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1.
Dong Han Hamid Y. Qureshi Yifan Lu Hemant K. Paudel 《The Journal of biological chemistry》2009,284(20):13422-13433
In Alzheimer disease (AD), frontotemporal dementia and parkinsonism linked
to chromosome 17 (FTDP-17) and other tauopathies, tau accumulates and forms
paired helical filaments (PHFs) in the brain. Tau isolated from PHFs is
phosphorylated at a number of sites, migrates as ∼60-, 64-, and 68-kDa
bands on SDS-gel, and does not promote microtubule assembly. Upon
dephosphorylation, the PHF-tau migrates as ∼50–60-kDa bands on
SDS-gels in a manner similar to tau that is isolated from normal brain and
promotes microtubule assembly. The site(s) that inhibits microtubule
assembly-promoting activity when phosphorylated in the diseased brain is not
known. In this study, when tau was phosphorylated by Cdk5 in vitro,
its mobility shifted from ∼60-kDa bands to ∼64- and 68-kDa bands in a
time-dependent manner. This mobility shift correlated with phosphorylation at
Ser202, and Ser202 phosphorylation inhibited tau
microtubule-assembly promoting activity. When several tau point mutants were
analyzed, G272V, P301L, V337M, and R406W mutations associated with FTDP-17,
but not nonspecific mutations S214A and S262A, promoted Ser202
phosphorylation and mobility shift to a ∼68-kDa band. Furthermore,
Ser202 phosphorylation inhibited the microtubule assembly-promoting
activity of FTDP-17 mutants more than of WT. Our data indicate that FTDP-17
missense mutations, by promoting phosphorylation at Ser202, inhibit
the microtubule assembly-promoting activity of tau in vitro,
suggesting that Ser202 phosphorylation plays a major role in the
development of NFT pathology in AD and related tauopathies.Neurofibrillary tangles
(NFTs)4 and senile
plaques are the two characteristic neuropathological lesions found in the
brains of patients suffering from Alzheimer disease (AD). The major fibrous
component of NFTs are paired helical filaments (PHFs) (for reviews see Refs.
1–3).
Initially, PHFs were found to be composed of a protein component referred to
as “A68” (4).
Biochemical analysis reveled that A68 is identical to the
microtubule-associated protein, tau
(4,
5). Some characteristic
features of tau isolated from PHFs (PHF-tau) are that it is abnormally
hyperphosphorylated (phosphorylated on more sites than the normal brain tau),
does not bind to microtubules, and does not promote microtubule assembly
in vitro. Upon dephosphorylation, PHF-tau regains its ability to bind
to and promote microtubule assembly
(6,
7). Tau hyperphosphorylation is
suggested to cause microtubule instability and PHF formation, leading to NFT
pathology in the brain
(1–3).PHF-tau is phosphorylated on at least 21 proline-directed and
non-proline-directed sites (8,
9). The individual contribution
of these sites in converting tau to PHFs is not entirely clear. However, some
sites are only partially phosphorylated in PHFs
(8), whereas phosphorylation on
specific sites inhibits the microtubule assembly-promoting activity of tau
(6,
10). These observations
suggest that phosphorylation on a few sites may be responsible and sufficient
for causing tau dysfunction in AD.Tau purified from the human brain migrates as ∼50–60-kDa bands on
SDS-gel due to the presence of six isoforms that are phosphorylated to
different extents (2). PHF-tau
isolated from AD brain, on the other hand, displays ∼60-, 64-, and 68
kDa-bands on an SDS-gel (4,
5,
11). Studies have shown that
∼64- and 68-kDa tau bands (the authors have described the ∼68-kDa tau
band as an ∼69-kDa band in these studies) are present only in brain areas
affected by NFT degeneration
(12,
13). Their amount is
correlated with the NFT densities at the affected brain regions. Moreover, the
increase in the amount of ∼64- and 68-kDa band tau in the brain correlated
with a decline in the intellectual status of the patient. The ∼64- and
68-kDa tau bands were suggested to be the pathological marker of AD
(12,
13). Biochemical analyses
determined that ∼64- and 68-kDa bands are hyperphosphorylated tau, which
upon dephosphorylation, migrated as normal tau on SDS-gel
(4,
5,
11). Tau sites involved in the
tau mobility shift to ∼64- and 68-kDa bands were suggested to have a role
in AD pathology (12,
13). It is not known whether
phosphorylation at all 21 PHF-sites is required for the tau mobility shift in
AD. However, in vitro the tau mobility shift on SDS-gel is sensitive
to phosphorylation only on some sites
(6,
14). It is therefore possible
that in the AD brain, phosphorylation on some sites also causes a tau mobility
shift. Identification of such sites will significantly enhance our knowledge
of how NFT pathology develops in the brain.PHFs are also the major component of NFTs found in the brains of patients
suffering from a group of neurodegenerative disorders collectively called
tauopathies (2,
11). These disorders include
frontotemporal dementia and Parkinsonism linked to chromosome 17 (FTDP-17),
corticobasal degeneration, progressive supranuclear palsy, and Pick disease.
Each PHF-tau isolated from autopsied brains of patients suffering from various
tauopathies is hyperphosphorylated, displays ∼60-, 64-, and 68-kDa bands
on SDS-gel, and is incapable of binding to microtubules. Upon
dephosphorylation, the above referenced PHF-tau migrates as a normal tau on
SDS-gel, binds to microtubules, and promotes microtubule assembly
(2,
11). These observations
suggest that the mechanisms of NFT pathology in various tauopathies may be
similar and the phosphorylation-dependent mobility shift of tau on SDS-gel may
be an indicator of the disease. The tau gene is mutated in familial FTDP-17,
and these mutations accelerate NFT pathology in the brain
(15–18).
Understanding how FTDP-17 mutations promote tau phosphorylation can provide a
better understanding of how NFT pathology develops in AD and various
tauopathies. However, when expressed in CHO cells, G272V, R406W, V337M, and
P301L tau mutations reduce tau phosphorylation
(19,
20). In COS cells, although
G272V, P301L, and V337M mutations do not show any significant affect, the
R406W mutation caused a reduction in tau phosphorylation
(21,
22). When expressed in SH-SY5Y
cells subsequently differentiated into neurons, the R406W, P301L, and V337M
mutations reduce tau phosphorylation
(23). In contrast, in
hippocampal neurons, R406W increases tau phosphorylation
(24). When phosphorylated by
recombinant GSK3β in vitro, the P301L and V337M mutations do not
have any effect, and the R406W mutation inhibits phosphorylation
(25). However, when incubated
with rat brain extract, all of the G272V, P301L, V337M, and R406W mutations
stimulate tau phosphorylation
(26). The mechanism by which
FTDP-17 mutations promote tau phosphorylation leading to development of NFT
pathology has remained unclear.Cyclin-dependent protein kinase 5 (Cdk5) is one of the major kinases that
phosphorylates tau in the brain
(27,
28). In this study, to
determine how FTDP-17 missense mutations affect tau phosphorylation, we
phosphorylated four FTDP-17 tau mutants (G272V, P301L, V337M, and R406W) by
Cdk5. We have found that phosphorylation of tau by Cdk5 causes a tau mobility
shift to ∼64- and 68 kDa-bands. Although the mobility shift to a
∼64-kDa band is achieved by phosphorylation at Ser396/404 or
Ser202, the mobility shift to a 68-kDa band occurs only in response
to phosphorylation at Ser202. We show that in
vitro, FTDP-17 missense mutations, by promoting phosphorylation at
Ser202, enhance the mobility shift to ∼64- and 68-kDa bands and
inhibit the microtubule assembly-promoting activity of tau. Our data suggest
that Ser202 phosphorylation is the major event leading to NFT
pathology in AD and related tauopathies. 相似文献
2.
Bess Frost Rachel L. Jacks Marc I. Diamond 《The Journal of biological chemistry》2009,284(19):12845-12852
Tauopathies are neurodegenerative diseases characterized by aggregation of
the microtubule-associated protein Tau in neurons and glia. Although Tau is
normally considered an intracellular protein, Tau aggregates are observed in
the extracellular space, and Tau peptide is readily detected in the
cerebrospinal fluid of patients. Tau aggregation occurs in many diseases,
including Alzheimer disease and frontotemporal dementia. Tau pathology begins
in discrete, disease-specific regions but eventually involves much larger
areas of the brain. It is unknown how this propagation of Tau misfolding
occurs. We hypothesize that extracellular Tau aggregates can transmit a
misfolded state from the outside to the inside of a cell, similar to prions.
Here we show that extracellular Tau aggregates, but not monomer, are taken up
by cultured cells. Internalized Tau aggregates displace tubulin, co-localize
with dextran, a marker of fluid-phase endocytosis, and induce fibrillization
of intracellular full-length Tau. These intracellular fibrils are competent to
seed fibril formation of recombinant Tau monomer in vitro. Finally,
we observed that newly aggregated intracellular Tau transfers between
co-cultured cells. Our data indicate that Tau aggregates can propagate a
fibrillar, misfolded state from the outside to the inside of a cell. This may
have important implications for understanding how protein misfolding spreads
through the brains of tauopathy patients, and it is potentially relevant to
myriad neurodegenerative diseases associated with protein misfolding.Tau filament deposition in Alzheimer disease
(AD),2 frontotemporal
dementia (FTD), and other tauopathies correlates closely with cognitive
dysfunction and cell death (1).
Mutations in the tau gene cause autosomal dominant tauopathy,
implicating Tau as the proximal cause
(2–4).
Specific disease phenotypes are defined by the early sites of pathology. For
example, AD is characterized by memory loss that derives from involvement of
hippocampal neurons, whereas FTD is characterized by personality changes that
result from frontal lobe involvement
(5). Pathology ultimately
spreads to involve much larger regions of brain. Studies on patients with AD
show a progressive, stereotyped spread of Tau deposits from the
transentorhinal cortex to the hippocampus, and eventually to most cortical
areas
(6–8).
Others have correlated the distribution of neurofibrillary tangles of Tau in
AD brains with trans-synaptic distance from the affected areas
(9). A similar spread affecting
different subsets of neurons has been observed in other sporadic tauopathies,
such as progressive supranuclear palsy
(10). It is unknown why Tau
misfolding progresses through the brain, whether it is a sequence of cell
autonomous processes or whether a toxic factor is involved. Loss of synaptic
connections and cell death may expose healthy cells to toxic factors and
decrease available neurotrophins
(11,
12). Another possibility is
that the Tau protein itself serves as the agent of trans-cellular propagation.
For example, it has been shown that extracellular Tau is toxic to cultured
neuronal cells (13,
14). This is consistent with
the observation that immunotherapy against Tau reduces pathology in a mouse
model (15).Tau is well known as an intracellular protein that stabilizes microtubule
filaments (16); however, it is
readily detected in cerebrospinal fluid
(17) and as extracellular
aggregates, termed “ghost tangles,” in diseased brain. These are
comprised predominantly of the microtubule-binding region (MTBR), the
functional and pathogenic core of the Tau protein
(18). We hypothesize that Tau
aggregates present in the extracellular space enter naive cells and induce
misfolding of intracellular Tau. We have tested this idea using cellular
studies, biochemistry, and atomic force microscopy (AFM). 相似文献
3.
Aggregation of the Ure2 protein is at the origin of the [URE3]
prion trait in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The N-terminal
region of Ure2p is necessary and sufficient to induce the [URE3]
phenotype in vivo and to polymerize into amyloid-like fibrils in
vitro. However, as the N-terminal region is poorly ordered in the native
state, making it difficult to detect structural changes in this region by
spectroscopic methods, detailed information about the fibril assembly process
is therefore lacking. Short fibril-forming peptide regions (4–7
residues) have been identified in a number of prion and other amyloid-related
proteins, but such short regions have not yet been identified in Ure2p. In
this study, we identify a unique cysteine mutant (R17C) that can greatly
accelerate the fibril assembly kinetics of Ure2p under oxidizing conditions.
We found that the segment QVNI, corresponding to residues 18–21 in
Ure2p, plays a critical role in the fast assembly properties of R17C,
suggesting that this segment represents a potential amyloid-forming region. A
series of peptides containing the QVNI segment were found to form fibrils
in vitro. Furthermore, the peptide fibrils could seed fibril
formation for wild-type Ure2p. Preceding the QVNI segment with a cysteine or a
hydrophobic residue, instead of a charged residue, caused the rate of assembly
into fibrils to increase greatly for both peptides and full-length Ure2p. Our
results indicate that the potential amyloid stretch and its preceding residue
can modulate the fibril assembly of Ure2p to control the initiation of prion
formation.The [URE3] phenotype of Saccharomyces cerevisiae arises
because of conversion of the Ure2 protein to an aggregated propagatable prion
state (1,
2). Ure2p contains two regions:
a poorly structured N-terminal region and a compactly folded C-terminal region
(3,
4). The N-terminal region is
rich in Asn and Gln residues, is highly flexible, and is without any
detectable ordered secondary structure
(4–6).
This region is necessary and sufficient for prion behavior in vivo
(2) and amyloid-forming
capacity in vitro (5,
7), so it is referred to as the
prion domain (PrD).2
The C-terminal region has a fold similar to the glutathione
S-transferase superfamily
(8,
9) and possesses
glutathione-dependent peroxidase activity
(10). Upon fibril formation,
the N-terminal region undergoes a significant conformational change from an
unfolded to a thermally resistant conformation
(11), whereas the glutathione
S-transferase-like C-terminal domain retains its enzymatic activity,
suggesting that little conformational change occurs
(10,
12). Ure2p fibrils show
various morphologies, including variations in thickness and the presence or
absence of a periodic twist
(13–16).
The overall structure of the fibrils imaged by cryoelectron microscopy
suggests that the intact fibrils contain a 4-nm amyloid filament backbone
surrounded by C-terminal globular domains
(17).It is widely accepted that disulfide bonds play a critical role in
maintaining protein stability
(18–21)
and also affect the process of protein folding by influencing the folding
pathway
(22–25).
A recent study shows that the presence of a disulfide bond in a protein can
markedly accelerate the folding process
(26). Therefore, a disulfide
bond is a useful tool to study protein folding. In the study of prion and
other amyloid-related proteins, cysteine scanning has been widely used to
study the structure of amyloid fibrils, the driving force of amyloid
formation, and the plasticity of amyloid fibrils
(13,
27–31).Short segments from amyloid-related proteins, including IAPP
(islet amyloid polypeptide),
β2-microglobulin, insulin, and the amyloid-β peptide,
show amyloid-forming capacity
(32–34).
Hence, the amyloid stretch hypothesis has been proposed, which suggests that a
short amino acid stretch bearing a highly amyloidogenic motif might supply
most of the driving force needed to trigger the self-catalytic assembly
process of a protein to form fibrils
(35,
36). In support of this
hypothesis, it was found that the insertion of an amyloidogenic stretch into a
non-amyloid-related protein can trigger the amyloidosis of the protein
(36). At the same time, the
structural information obtained from microcrystals formed by amyloidogenic
stretches and bearing cross-β-structure has contributed significantly to
our understanding of the structure of intact fibrils at the atomic level
(34,
37). However, no amyloidogenic
stretches <10 amino acids have so far been identified in the yeast prion
protein Ure2.In this study, we performed a cysteine scan within the N-terminal PrD of
Ure2p and found a unique cysteine mutant (R17C) that eliminates the lag phase
of the Ure2p fibril assembly reaction upon the addition of oxidizing agents.
Furthermore, we identified a 4-residue region adjacent to Arg17 as
a potential amyloid stretch in Ure2p. 相似文献
4.
5.
Benjamin E. L. Lauffer Stanford Chen Cristina Melero Tanja Kortemme Mark von Zastrow Gabriel A. Vargas 《The Journal of biological chemistry》2009,284(4):2448-2458
Many G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) recycle after agonist-induced
endocytosis by a sequence-dependent mechanism, which is distinct from default
membrane flow and remains poorly understood. Efficient recycling of the
β2-adrenergic receptor (β2AR) requires a C-terminal PDZ
(PSD-95/Discs Large/ZO-1) protein-binding determinant (PDZbd), an intact actin
cytoskeleton, and is regulated by the endosomal protein Hrs (hepatocyte growth
factor-regulated substrate). The PDZbd is thought to link receptors to actin
through a series of protein interaction modules present in NHERF/EBP50
(Na+/H+ exchanger 3 regulatory factor/ezrin-binding phosphoprotein
of 50 kDa) family and ERM (ezrin/radixin/moesin) family proteins. It is not
known, however, if such actin connectivity is sufficient to recapitulate the
natural features of sequence-dependent recycling. We addressed this question
using a receptor fusion approach based on the sufficiency of the PDZbd to
promote recycling when fused to a distinct GPCR, the δ-opioid receptor,
which normally recycles inefficiently in HEK293 cells. Modular domains
mediating actin connectivity promoted receptor recycling with similarly high
efficiency as the PDZbd itself, and recycling promoted by all of the domains
was actin-dependent. Regulation of receptor recycling by Hrs, however, was
conferred only by the PDZbd and not by downstream interaction modules. These
results suggest that actin connectivity is sufficient to mimic the core
recycling activity of a GPCR-linked PDZbd but not its cellular regulation.G protein-coupled receptors
(GPCRs)2 comprise the
largest family of transmembrane signaling receptors expressed in animals and
transduce a wide variety of physiological and pharmacological information.
While these receptors share a common 7-transmembrane-spanning topology,
structural differences between individual GPCR family members confer diverse
functional and regulatory properties
(1-4).
A fundamental mechanism of GPCR regulation involves agonist-induced
endocytosis of receptors via clathrin-coated pits
(4). Regulated endocytosis can
have multiple functional consequences, which are determined in part by the
specificity with which internalized receptors traffic via divergent downstream
membrane pathways
(5-7).Trafficking of internalized GPCRs to lysosomes, a major pathway traversed
by the δ-opioid receptor (δOR), contributes to proteolytic
down-regulation of receptor number and produces a prolonged attenuation of
subsequent cellular responsiveness to agonist
(8,
9). Trafficking of internalized
GPCRs via a rapid recycling pathway, a major route traversed by the
β2-adrenergic receptor (β2AR), restores the complement of functional
receptors present on the cell surface and promotes rapid recovery of cellular
signaling responsiveness (6,
10,
11). When co-expressed in the
same cells, the δOR and β2AR are efficiently sorted between these
divergent downstream membrane pathways, highlighting the occurrence of
specific molecular sorting of GPCRs after endocytosis
(12).Recycling of various integral membrane proteins can occur by default,
essentially by bulk membrane flow in the absence of lysosomal sorting
determinants (13). There is
increasing evidence that various GPCRs, such as the β2AR, require
distinct cytoplasmic determinants to recycle efficiently
(14). In addition to requiring
a cytoplasmic sorting determinant, sequence-dependent recycling of the
β2AR differs from default recycling in its dependence on an intact actin
cytoskeleton and its regulation by the conserved endosomal sorting protein Hrs
(hepatocyte growth factor receptor substrate)
(11,
14). Compared with the present
knowledge regarding protein complexes that mediate sorting of GPCRs to
lysosomes (15,
16), however, relatively
little is known about the biochemical basis of sequence-directed recycling or
its regulation.The β2AR-derived recycling sequence conforms to a canonical PDZ
(PSD-95/Discs Large/ZO-1) protein-binding determinant (henceforth called
PDZbd), and PDZ-mediated protein association(s) with this sequence appear to
be primarily responsible for its endocytic sorting activity
(17-20).
Fusion of this sequence to the cytoplasmic tail of the δOR effectively
re-routes endocytic trafficking of engineered receptors from lysosomal to
recycling pathways, establishing the sufficiency of the PDZbd to function as a
transplantable sorting determinant
(18). The β2AR-derived
PDZbd binds with relatively high specificity to the NHERF/EBP50 family of PDZ
proteins (21,
22). A well-established
biochemical function of NHERF/EBP50 family proteins is to associate integral
membrane proteins with actin-associated cytoskeletal elements. This is
achieved through a series of protein-interaction modules linking NHERF/EBP50
family proteins to ERM (ezrin-radixin-moesin) family proteins and, in turn, to
actin filaments
(23-26).
Such indirect actin connectivity is known to mediate other effects on plasma
membrane organization and function
(23), however, and NHERF/EBP50
family proteins can bind to additional proteins potentially important for
endocytic trafficking of receptors
(23,
25). Thus it remains unclear
if actin connectivity is itself sufficient to promote sequence-directed
recycling of GPCRs and, if so, if such connectivity recapitulates the normal
cellular regulation of sequence-dependent recycling. In the present study, we
took advantage of the modular nature of protein connectivity proposed to
mediate β2AR recycling
(24,
26), and extended the opioid
receptor fusion strategy used successfully for identifying diverse recycling
sequences in GPCRs
(27-29),
to address these fundamental questions.Here we show that the recycling activity of the β2AR-derived PDZbd can
be effectively bypassed by linking receptors to ERM family proteins in the
absence of the PDZbd itself. Further, we establish that the protein
connectivity network can be further simplified by fusing receptors to an
interaction module that binds directly to actin filaments. We found that
bypassing the PDZ-mediated interaction using either domain is sufficient to
mimic the ability of the PDZbd to promote efficient, actin-dependent recycling
of receptors. Hrs-dependent regulation, however, which is characteristic of
sequence-dependent recycling of wild-type receptors, was recapitulated only by
the fused PDZbd and not by the proposed downstream interaction modules. These
results support a relatively simple architecture of protein connectivity that
is sufficient to mimic the core recycling activity of the β2AR-derived
PDZbd, but not its characteristic cellular regulation. Given that an
increasing number of GPCRs have been shown to bind PDZ proteins that typically
link directly or indirectly to cytoskeletal elements
(17,
27,
30-32),
the present results also suggest that actin connectivity may represent a
common biochemical principle underlying sequence-dependent recycling of
various GPCRs. 相似文献
6.
Rakez Kayed Anna Pensalfini Larry Margol Yuri Sokolov Floyd Sarsoza Elizabeth Head James Hall Charles Glabe 《The Journal of biological chemistry》2009,284(7):4230-4237
Amyloid oligomers are believed to play causal roles in several types of
amyloid-related neurodegenerative diseases. Several different types of amyloid
oligomers have been reported that differ in morphology, size, or toxicity,
raising the question of the pathological significance and structural
relationships between different amyloid oligomers. Annular protofibrils (APFs)
have been described in oligomer preparations of many different amyloidogenic
proteins and peptides as ring-shaped or pore-like structures. They are
interesting because their pore-like morphology is consistent with numerous
reports of membrane-permeabilizing activity of amyloid oligomers. Here we
report the preparation of relatively homogeneous preparations of APFs and an
antiserum selective for APFs (αAPF) compared with prefibrillar oligomers
(PFOs) and fibrils. PFOs appear to be precursors for APF formation, which form
in high yield after exposure to a hydrophobic-hydrophilic interface.
Surprisingly, preformed APFs do not permeabilize lipid bilayers, unlike the
precursor PFOs. APFs display a conformation-dependent, generic epitope that is
distinct from that of PFOs and amyloid fibrils. Incubation of PFOs with
phospholipids vesicles results in a loss of PFO immunoreactivity with a
corresponding increase in αAPF immunoreactivity, suggesting that lipid
vesicles catalyze the conversion of PFOs into APFs. The annular
anti-protofibril antibody also recognizes heptameric α-hemolysin pores,
but not monomers, suggesting that the antibody recognizes an epitope that is
specific for a β barrel structural motif.Many age-related neurodegenerative diseases are characterized by the
accumulation of amyloid deposits derived from a variety of misfolded proteins
(1). These diseases typically
have both sporadic and inherited forms, and in many cases the mutations
associated with the familial forms are in the gene encoding the protein that
accumulates or in genes directly related to its production, processing, or
accumulation (2). The genetic
linkage between the mutant allele and disease is evidence of the causal
relationship of amyloid accumulation to pathogenesis, and many of the
mutations either destabilize the natively folded state, produce more
amyloidogenic protein, or they increase its propensity to aggregate
(3). Although fibrillar amyloid
deposits are among the most obvious pathognomonic features of disease, their
role in pathogenesis is not clear. The extent of fibrillar amyloid plaque
deposition does not correlate well with Alzheimer''s disease pathogenesis, and
there are a significant number of non-demented individuals that have
equivalent amounts of amyloid plaques as disease patients
(4). Pathological changes are
observed in transgenic animals before the onset of amyloid plaque accumulation
(5,
6), and it has been reported
that soluble Aβ oligomers correlate better with dementia than insoluble,
fibrillar deposits (7,
8), suggesting that oligomeric
forms of Aβ may represent the primary toxic species. Soluble oligomers
have been implicated as the primary toxic species in many degenerative
diseases where the accumulation of large fibrillar deposits may be either
inert, protective, or pathological by a different mechanism (for review, see
Refs. 9 and
10).Aβ aggregates have been described ranging in size from dimers up to
particles of one million daltons or larger
(11–16).
In the atomic force microscope prefibrillar oligomers
(PFOs)3 appear as
spherical particles of ∼3–10 nm. PFOs appear at early times of
incubation and disappear as mature fibrils appear
(16–18).
At longer times of incubation PFOs appear to coalesce to form curvilinear
beaded strings that have been called protofibrils and ring-shaped, pore-like
structures referred to as annular protofibrils (APFs)
(17). APFs appear to be formed
from the circularization of PFO subunits. A similar spectrum of PFOs and APFs
has been observed for many types of amyloids, such as α-synuclein
(19), islet amyloid
(20), and non-disease
associated “neoamyloids”
(21). Although PFOs, APFs, and
fibrils have been observed for many different types of amyloidogenic proteins
and peptides (22), their
structures, interrelationships, and contributions to disease pathogenesis are
not entirely clear.Insoluble fibrils and small soluble pieces of fibrils known as fibrillar
oligomers appear to have a distinct and mutually exclusive underlying
structure than PFOs because they display generic epitopes that are recognized
by distinct conformation-dependent monoclonal antibodies
(23,
24) and antisera
(25,
26). It is not yet known
whether APFs represent a unique conformation or whether they are structurally
related to PFOs or fibrils. So far APFs have only been defined morphologically
as pore-like structures and have been observed in preparations of PFOs and in
fibril-containing preparations
(27–29).
Familial mutations associated with inherited forms of Parkinson and Alzheimer
diseases increase the formation of APFs, suggesting that their formation is
related to pathogenic activity
(17,
30). Based on the close
resemblance between APFs and bacterial pore-forming toxins, it has been
proposed that APFs permeabilize membranes
(22). Because membrane
permeabilization is a common pathogenic activity of prefibrillar amyloid
oligomers (31) and PFOs are a
precursor to annular protofibril formation, the formation of APFs is an
attractive explanation for the membrane permeabilization of oligomers because
annular protofibril formation is also a common assembly state and they
resemble pores morphologically.Investigating the pathological properties of Aβ APFs has been impeded
by a lack of homogeneous preparations of annular structures and the lack of a
facile means of distinguishing them from other aggregations states in
vivo. Here we report the preparation of relatively homogeneous
populations of APFs that have the same pore-like morphology previously
described. We have used these preparations to examine their aggregation
potential and membrane-permeabilizing properties and as an immunogen for the
preparation of an antiserum that selectively recognizes APFs, compared with
monomers, PFOs, and fibrils. APFs are stable and do not convert into fibrils
or PFOs within months of incubation. APFs also exhibit much lower
membrane-permeabilizing activity compared with the prefibrillar oligomer
precursors to APF formation. Interaction with a hydrophobic-hydrophilic
interface accelerates the conversion of PFOs into APFs. Incubation of PFOs
with lipid vesicles results in a rapid loss of the prefibrillar oligomer
specific epitope and the coordinate appearance of an annular
protofibril-specific epitope. APFs display a unique conformation-dependent
epitope that is distinct from PFOs and fibrils. Anti-annular protofibril
antibody recognizes mature heptameric pores from α-hemolysin, suggesting
that APFs may form β-barrel pore structures. 相似文献
7.
Kuen-Feng Chen Pei-Yen Yeh Chiun Hsu Chih-Hung Hsu Yen-Shen Lu Hsing-Pang Hsieh Pei-Jer Chen Ann-Lii Cheng 《The Journal of biological chemistry》2009,284(17):11121-11133
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, , 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) LY2940022 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
(10–13),
prostate
(14–17),
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,
22–23,
28), c-FLIP
(4,
11,
21–23,
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
8.
Eun-Yeong Bergsdorf Anselm A. Zdebik Thomas J. Jentsch 《The Journal of biological chemistry》2009,284(17):11184-11193
Members of the CLC gene family either function as chloride channels or as
anion/proton exchangers. The plant AtClC-a uses the pH gradient across the
vacuolar membrane to accumulate the nutrient
in this organelle. When AtClC-a was
expressed in Xenopus oocytes, it mediated
exchange
and less efficiently mediated Cl–/H+ exchange.
Mutating the “gating glutamate” Glu-203 to alanine resulted in an
uncoupled anion conductance that was larger for Cl– than
. Replacing the “proton
glutamate” Glu-270 by alanine abolished currents. These could be
restored by the uncoupling E203A mutation. Whereas mammalian endosomal ClC-4
and ClC-5 mediate stoichiometrically coupled
2Cl–/H+ exchange, their
transport is largely uncoupled from
protons. By contrast, the AtClC-a-mediated
accumulation in plant vacuoles
requires tight
coupling. Comparison of AtClC-a and ClC-5 sequences identified a proline in
AtClC-a that is replaced by serine in all mammalian CLC isoforms. When this
proline was mutated to serine (P160S), Cl–/H+
exchange of AtClC-a proceeded as efficiently as
exchange, suggesting a role of this residue in
exchange. Indeed, when the corresponding serine of ClC-5 was replaced by
proline, this Cl–/H+ exchanger gained efficient
coupling. When inserted into the model Torpedo chloride channel
ClC-0, the equivalent mutation increased nitrate relative to chloride
conductance. Hence, proline in the CLC pore signature sequence is important
for
exchange and conductance both in
plants and mammals. Gating and proton glutamates play similar roles in
bacterial, plant, and mammalian CLC anion/proton exchangers.CLC proteins are found in all phyla from bacteria to humans and either
mediate electrogenic anion/proton exchange or function as chloride channels
(1). In mammals, the roles of
plasma membrane CLC Cl– channels include transepithelial
transport
(2–5)
and control of muscle excitability
(6), whereas vesicular CLC
exchangers may facilitate endocytosis
(7) and lysosomal function
(8–10)
by electrically shunting vesicular proton pump currents
(11). In the plant
Arabidopsis thaliana, there are seven CLC isoforms
(AtClC-a–AtClC-g)2
(12–15),
which may mostly reside in intracellular membranes. AtClC-a uses the pH
gradient across the vacuolar membrane to transport the nutrient nitrate into
that organelle (16). This
secondary active transport requires a tightly coupled
exchange. Astonishingly, however, mammalian ClC-4 and -5 and bacterial EcClC-1
(one of the two CLC isoforms in Escherichia coli) display tightly
coupled Cl–/H+ exchange, but anion flux is largely
uncoupled from H+ when
is transported
(17–21).
The lack of appropriate expression systems for plant CLC transporters
(12) has so far impeded
structure-function analysis that may shed light on the ability of AtClC-a to
perform efficient
exchange. This dearth of data contrasts with the extensive mutagenesis work
performed with CLC proteins from animals and bacteria.The crystal structure of bacterial CLC homologues
(22,
23) and the investigation of
mutants (17,
19–21,
24–29)
have yielded important insights into their structure and function. CLC
proteins form dimers with two largely independent permeation pathways
(22,
25,
30,
31). Each of the monomers
displays two anion binding sites
(22). A third binding site is
observed when a certain key glutamate residue, which is located halfway in the
permeation pathway of almost all CLC proteins, is mutated to alanine
(23). Mutating this gating
glutamate in CLC Cl– channels strongly affects or even
completely suppresses single pore gating
(23), whereas CLC exchangers
are transformed by such mutations into pure anion conductances that are not
coupled to proton transport
(17,
19,
20). Another key glutamate,
located at the cytoplasmic surface of the CLC monomer, seems to be a hallmark
of CLC anion/proton exchangers. Mutating this proton glutamate to
nontitratable amino acids uncouples anion transport from protons in the
bacterial EcClC-1 protein (27)
but seems to abolish transport altogether in mammalian ClC-4 and -5
(21). In those latter
proteins, anion transport could be restored by additionally introducing an
uncoupling mutation at the gating glutamate
(21).The functional complementation by AtClC-c and -d
(12,
32) of growth phenotypes of a
yeast strain deleted for the single yeast CLC Gef1
(33) suggested that these
plant CLC proteins function in anion transport but could not reveal details of
their biophysical properties. We report here the first functional expression
of a plant CLC in animal cells. Expression of wild-type (WT) and mutant
AtClC-a in Xenopus oocytes indicate a general role of gating and
proton glutamate residues in anion/proton coupling across different isoforms
and species. We identified a proline in the CLC signature sequence of AtClC-a
that plays a crucial role in
exchange. Mutating it to serine, the residue present in mammalian CLC proteins
at this position, rendered AtClC-a Cl–/H+ exchange
as efficient as
exchange. Conversely, changing the corresponding serine of ClC-5 to proline
converted it into an efficient
exchanger. When proline replaced the critical serine in Torpedo
ClC-0, the relative conductance of
this model Cl– channel was drastically increased, and
“fast” protopore gating was slowed. 相似文献
9.
Tushar K. Beuria Srinivas Mullapudi Eugenia Mileykovskaya Mahalakshmi Sadasivam William Dowhan William Margolin 《The Journal of biological chemistry》2009,284(21):14079-14086
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
(6–8),
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,
13–15).
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
(31–33).
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
10.
Ruben K. Dagda Salvatore J. Cherra III Scott M. Kulich Anurag Tandon David Park Charleen T. Chu 《The Journal of biological chemistry》2009,284(20):13843-13855
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
11.
12.
De-Kuan Chang Chien-Yu Chiu Szu-Yao Kuo Wei-Chuan Lin Albert Lo Yi-Ping Wang Pi-Chun Li Han-Chung Wu 《The Journal of biological chemistry》2009,284(19):12905-12916
It is known that solid tumors recruit new blood vessels to support tumor
growth, but the molecular diversity of receptors in tumor angiogenic vessels
might also be used clinically to develop better targeted therapy. In
vivo phage display was used to identify peptides that specifically target
tumor blood vessels. Several novel peptides were identified as being able to
recognize tumor vasculature but not normal blood vessels in severe combined
immunodeficiency (SCID) mice bearing human tumors. These tumor-homing peptides
also bound to blood vessels in surgical specimens of various human cancers.
The peptide-linked liposomes containing fluorescent substance were capable of
translocating across the plasma membrane through endocytosis. With the
conjugation of peptides and liposomal doxorubicin, the targeted drug delivery
systems enhanced the therapeutic efficacy of the chemotherapeutic agent
against human cancer xenografts by decreasing tumor angiogenesis and
increasing cancer cell apoptosis. Furthermore, the peptide-mediated targeting
liposomes improved the pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of the drug they
delivered compared with nontargeting liposomes or free drugs. Our results
indicate that the tumor-homing peptides can be used specifically target tumor
vasculature and have the potential to improve the systemic treatment of
patients with solid tumors.One of the primary goals of a cancer treatment regimen is to deliver
sufficient amounts of a drug to targeted tumors while minimizing damage to
normal tissues. Most chemotherapeutic but cytotoxic agents enter the normal
tissues in the body indiscriminately without much preference for tumor sites.
The dose reaching the tumor may be as little as 5–10% of the dose
accumulating in normal organs
(1). One reason is that
interstitial fluid pressure in solid tumors is higher than in normal tissues,
which leads to decreased transcapillary transport of chemotherapy or
anticancer antibodies into tumor tissues
(2–4).
Cancer cells are therefore exposed to a less than effective concentration of
the drug than normal cells, whereas the rest of the body must be subjected to
increased toxicity and decreased effectiveness. This phenomenon often limits
the dose of anti-cancer drugs that can be given to a patient without severe
harm, resulting in incomplete tumor response, early disease relapse, and drug
resistance.The development of drug delivery systems represents the ongoing effort to
improve the selectivity and efficacy of antineoplastic drugs. Compared with
conventional administration methods for chemotherapeutic agents, lipid- or
polymer-based nanomedicines have the advantage of improving the
pharmacological and therapeutic properties of cytotoxic drugs
(5,
6). Most small molecule
chemotherapeutic agents have a large volume of distribution upon intravenous
administration (7) and a narrow
therapeutic window because of severe toxicity to normal tissues. By
encapsulating drugs in drug delivery particles, such as liposomes, the volume
of distribution is significantly reduced, and the concentration of drug within
the tumor is increased (8).The coupling of polyethylene glycol
(PEG)2 to liposomes
(PEGylated liposomes), which have a longer half-life in the blood
(9–11),
is regarded as having great potential in a drug delivery system. For example,
PEGylated liposome-encapsulated doxorubicin has been reported to significantly
improve the therapeutic index of doxorubicin in preclinical
(10,
12,
13) and clinical studies
(14–16).
Many of these drug delivery systems have entered the clinic and have been
shown to improve the pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of the drugs they
deliver (6).The growth of solid tumors is dependent on their capacity to induce the
growth of blood vessels to supply them with oxygen and nutrients. However, the
blood vessels of tumors present specific characteristics not observed in
normal tissues, including extensive angiogenesis, leaky vascular architecture,
impaired lymphatic drainage, and increased expression of permeability
mediators on the cell surface
(17,
18). These characteristics
might be used to develop antiangiogenic target therapy for cancer. The
hyperpermeability of tumor vasculature, for example, is a key factor for the
success of liposome-delivered chemotherapy agents. The angiogenic tumor
vasculature is estimated to have an average pore size of 100–600 nm
(19). These pores are
significantly larger than the gaps found in normal endothelium, which are
typically <6 nm wide (8).
After intravenous administration, liposomes with diameters of ∼65–75
nm
(20–22)
are small enough to passively infiltrate tumor endothelium but large enough to
be excluded from normal endothelium. In solid tumors, the permeability of the
tissue vasculature increases to the point that particulate liposomes can
extravasate and localize in the tissue interstitial space
(19). In addition, tumor
tissues frequently lack effective lymphatic drainage
(3), which promotes liposome
retention. The combination of these factors leads to an accumulation of the
drug delivering liposome within the tumor. This passive targeting phenomenon
has been called the “enhanced permeability and retention effect”
(23,
24).The use of liposomes for passive targeting has some disadvantages. Normal
organ uptake of liposomes leads to accumulation of the encapsulated drug in
mononuclear phagocytic system cells in the liver, spleen, and bone marrow,
which may be toxic to these tissues. With the increased circulation time and
confinement of the particulate liposomes, hematological toxicities, such as
neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, and leucopenia, have also appeared
(25,
26). Ongoing research aims to
enhance the tumor site-specific action of the liposomes by attaching them to
ligands that target tumor cell
(21,
27) and tumor vasculature
(20,
28) surface molecules. These
liposomes are called active or ligand-mediated targeting liposomes.Combinatorial libraries displayed on phage have been used successfully to
discover cell surface-binding peptides and have thus become an excellent means
of identifying tumor specific targeting ligands. Phage-displayed peptide
libraries have been used to identify B-cell epitopes
(29–31).
They can also be used to search for disease-specific antigen mimics
(32,
33) and identify tumor cells
(21,
34) and tumor
vasculature-specific peptides
(35). Screening phage display
libraries against specific target tissues is therefore a fast, direct method
for identifying peptide sequences that might be used for drug targeting or
gene delivery. By combining a drug delivery system with tumor-specific
peptides, it is possible that targeting liposome can deliver as many as
several thousand anticancer drug molecules to tumor cells via only a few
targeting ligand molecules.In this in vivo study, we developed a method capable of selecting
peptides that home to tumor tissues. We identified several targeting peptides
able to bind specifically to tumor vasculature in surgical specimens of human
cancer and xenografts. Coupling these peptides with a liposome containing the
anti-cancer drug doxorubicin (Lipo-Dox; LD) enhanced the efficacy of the drug
against several types of human cancer xenografts in SCID mice. Our results
indicate that these targeting peptides can potentially play an important role
in the development of more effective drug delivery systems. 相似文献
13.
Isabel Molina-Ortiz Rub��n A. Bartolom�� Pablo Hern��ndez-Varas Georgina P. Colo Joaquin Teixid�� 《The Journal of biological chemistry》2009,284(22):15147-15157
Melanoma cells express the chemokine receptor CXCR4 that confers high
invasiveness upon binding to its ligand CXCL12. Melanoma cells at initial
stages of the disease show reduction or loss of E-cadherin expression, but
recovery of its expression is frequently found at advanced phases. We
overexpressed E-cadherin in the highly invasive BRO lung metastatic cell
melanoma cell line to investigate whether it could influence CXCL12-promoted
cell invasion. Overexpression of E-cadherin led to defective invasion of
melanoma cells across Matrigel and type I collagen in response to CXCL12. A
decrease in individual cell migration directionality toward the chemokine and
reduced adhesion accounted for the impaired invasion. A p190RhoGAP-dependent
inhibition of RhoA activation was responsible for the impairment in
chemokine-stimulated E-cadherin melanoma transfectant invasion. Furthermore,
we show that p190RhoGAP and p120ctn associated predominantly on the plasma
membrane of cells overexpressing E-cadherin, and that E-cadherin-bound p120ctn
contributed to RhoA inactivation by favoring p190RhoGAP-RhoA association.
These results suggest that melanoma cells at advanced stages of the disease
could have reduced metastatic potency in response to chemotactic stimuli
compared with cells lacking E-cadherin, and the results indicate that
p190RhoGAP is a central molecule controlling melanoma cell invasion.Cadherins are a family of Ca2+-dependent adhesion molecules that
mediate cell-cell contacts and are expressed in most solid tissues providing a
tight control of morphogenesis
(1,
2). Classical cadherins, such
as epithelial (E) cadherin, are found in adherens junctions, forming core
protein complexes with β-catenin, α-catenin, and p120 catenin
(p120ctn). Both β-catenin and p120ctn directly interact with E-cadherin,
whereas α-catenin associates with the complex through its binding to
β-catenin, providing a link with the actin cytoskeleton
(1,
2). E-cadherin is frequently
lost or down-regulated in many human tumors, coincident with morphological
epithelial to mesenchymal transition and acquisition of invasiveness
(3-6).Although melanoma only accounts for 5% of skin cancers, when metastasis
starts, it is responsible for 80% of deaths from skin cancers
(7). Melanocytes express
E-cadherin
(8-10),
but melanoma cells at early radial growth phase show a large reduction in the
expression of this cadherin, and surprisingly, expression has been reported to
be partially recovered by vertical growth phase and metastatic melanoma cells
(9,
11,
12).Trafficking of cancer cells from primary tumor sites to intravasation into
blood circulation and later to extravasation to colonize distant organs
requires tightly regulated directional cues and cell migration and invasion
that are mediated by chemokines, growth factors, and adhesion molecules
(13). Solid tumor cells
express chemokine receptors that provide guidance of these cells to organs
where their chemokine ligands are expressed, constituting a homing model
resembling the one used by immune cells to exert their immune surveillance
functions (14). Most solid
cancer cells express CXCR4, a receptor for the chemokine CXCL12 (also called
SDF-1), which is expressed in lungs, bone marrow, and liver
(15). Expression of CXCR4 in
human melanoma has been detected in the vertical growth phase and on regional
lymph nodes, which correlated with poor prognosis and increased mortality
(16,
17). Previous in vivo
experiments have provided evidence supporting a crucial role for CXCR4 in the
metastasis of melanoma cells
(18).Rho GTPases control the dynamics of the actin cytoskeleton during cell
migration (19,
20). The activity of Rho
GTPases is tightly regulated by guanine-nucleotide exchange factors
(GEFs),4 which
stimulate exchange of bound GDP by GTP, and inhibited by GTPase-activating
proteins (GAPs), which promote GTP hydrolysis
(21,
22), whereas guanine
nucleotide dissociation inhibitors (GDIs) appear to mediate blocking of
spontaneous activation (23).
Therefore, cell migration is finely regulated by the balance between GEF, GAP,
and GDI activities on Rho GTPases. Involvement of Rho GTPases in cancer is
well documented (reviewed in Ref.
24), providing control of both
cell migration and growth. RhoA and RhoC are highly expressed in colon,
breast, and lung carcinoma
(25,
26), whereas overexpression of
RhoC in melanoma leads to enhancement of cell metastasis
(27). CXCL12 activates both
RhoA and Rac1 in melanoma cells, and both GTPases play key roles during
invasion toward this chemokine
(28,
29).Given the importance of the CXCL12-CXCR4 axis in melanoma cell invasion and
metastasis, in this study we have addressed the question of whether changes in
E-cadherin expression on melanoma cells might affect cell invasiveness. We
show here that overexpression of E-cadherin leads to impaired melanoma cell
invasion to CXCL12, and we provide mechanistic characterization accounting for
the decrease in invasion. 相似文献
14.
Denise A. Berti Cain Morano Lilian C. Russo Leandro M. Castro Fernanda M. Cunha Xin Zhang Juan Sironi Cl��cio F. Klitzke Emer S. Ferro Lloyd D. Fricker 《The Journal of biological chemistry》2009,284(21):14105-14116
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
(8–10).
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
(10–12).
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
(23–25)
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
15.
16.
17.
18.
Andrés Norambuena Claudia Metz Lucas Vicu?a Antonia Silva Evelyn Pardo Claudia Oyanadel Loreto Massardo Alfonso González Andrea Soza 《The Journal of biological chemistry》2009,284(19):12670-12679
Galectins have been implicated in T cell homeostasis playing complementary
pro-apoptotic roles. Here we show that galectin-8 (Gal-8) is a potent
pro-apoptotic agent in Jurkat T cells inducing a complex phospholipase
D/phosphatidic acid signaling pathway that has not been reported for any
galectin before. Gal-8 increases phosphatidic signaling, which enhances the
activity of both ERK1/2 and type 4 phosphodiesterases (PDE4), with a
subsequent decrease in basal protein kinase A activity. Strikingly, rolipram
inhibition of PDE4 decreases ERK1/2 activity. Thus Gal-8-induced PDE4
activation releases a negative influence of cAMP/protein kinase A on ERK1/2.
The resulting strong ERK1/2 activation leads to expression of the death factor
Fas ligand and caspase-mediated apoptosis. Several conditions that decrease
ERK1/2 activity also decrease apoptosis, such as anti-Fas ligand blocking
antibodies. In addition, experiments with freshly isolated human peripheral
blood mononuclear cells, previously stimulated with anti-CD3 and anti-CD28,
show that Gal-8 is pro-apoptotic on activated T cells, most likely on a
subpopulation of them. Anti-Gal-8 autoantibodies from patients with systemic
lupus erythematosus block the apoptotic effect of Gal-8. These results
implicate Gal-8 as a novel T cell suppressive factor, which can be
counterbalanced by function-blocking autoantibodies in autoimmunity.Glycan-binding proteins of the galectin family have been increasingly
studied as regulators of the immune response and potential therapeutic agents
for autoimmune disorders (1).
To date, 15 galectins have been identified and classified according with the
structural organization of their distinctive monomeric or dimeric carbohydrate
recognition domain for β-galactosides
(2,
3). Galectins are secreted by
unconventional mechanisms and once outside the cells bind to and cross-link
multiple glycoconjugates both at the cell surface and at the extracellular
matrix, modulating processes as diverse as cell adhesion, migration,
proliferation, differentiation, and apoptosis
(4–10).
Several galectins have been involved in T cell homeostasis because of their
capability to kill thymocytes, activated T cells, and T cell lines
(11–16).
Pro-apoptotic galectins might contribute to shape the T cell repertoire in the
thymus by negative selection, restrict the immune response by eliminating
activated T cells at the periphery
(1), and help cancer cells to
escape the immune system by eliminating cancer-infiltrating T cells
(17). They have also a
promising therapeutic potential to eliminate abnormally activated T cells and
inflammatory cells (1). Studies
on the mostly explored galectins, Gal-1, -3, and -9
(14,
15,
18–20),
as well as in Gal-2 (13),
suggest immunosuppressive complementary roles inducing different pathways to
apoptosis. Galectin-8
(Gal-8)4 is one of the
most widely expressed galectins in human tissues
(21,
22) and cancerous cells
(23,
24). Depending on the cell
context and mode of presentation, either as soluble stimulus or extracellular
matrix, Gal-8 can promote cell adhesion, spreading, growth, and apoptosis
(6,
7,
9,
10,
22,
25). Its role has been mostly
studied in relation to tumor malignancy
(23,
24). However, there is some
evidence regarding a role for Gal-8 in T cell homeostasis and autoimmune or
inflammatory disorders. For instance, the intrathymic expression and
pro-apoptotic effect of Gal-8 upon CD4highCD8high
thymocytes suggest a role for Gal-8 in shaping the T cell repertoire
(16). Gal-8 could also
modulate the inflammatory function of neutrophils
(26), Moreover Gal-8-blocking
agents have been detected in chronic autoimmune disorders
(10,
27,
28). In rheumatoid arthritis,
Gal-8 has an anti-inflammatory action, promoting apoptosis of synovial fluid
cells, but can be counteracted by a specific rheumatoid version of CD44
(CD44vRA) (27). In systemic
lupus erythematosus (SLE), a prototypic autoimmune disease, we recently
described function-blocking autoantibodies against Gal-8
(10,
28). Thus it is important to
define the role of Gal-8 and the influence of anti-Gal-8 autoantibodies in
immune cells.In Jurkat T cells, we previously reported that Gal-8 interacts with
specific integrins, such as α1β1, α3β1, and
α5β1 but not α4β1, and as a matrix protein promotes cell
adhesion and asymmetric spreading through activation of the extracellular
signal-regulated kinases 1 and 2 (ERK1/2)
(10). These early effects
occur within 5–30 min. However, ERK1/2 signaling supports long term
processes such as T cell survival or death, depending on the moment of the
immune response. During T cell activation, ERK1/2 contributes to enhance the
expression of interleukin-2 (IL-2) required for T cell clonal expansion
(29). It also supports T cell
survival against pro-apoptotic Fas ligand (FasL) produced by themselves and by
other previously activated T cells
(30,
31). Later on, ERK1/2 is
required for activation-induced cell death, which controls the extension of
the immune response by eliminating recently activated and restimulated T cells
(32,
33). In activation-induced
cell death, ERK1/2 signaling contributes to enhance the expression of FasL and
its receptor Fas/CD95 (32,
33), which constitute a
preponderant pro-apoptotic system in T cells
(34). Here, we ask whether
Gal-8 is able to modulate the intensity of ERK1/2 signaling enough to
participate in long term processes involved in T cell homeostasis.The functional integration of ERK1/2 and PKA signaling
(35) deserves special
attention. cAMP/PKA signaling plays an immunosuppressive role in T cells
(36) and is altered in SLE
(37). Phosphodiesterases
(PDEs) that degrade cAMP release the immunosuppressive action of cAMP/PKA
during T cell activation (38,
39). PKA has been described to
control the activity of ERK1/2 either positively or negatively in different
cells and processes (35). A
little explored integration among ERK1/2 and PKA occurs via phosphatidic acid
(PA) and PDE signaling. Several stimuli activate phospholipase D (PLD) that
hydrolyzes phosphatidylcholine into PA and choline. Such PLD-generated PA
plays roles in signaling interacting with a variety of targeting proteins that
bear PA-binding domains (40).
In this way PA recruits Raf-1 to the plasma membrane
(41). It is also converted by
phosphatidic acid phosphohydrolase (PAP) activity into diacylglycerol (DAG),
which among other functions, recruits and activates the GTPase Ras
(42). Both Ras and Raf-1 are
upstream elements of the ERK1/2 activation pathway
(43). In addition, PA binds to
and activates PDEs of the type 4 subfamily (PDE4s) leading to decreased cAMP
levels and PKA down-regulation
(44). The regulation and role
of PA-mediated control of ERK1/2 and PKA remain relatively unknown in T cell
homeostasis, because it is also unknown whether galectins stimulate the PLD/PA
pathway.Here we found that Gal-8 induces apoptosis in Jurkat T cells by triggering
cross-talk between PKA and ERK1/2 pathways mediated by PLD-generated PA. Our
results for the first time show that a galectin increases the PA levels,
down-regulates the cAMP/PKA system by enhancing rolipram-sensitive PDE
activity, and induces an ERK1/2-dependent expression of the pro-apoptotic
factor FasL. The enhanced PDE activity induced by Gal-8 is required for the
activation of ERK1/2 that finally leads to apoptosis. Gal-8 also induces
apoptosis in human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC), especially after
activating T cells with anti-CD3/CD28. Therefore, Gal-8 shares with other
galectins the property of killing activated T cells contributing to the T cell
homeostasis. The pathway involves a particularly integrated signaling context,
engaging PLD/PA, cAMP/PKA, and ERK1/2, which so far has not been reported for
galectins. The pro-apoptotic function of Gal-8 also seems to be unique in its
susceptibility to inhibition by anti-Gal-8 autoantibodies. 相似文献
19.
Motoki Takaku Shinichi Machida Noriko Hosoya Shugo Nakayama Yoshimasa Takizawa Isao Sakane Takehiko Shibata Kiyoshi Miyagawa Hitoshi Kurumizaka 《The Journal of biological chemistry》2009,284(21):14326-14336
The RAD51 protein is a central player in homologous recombinational repair.
The RAD51B protein is one of five RAD51 paralogs that function in the
homologous recombinational repair pathway in higher eukaryotes. In the present
study, we found that the human EVL (Ena/Vasp-like) protein, which is suggested
to be involved in actin-remodeling processes, unexpectedly binds to the RAD51
and RAD51B proteins and stimulates the RAD51-mediated homologous pairing and
strand exchange. The EVL knockdown cells impaired RAD51 assembly onto damaged
DNA after ionizing radiation or mitomycin C treatment. The EVL protein alone
promotes single-stranded DNA annealing, and the recombination activities of
the EVL protein are further enhanced by the RAD51B protein. The expression of
the EVL protein is not ubiquitous, but it is significantly expressed in breast
cancer-derived MCF7 cells. These results suggest that the EVL protein is a
novel recombination factor that may be required for repairing specific DNA
lesions, and that may cause tumor malignancy by its inappropriate
expression.Chromosomal DNA double strand breaks
(DSBs)2 are potential
inducers of chromosomal aberrations and tumorigenesis, and they are accurately
repaired by the homologous recombinational repair (HRR) pathway, without base
substitutions, deletions, and insertions
(1–3).
In the HRR pathway (4,
5), single-stranded DNA (ssDNA)
tails are produced at the DSB sites. The RAD51 protein, a eukaryotic homologue
of the bacterial RecA protein, binds to the ssDNA tail and forms a helical
nucleoprotein filament. The RAD51-ssDNA filament then binds to the intact
double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) to form a three-component complex, containing
ssDNA, dsDNA, and the RAD51 protein. In this three-component complex, the
RAD51 protein promotes recombination reactions, such as homologous pairing and
strand exchange
(6–9).The RAD51 protein requires auxiliary proteins to promote the homologous
pairing and strand exchange reactions efficiently in cells
(10–12).
In humans, the RAD52, RAD54, and RAD54B proteins directly interact with the
RAD51 protein
(13–17)
and stimulate the RAD51-mediated homologous pairing and/or strand exchange
reactions in vitro
(18–21).
The human RAD51AP1 protein, which directly binds to the RAD51 protein
(22), was also found to
stimulate RAD51-mediated homologous pairing in vitro
(23,
24). The BRCA2 protein
contains ssDNA-binding, dsDNA-binding, and RAD51-binding motifs
(25–33),
and the Ustilago maydis BRCA2 ortholog, Brh2, reportedly stimulated
RAD51-mediated strand exchange
(34,
35). Most of these
RAD51-interacting factors are known to be required for efficient RAD51
assembly onto DSB sites in cells treated with ionizing radiation
(10–12).The RAD51B (RAD51L1, Rec2) protein is a member of the RAD51 paralogs, which
share about 20–30% amino acid sequence similarity with the RAD51 protein
(36–38).
RAD51B-deficient cells are hypersensitive to DSB-inducing agents,
such as cisplatin, mitomycin C (MMC), and γ-rays, indicating that the
RAD51B protein is involved in the HRR pathway
(39–44).
Genetic experiments revealed that RAD51B-deficient cells exhibited
impaired RAD51 assembly onto DSB sites
(39,
44), suggesting that the
RAD51B protein functions in the early stage of the HRR pathway. Biochemical
experiments also suggested that the RAD51B protein participates in the early
to late stages of the HRR pathway
(45–47).In the present study, we found that the human EVL (Ena/Vasp-like) protein
binds to the RAD51 and RAD51B proteins in a HeLa cell extract. The EVL protein
is known to be involved in cytoplasmic actin remodeling
(48) and is also overexpressed
in breast cancer (49). Like
the RAD51B knockdown cells, the EVL knockdown cells partially impaired RAD51
foci formation after DSB induction, suggesting that the EVL protein enhances
RAD51 assembly onto DSB sites. The purified EVL protein preferentially bound
to ssDNA and stimulated RAD51-mediated homologous pairing and strand exchange.
The EVL protein also promoted the annealing of complementary strands. These
recombination reactions that were stimulated or promoted by the EVL protein
were further enhanced by the RAD51B protein. These results strongly suggested
that the EVL protein is a novel factor that activates RAD51-mediated
recombination reactions, probably with the RAD51B protein. We anticipate that,
in addition to its involvement in cytoplasmic actin dynamics, the EVL protein
may be required in homologous recombination for repairing specific DNA
lesions, and it may cause tumor malignancy by inappropriate recombination
enhanced by EVL overexpression in certain types of tumor cells. 相似文献
20.
Christopher P. Gayer Lakshmi S. Chaturvedi Shouye Wang David H. Craig Thomas Flanigan Marc D. Basson 《The Journal of biological chemistry》2009,284(4):2001-2011
The intestinal epithelium is repetitively deformed by shear, peristalsis,
and villous motility. Such repetitive deformation stimulates the proliferation
of intestinal epithelial cells on collagen or laminin substrates via ERK, but
the upstream mediators of this effect are poorly understood. We hypothesized
that the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K)/AKT cascade mediates this
mitogenic effect. PI3K, AKT, and glycogen synthase kinase-3β
(GSK-3β) were phosphorylated by 10 cycles/min strain at an average 10%
deformation, and pharmacologic blockade of these molecules or reduction by
small interfering RNA (siRNA) prevented the mitogenic effect of strain in
Caco-2 or IEC-6 intestinal epithelial cells. Strain MAPK activation required
PI3K but not AKT. AKT isoform-specific siRNA transfection demonstrated that
AKT2 but not AKT1 is required for GSK-3β phosphorylation and the strain
mitogenic effect. Furthermore, overexpression of AKT1 or an AKT chimera
including the PH domain and hinge region of AKT2 and the catalytic domain and
C-tail of AKT1 prevented strain activation of GSK-3β, but overexpression
of AKT2 or a chimera including the PH domain and hinge region of AKT1 and the
catalytic domain and C-tail of AKT2 did not. These data delineate a role for
PI3K, AKT2, and GSK-3β in the mitogenic effect of strain. PI3K is
required for both ERK and AKT2 activation, whereas AKT2 is sequentially
required for GSK-3β. Furthermore, AKT2 specificity requires its catalytic
domain and tail region. Manipulating this pathway may prevent mucosal atrophy
and maintain the mucosal barrier in conditions such as ileus, sepsis, and
prolonged fasting when peristalsis and villous motility are decreased and the
mucosal barrier fails.Mechanical forces are part of the normal intestinal epithelial environment.
Numerous different forces deform these cells including shear stress from
endoluminal chyme, bowel peristalsis, and villous motility
(1,
2). During normal bowel
function the mucosa is subjected to injury that must be repaired to maintain
the mucosal barrier (3,
4). Deformation patterns of the
bowel are altered in conditions such as prolonged fasting, post-surgical
ileus, and sepsis states, resulting in profoundly reduced mucosal deformation.
When such states are prolonged, proliferation slows, the mucosa becomes
atrophic, and bacterial translocation may ensue as the mucosal barrier of the
gut breaks down
(5–7).In vitro, repetitive deformation is trophic for intestinal
epithelial cells (8) cultured
on type I or type IV collagen or laminin. Human Caco-2 intestinal epithelial
cells (9), non-transformed rat
IEC-6 intestinal epithelial cells
(10), and primary human
intestinal epithelial cells isolated from surgical specimens
(11) proliferate more rapidly
in response to cyclic strain
(12) unless substantial
quantities of fibronectin are added to the media or matrix
(11) to mimic the acute phase
reaction of acute or chronic inflammation and injury. Cyclic strain also
stimulates proliferation in HCT 116 colon cancer cells
(13) and differentiation of
Caco-2 cells cultured on a collagen substrate
(9). This phenomenon has also
been observed in vivo
(14). Thus, repetitive
deformation may help to maintain the normal homeostasis of the gut mucosa
under non-inflammatory conditions. Previous work in our laboratory has
implicated Src, focal adhesion kinase, and the mitogen-activated protein
kinase (MAPK)2
extracellular signal-related kinase (ERK) in the mitogenic effect of strain
(10). Although p38 is also
activated in Caco-2 cells subjected to cyclic strain on a collagen matrix, its
activity is not required for the mitogenic effect of strain
(12).Although often the PI3K/AKT pathway is thought of as a parallel pathway to
the MAPK, this is not always the case. Protein kinase C isoenzymes
differentially modulate thrombin effect on MAPK-dependent retinal pigment
epithelial cell (RPE) proliferation, and it has been shown that PI3K or AKT
inhibition prevented thrombin-induced ERK activation and RPE proliferation
(15).PI3K, AKT, and glycogen synthase kinase (GSK), a downstream target of AKT
(16), have been implemented in
intestinal epithelial cell proliferation in numerous cell systems not
involving strain
(17–19)
including uncontrolled proliferation in gastrointestinal cancers
(20–22).
Mechanical forces activate this pathway as well. PI3K and AKT are required for
increased extracellular pressure to stimulate colon cancer cell adhesion
(23), although the pathway by
which pressure stimulates colon cancer cells in suspension differs from the
response of adherent intestinal epithelial cells to repetitive deformation
(24), and GSK is not involved
in this effect.3
Repetitive strain also stimulates vascular endothelial cell proliferation via
PI3K and AKT (25,
26), whereas respiratory
strain stimulates angiogenic responses via PI3K
(27). We, therefore,
hypothesized that the PI3K/AKT/GSK axis would be involved in the mitogenic
effects of repetitive deformation on a collagen matrix.To test this hypothesis, we used the Flexcell apparatus to rhythmically
deform Caco-2 intestinal epithelial cells. IEC-6 cells were used to confirm
key results. A frequency of 10 cycles per min was used, which is similar in
order of magnitude to the frequency that the intestinal mucosa might be
deformed by peristalsis or villous motility in vivo
(28,
29). Mechanical forces such as
repetitive deformation are likely cell-type and frequency-specific, as
different cell types respond to different frequencies. Vascular endothelial
cells respond to frequencies of 60–80 cycles/min
(25), whereas intestinal
epithelial cells may actually decrease proliferation in response to
frequencies of 5 cycles/min
(30). We characterized PI3K,
AKT, and GSK phosphorylation with strain, blocked these molecules
pharmacologically or by siRNA, and delineated the specificity of the AKT
effect using isozyme-specific siRNA and transfection of AKT1/2 chimeras. We
also characterized the interaction of this pathway with the activation of ERK
by strain, which has previously been implicated in the mitogenic response
(12). 相似文献