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1.
Thrombin is a serine protease that evokes various cellular responses involved in injury and repair of the nervous system through the activation of protease-activated receptor-1 (PAR-1). Signals that modulate cell morphology precede most PAR-1 effects, but the initial signal transduction molecules are not known. Using the yeast two-hybrid system, we identified Hsp90, a chaperone with known signaling properties, as a binding partner of PAR-1. The interaction was confirmed by glutathione S-transferase pull-down, overlay, and co-immunoprecipitation assays. Morphological assays in mouse astrocytes were carried out to evaluate the importance of Hsp90 during cytoskeletal signaling. Reducing Hsp90 levels by antisense treatment or disruption of the Hsp90.PAR-1 complex by the Hsp90-specific drug geldanamycin attenuated thrombin-mediated astrocyte shape changes. Furthermore, overexpression of the PAR-1 cytoplasmic tail abrogated thrombin-induced cytoskeletal changes in neuronal cells. Treatment with geldanamycin specifically inhibited activation of RhoA without affecting thrombin-mediated intracellular calcium release, revealing the regulation of a distinct signaling pathway by Hsp90. Taken together, these studies demonstrate that Hsp90 may be essential for PAR-1-mediated signaling to the cytoskeleton.  相似文献   

2.
This review summarizes studies on the reciprocal regulation of neuroblastoma neurite outgrowth by thrombin and protease nexin-1 (PN-1). PN-1 recently was shown to possess the same deduced amino acid sequence as the glial-derived neurite-promoting factor. The neurite outgrowth activity of PN-1 depends on its ability to inhibit thrombin. Thrombin not only blocks the neurite outgrowth activity of PN-1, but it also brings about neurite retraction in the presence of PN-1. Thrombin also produces neurite retraction in the absence of PN-1 and other regulatory factors. This suggests that its activity is due to a direct action on cells. The neurite retraction by thrombin depends on its proteolytic activity. It does not occur with the other serine proteases that have been tested, indicating that it is a specific effect and is not due to a general proteolytic effect that could detach neurites from the culture dish. Serum brings about neurite retraction in certain neuroblastoma cells and primary neuronal cultures; most of this activity is due to residual thrombin in the serum. Together, these results suggest that PN-1 and thrombin (or a thrombin-like protease) play a role in regulation of neurite outgrowth.  相似文献   

3.
The formation and directional guidance of neurites involves dynamic regulation of Rho family GTPases. Rac and Cdc42 promote neurite outgrowth, whereas Rho activation causes neurite retraction. Here we describe a role for collapsin response mediator protein (Crmp-2), a neuronal protein implicated in axonal outgrowth and a component of the semaphorin 3A pathway, in switching GTPase signaling when expressed in combination with either dominant active Rac or Rho. In neuroblastoma N1E-115 cells, co-expression of Crmp-2 with dominant active RhoA V14 induced Rac morphology, cell spreading and ruffling (and the formation of neurites). Conversely, co-expression of Crmp-2 with dominant active Rac1 V12 inhibited Rac morphology, and in cells already expressing Rac1 V12, Crmp-2 caused localized peripheral collapse, involving Rho (and Cdc42) activation. Rho kinase was a pivotal regulator of Crmp-2; Crmp-2 phosphorylation was required for Crmp-2/Rac1 V12 inhibition, but not Crmp-2/RhoA V14 induction, of Rac morphology. Thus Crmp-2, regulated by Rho kinase, promotes outgrowth and collapse in response to active Rho and Rac, respectively, reversing their usual morphological effects and providing a mechanism for dynamic modulation of growth cone guidance.  相似文献   

4.
The mechanism by which thrombin induces neurite retraction was studied in NB2a mouse neuroblastoma cells. The rapid effect of thrombin (completed within minutes) appears to involve an interaction between its anion-binding exosite and the thrombin receptor. Structural alterations of this site increase the EC50 for thrombin-mediated retraction, and a hirudin C-terminal peptide that blocks this site inhibits the response. The thrombin effect was mimicked by a 14 amino acid peptide starting with Ser-42, at the proposed cleavage site of the human thrombin receptor. The protein kinase inhibitors staurosporine and H-7 blocked thrombin-induced retraction. It is therefore proposed that thrombin-mediated neurite retraction is caused by cleavage-induced activation of the thrombin receptor and involves stimulation of a protein kinase(s).  相似文献   

5.
Neuronal cells undergo rapid growth cone collapse, neurite retraction, and cell rounding in response to certain G protein-coupled receptor agonists such as lysophosphatidic acid (LPA). These shape changes are driven by Rho-mediated contraction of the actomyosin-based cytoskeleton. To date, however, detection of Rho activation has been hampered by the lack of a suitable assay. Furthermore, the nature of the G protein(s) mediating LPA-induced neurite retraction remains unknown. We have developed a Rho activation assay that is based on the specific binding of active RhoA to its downstream effector Rho-kinase (ROK). A fusion protein of GST and the Rho-binding domain of ROK pulls down activated but not inactive RhoA from cell lysates. Using GST-ROK, we show that in N1E-115 neuronal cells LPA activates endogenous RhoA within 30 s, concomitant with growth cone collapse. Maximal activation occurs after 3 min when neurite retraction is complete and the actin cytoskeleton is fully contracted. LPA-induced RhoA activation is completely inhibited by tyrosine kinase inhibitors (tyrphostin 47 and genistein). Activated Galpha12 and Galpha13 subunits mimic LPA both in activating RhoA and in inducing RhoA-mediated cytoskeletal contraction, thereby preventing neurite outgrowth. We conclude that in neuronal cells, LPA activates RhoA to induce growth cone collapse and neurite retraction through a G12/13-initiated pathway that involves protein-tyrosine kinase activity.  相似文献   

6.
The invasion-inducing T-lymphoma invasion and metastasis 1 (Tiam1) protein functions as a guanine nucleotide exchange factor (GEF) for the small GTPase Rac1. Differentiation-dependent expression of Tiam1 in the developing brain suggests a role for this GEF and its effector Rac1 in the control of neuronal morphology. Here we show that overexpression of Tiam1 induces cell spreading and affects neurite outgrowth in N1E-115 neuroblastoma cells. These effects are Rac-dependent and strongly promoted by laminin. Overexpression of Tiam1 recruits the α6β1 integrin, a laminin receptor, to specific adhesive contacts at the cell periphery, which are different from focal contacts. Cells overexpressing Tiam1 no longer respond to lysophosphatidic acid– induced neurite retraction and cell rounding, processes mediated by Rho, suggesting that Tiam1-induced activation of Rac antagonizes Rho signaling. This inhibition can be overcome by coexpression of constitutively active RhoA, which may indicate that regulation occurs at the level of Rho or upstream. Conversely, neurite formation induced by Tiam1 or Rac1 is further promoted by inactivating Rho. These results demonstrate that Rac- and Rho-mediated pathways oppose each other during neurite formation and that a balance between these pathways determines neuronal morphology. Furthermore, our data underscore the potential role of Tiam1 as a specific regulator of Rac during neurite formation and illustrate the importance of reciprocal interactions between the cytoskeleton and the extracellular matrix during this process.  相似文献   

7.
In neuronal cells, current evidence suggests that G(13)alpha and RhoA play significant roles in LPA-mediated neurite retraction; however, the contribution of other G-proteins to this process is less well-understood. We provide evidence that LPA activation of G(13), G(q) and G(i) occurs rapidly in neuroblastoma cells, but that stimulation of RhoA is transient whereas the activation of G(q)- and G(i)-mediated pathways is sustained. In addition to G(13)alpha, we demonstrate that G(q)alpha is capable of promoting neurite retraction. G(q)-mediated retraction is RhoA-independent and is likely mediated via a mechanism involving protein kinase C and calcium flux. Additionally, we provide evidence that activation of adenylyl cyclase via G(s) inhibits RhoA-mediated neurite retraction via protein kinase A-mediated inhibition of RhoA action. Taken together, we hypothesize that LPA promotes neurite retraction via RhoA-dependent and -independent pathways involving G(13) and G(q), respectively, and that agonists that activate G(s) inhibit the RhoA-dependent pathway.  相似文献   

8.
Rho guanosine triphosphatases (GTPases) control the cytoskeletal dynamics that power neurite outgrowth. This process consists of dynamic neurite initiation, elongation, retraction, and branching cycles that are likely to be regulated by specific spatiotemporal signaling networks, which cannot be resolved with static, steady-state assays. We present NeuriteTracker, a computer-vision approach to automatically segment and track neuronal morphodynamics in time-lapse datasets. Feature extraction then quantifies dynamic neurite outgrowth phenotypes. We identify a set of stereotypic neurite outgrowth morphodynamic behaviors in a cultured neuronal cell system. Systematic RNA interference perturbation of a Rho GTPase interactome consisting of 219 proteins reveals a limited set of morphodynamic phenotypes. As proof of concept, we show that loss of function of two distinct RhoA-specific GTPase-activating proteins (GAPs) leads to opposite neurite outgrowth phenotypes. Imaging of RhoA activation dynamics indicates that both GAPs regulate different spatiotemporal Rho GTPase pools, with distinct functions. Our results provide a starting point to dissect spatiotemporal Rho GTPase signaling networks that regulate neurite outgrowth.  相似文献   

9.
Our laboratory has recently demonstrated that insulin induces relaxation of vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs) by activating myosin-bound phosphatase (MBP) and by inhibiting Rho kinase (Begum N, Duddy N, Sandu OA, Reinzie J, and Ragolia L. Mol Endocrinol 14: 1365-1376, 2000). In this study, we tested the hypothesis that insulin via the nitric oxide (NO)/cGMP pathway may inactivate Rho, resulting in a decrease in phosphorylation of the myosin-bound subunit (MBS(Thr695)) of MBP and in its activation. Treatment of confluent serum-starved VSMCs with insulin prevented thrombin-induced increases in membrane-associated RhoA, Rho kinase activation, and site-specific phosphorylation of MBS(Thr695) of MBP and caused MBP activation. Preexposure to N(G)-monomethyl-L-arginine, a NO synthase inhibitor, and R-p-8-(4-chlorophenylthio)cGMP, a cGMP antagonist, attenuated insulin's inhibitory effect on Rho translocation and restored thrombin-mediated Rho kinase activation and site-specific MBS(Thr695) phosphorylation, resulting in MBP inactivation. In contrast, 8-bromo-cGMP, a cGMP agonist, mimicked insulin's inhibitory effects by abolishing thrombin-mediated Rho signaling and promoted dephosphorylation of MBS(Thr695). Furthermore, expression of a dominant-negative RhoA decreased basal as well as thrombin-induced MBS(Thr695) phosphorylation and caused insulin activation of MBP. Collectively, these results indicate that insulin inhibits Rho signaling by decreasing RhoA translocation via the NO/cGMP signaling pathway to cause MBP activation via site-specific dephosphorylation of its regulatory subunit MBS.  相似文献   

10.
Thrombin, the ultimate protease in the blood coagulation cascade, mediates its known cellular effects by unique proteolytic activation of G-protein-coupled protease-activated receptors (PARs), such as PAR1, PAR3, and PAR4, and a "tethered ligand" mechanism. PAR1 is variably expressed in subpopulations of neurons and largely determines thrombin's effects on morphology, calcium mobilization, and caspase-mediated apoptosis. In spinal cord motoneurons, PAR1 expression correlates with transient thrombin-mediated [Ca(2+)](i) flux, receptor cleavage, and elevation of rest [Ca(2+)](i) activating intracellular proteases. At nanomolar concentrations, thrombin retracts neurites via PAR1 activation of the monomeric, 21 kDa Ras G-protein RhoA, which is also involved in neuroprotection at lower thrombin concentrations. Such results suggest potential downstream targets for thrombin's injurious effects. Consequently, we employed several G-protein-specific modulators prior to thrombin exposure in an attempt to uncouple both heterotrimeric and monomeric G-proteins from motoneuronal PAR1. Cholera toxin, stimulating Gs, and lovastatin, which blocks isoprenylation of Rho, reduced thrombin-induced calcium mobilization. In contrast, pertussis toxin and mastoparan, inhibiting or stimulating G(o)/G(i), were found to exacerbate thrombin action. Effects on neuronal rounding and apoptosis were also detected, suggesting therapeutic utility may result from interference with downstream components of thrombin signaling pathways in human motor neuron disorders, and possibly other neurodegenerative diseases. Published 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

11.
The small GTP-binding protein Rho has been implicated in the control of neuronal morphology. In N1E-115 neuronal cells, the Rho-inactivating C3 toxin stimulates neurite outgrowth and prevents actomyosin-based neurite retraction and cell rounding induced by lysophosphatidic acid (LPA), sphingosine-1-phosphate, or thrombin acting on their cognate G protein–coupled receptors. We have identified a novel putative GDP/GTP exchange factor, RhoGEF (190 kD), that interacts with both wild-type and activated RhoA, but not with Rac or Cdc42. RhoGEF, like activated RhoA, mimics receptor stimulation in inducing cell rounding and in preventing neurite outgrowth. Furthermore, we have identified a 116-kD protein, p116Rip, that interacts with both the GDP- and GTP-bound forms of RhoA in N1E-115 cells. Overexpression of p116Rip stimulates cell flattening and neurite outgrowth in a similar way to dominant-negative RhoA and C3 toxin. Cells overexpressing p116Rip fail to change their shape in response to LPA, as is observed after Rho inactivation. Our results indicate that (a) RhoGEF may link G protein–coupled receptors to RhoA activation and ensuing neurite retraction and cell rounding; and (b) p116Rip inhibits RhoA-stimulated contractility and promotes neurite outgrowth.  相似文献   

12.
The Wnt-induced planar cell polarity (PCP) signaling pathway is essential for polarized cell migration and morphogenesis. Dishevelled (Dvl) and its binding protein Daam1 mediate RhoA activation in this pathway. WGEF, a member of the Rho-guanine nucleotide exchange factor (Rho-GEF) family, was shown to play a role in Wnt-induced RhoA activation in Xenopus embryos. However, it has remained unknown which member(s) of a Rho-GEF family are involved in Wnt/Dvl-induced RhoA activation in mammalian cells. Here we identified p114-RhoGEF and Lfc (also called GEF-H1) as the Rho-GEFs responsible for Wnt-3a–induced RhoA activation in N1E-115 mouse neuroblastoma cells. We screened for Rho-GEF–silencing short-hairpin RNAs (shRNAs) that are capable of suppressing Dvl-induced neurite retraction in N1E-115 cells and found that p114-RhoGEF and Lfc shRNAs, but not WGEF shRNA, suppressed Dvl- and Wnt-3a–induced neurite retraction. p114-RhoGEF and Lfc shRNAs also inhibited Dvl- and Wnt-3a–induced RhoA activation, and p114-RhoGEF and Lfc proteins were capable of binding to Dvl and Daam1. Additionally, the Dvl-binding domains of p114-RhoGEF and Lfc inhibited Dvl-induced neurite retraction. Our results suggest that p114-RhoGEF and Lfc are critically involved in Wnt-3a– and Dvl-induced RhoA activation and neurite retraction in N1E-115 cells.  相似文献   

13.
Rapid neurite remodeling is fundamental to nervous system development and plasticity. It involves neurite extension that is regulated by NGF through PI3K/AKT, p44/42 MAPK and p38 MAPK. It also involves neurite retraction that is regulated by the serine protease, thrombin. However, the intracellular signaling pathway by which thrombin causes neurite retraction is unknown. Using the PC12 neuronal cell model, we demonstrate that thrombin utilizes the PI3K/AKT pathway for neurite retraction in NGF-differentiated cells. Interestingly, however, we found that thrombin enhances NGF-induced neurite extension in differentiating cells. This is achieved through increased and sustained activation of p44/42 MAPK and p38 MAPK. Thus, thrombin elicits opposing effects in differentiated and differentiating cells through activation of distinct signaling pathways: neurite retraction in differentiated cells via PI3K/AKT, and neurite extension in differentiating cells via p44/42 MAPK and p38 MAPK. These findings, which also point to a novel cooperative role between thrombin and NGF, have significant implications in the development of the nervous system and the disease processes that afflicts it as well as in the potential of combined thrombin and NGF therapy for impaired learning and memory, and spinal cord injury which all require neurite extension and remodeling.  相似文献   

14.
Rho GTPases such as RhoA, Rac1 and Cdc42 are crucial players in the regulation of signal transduction pathways required for neuronal differentiation. Using an in vitro cell culture model of neuroblastoma SH-SY5Y cells, we demonstrated previously that RhoA is an in vivo substrate of tissue transglutaminase (TGase) and retinoic acid (RA) promoted activation of RhoA by transamidation. Although activation of RhoA promoted cytoskeletal rearrangement in SH-SY5Y cells, it was not involved in induction of neurite outgrowth. Here, we demonstrate that RA promotes activation of Rac1 in SH-SY5Y cells in a transamidation-independent manner. RA-induced activation of Rac1 is mediated by phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K), probably because of phosphorylation of the p85 regulatory subunit by Src kinases. Over-expression of constitutively active PI3K or Rac1-V12 induces neurite outgrowth, activation of mitogen activated protein kinases (MAPKs), and expression of neuronal markers. The PI3K inhibitor LY294002, or over-expression of dominant negative Rac1-N17, blocks RA-induced neurite outgrowth, activation of MAPKs, and expression of neuronal markers, suggesting that activation of PI3K/Rac1 signaling represents a potential mechanism for regulation of neuronal differentiation in SH-SY5Y cells.  相似文献   

15.
Regulation of neuronal morphology and activity-dependent synaptic modifications involves reorganization of the actin cytoskeleton. Dynamic changes of the actin cytoskeleton in many cell types are controlled by small GTPases of the Rho family, such as RhoA, Rac1 and Cdc42. As key regulators of both actin and microtubule cytoskeleton, Rho GTPases have also emerged as important regulators of dendrite and spine structural plasticity. Multiple studies suggest that Rac1 and Cdc42 are positive regulators promoting neurite outgrowth and growth cone protrusion, while the activation of RhoA induces stress fiber formation, leading to growth cone collapse and neurite retraction. This review focuses on recent advances in our understanding of the molecular mechanisms underlying physiological and pathological functions of Cdc42 in the nervous system. We also discuss application of different FRET-based biosensors as a powerful approach to examine the dynamics of Cdc42 activity in living cells.  相似文献   

16.
The bioactive phospholipid lysophosphatidic acid (LPA) causes growth cone collapse and neurite retraction in neuronal cells. These changes are brought about by the action of a cell surface receptor coupled to specific G proteins that control morphology and motility through the action of a group of small GTPases, the Rho family of proteins. Many studies have focused on actin reorganization modulated by Rho-GTPases, but almost no information has been obtained concerning microtubular network reorganization after LPA-induced neurite retraction. In the present study, we demonstrate an increase in site-specific Alzheimer's disease-like Tau phosphorylation during LPA-induced neurite retraction in differentiated SY-SH5Y human neuroblastoma cells. The phosphorylation state of Tau was inferred from its immunoreactivity with antibodies that recognize phosphorylation-sensitive epitopes. The effects of specific kinase inhibitors indicate that this phosphorylation is mediated by glycogen synthase kinase-3 (GSK-3). In support of this idea, we observed an increase of GSK-3 activity upon growth cone collapse. Our results are consistent with the hypothesis that activation of GSK-3 occurs in the Rho pathway and may represent an important link between microtubules and microfilaments dynamics during neuritogenesis and in pathological situations such as Alzheimer's disease.  相似文献   

17.
Much evidence indicates that cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA) prevents increased endothelial permeability induced by inflammatory mediators. We investigated the hypothesis that PKA inhibits Rho GTPases, which are regulator proteins believed to mediate endothelial barrier dysfunction. Stimulation of human microvascular endothelial cells (HMEC) with thrombin (10 nM) increased activated RhoA (RhoA-GTP) within 1 min, which remained elevated approximately fourfold over control for 15 min. The activation was accompanied by RhoA translocation to the cell membrane. However, thrombin did not activate Cdc42 or Rac1 within similar time points, indicating selectivity of activation responses by Rho GTPases. Pretreatment of HMEC with 10 micro M forskolin plus 1 micro M IBMX (FI) to elevate intracellular cAMP levels inhibited both thrombin-induced RhoA activation and translocation responses. FI additionally inhibited thrombin-mediated dissociation of RhoA from guanine nucleotide dissociation inhibitor (GDI) and enhanced in vivo incorporation of (32)P by GDI. HMEC pretreated in parallel with FI showed >50% reduction in time for the thrombin-mediated resistance drop to return to near baseline and inhibition of approximately 23% of the extent of resistance drop. Infection of HMEC with replication-deficient adenovirus containing the protein kinase A inhibitor gene (PKA inhibitor) blocked both the FI-mediated protective effects on RhoA activation and resistance changes. In conclusion, the results provide evidence that PKA inhibited RhoA activation in endothelial cells, supporting a signaling mechanism of protection against vascular endothelial barrier dysfunction.  相似文献   

18.
19.
Neuritogenesis, the first step of neuronal differentiation, takes place as nascent neurites bud from the immediate postmitotic neuronal soma. Little is known about the mechanisms underlying the dramatic morphological changes that characterize this event. Here, we show that RhoA activity plays a decisive role during neuritogenesis of cultured hippocampal neurons by recruiting and activating its specific kinase ROCK, which, in turn, complexes with profilin IIa. We establish that this previously uncharacterized brain-specific actin-binding protein controls neurite sprouting by modifying actin stability, a function regulated by ROCK-mediated phosphorylation. Furthermore, we determine that this novel cascade is switched on or off by physiological stimuli. We propose that RhoA/ROCK/PIIa-mediated regulation of actin stability, shown to be essential for neuritogenesis, may constitute a central mechanism throughout neuronal differentiation.  相似文献   

20.
The goal of the present study was to characterize the effects of RhoA at different stages of nerve growth factor (NGF)-induced neuronal differentiation in the PC12 model. This comparative analysis was prompted by previous studies that reported apparently opposite effects for Rho in different models of neuronal differentiation and regeneration. PC12 cells were transfected with activated V14RhoA or dominant negative N19RhoA under the control of either a constitutive or a steroid-regulated promoter. Upon exposure to NGF, V14RhoA cells continued to proliferate and did not extend neurites; however, they remained responsive to NGF, as indicated by the activation of extracellular signal-regulated kinases. This inability to differentiate was reversed by C3 toxin and activation of cyclic AMP signaling, which inactivate RhoA. N19RhoA expression led to an increase in neurite initiation and branching. In contrast, when the RhoA mutants were expressed after NGF priming, only the rate of neurite extension was altered; V14RhoA clones had neurites approximately twice as long, whereas neurites of N19RhoA cells were approximately 50% shorter than those of appropriate controls. The effects of Rho in neurite regeneration mimicked those observed during the initial stages of morphogenesis; activation inhibited, whereas inactivation promoted, neurite outgrowth. Our results indicate that RhoA function changes at different stages of NGF-induced neuronal differentiation and neurite regeneration.  相似文献   

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