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1.
Transnitrosylation and denitrosylation are emerging as key post-translational modification events in regulating both normal physiology and a wide spectrum of human diseases. Thioredoxin 1 (Trx1) is a conserved antioxidant that functions as a classic disulfide reductase. It also catalyzes the transnitrosylation or denitrosylation of caspase 3 (Casp3), underscoring its central role in determining Casp3 nitrosylation specificity. However, the mechanisms that regulate Trx1 transnitrosylation and denitrosylation of specific targets are unresolved. Here we used an optimized mass spectrometric method to demonstrate that Trx1 is itself nitrosylated by S-nitrosoglutathione at Cys73 only after the formation of a Cys32-Cys35 disulfide bond upon which the disulfide reductase and denitrosylase activities of Trx1 are attenuated. Following nitrosylation, Trx1 subsequently transnitrosylates Casp3. Overexpression of Trx1C32S/C35S (a mutant Trx1 with both Cys32 and Cys35 replaced by serine to mimic the disulfide reductase-inactive Trx1) in HeLa cells promoted the nitrosylation of specific target proteins. Using a global proteomics approach, we identified 47 novel Trx1 transnitrosylation target protein candidates. From further bioinformatics analysis of this set of nitrosylated peptides, we identified consensus motifs that are likely to be the determinants of Trx1-mediated transnitrosylation specificity. Among these proteins, we confirmed that Trx1 directly transnitrosylates peroxiredoxin 1 at Cys173 and Cys83 and protects it from H2O2-induced overoxidation. Functionally, we found that Cys73-mediated Trx1 transnitrosylation of target proteins is important for protecting HeLa cells from apoptosis. These data demonstrate that the ability of Trx1 to transnitrosylate target proteins is regulated by a crucial stepwise oxidative and nitrosative modification of specific cysteines, suggesting that Trx1, as a master regulator of redox signaling, can modulate target proteins via alternating modalities of reduction and nitrosylation.Nitric oxide (NO) is an important second messenger for signal transduction in cells. The production of cGMP by guanylyl cyclase, enabled by the binding of NO onto heme, is considered the primary mechanism responsible for the plethora of functions exerted by NO (1). However, S-nitrosylation, the covalent addition of the NO moiety onto cysteine thiols, is increasingly recognized as an important post-translational modification for regulating protein functions (for reviews, see Refs. 2 and 3). S-Nitrosylation is dynamic, reversible, site-specific, and modulated by selected cellular stimuli (47). With improved detection sensitivity, an increasing number of S-nitrosylated proteins have been identified by proteomics technologies (5, 813). Among the known modified proteins, nitrosylation occurs only on selected cysteines (4, 6, 1417). Non-enzymatic mechanisms proposed to determine S-nitrosylation specificity include the availability of specific NO donors and protein microenvironments that stabilize the pKa of acidic target cysteines (18). Furthermore, several enzymes, including hemoglobin (19, 20), superoxide dismutase 1 (21, 22), S-nitrosoglutathione reductase (2325), and protein-disulfide isomerase (26), have been shown to possess either transnitrosylase or denitrosylase activities. However, an enzymatic system that governs site-specific transnitrosylation and denitrosylation, analogous to the kinase/phosphatase paradigm for regulating protein phosphorylation, has remained largely uncharacterized.Trx11 is an important antioxidant protein with protein reductase activity (27, 28). It has been characterized as an antiapoptotic protein because of its ability to suppress proapoptotic proteins, including apoptosis signal-regulating kinase 1 via disulfide reduction and Casp3 via transnitrosylation of Cys163 (14, 29). Conversely, Trx1 can denitrosylate Casp3 at Cys163, resulting in Casp3 activation (7). Trx1 appears to govern site-specific reversible nitrosylation of selected protein targets (14, 15), but what are the underlying mechanisms that regulate Trx1 transnitrosylation and denitrosylation activities? Are there additional Trx1-mediated transnitrosylation or denitrosylation targets that have not yet been identified? In this study, we used ESI-Q-TOF mass spectrometry (MS) to analyze the nitrosylation of Trx1 and a Casp3 peptide (Casp3p) under different redox conditions. Because of the labile nature of the S–NO bond, direct identification of S-nitrosylated proteins and their specific nitrosylation sites by MS remains challenging (8). A biotin switch method that is based on the derivatization of protein S–NO with a biotinylating agent is typically used for such analyses (8). However, like any indirect method, both false positive and negative identifications have been reported (30). Recently, we developed a method for direct analysis of protein S-nitrosylation by ESI-Q-TOF MS without prior chemical derivatization (31). Here we applied the same technique to determine the regulation of Trx1 by stepwise oxidative and nitrosative modifications of distinct cysteines and its subsequent ability to transnitrosylate target proteins. Nitrosative modification at Cys73 of Trx1 cannot occur without prior attenuation of the Trx1 disulfide reductase and denitrosylase activities via either disulfide bond formation between Cys32 and Cys35 or their mutation to serines. This is a key observation that has never been previously reported. Consequently, we designed a proteomics approach and discovered over 40 putative Trx1 transnitrosylation target proteins. We further characterized the Trx1 transnitrosylation proteome and identified three consensus motifs surrounding the putative Trx1 transnitrosylation sites, suggesting a protein-protein interaction mechanism for determining transnitrosylation specificity.  相似文献   

2.
Human concentrative nucleoside transporter 3 (hCNT3) utilizes electrochemical gradients of both Na+ and H+ to accumulate pyrimidine and purine nucleosides within cells. We have employed radioisotope flux and electrophysiological techniques in combination with site-directed mutagenesis and heterologous expression in Xenopus oocytes to identify two conserved pore-lining glutamate residues (Glu-343 and Glu-519) with essential roles in hCNT3 Na+/nucleoside and H+/nucleoside cotransport. Mutation of Glu-343 and Glu-519 to aspartate, glutamine, and cysteine severely compromised hCNT3 transport function, and changes included altered nucleoside and cation activation kinetics (all mutants), loss or impairment of H+ dependence (all mutants), shift in Na+:nucleoside stoichiometry from 2:1 to 1:1 (E519C), complete loss of catalytic activity (E519Q) and, similar to the corresponding mutant in Na+-specific hCNT1, uncoupled Na+ currents (E343Q). Consistent with close-proximity integration of cation/solute-binding sites within a common cation/permeant translocation pore, mutation of Glu-343 and Glu-519 also altered hCNT3 nucleoside transport selectivity. Both residues were accessible to the external medium and inhibited by p-chloromercuribenzene sulfonate when converted to cysteine.Physiologic nucleosides and the majority of synthetic nucleoside analogs with antineoplastic and/or antiviral activity are hydrophilic molecules that require specialized plasma membrane nucleoside transporter (NT)3 proteins for transport into or out of cells (14). NT-mediated transport is required for nucleoside metabolism by salvage pathways and is a critical determinant of the pharmacologic actions of nucleoside drugs (36). By regulating adenosine availability to purinoreceptors, NTs also modulate a diverse array of physiological processes, including neurotransmission, immune responses, platelet aggregation, renal function, and coronary vasodilation (4, 6, 7). Two structurally unrelated NT families of integral membrane proteins exist in human and other mammalian cells and tissues as follows: the SLC28 concentrative nucleoside transporter (CNT) family and the SLC29 equilibrative nucleoside transporter (ENT) family (3, 4, 6, 8, 9). ENTs are normally present in most, possibly all, cell types (4, 6, 8). CNTs, in contrast, are found predominantly in intestinal and renal epithelia and other specialized cell types, where they have important roles in absorption, secretion, distribution, and elimination of nucleosides and nucleoside drugs (13, 5, 6, 9).The CNT protein family in humans is represented by three members, hCNT1, hCNT2, and hCNT3. Belonging to a CNT subfamily phylogenetically distinct from hCNT1/2, hCNT3 utilizes electrochemical gradients of both Na+ and H+ to accumulate a broad range of pyrimidine and purine nucleosides and nucleoside drugs within cells (10, 11). hCNT1 and hCNT2, in contrast, are Na+-specific and transport pyrimidine and purine nucleosides, respectively (1113). Together, hCNT1–3 account for the three major concentrative nucleoside transport processes of human and other mammalian cells. Nonmammalian members of the CNT protein family that have been characterized functionally include hfCNT, a second member of the CNT3 subfamily from the ancient marine prevertebrate the Pacific hagfish Eptatretus stouti (14), CeCNT3 from Caenorhabditis elegans (15), CaCNT from Candida albicans (16), and the bacterial nucleoside transporter NupC from Escherichia coli (17). hfCNT is Na+- but not H+-coupled, whereas CeCNT3, CaCNT, and NupC are exclusively H+-coupled. Na+:nucleoside coupling stoichiometries are 1:1 for hCNT1 and hCNT2 and 2:1 for hCNT3 and hfCNT3 (11, 14). H+:nucleoside coupling ratios for hCNT3 and CaCNT are 1:1 (11, 16).Although much progress has been made in molecular studies of ENT proteins (4, 6, 8), studies of structurally and functionally important regions and residues within the CNT protein family are still at an early stage. Topological investigations suggest that hCNT1–3 and other eukaryote CNT family members have a 13 (or possibly 15)-transmembrane helix (TM) architecture, and multiple alignments reveal strong sequence similarities within the C-terminal half of the proteins (18). Prokaryotic CNTs lack the first three TMs of their eukaryotic counterparts, and functional expression of N-terminally truncated human and rat CNT1 in Xenopus oocytes has established that these three TMs are not required for Na+-dependent uridine transport activity (18). Consistent with this finding, chimeric studies involving hCNT1 and hfCNT (14) and hCNT1 and hCNT3 (19) have demonstrated that residues involved in Na+- and H+-coupling reside in the C-terminal half of the protein. Present in this region of the transporter, but of unknown function, is a highly conserved (G/A)XKX3NEFVA(Y/M/F) motif common to all eukaryote and prokaryote CNTs.By virtue of their negative charge and consequent ability to interact directly with coupling cations and/or participate in cation-induced and other protein conformational transitions, glutamate and aspartate residues play key functional and structural roles in a broad spectrum of mammalian and bacterial cation-coupled transporters (2030). Little, however, is known about their role in CNTs. This study builds upon a recent mutagenesis study of conserved glutamate and aspartate residues in hCNT1 (31) to undertake a parallel in depth investigation of corresponding residues in hCNT3. By employing the multifunctional capability of hCNT3 as a template for these studies, this study provides novel mechanistic insights into the molecular mechanism(s) of CNT-mediated cation/nucleoside cotransport, including the role of the (G/A)XKX3NEFVA(Y/M/F) motif.  相似文献   

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

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

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Protein–protein interactions (PPIs) are fundamental to the structure and function of protein complexes. Resolving the physical contacts between proteins as they occur in cells is critical to uncovering the molecular details underlying various cellular activities. To advance the study of PPIs in living cells, we have developed a new in vivo cross-linking mass spectrometry platform that couples a novel membrane-permeable, enrichable, and MS-cleavable cross-linker with multistage tandem mass spectrometry. This strategy permits the effective capture, enrichment, and identification of in vivo cross-linked products from mammalian cells and thus enables the determination of protein interaction interfaces. The utility of the developed method has been demonstrated by profiling PPIs in mammalian cells at the proteome scale and the targeted protein complex level. Our work represents a general approach for studying in vivo PPIs and provides a solid foundation for future studies toward the complete mapping of PPI networks in living systems.Protein–protein interactions (PPIs)1 play a key role in defining protein functions in biological systems. Aberrant PPIs can have drastic effects on biochemical activities essential to cell homeostasis, growth, and proliferation, and thereby lead to various human diseases (1). Consequently, PPI interfaces have been recognized as a new paradigm for drug development. Therefore, mapping PPIs and their interaction interfaces in living cells is critical not only for a comprehensive understanding of protein function and regulation, but also for describing the molecular mechanisms underlying human pathologies and identifying potential targets for better therapeutics.Several strategies exist for identifying and mapping PPIs, including yeast two-hybrid, protein microarray, and affinity purification mass spectrometry (AP-MS) (25). Thanks to new developments in sample preparation strategies, mass spectrometry technologies, and bioinformatics tools, AP-MS has become a powerful and preferred method for studying PPIs at the systems level (69). Unlike other approaches, AP-MS experiments allow the capture of protein interactions directly from their natural cellular environment, thus better retaining native protein structures and biologically relevant interactions. In addition, a broader scope of PPI networks can be obtained with greater sensitivity, accuracy, versatility, and speed. Despite the success of this very promising technique, AP-MS experiments can lead to the loss of weak/transient interactions and/or the reorganization of protein interactions during biochemical manipulation under native purification conditions. To circumvent these problems, in vivo chemical cross-linking has been successfully employed to stabilize protein interactions in native cells or tissues prior to cell lysis (1016). The resulting covalent bonds formed between interacting partners allow affinity purification under stringent and fully denaturing conditions, consequently reducing nonspecific background while preserving stable and weak/transient interactions (1216). Subsequent mass spectrometric analysis can reveal not only the identities of interacting proteins, but also cross-linked amino acid residues. The latter provides direct molecular evidence describing the physical contacts between and within proteins (17). This information can be used for computational modeling to establish structural topologies of proteins and protein complexes (1722), as well as for generating experimentally derived protein interaction network topology maps (23, 24). Thus, cross-linking mass spectrometry (XL-MS) strategies represent a powerful and emergent technology that possesses unparalleled capabilities for studying PPIs.Despite their great potential, current XL-MS studies that have aimed to identify cross-linked peptides have been mostly limited to in vitro cross-linking experiments, with few successfully identifying protein interaction interfaces in living cells (24, 25). This is largely because XL-MS studies remain challenging due to the inherent difficulty in the effective MS detection and accurate identification of cross-linked peptides, as well as in unambiguous assignment of cross-linked residues. In general, cross-linked products are heterogeneous and low in abundance relative to non-cross-linked products. In addition, their MS fragmentation is too complex to be interpreted using conventional database searching tools (17, 26). It is noted that almost all of the current in vivo PPI studies utilize formaldehyde cross-linking because of its membrane permeability and fast kinetics (1016). However, in comparison to the most commonly used amine reactive NHS ester cross-linkers, identification of formaldehyde cross-linked peptides is even more challenging because of its promiscuous nonspecific reactivity and extremely short spacer length (27). Therefore, further developments in reagents and methods are urgently needed to enable simple MS detection and effective identification of in vivo cross-linked products, and thus allow the mapping of authentic protein contact sites as established in cells, especially for protein complexes.Various efforts have been made to address the limitations of XL-MS studies, resulting in new developments in bioinformatics tools for improved data interpretation (2832) and new designs of cross-linking reagents for enhanced MS analysis of cross-linked peptides (24, 3339). Among these approaches, the development of new cross-linking reagents holds great promise for mapping PPIs on the systems level. One class of cross-linking reagents containing an enrichment handle have been shown to allow selective isolation of cross-linked products from complex mixtures, boosting their detectability by MS (3335, 4042). A second class of cross-linkers containing MS-cleavable bonds have proven to be effective in facilitating the unambiguous identification of cross-linked peptides (3639, 43, 44), as the resulting cross-linked products can be identified based on their characteristic and simplified fragmentation behavior during MS analysis. Therefore, an ideal cross-linking reagent would possess the combined features of both classes of cross-linkers. To advance the study of in vivo PPIs, we have developed a new XL-MS platform based on a novel membrane-permeable, enrichable, and MS-cleavable cross-linker, Azide-A-DSBSO (azide-tagged, acid-cleavable disuccinimidyl bis-sulfoxide), and multistage tandem mass spectrometry (MSn). This new XL-MS strategy has been successfully employed to map in vivo PPIs from mammalian cells at both the proteome scale and the targeted protein complex level.  相似文献   

17.
Mathematical tools developed in the context of Shannon information theory were used to analyze the meaning of the BLOSUM score, which was split into three components termed as the BLOSUM spectrum (or BLOSpectrum). These relate respectively to the sequence convergence (the stochastic similarity of the two protein sequences), to the background frequency divergence (typicality of the amino acid probability distribution in each sequence), and to the target frequency divergence (compliance of the amino acid variations between the two sequences to the protein model implicit in the BLOCKS database). This treatment sharpens the protein sequence comparison, providing a rationale for the biological significance of the obtained score, and helps to identify weakly related sequences. Moreover, the BLOSpectrum can guide the choice of the most appropriate scoring matrix, tailoring it to the evolutionary divergence associated with the two sequences, or indicate if a compositionally adjusted matrix could perform better.[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25,26,27,28,29]  相似文献   

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SLC26A7 (human)/Slc26a7 (mouse) is a recently identified chloride-base exchanger and/or chloride transporter that is expressed on the basolateral membrane of acid-secreting cells in the renal outer medullary collecting duct (OMCD) and in gastric parietal cells. Here, we show that mice with genetic deletion of Slc26a7 expression develop distal renal tubular acidosis, as manifested by metabolic acidosis and alkaline urine pH. In the kidney, basolateral Cl/HCO3 exchange activity in acid-secreting intercalated cells in the OMCD was significantly decreased in hypertonic medium (a normal milieu for the medulla) but was reduced only mildly in isotonic medium. Changing from a hypertonic to isotonic medium (relative hypotonicity) decreased the membrane abundance of Slc26a7 in kidney cells in vivo and in vitro. In the stomach, stimulated acid secretion was significantly impaired in isolated gastric mucosa and in the intact organ. We propose that SLC26A7 dysfunction should be investigated as a potential cause of unexplained distal renal tubular acidosis or decreased gastric acid secretion in humans.The collecting duct segment of the distal kidney nephron plays a major role in systemic acid base homeostasis by acid secretion and bicarbonate absorption. The acid secretion occurs via H+-ATPase and H-K-ATPase into the lumen and bicarbonate is absorbed via basolateral Cl/HCO3 exchangers (14). The tubules, which are located within the outer medullary region of the kidney collecting duct (OMCD),2 have the highest rate of acid secretion among the distal tubule segments and are therefore essential to the maintenance of acid base balance (2).The gastric parietal cell is the site of generation of acid and bicarbonate through the action of cytosolic carbonic anhydrase II (5, 6). The intracellular acid is secreted into the lumen via gastric H-K-ATPase, which works in conjunction with a chloride channel and a K+ recycling pathway (710). The intracellular bicarbonate is transported to the blood via basolateral Cl/HCO3 exchangers (1114).SLC26 (human)/Slc26 (mouse) isoforms are members of a conserved family of anion transporters that display tissue-specific patterns of expression in epithelial cells (1524). Several SLC26 members can function as chloride/bicarbonate exchangers. These include SLC26A3 (DRA), SLC26A4 (pendrin), SLC26A6 (PAT1 or CFEX), SLC26A7, and SLC26A9 (2531). SLC26A7 and SLC26A9 can also function as chloride channels (3234).SLC26A7/Slc26a7 is predominantly expressed in the kidney and stomach (28, 29). In the kidney, Slc26a7 co-localizes with AE1, a well-known Cl/HCO3 exchanger, on the basolateral membrane of (acid-secreting) A-intercalated cells in OMCD cells (29, 35, 36) (supplemental Fig. 1). In the stomach, Slc26a7 co-localizes with AE2, a major Cl/HCO3 exchanger, on the basolateral membrane of acid secreting parietal cells (28). To address the physiological function of Slc26a7 in the intact mouse, we have generated Slc26a7 ko mice. We report here that Slc26a7 ko mice exhibit distal renal tubular acidosis and impaired gastric acidification in the absence of morphological abnormalities in kidney or stomach.  相似文献   

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Early onset generalized dystonia (DYT1) is an autosomal dominant neurological disorder caused by deletion of a single glutamate residue (torsinA ΔE) in the C-terminal region of the AAA+ (ATPases associated with a variety of cellular activities) protein torsinA. The pathogenic mechanism by which torsinA ΔE mutation leads to dystonia remains unknown. Here we report the identification and characterization of a 628-amino acid novel protein, printor, that interacts with torsinA. Printor co-distributes with torsinA in multiple brain regions and co-localizes with torsinA in the endoplasmic reticulum. Interestingly, printor selectively binds to the ATP-free form but not to the ATP-bound form of torsinA, supporting a role for printor as a cofactor rather than a substrate of torsinA. The interaction of printor with torsinA is completely abolished by the dystonia-associated torsinA ΔE mutation. Our findings suggest that printor is a new component of the DYT1 pathogenic pathway and provide a potential molecular target for therapeutic intervention in dystonia.Early onset generalized torsion dystonia (DYT1) is the most common and severe form of hereditary dystonia, a movement disorder characterized by involuntary movements and sustained muscle spasms (1). This autosomal dominant disease has childhood onset and its dystonic symptoms are thought to result from neuronal dysfunction rather than neurodegeneration (2, 3). Most DYT1 cases are caused by deletion of a single glutamate residue at positions 302 or 303 (torsinA ΔE) of the 332-amino acid protein torsinA (4). In addition, a different torsinA mutation that deletes amino acids Phe323–Tyr328 (torsinA Δ323–328) was identified in a single family with dystonia (5), although the pathogenic significance of this torsinA mutation is unclear because these patients contain a concomitant mutation in another dystonia-related protein, ϵ-sarcoglycan (6). Recently, genetic association studies have implicated polymorphisms in the torsinA gene as a genetic risk factor in the development of adult-onset idiopathic dystonia (7, 8).TorsinA contains an N-terminal endoplasmic reticulum (ER)3 signal sequence and a 20-amino acid hydrophobic region followed by a conserved AAA+ (ATPases associated with a variety of cellular activities) domain (9, 10). Because members of the AAA+ family are known to facilitate conformational changes in target proteins (11, 12), it has been proposed that torsinA may function as a molecular chaperone (13, 14). TorsinA is widely expressed in brain and multiple other tissues (15) and is primarily associated with the ER and nuclear envelope (NE) compartments in cells (1620). TorsinA is believed to mainly reside in the lumen of the ER and NE (1719) and has been shown to bind lamina-associated polypeptide 1 (LAP1) (21), lumenal domain-like LAP1 (LULL1) (21), and nesprins (22). In addition, recent evidence indicates that a significant pool of torsinA exhibits a topology in which the AAA+ domain faces the cytoplasm (20). In support of this topology, torsinA is found in the cytoplasm, neuronal processes, and synaptic terminals (2, 3, 15, 2326) and has been shown to bind cytosolic proteins snapin (27) and kinesin light chain 1 (20). TorsinA has been proposed to play a role in several cellular processes, including dopaminergic neurotransmission (2831), NE organization and dynamics (17, 22, 32), and protein trafficking (27, 33). However, the precise biological function of torsinA and its regulation remain unknown.To gain insights into torsinA function, we performed yeast two-hybrid screens to search for torsinA-interacting proteins in the brain. We report here the isolation and characterization of a novel protein named printor (protein interactor of torsinA) that interacts selectively with wild-type (WT) torsinA but not the dystonia-associated torsinA ΔE mutant. Our data suggest that printor may serve as a cofactor of torsinA and provide a new molecular target for understanding and treating dystonia.  相似文献   

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