from different compartments, utilizing distinct mechanisms. Thus, TGN38 enters the TGN from the endocytic recycling compartment by an iterative removal from the latter compartment, furin reaches the TGN by exiting the early/late endosomal system, and CI-MPR implements features of both pathways (4, 69).Whereas the detailed molecular and cellular mechanisms underlying the membrane progression in the course of cargo transport through the endosomal system or retrieval from early/late endosomes to the TGN is still elusive, experimental evidence has been accumulating to implicate PIKfyve, the sole enzyme for PtdIns(3,5)P2 synthesis (10). Thus, PIKfyve has been found to interact with the late endosome-to-TGN transport factor Rab9 effector p40 (11). Furthermore, disruption of the PtdIns(3,5)P2 homeostatic mechanism by means of expression of dominant-negative kinase-deficient point mutants of PIKfyve, protein depletion, or pharmacological inhibition of PIKfyve activity was found to impair the exit of a subset of cargoes from early endosomes to the TGN and late endosomes or from the late endosomes (1216). Phenotypically, these defects are manifested by progressive endosome swelling and cytoplasmic vacuolation, first seen by expression of dominant-negative PIKfyveK1831E in a number of mammalian cell types (17) and confirmed thereafter by other maneuvers inhibiting PIKfyve protein expression or activity (14, 16). In vitro reconstitution assays indicate that PIKfyve enzymatic activity is required in endosome processing in two ways. It triggers the formation/fission (or maturation) of ECV/MVBs from early endosomes and arrests the rate of fusion events in the endosomal system (18, 19). It is thus conceivable that impaired PIKfyve and PtdIns(3,5)P2 functioning in the fission and fusion events mechanistically underlies the constraints in the trafficking pathways traversing endosomes.Microtubules aided by the microtubule-associated motor protein families of kinesin and dynein are required for proper performance of the endosomal/endocytic membrane system. Although their role is rather complex and not completely understood, in vivo and in vitro studies implicate microtubule-based dynamics in multiple aspects of the endocytic trafficking, including sorting of endocytic contents, fission/fusion events at early or late endosomes, early endosome maturation, and efficient motility of the transport vesicles to their destination (2027). Accumulating evidence indicates that the binding of motor proteins to organelles or carrier vesicles is regulated by motor protein adapters. Intriguingly, this newly emerging adapter function has been found to be executed by proteins known as scaffolds of stress signaling enzymes. One such adapter for conventional kinesins is the group of JIPs that scaffold the JNK/p38 MAP kinase signaling modules (2831). A mutation that causes mislocalization of synaptic vesicles and aberrant axonal transport in Drosophila and Caenorhabditis elegans affects the JIP3 homologs Sunday driver (dSYD) and Unc16, respectively (32, 33). In mammalian cells, JIPs are represented by four proteins (JIP1–4) derived from separate genes and several alternatively spliced variants. JIP1, the founding member, is structurally related to JIP2 (34, 35). JIP3 (also known as Unc16/JSAP1/dSYD) is structurally unrelated to JIP1 or JIP2, but as those two, it is abundant in neuronal cells (30, 32, 36). The latest addition to the group is JIP4 that occurs in three splice variants known thus far: JLP and JIP4 in mouse and SPAG9 in humans (31, 37, 38). JIP4, JLP, and SPAG9 (gene symbol, SPAG9) are structurally homologous to JIP3 but display broader distribution (3739). Remarkably, all four members of the JIP group interact with the kinesin1 light chain, and potential cargoes for microtubule-based vesicle transport have been proposed for JIP1–JIP3 (32, 33, 38, 4043). The role of JLP/JIP4 in the context of cargo transport or membrane trafficking events, however, has never been investigated. In the present study we report that JLP is a PIKfyve physical and functional partner in microtubule-based endosome-to-TGN trafficking. The interaction is identified by a yeast two-hybrid screen with the PIKfyve cpn60_TCP1 consensus sequence and mapped to the 75-aa peptide fragment of the extreme JLP C terminus. By monitoring divergent routes of cargo delivery to the TGN, differing by the requirement of microtubule-dependent early endosome maturation, we have determined that JLP assists PIKfyve selective functionality in microtubule-based endosome-to-TGN trafficking.  相似文献   

13.
The carboxyl-terminal cholinesterase-like (ChEL) domain of thyroglobulin (Tg) has been identified as critically important in Tg export from the endoplasmic reticulum. In a number of human kindreds suffering from congenital hypothyroidism, and in the cog congenital goiter mouse and rdw rat dwarf models, thyroid hormone synthesis is inhibited because of mutations in the ChEL domain that block protein export from the endoplasmic reticulum. We hypothesize that Tg forms homodimers through noncovalent interactions involving two predicted α-helices in each ChEL domain that are homologous to the dimerization helices of acetylcholinesterase. This has been explored through selective epitope tagging of dimerization partners and by inserting an extra, unpaired Cys residue to create an opportunity for intermolecular disulfide pairing. We show that the ChEL domain is necessary and sufficient for Tg dimerization; specifically, the isolated ChEL domain can dimerize with full-length Tg or with itself. Insertion of an N-linked glycan into the putative upstream dimerization helix inhibits homodimerization of the isolated ChEL domain. However, interestingly, co-expression of upstream Tg domains, either in cis or in trans, overrides the dimerization defect of such a mutant. Thus, although the ChEL domain provides a nidus for Tg dimerization, interactions of upstream Tg regions with the ChEL domain actively stabilizes the Tg dimer complex for intracellular transport.The synthesis of thyroid hormone in the thyroid gland requires secretion of thyroglobulin (Tg)2 to the apical luminal cavity of thyroid follicles (1). Once secreted, Tg is iodinated via the activity of thyroid peroxidase (2). A coupling reaction involving a quinol-ether linkage especially engages di-iodinated tyrosyl residues 5 and 130 to form thyroxine within the amino-terminal portion of the Tg polypeptide (3, 4). Preferential iodination of Tg hormonogenic sites is dependent not on the specificity of the peroxidase (5) but upon the native structure of Tg (6, 7). To date, no other thyroidal proteins have been shown to effectively substitute in this role for Tg.The first 80% of the primary structure of Tg (full-length murine Tg: 2,746 amino acids) involves three regions called I-II-III comprised of disulfide-rich repeat domains held together by intradomain disulfide bonds (8, 9). The final 581 amino acids of Tg are strongly homologous to acetylcholinesterase (1012). Rate-limiting steps in the overall process of Tg secretion involve its structural maturation within the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) (13). Interactions between regions I-II-III and the cholinesterase-like (ChEL) domain have recently been suggested to be important in this process, with ChEL functioning as an intramolecular chaperone and escort for I-II-III (14). In addition, Tg conformational maturation culminates in Tg homodimerization (15, 16) with progression to a cylindrical, and ultimately, a compact ovoid structure (1719).In human congenital hypothyroidism with deficient Tg, the ChEL domain is a commonly affected site of mutation, including the recently described A2215D (20, 21), R2223H (22), G2300D, R2317Q (23), G2355V, G2356R, and the skipping of exon 45 (which normally encodes 36 amino acids), as well as the Q2638stop mutant (24) (in addition to polymorphisms including P2213L, W2482R, and R2511Q that may be associated with thyroid overgrowth (25)). As best as is currently known, all of the congenital hypothyroidism-inducing Tg mutants are defective for intracellular transport (26). A homozygous G2300R mutation (equivalent to residue 2,298 of mouse Tg) in the ChEL domain is responsible for congenital hypothyroidism in rdw rats (27, 28), whereas we identified the Tg-L2263P point mutation as the cause of hypothyroidism in the cog mouse (29). Such mutations perturb intradomain structure (30), and interestingly, block homodimerization (31). Acquisition of quaternary structure has long been thought to be required for efficient export from the ER (32) as exemplified by authentic acetylcholinesterase (33, 34) in which dimerization enhances protein stability and export (35).Tg comprised only of regions I-II-III (truncated to lack the ChEL domain) is blocked within the ER (30), whereas a secretory version of the isolated ChEL domain of Tg devoid of I-II-III undergoes rapid and efficient intracellular transport and secretion (14). A striking homology positions two predicted α-helices of the ChEL domain to the identical relative positions of the dimerization helices in acetylcholinesterase. This raises the possibility that ChEL may serve as a homodimerization domain for Tg, providing a critical function in maturation for Tg transport to the site of thyroid hormone synthesis (1).In this study, we provide unequivocal evidence for homodimerization of the ChEL domain and “hetero”-dimerization of that domain with full-length Tg, and we provide significant evidence that the predicted ChEL dimerization helices provide a nidus for Tg assembly. On the other hand, our data also suggest that upstream Tg regions known to interact with ChEL (14) actively stabilize the Tg dimer complex. Together, I-II-III and ChEL provide unique contributions to the process of intracellular transport of Tg through the secretory pathway.  相似文献   

14.
Rheb G-protein plays critical roles in the TSC/Rheb/mTOR signaling pathway by activating mTORC1. The activation of mTORC1 by Rheb can be faithfully reproduced in vitro by using mTORC1 immunoprecipitated by the use of anti-raptor antibody from mammalian cells starved for nutrients. The low in vitro kinase activity against 4E-BP1 of this mTORC1 preparation is dramatically increased by the addition of recombinant Rheb. On the other hand, the addition of Rheb does not activate mTORC2 immunoprecipitated from mammalian cells by the use of anti-rictor antibody. The activation of mTORC1 is specific to Rheb, because other G-proteins such as KRas, RalA/B, and Cdc42 did not activate mTORC1. Both Rheb1 and Rheb2 activate mTORC1. In addition, the activation is dependent on the presence of bound GTP. We also find that the effector domain of Rheb is required for the mTORC1 activation. FKBP38, a recently proposed mediator of Rheb action, appears not to be involved in the Rheb-dependent activation of mTORC1 in vitro, because the preparation of mTORC1 that is devoid of FKBP38 is still activated by Rheb. The addition of Rheb results in a significant increase of binding of the substrate protein 4E-BP1 to mTORC1. PRAS40, a TOR signaling (TOS) motif-containing protein that competes with the binding of 4EBP1 to mTORC1, inhibits Rheb-induced activation of mTORC1. A preparation of mTORC1 that is devoid of raptor is not activated by Rheb. Rheb does not induce autophosphorylation of mTOR. These results suggest that Rheb induces alteration in the binding of 4E-BP1 with mTORC1 to regulate mTORC1 activation.Rheb defines a unique member of the Ras superfamily G-proteins (1). We have shown that Rheb proteins are conserved and are found from yeast to human (2). Although yeast and fruit fly have one Rheb, mouse and human have two Rheb proteins termed Rheb1 (or simply Rheb) and Rheb2 (RhebL1) (2). Structurally, these proteins contain G1-G5 boxes, short stretches of amino acids that define the function of the Ras superfamily G-proteins including guanine nucleotide binding (1, 3, 4). Rheb proteins have a conserved arginine at residue 15 that corresponds to residue 12 of Ras (1). The effector domain required for the binding with downstream effectors encompasses the G2 box and its adjacent sequences (1, 5). Structural analysis by x-ray crystallography further shows that the effector domain is exposed to solvent, is located close to the phosphates of GTP especially at residues 35–38, and undergoes conformational change during GTP/GDP exchange (6). In addition, all Rheb proteins end with the CAAX (C is cysteine, A is an aliphatic amino acid, and X is the C-terminal amino acid) motif that signals farnesylation. In fact, we as well as others have shown that these proteins are farnesylated (79).Rheb plays critical roles in the TSC/Rheb/mTOR signaling, a signaling pathway that plays central roles in regulating protein synthesis and growth in response to nutrient, energy, and growth conditions (1014). Rheb is down-regulated by a TSC1·TSC2 complex that acts as a GTPase-activating protein for Rheb (1519). Recent studies established that the GAP domain of TSC2 defines the functional domain for the down-regulation of Rheb (20). Mutations in the Tsc1 or Tsc2 gene lead to tuberous sclerosis whose symptoms include the appearance of benign tumors called hamartomas at different parts of the body as well as neurological symptoms (21, 22). Overexpression of Rheb results in constitutive activation of mTOR even in the absence of nutrients (15, 16). Two mTOR complexes, mTORC1 and mTORC2, have been identified (23, 24). Whereas mTORC1 is involved in protein synthesis activation mediated by S6K and 4EBP1, mTORC2 is involved in the phosphorylation of Akt in response to insulin. It has been suggested that Rheb is involved in the activation of mTORC1 but not mTORC2 (25).Although Rheb is clearly involved in the activation of mTOR, the mechanism of activation has not been established. We as well as others have suggested a model that involves the interaction of Rheb with the TOR complex (2628). Rheb activation of mTOR kinase activity using immunoprecipitated mTORC1 was reported (29). Rheb has been shown to interact with mTOR (27, 30), and this may involve direct interaction of Rheb with the kinase domain of mTOR (27). However, this Rheb/mTOR interaction is a weak interaction and is not dependent on the presence of GTP bound to Rheb (27, 28). Recently, a different model proposing that FKBP38 (FK506-binding protein 38) mediates the activation of mTORC1 by Rheb was proposed (31, 32). In this model, FKBP38 binds mTOR and negatively regulates mTOR activity, and this negative regulation is blocked by the binding of Rheb to FKBP38. However, recent reports dispute this idea (33).To further characterize Rheb activation of mTOR, we have utilized an in vitro system that reproduces activation of mTORC1 by the addition of recombinant Rheb. We used mTORC1 immunoprecipitated from nutrient-starved cells using anti-raptor antibody and have shown that its kinase activity against 4E-BP1 is dramatically increased by the addition of recombinant Rheb. Importantly, the activation of mTORC1 is specific to Rheb and is dependent on the presence of bound GTP as well as an intact effector domain. FKBP38 is not detected in our preparation and further investigation suggests that FKBP38 is not an essential component for the activation of mTORC1 by Rheb. Our study revealed that Rheb enhances the binding of a substrate 4E-BP1 with mTORC1 rather than increasing the kinase activity of mTOR.  相似文献   

15.
The Notch receptor is critical for proper development where it orchestrates numerous cell fate decisions. The Fringe family of β1,3-N-acetylglucosaminyltransferases are regulators of this pathway. Fringe enzymes add N-acetylglucosamine to O-linked fucose on the epidermal growth factor repeats of Notch. Here we have analyzed the reaction catalyzed by Lunatic Fringe (Lfng) in detail. A mutagenesis strategy for Lfng was guided by a multiple sequence alignment of Fringe proteins and solutions from docking an epidermal growth factor-like O-fucose acceptor substrate onto a homology model of Lfng. We targeted three main areas as follows: residues that could help resolve where the fucose binds, residues in two conserved loops not observed in the published structure of Manic Fringe, and residues predicted to be involved in UDP-N-acetylglucosamine (UDP-GlcNAc) donor specificity. We utilized a kinetic analysis of mutant enzyme activity toward the small molecule acceptor substrate 4-nitrophenyl-α-l-fucopyranoside to judge their effect on Lfng activity. Our results support the positioning of O-fucose in a specific orientation to the catalytic residue. We also found evidence that one loop closes off the active site coincident with, or subsequent to, substrate binding. We propose a mechanism whereby the ordering of this short loop may alter the conformation of the catalytic aspartate. Finally, we identify several residues near the UDP-GlcNAc-binding site, which are specifically permissive toward UDP-GlcNAc utilization.Defects in Notch signaling have been implicated in numerous human diseases, including multiple sclerosis (1), several forms of cancer (2-4), cerebral autosomal dominant arteriopathy with sub-cortical infarcts and leukoencephalopathy (5), and spondylocostal dysostosis (SCD)3 (6-8). The transmembrane Notch signaling receptor is activated by members of the DSL (Delta, Serrate, Lag2) family of ligands (9, 10). In the endoplasmic reticulum, O-linked fucose glycans are added to the epidermal growth factor-like (EGF) repeats of the Notch extracellular domain by protein O-fucosyltransferase 1 (11-13). These O-fucose monosaccharides can be elongated in the Golgi apparatus by three highly conserved β1,3-N-acetylglucosaminyltransferases of the Fringe family (Lunatic (Lfng), Manic (Mfng), and Radical Fringe (Rfng) in mammals) (14-16). The formation of this GlcNAc-β1,3-Fuc-α1, O-serine/threonine disaccharide is necessary and sufficient for subsequent elongation to a tetrasaccharide (15, 19), although elongation past the disaccharide in Drosophila is not yet clear (20, 21). Elongation of O-fucose by Fringe is known to potentiate Notch signaling from Delta ligands and inhibit signaling from Serrate ligands (22). Delta ligands are termed Delta-like (Delta-like1, -2, and -4) in mammals, and the homologs of Serrate are known as Jagged (Jagged1 and -2) in mammals. The effects of Fringe on Drosophila Notch can be recapitulated in Notch ligand in vitro binding assays using purified components, suggesting that the elongation of O-fucose by Fringe alters the binding of Notch to its ligands (21). Although Fringe also appears to alter Notch-ligand interactions in mammals, the effects of elongation of the glycan past the O-fucose monosaccharide is more complicated and appears to be cell type-, receptor-, and ligand-dependent (for a recent review see Ref. 23).The Fringe enzymes catalyze the transfer of GlcNAc from the donor substrate UDP-α-GlcNAc to the acceptor fucose, forming the GlcNAc-β1,3-Fuc disaccharide (14-16). They belong to the GT-A-fold of inverting glycosyltransferases, which includes N-acetylglucosaminyltransferase I and β1,4-galactosyltransferase I (17, 18). The mechanism is presumed to proceed through the abstraction of a proton from the acceptor substrate by a catalytic base (Asp or Glu) in the active site. This creates a nucleophile that attacks the anomeric carbon of the nucleotide-sugar donor, inverting its configuration from α (on the nucleotide sugar) to β (in the product) (24, 25). The enzyme then releases the acceptor substrate modified with a disaccharide and UDP. The Mfng structure (26) leaves little doubt as to the identity of the catalytic residue, which in all likelihood is aspartate 289 in mouse Lfng (we will use numbering for mouse Lunatic Fringe throughout, unless otherwise stated). The structure of Mfng with UDP-GlcNAc soaked into the crystals (26) showed density only for the UDP portion of the nucleotide-sugar donor and no density for two loops flanking either side of the active site. The presence of flexible loops that become ordered upon substrate binding is a common observation with glycosyltransferases in the GT-A fold family (18, 25). Density for the entire donor was observed in the structure of rabbit N-acetylglucosaminyltransferase I (27). In this case, ordering of a previously disordered loop upon UDP-GlcNAc binding may have contributed to increased stability of the donor. In the case of bovine β1,4-galactosyltransferase I, a section of flexible random coil from the apo-structure was observed to change its conformation to α-helical upon donor substrate binding (28). Both loops in Lfng are highly conserved, and we have mutated a number of residues in each to test the hypothesis that they interact with the substrates. The mutagenesis strategy was also guided by docking of an EGF-O-fucose acceptor substrate into the active site of the Lfng model as well as comparison of the Lfng model with a homology model of the β1,3-glucosyltransferase (β3GlcT) that modifies O-fucose on thrombospondin type 1 repeats (29, 30). The β3GlcT is predicted to be a GT-A fold enzyme related to the Fringe family (17, 18, 29).  相似文献   

16.
In archaea and eukarya, box C/D ribonucleoprotein (RNP) complexes are responsible for 2′-O-methylation of tRNAs and rRNAs. The archaeal box C/D small RNP complex requires a small RNA component (sRNA) possessing Watson-Crick complementarity to the target RNA along with three proteins: L7Ae, Nop5p, and fibrillarin. Transfer of a methyl group from S-adenosylmethionine to the target RNA is performed by fibrillarin, which by itself has no affinity for the sRNA-target duplex. Instead, it is targeted to the site of methylation through association with Nop5p, which in turn binds to the L7Ae-sRNA complex. To understand how Nop5p serves as a bridge between the targeting and catalytic functions of the box C/D small RNP complex, we have employed alanine scanning to evaluate the interaction between the Pyrococcus horikoshii Nop5p domain and an L7Ae box C/D RNA complex. From these data, we were able to construct an isolated RNA-binding domain (Nop-RBD) that folds correctly as demonstrated by x-ray crystallography and binds to the L7Ae box C/D RNA complex with near wild type affinity. These data demonstrate that the Nop-RBD is an autonomously folding and functional module important for protein assembly in a number of complexes centered on the L7Ae-kinkturn RNP.Many biological RNAs require extensive modification to attain full functionality in the cell (1). Currently there are over 100 known RNA modification types ranging from small functional group substitutions to the addition of large multi-cyclic ring structures (2). Transfer RNA, one of many functional RNAs targeted for modification (3-6), possesses the greatest modification type diversity, many of which are important for proper biological function (7). Ribosomal RNA, on the other hand, contains predominantly two types of modified nucleotides: pseudouridine and 2′-O-methylribose (8). The crystal structures of the ribosome suggest that these modifications are important for proper folding (9, 10) and structural stabilization (11) in vivo as evidenced by their strong tendency to localize to regions associated with function (8, 12, 13). These roles have been verified biochemically in a number of cases (14), whereas newly emerging functional modifications are continually being investigated.Box C/D ribonucleoprotein (RNP)3 complexes serve as RNA-guided site-specific 2′-O-methyltransferases in both archaea and eukaryotes (15, 16) where they are referred to as small RNP complexes and small nucleolar RNPs, respectively. Target RNA pairs with the sRNA guide sequence and is methylated at the 2′-hydroxyl group of the nucleotide five bases upstream of either the D or D′ box motif of the sRNA (Fig. 1, star) (17, 18). In archaea, the internal C′ and D′ motifs generally conform to a box C/D consensus sequence (19), and each sRNA contains two guide regions ∼12 nucleotides in length (20). The bipartite architecture of the RNP potentially enables the complex to methylate two distinct RNA targets (21) and has been shown to be essential for site-specific methylation (22).Open in a separate windowFIGURE 1.Organization of the archaeal box C/D complex. The protein components of this RNP are L7Ae, Nop5p, and fibrillarin, which together bind a box C/D sRNA. The regions of the Box C/D sRNA corresponding to the conserved C, D, C′, and D′ boxes are labeled. The target RNA binds the sRNA through Watson-Crick pairing and is methylated by fibrillarin at the fifth nucleotide from the D/D′ boxes (star).In addition to the sRNA, the archaeal box C/D complex requires three proteins for activity (23): the ribosomal protein L7Ae (24, 25), fibrillarin, and the Nop56/Nop58 homolog Nop5p (Fig. 1). L7Ae binds to both box C/D and the C′/D′ motifs (26), which respectively comprise kink-turn (27) or k-loop structures (28), to initiate the assembly of the RNP (29, 30). Fibrillarin performs the methyl group transfer from the cofactor S-adenosylmethionine to the target RNA (31-33). For this to occur, the active site of fibrillarin must be positioned precisely over the specific 2′-hydroxyl group to be methylated. Although fibrillarin methylates this functional group in the context of a Watson-Crick base-paired helix (guide/target), it has little to no binding affinity for double-stranded RNA or for the L7Ae-sRNA complex (22, 26, 33, 34). Nop5p serves as an intermediary protein bringing fibrillarin to the complex through its association with both the L7Ae-sRNA complex and fibrillarin (22). Along with its role as an intermediary between fibrillarin and the L7Ae-sRNA complex, Nop5p possesses other functions not yet fully understood. For example, Nop5p self-dimerizes through a coiled-coil domain (35) that in most archaea and eukaryotic homologs includes a small insertion sequence of unknown function (36, 37). However, dimerization and fibrillarin binding have been shown to be mutually exclusive in Methanocaldococcus jannaschii Nop5p, potentially because of the presence of this insertion sequence (36). Thus, whether Nop5p is a monomer or a dimer in the active RNP is still under debate.In this study, we focus our attention on the Nop5p protein to investigate its interaction with a L7Ae box C/D RNA complex because both the fibrillarin-Nop5p and the L7Ae box C/D RNA interfaces are known from crystal structures (29, 35, 38). Individual residues on the surface of a monomeric form of Nop5p (referred to as mNop5p) (22) were mutated to alanine, and the effect on binding affinity for a L7Ae box C/D motif RNA complex was assessed through the use of electrophoretic mobility shift assays. These data reveal that residues important for binding cluster within the highly conserved NOP domain (39, 40). To demonstrate that this domain is solely responsible for the affinity of Nop5p for the preassembled L7Ae box C/D RNA complex, we expressed and purified it in isolation from the full Nop5p protein. The isolated Nop-RBD domain binds to the L7Ae box C/D RNA complex with nearly wild type affinity, demonstrating that the Nop-RBD is truly an autonomously folding and functional module. Comparison of our data with the crystal structure of the homologous spliceosomal hPrp31-15.5K protein-U4 snRNA complex (41) suggests the adoption of a similar mode of binding, further supporting a crucial role for the NOP domain in RNP complex assembly.  相似文献   

17.
Cell membranes predominantly consist of lamellar lipid bilayers. When studied in vitro, however, many membrane lipids can exhibit non-lamellar morphologies, often with cubic symmetries. An open issue is how lipid polymorphisms influence organelle and cell shape. Here, we used controlled dimerization of artificial membrane proteins in mammalian tissue culture cells to induce an expansion of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) with cubic symmetry. Although this observation emphasizes ER architectural plasticity, we found that the changed ER membrane became sequestered into large autophagic vacuoles, positive for the autophagy protein LC3. Autophagy may be targeting irregular membrane shapes and/or aggregated protein. We suggest that membrane morphology can be controlled in cells.The observation that simple mixtures of amphiphilic (polar) lipids and water yield a rich flora of phase structures has opened a long-standing debate as to whether such membrane polymorphisms are relevant for living organisms (17). Lipid bilayers with planar geometry, termed lamellar symmetry, dominate the membrane structure of cells. However, this architecture comprises only a fraction of the structures seen with in vitro lipid-water systems (711). The propensity to form lamellar bilayers (a property exclusive to cylindrically shaped lipids) is flanked by a continuum of lipid structures that occur in a number of exotic and probably non-physiological non-bilayer configurations (3, 12). However, certain lipids, particularly those with smaller head groups and more bulky hydrocarbon chains, can adopt bilayered non-lamellar phases called cubic phases. Here the bilayer is curved everywhere in the form of saddle shapes corresponding to an energetically favorable minimal surface of zero mean curvature (1, 7). Because a substantial number of the lipids present in biological membranes, when studied as individual pure lipids, form cubic phases (13), cubic membranes have received particular interest in cell biology.Since the application of electron microscopy (EM)3 to the study of cell ultrastructure, unusual membrane morphologies have been reported for virtually every organelle (14, 15). However, interpretation of three-dimensional structures from two-dimensional electron micrographs is not easy (16). In seminal work, Landh (17) developed the method of direct template correlative matching, a technique that unequivocally assesses the presence of cubic membranes in biological specimens (16). Cubic phases adopt mathematically well defined three-dimensional configurations whose two-dimensional analogs have been derived (4, 17). In direct template correlative matching, electron micrographs are matched to these analogs. Cubic cell membrane geometries and in vitro cubic phases of purified lipid mixtures do differ in their lattice parameters; however, such deviations are thought to relate to differences in water activity and lipid to protein ratios (10, 14, 18). Direct template correlative matching has revealed thousands of examples of cellular cubic membranes in a broad survey of electron micrographs ranging from protozoa to human cells (14, 17) and, more recently, in the mitochondria of amoeba (19) and in subcellular membrane compartments associated with severe acute respiratory syndrome virus (20). Analysis of cellular cubic membranes has also been furthered by the development of EM tomography that confirmed the presence of cubic bilayers in the mitochondrial membranes of amoeba (21, 22).Although it is now clear that cubic membranes can exist in living cells, the generation of such architecture would appear tightly regulated, as evidenced by the dominance of lamellar bilayers in biology. In this light, we examined the capability and implications of generating cubic membranes in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) of mammalian tissue culture cells. The ER is a spatially interconnected complex consisting of two domains, the nuclear envelope and the peripheral ER (2326). The nuclear envelope surrounds the nucleus and is composed of two continuous sheets of membranes, an inner and outer nuclear membrane connected to each other at nuclear pores. The peripheral ER constitutes a network of branching trijunctional tubules that are continuous with membrane sheet regions that occur in closer proximity to the nucleus. Recently it has been suggested that the classical morphological definition of rough ER (ribosome-studded) and smooth ER (ribosome-free) may correspond to sheet-like and tubular ER domains, respectively (27). The ER has a strong potential for cubic architectures, as demonstrated by the fact that the majority of cubic cell membranes in the EM record come from ER-derived structures (14, 17). Furthermore, ER cubic symmetries are an inducible class of organized smooth ER (OSER), a definition collectively referring to ordered smooth ER membranes (=stacked cisternae on the outer nuclear membrane, also called Karmelle (2830), packed sinusoidal ER (31), concentric membrane whorls (30, 3234), and arrays of crystalloid ER (3537)). Specifically, weak homotypic interactions between membrane proteins produce both a whorled and a sinusoidal OSER phenotype (38), the latter exhibiting a cubic symmetry (16, 39).We were able to produce OSER with cubic membrane morphology via induction of homo-dimerization of artificial membrane proteins. Interestingly, the resultant cubic membrane architecture was removed from the ER system by incorporation into large autophagic vacuoles. To assess whether these cubic symmetries were favored in the absence of cellular energy, we depleted ATP. To our surprise, the cells responded by forming large domains of tubulated membrane, suggesting that a cubic symmetry was not the preferred conformation of the system. Our results suggest that whereas the endoplasmic reticulum is capable of adopting cubic symmetries, both the inherent properties of the ER system and active cellular mechanisms, such as autophagy, can tightly control their appearance.  相似文献   

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ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporters transduce the free energy of ATP hydrolysis to power the mechanical work of substrate translocation across cell membranes. MsbA is an ABC transporter implicated in trafficking lipid A across the inner membrane of Escherichia coli. It has sequence similarity and overlapping substrate specificity with multidrug ABC transporters that export cytotoxic molecules in humans and prokaryotes. Despite rapid advances in structure determination of ABC efflux transporters, little is known regarding the location of substrate-binding sites in the transmembrane segment and the translocation pathway across the membrane. In this study, we have mapped residues proximal to the daunorubicin (DNR)-binding site in MsbA using site-specific, ATP-dependent quenching of DNR intrinsic fluorescence by spin labels. In the nucleotide-free MsbA intermediate, DNR-binding residues cluster at the cytoplasmic end of helices 3 and 6 at a site accessible from the membrane/water interface and extending into an aqueous chamber formed at the interface between the two transmembrane domains. Binding of a nonhydrolyzable ATP analog inverts the transporter to an outward-facing conformation and relieves DNR quenching by spin labels suggesting DNR exclusion from proximity to the spin labels. The simplest model consistent with our data has DNR entering near an elbow helix parallel to the water/membrane interface, partitioning into the open chamber, and then translocating toward the periplasm upon ATP binding.ATP-binding cassette (ABC)2 transporters transduce the energy of ATP hydrolysis to power the movement of a wide range of substrates across the cell membranes (1, 2). They constitute the largest family of prokaryotic transporters, import essential cell nutrients, flip lipids, and export toxic molecules (3). Forty eight human ABC transporters have been identified, including ABCB1, or P-glycoprotein, which is implicated in cross-resistance to drugs and cytotoxic molecules (4, 5). Inherited mutations in these proteins are linked to diseases such as cystic fibrosis, persistent hypoglycemia of infancy, and immune deficiency (6).The functional unit of an ABC transporter consists of four modules. Two highly conserved ABCs or nucleotide-binding domains (NBDs) bind and hydrolyze ATP to supply the active energy for transport (7). ABCs drive the mechanical work of proteins with diverse functions ranging from membrane transport to DNA repair (3, 5). Substrate specificity is determined by two transmembrane domains (TMDs) that also provide the translocation pathway across the bilayer (7). Bacterial ABC exporters are expressed as monomers, each consisting of one NBD and one TMD, that dimerize to form the active transporter (3). The number of transmembrane helices and their organization differ significantly between ABC importers and exporters reflecting the divergent structural and chemical nature of their substrates (1, 8, 9). Furthermore, ABC exporters bind substrates directly from the cytoplasm or bilayer inner leaflet and release them to the periplasm or bilayer outer leaflet (10, 11). In contrast, bacterial importers have their substrates delivered to the TMD by a dedicated high affinity substrate-binding protein (12).In Gram-negative bacteria, lipid A trafficking from its synthesis site on the inner membrane to its final destination in the outer membrane requires the ABC transporter MsbA (13). Although MsbA has not been directly shown to transport lipid A, suppression of MsbA activity leads to cytoplasmic accumulation of lipid A and inhibits bacterial growth strongly suggesting a role in translocation (14-16). In addition to this role in lipid A transport, MsbA shares sequence similarity with multidrug ABC transporters such as human ABCB1, LmrA of Lactococcus lactis, and Sav1866 of Staphylococcus aureus (16-19). ABCB1, a prototype of the ABC family, is a plasma membrane protein whose overexpression provides resistance to chemotherapeutic agents in cancer cells (1). LmrA and MsbA have overlapping substrate specificity with ABCB1 suggesting that both proteins can function as drug exporters (18, 20). Indeed, cells expressing MsbA confer resistance to erythromycin and ethidium bromide (21). MsbA can be photolabeled with the ABCB1/LmrA substrate azidopine and can transport Hoechst 33342 (H33342) across membrane vesicles in an energy-dependent manner (21).The structural mechanics of ABC exporters was revealed from comparison of the MsbA crystal structures in the apo- and nucleotide-bound states as well as from analysis by spin labeling EPR spectroscopy in liposomes (17, 19, 22, 23). The energy harnessed from ATP binding and hydrolysis drives a cycle of NBD association and dissociation that is transmitted to induce reorientation of the TMD from an inward- to outward-facing conformation (17, 19, 22). Large amplitude motion closes the cytoplasmic end of a chamber found at the interface between the two TMDs and opens it to the periplasm (23). These rearrangements lead to significant changes in chamber hydration, which may drive substrate translocation (22).Substrate binding must precede energy input, otherwise the cycle is futile, wasting the energy of ATP hydrolysis without substrate extrusion (7). Consistent with this model, ATP binding reduces ABCB1 substrate affinity, potentially through binding site occlusion (24-26). Furthermore, the TMD substrate-binding event signals the NBD to stimulate ATP hydrolysis increasing transport efficiency (1, 27, 28). However, there is a paucity of information regarding the location of substrate binding, the transport pathway, and the structural basis of substrate recognition by ABC exporters. In vitro studies of MsbA substrate specificity identify a broad range of substrates that stimulate ATPase activity (29). In addition to the putative physiological substrates lipid A and lipopolysaccharide (LPS), the ABCB1 substrates Ilmofosine, H33342, and verapamil differentially enhance ATP hydrolysis of MsbA (29, 30). Intrinsic MsbA tryptophan (Trp) fluorescence quenching by these putative substrate molecules provides further support of interaction (29).Extensive biochemical analysis of ABCB1 and LmrA provides a general model of substrate binding to ABC efflux exporters. This so-called “hydrophobic cleaner model” describes substrates binding from the inner leaflet of the bilayer and then translocating through the TMD (10, 31, 32). These studies also identified a large number of residues involved in substrate binding and selectivity (33). When these crucial residues are mapped onto the crystal structures of MsbA, a subset of homologous residues clusters to helices 3 and 6 lining the putative substrate pathway (34). Consistent with a role in substrate binding and specificity, simultaneous replacement of two serines (Ser-289 and Ser-290) in helix 6 of MsbA reduces binding and transport of ethidium and taxol, although H33342 and erythromycin interactions remain unaffected (34).The tendency of lipophilic substrates to partition into membranes confounds direct analysis of substrate interactions with ABC exporters (35, 36). Such partitioning may promote dynamic collisions with exposed Trp residues and nonspecific cross-linking in photo-affinity labeling experiments. In this study, we utilize a site-specific quenching approach to identify residues in the vicinity of the daunorubicin (DNR)-binding site (37). Although the data on DNR stimulation of ATP hydrolysis is inconclusive (20, 29, 30), the quenching of MsbA Trp fluorescence suggests a specific interaction. Spin labels were introduced along transmembrane helices 3, 4, and 6 of MsbA to assess their ATP-dependent quenching of DNR fluorescence. Residues that quench DNR cluster along the cytoplasmic end of helices 3 and 6 consistent with specific binding of DNR. Furthermore, many of these residues are not lipid-exposed but face the putative substrate chamber formed between the two TMDs. These residues are proximal to two Trps, which likely explains the previously reported quenching (29). Our results suggest DNR partitions to the membrane and then binds MsbA in a manner consistent with the hydrophobic cleaner model. Interpretation in the context of the crystal structures of MsbA identifies a putative translocation pathway through the transmembrane segment.  相似文献   

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