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1.
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
2.
3.
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
4.
5.
James Sinnett-Smith Rodrigo Jacamo Robert Kui YunZu M. Wang Steven H. Young Osvaldo Rey Richard T. Waldron Enrique Rozengurt 《The Journal of biological chemistry》2009,284(20):13434-13445
Rapid protein kinase D (PKD) activation and phosphorylation via protein
kinase C (PKC) have been extensively documented in many cell types cells
stimulated by multiple stimuli. In contrast, little is known about the role
and mechanism(s) of a recently identified sustained phase of PKD activation in
response to G protein-coupled receptor agonists. To elucidate the role of
biphasic PKD activation, we used Swiss 3T3 cells because PKD expression in
these cells potently enhanced duration of ERK activation and DNA synthesis in
response to Gq-coupled receptor agonists. Cell treatment with the
preferential PKC inhibitors GF109203X or Gö6983 profoundly inhibited PKD
activation induced by bombesin stimulation for <15 min but did not prevent
PKD catalytic activation induced by bombesin stimulation for longer times
(>60 min). The existence of sequential PKC-dependent and PKC-independent
PKD activation was demonstrated in 3T3 cells stimulated with various
concentrations of bombesin (0.3–10 nm) or with vasopressin, a
different Gq-coupled receptor agonist. To gain insight into the
mechanisms involved, we determined the phosphorylation state of the activation
loop residues Ser744 and Ser748. Transphosphorylation
targeted Ser744, whereas autophosphorylation was the predominant
mechanism for Ser748 in cells stimulated with Gq-coupled
receptor agonists. We next determined which phase of PKD activation is
responsible for promoting enhanced ERK activation and DNA synthesis in
response to Gq-coupled receptor agonists. We show, for the first
time, that the PKC-independent phase of PKD activation mediates prolonged ERK
signaling and progression to DNA synthesis in response to bombesin or
vasopressin through a pathway that requires epidermal growth factor
receptor-tyrosine kinase activity. Thus, our results identify a novel
mechanism of Gq-coupled receptor-induced mitogenesis mediated by
sustained PKD activation through a PKC-independent pathway.The understanding of the mechanisms that control cell proliferation
requires the identification of the molecular pathways that govern the
transition of quiescent cells into the S phase of the cell cycle. In this
context the activation and phosphorylation of protein kinase D
(PKD),4 the founding
member of a new protein kinase family within the
Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase (CAMK) group and separate
from the previously identified PKCs (for review, see Ref.
1), are attracting intense
attention. In unstimulated cells, PKD is in a state of low catalytic (kinase)
activity maintained by autoinhibition mediated by the N-terminal domain, a
region containing a repeat of cysteinerich zinc finger-like motifs and a
pleckstrin homology (PH) domain
(1–4).
Physiological activation of PKD within cells occurs via a
phosphorylation-dependent mechanism first identified in our laboratory
(5–7).
In response to cellular stimuli
(1), including phorbol esters,
growth factors (e.g. PDGF), and G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR)
agonists (6,
8–16)
that signal through Gq, G12, Gi, and Rho
(11,
15–19),
PKD is converted into a form with high catalytic activity, as shown by in
vitro kinase assays performed in the absence of lipid co-activators
(5,
20).During these studies multiple lines of evidence indicated that PKC activity
is necessary for rapid PKD activation within intact cells. For example, rapid
PKD activation was selectively and potently blocked by cell treatment with
preferential PKC inhibitors (e.g. GF109203X or Gö6983) that do
not directly inhibit PKD catalytic activity
(5,
20), implying that PKD
activation in intact cells is mediated directly or indirectly through PKCs.
Many reports demonstrated the operation of a rapid PKC/PKD signaling cascade
induced by multiple GPCR agonists and other receptor ligands in a range of
cell types (for review, see Ref.
1). Our previous studies
identified Ser744 and Ser748 in the PKD activation loop
(also referred as activation segment or T-loop) as phosphorylation sites
critical for PKC-mediated PKD activation
(1,
4,
7,
17,
21). Collectively, these
findings demonstrated the existence of a rapidly activated PKC-PKD protein
kinase cascade(s). In a recent study we found that the rapid PKC-dependent PKD
activation was followed by a late, PKC-independent phase of catalytic
activation and phosphorylation induced by stimulation of the bombesin
Gq-coupled receptor ectopically expressed in COS-7 cells
(22). This study raised the
possibility that PKD mediates rapid biological responses downstream of PKCs,
whereas, in striking contrast, PKD could mediate long term responses through
PKC-independent pathways. Despite its potential importance for defining the
role of PKC and PKD in signal transduction, this hypothesis has not been
tested in any cell type.Accumulating evidence demonstrates that PKD plays an important role in
several cellular processes and activities, including signal transduction
(14,
23–25),
chromatin organization (26),
Golgi function (27,
28), gene expression
(29–31),
immune regulation (26), and
cell survival, adhesion, motility, differentiation, DNA synthesis, and
proliferation (for review, see Ref.
1). In Swiss 3T3 fibroblasts, a
cell line used extensively as a model system to elucidate mechanisms of
mitogenic signaling
(32–34),
PKD expression potently enhances ERK activation, DNA synthesis, and cell
proliferation induced by Gq-coupled receptor agonists
(8,
14). Here, we used this model
system to elucidate the role and mechanism(s) of biphasic PKD activation.
First, we show that the Gq-coupled receptor agonists bombesin and
vasopressin, in contrast to phorbol esters, specifically induce PKD activation
through early PKC-dependent and late PKC-independent mechanisms in Swiss 3T3
cells. Subsequently, we demonstrate for the first time that the
PKC-independent phase of PKD activation is responsible for promoting ERK
signaling and progression to DNA synthesis through an epidermal growth factor
receptor (EGFR)-dependent pathway. Thus, our results identify a novel
mechanism of Gq-coupled receptor-induced mitogenesis mediated by
sustained PKD activation through a PKC-independent pathway. 相似文献
6.
Maika Deffieu Ingrid Bhatia-Ki??ová Bénédicte Salin Anne Galinier Stéphen Manon Nadine Camougrand 《The Journal of biological chemistry》2009,284(22):14828-14837
The antioxidant N-acetyl-l-cysteine prevented the
autophagy-dependent delivery of mitochondria to the vacuoles, as examined by
fluorescence microscopy of mitochondria-targeted green fluorescent protein,
transmission electron microscopy, and Western blot analysis of mitochondrial
proteins. The effect of N-acetyl-l-cysteine was specific
to mitochondrial autophagy (mitophagy). Indeed, autophagy-dependent activation
of alkaline phosphatase and the presence of hallmarks of non-selective
microautophagy were not altered by N-acetyl-l-cysteine.
The effect of N-acetyl-l-cysteine was not related to its
scavenging properties, but rather to its fueling effect of the glutathione
pool. As a matter of fact, the decrease of the glutathione pool induced by
chemical or genetical manipulation did stimulate mitophagy but not general
autophagy. Conversely, the addition of a cell-permeable form of glutathione
inhibited mitophagy. Inhibition of glutathione synthesis had no effect in the
strain Δuth1, which is deficient in selective mitochondrial
degradation. These data show that mitophagy can be regulated independently of
general autophagy, and that its implementation may depend on the cellular
redox status.Autophagy is a major pathway for the lysosomal/vacuolar delivery of
long-lived proteins and organelles, where they are degraded and recycled.
Autophagy plays a crucial role in differentiation and cellular response to
stress and is conserved in eukaryotic cells from yeast to mammals
(1,
2). The main form of autophagy,
macroautophagy, involves the non-selective sequestration of large portions of
the cytoplasm into double-membrane structures termed autophagosomes, and their
delivery to the vacuole/lysosome for degradation. Another process,
microautophagy, involves the direct sequestration of parts of the cytoplasm by
vacuole/lysosomes. The two processes coexist in yeast cells but their extent
may depend on different factors including metabolic state: for example, we
have observed that nitrogen-starved lactate-grown yeast cells develop
microautophagy, whereas nitrogen-starved glucose-grown cells preferentially
develop macroautophagy (3).Both macroautophagy and microautophagy are essentially non-selective, in
the way that autophagosomes and vacuole invaginations do not appear to
discriminate the sequestered material. However, selective forms of autophagy
have been observed (4) that
target namely peroxisomes (5,
6), chromatin
(7,
8), endoplasmic reticulum
(9), ribosomes
(10), and mitochondria
(3,
11–13).
Although non-selective autophagy plays an essential role in survival by
nitrogen starvation, by providing amino acids to the cell, selective autophagy
is more likely to have a function in the maintenance of cellular structures,
both under normal conditions as a “housecleaning” process, and
under stress conditions by eliminating altered organelles and macromolecular
structures
(14–16).
Selective autophagy targeting mitochondria, termed mitophagy, may be
particularly relevant to stress conditions. The mitochondrial respiratory
chain is both the main site and target of
ROS4 production
(17). Consequently, the
maintenance of a pool of healthy mitochondria is a crucial challenge for the
cells. The progressive accumulation of altered mitochondria
(18) caused by the loss of
efficiency of the maintenance process (degradation/biogenesis de
novo) is often considered as a major cause of cellular aging
(19–23).
In mammalian cells, autophagic removal of mitochondria has been shown to be
triggered following induction/blockade of apoptosis
(23), suggesting that
autophagy of mitochondria was required for cell survival following
mitochondria injury (14).
Consistent with this idea, a direct alteration of mitochondrial permeability
properties has been shown to induce mitochondrial autophagy
(13,
24,
25). Furthermore, inactivation
of catalase induced the autophagic elimination of altered mitochondria
(26). In the yeast
Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the alteration of
F0F1-ATPase biogenesis in a conditional mutant has been
shown to trigger autophagy
(27). Alterations of
mitochondrial ion homeostasis caused by the inactivation of the
K+/H+ exchanger was shown to cause both autophagy and
mitophagy (28). We have
reported that treatment of cells with rapamycin induced early ROS production
and mitochondrial lipid oxidation that could be inhibited by the hydrophobic
antioxidant resveratrol (29).
Furthermore, resveratrol treatment impaired autophagic degradation of both
cytosolic and mitochondrial proteins and delayed rapamycin-induced cell death,
suggesting that mitochondrial oxidation events may play a crucial role in the
regulation of autophagy. This existence of regulation of autophagy by ROS has
received molecular support in HeLa cells
(30): these authors showed
that starvation stimulated ROS production, namely H2O2,
which was essential for autophagy. Furthermore, they identified the cysteine
protease hsAtg4 as a direct target for oxidation by
H2O2. This provided a possible connection between the
mitochondrial status and regulation of autophagy.Investigations of mitochondrial autophagy in nitrogen-starved lactate-grown
yeast cells have established the existence of two distinct processes: the
first one occurring very early, is selective for mitochondria and is dependent
on the presence of the mitochondrial protein Uth1p; the second one occurring
later, is not selective for mitochondria, is not dependent on Uth1p, and is a
form of bulk microautophagy
(3). The absence of the
selective process in the Δuth1 mutant strongly delays and
decreases mitochondrial protein degradation
(3,
12). The putative protein
phosphatase Aup1p has been also shown to be essential in inducing mitophagy
(31). Additionally several Atg
proteins were shown to be involved in vacuolar sequestration of mitochondrial
GFP (3,
12,
32,
33). Recently, the protein
Atg11p, which had been already identified as an essential protein for
selective autophagy has also been reported as being essential for mitophagy
(33).The question remains as to identify of the signals that trigger selective
mitophagy. It is particularly intriguing that selective mitophagy is activated
very early after the shift to a nitrogen-deprived medium
(3). Furthermore, selective
mitophagy is very active on lactate-grown cells (with fully differentiated
mitochondria) but is nearly absent in glucose-grown cells
(3). In the present paper, we
investigated the relationships between the redox status of the cells and
selective mitophagy, namely by manipulating glutathione. Our results support
the view that redox imbalance is a trigger for the selective elimination of
mitochondria. 相似文献
7.
8.
9.
As obligate intracellular parasites, viruses exploit diverse cellular
signaling machineries, including the mitogen-activated protein-kinase pathway,
during their infections. We have demonstrated previously that the open reading
frame 45 (ORF45) of Kaposi sarcoma-associated herpesvirus interacts with p90
ribosomal S6 kinases (RSKs) and strongly stimulates their kinase activities
(Kuang, E., Tang, Q., Maul, G. G., and Zhu, F.
(2008) J. Virol. 82
,1838
-1850). Here, we define the
mechanism by which ORF45 activates RSKs. We demonstrated that binding of ORF45
to RSK increases the association of extracellular signal-regulated kinase
(ERK) with RSK, such that ORF45, RSK, and ERK formed high molecular mass
protein complexes. We further demonstrated that the complexes shielded active
pERK and pRSK from dephosphorylation. As a result, the complex-associated RSK
and ERK were activated and sustained at high levels. Finally, we provide
evidence that this mechanism contributes to the sustained activation of ERK
and RSK in Kaposi sarcoma-associated herpesvirus lytic replication.The extracellular signal-regulated kinase
(ERK)2
mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) signaling pathway has been implicated
in diverse cellular physiological processes including proliferation, survival,
growth, differentiation, and motility
(1-4)
and is also exploited by a variety of viruses such as Kaposi
sarcoma-associated herpesvirus (KSHV), human cytomegalovirus, human
immunodeficiency virus, respiratory syncytial virus, hepatitis B virus,
coxsackie, vaccinia, coronavirus, and influenza virus
(5-17).
The MAPK kinases relay the extracellular signaling through sequential
phosphorylation to an array of cytoplasmic and nuclear substrates to elicit
specific responses (1,
2,
18). Phosphorylation of MAPK
is reversible. The kinetics of deactivation or duration of signaling dictates
diverse biological outcomes
(19,
20). For example, sustained
but not transient activation of ERK signaling induces the differentiation of
PC12 cells into sympathetic-like neurons and transformation of NIH3T3 cells
(20-22).
During viral infection, a unique biphasic ERK activation has been observed for
some viruses (an early transient activation triggered by viral binding or
entry and a late sustained activation correlated with viral gene expression),
but the responsible viral factors and underlying mechanism for the sustained
ERK activation remain largely unknown
(5,
8,
13,
23).The p90 ribosomal S6 kinases (RSKs) are a family of serine/threonine
kinases that lie at the terminus of the ERK pathway
(1,
24-26).
In mammals, four isoforms are known, RSK1 to RSK4. Each one has two
catalytically functional kinase domains, the N-terminal kinase domain (NTKD)
and C-terminal kinase domain (CTKD) as well as a linker region between the
two. The NTKD is responsible for phosphorylation of exogenous substrates, and
the CTKD and linker region regulate RSK activation
(1,
24,
25). In quiescent cells ERK
binds to the docking site in the C terminus of RSK
(27-29).
Upon mitogen stimulation, ERK is activated by its upstream MAPK/ERK kinase
(MEK). The active ERK phosphorylates Thr-359/Ser-363 of RSK in the linker
region (amino acid numbers refer to human RSK1) and Thr-573 in the CTKD
activation loop. The activated CTKD then phosphorylates Ser-380 in the linker
region, creating a docking site for 3-phosphoinositide-dependent protein
kinase-1. The 3-phosphoinositide-dependent protein kinase-1 phosphorylates
Ser-221 of RSK in the activation loop and activates the NTKD. The activated
NTKD autophosphorylates the serine residue near the ERK docking site, causing
a transient dissociation of active ERK from RSK
(25,
26,
28). The stimulation of
quiescent cells by a mitogen such as epidermal growth factor or a phorbol
ester such as 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA) usually
results in a transient RSK activation that lasts less than 30 min. RSKs have
been implicated in regulating cell survival, growth, and proliferation.
Mutation or aberrant expression of RSK has been implicated in several human
diseases including Coffin-Lowry syndrome and prostate and breast cancers
(1,
24,
25,
30-32).KSHV is a human DNA tumor virus etiologically linked to Kaposi sarcoma,
primary effusion lymphoma, and a subset of multicentric Castleman disease
(33,
34). Infection and
reactivation of KSHV activate multiple MAPK pathways
(6,
12,
35). Noticeably, the ERK/RSK
activation is sustained late during KSHV primary infection and reactivation
from latency (5,
6,
12,
23), but the mechanism of the
sustained ERK/RSK activation is unclear. Recently, we demonstrated that ORF45,
an immediate early and also virion tegument protein of KSHV, interacts with
RSK1 and RSK2 and strongly stimulates their kinase activities
(23). We also demonstrated
that the activation of RSK plays an essential role in KSHV lytic replication
(23). In the present study we
determined the mechanism of ORF45-induced sustained ERK/RSK activation. We
found that ORF45 increases the association of RSK with ERK and protects them
from dephosphorylation, causing sustained activation of both ERK and RSK. 相似文献
10.
S��bastien Thomas Brigitte Ritter David Verbich Claire Sanson Lyne Bourbonni��re R. Anne McKinney Peter S. McPherson 《The Journal of biological chemistry》2009,284(18):12410-12419
Intersectin-short (intersectin-s) is a multimodule scaffolding protein
functioning in constitutive and regulated forms of endocytosis in non-neuronal
cells and in synaptic vesicle (SV) recycling at the neuromuscular junction of
Drosophila and Caenorhabditis elegans. In vertebrates,
alternative splicing generates a second isoform, intersectin-long
(intersectin-l), that contains additional modular domains providing a guanine
nucleotide exchange factor activity for Cdc42. In mammals, intersectin-s is
expressed in multiple tissues and cells, including glia, but excluded from
neurons, whereas intersectin-l is a neuron-specific isoform. Thus,
intersectin-I may regulate multiple forms of endocytosis in mammalian neurons,
including SV endocytosis. We now report, however, that intersectin-l is
localized to somatodendritic regions of cultured hippocampal neurons, with
some juxtanuclear accumulation, but is excluded from synaptophysin-labeled
axon terminals. Consistently, intersectin-l knockdown (KD) does not affect SV
recycling. Instead intersectin-l co-localizes with clathrin heavy chain and
adaptor protein 2 in the somatodendritic region of neurons, and its KD reduces
the rate of transferrin endocytosis. The protein also co-localizes with
F-actin at dendritic spines, and intersectin-l KD disrupts spine maturation
during development. Our data indicate that intersectin-l is indeed an
important regulator of constitutive endocytosis and neuronal development but
that it is not a prominent player in the regulated endocytosis of SVs.Clathrin-mediated endocytosis
(CME)4 is a
major mechanism by which cells take up nutrients, control the surface levels
of multiple proteins, including ion channels and transporters, and regulate
the coupling of signaling receptors to downstream signaling cascades
(1-5).
In neurons, CME takes on additional specialized roles; it is an important
process regulating synaptic vesicle (SV) availability through endocytosis and
recycling of SV membranes (6,
7), it shapes synaptic
plasticity
(8-10),
and it is crucial in maintaining synaptic membranes and membrane structure
(11).Numerous endocytic accessory proteins participate in CME, interacting with
each other and with core components of the endocytic machinery such as
clathrin heavy chain (CHC) and adaptor protein-2 (AP-2) through specific
modules and peptide motifs
(12). One such module is the
Eps15 homology domain that binds to proteins bearing NPF motifs
(13,
14). Another is the Src
homology 3 (SH3) domain, which binds to proline-rich domains in protein
partners (15). Intersectin is
a multimodule scaffolding protein that interacts with a wide range of
proteins, including several involved in CME
(16). Intersectin has two
N-terminal Eps15 homology domains that are responsible for binding to epsin,
SCAMP1, and numb
(17-19),
a central coil-coiled domain that interacts with Eps15 and SNAP-23 and -25
(17,
20,
21), and five SH3 domains in
its C-terminal region that interact with multiple proline-rich domain
proteins, including synaptojanin, dynamin, N-WASP, CdGAP, and mSOS
(16,
22-25).
The rich binding capability of intersectin has linked it to various functions
from CME (17,
26,
27) and signaling
(22,
28,
29) to mitogenesis
(30,
31) and regulation of the
actin cytoskeleton (23).Intersectin functions in SV recycling at the neuromuscular junction of
Drosophila and C. elegans where it acts as a scaffold,
regulating the synaptic levels of endocytic accessory proteins
(21,
32-34).
In vertebrates, the intersectin gene is subject to alternative splicing, and a
longer isoform (intersectin-l) is generated that is expressed exclusively in
neurons (26,
28,
35,
36). This isoform has all the
binding modules of its short (intersectin-s) counterpart but also has
additional domains: a DH and a PH domain that provide guanine nucleotide
exchange factor (GEF) activity specific for Cdc42
(23,
37) and a C2 domain at the C
terminus. Through its GEF activity and binding to actin regulatory proteins,
including N-WASP, intersectin-l has been implicated in actin regulation and
the development of dendritic spines
(19,
23,
24). In addition, because the
rest of the binding modules are shared between intersectin-s and -l, it is
generally thought that the two intersectin isoforms have the same endocytic
functions. In particular, given the well defined role for the invertebrate
orthologs of intersectin-s in SV endocytosis, it is thought that intersectin-l
performs this role in mammalian neurons, which lack intersectin-s. Defining
the complement of intersectin functional activities in mammalian neurons is
particularly relevant given that the protein is involved in the
pathophysiology of Down syndrome (DS). Specifically, the intersectin gene is
localized on chromosome 21q22.2 and is overexpressed in DS brains
(38). Interestingly,
alterations in endosomal pathways are a hallmark of DS neurons and neurons
from the partial trisomy 16 mouse, Ts65Dn, a model for DS
(39,
40). Thus, an endocytic
trafficking defect may contribute to the DS disease process.Here, the functional roles of intersectin-l were studied in cultured
hippocampal neurons. We find that intersectin-l is localized to the
somatodendritic regions of neurons, where it co-localizes with CHC and AP-2
and regulates the uptake of transferrin. Intersectin-l also co-localizes with
actin at dendritic spines and disrupting intersectin-l function alters
dendritic spine development. In contrast, intersectin-l is absent from
presynaptic terminals and has little or no role in SV recycling. 相似文献
11.
Ivana I. Knezevic Sanda A. Predescu Radu F. Neamu Matvey S. Gorovoy Nebojsa M. Knezevic Cordus Easington Asrar B. Malik Dan N. Predescu 《The Journal of biological chemistry》2009,284(8):5381-5394
It is known that platelet-activating factor (PAF) induces severe
endothelial barrier leakiness, but the signaling mechanisms remain unclear.
Here, using a wide range of biochemical and morphological approaches applied
in both mouse models and cultured endothelial cells, we addressed the
mechanisms of PAF-induced disruption of interendothelial junctions (IEJs) and
of increased endothelial permeability. The formation of interendothelial gaps
filled with filopodia and lamellipodia is the cellular event responsible for
the disruption of endothelial barrier. We observed that PAF ligation of its
receptor induced the activation of the Rho GTPase Rac1. Following PAF
exposure, both Rac1 and its guanine nucleotide exchange factor Tiam1 were
found associated with a membrane fraction from which they
co-immunoprecipitated with PAF receptor. In the same time frame with
Tiam1-Rac1 translocation, the junctional proteins ZO-1 and VE-cadherin were
relocated from the IEJs, and formation of numerous interendothelial gaps was
recorded. Notably, the response was independent of myosin light chain
phosphorylation and thus distinct from other mediators, such as histamine and
thrombin. The changes in actin status are driven by the PAF-induced localized
actin polymerization as a consequence of Rac1 translocation and activation.
Tiam1 was required for the activation of Rac1, actin polymerization,
relocation of junctional associated proteins, and disruption of IEJs. Thus,
PAF-induced IEJ disruption and increased endothelial permeability requires the
activation of a Tiam1-Rac1 signaling module, suggesting a novel therapeutic
target against increased vascular permeability associated with inflammatory
diseases.The endothelial barrier is made up of endothelial cells
(ECs)4 connected to
each other by interendothelial junctions (IEJs) consisting of protein
complexes organized as tight junctions (TJs) and adherens junctions (AJs). In
addition, the focal adhesion complex located at the basal plasma membrane
enables firm contact of ECs with the underlying basement membrane and also
contributes to the barrier function
(1-3).
The glycocalyx, the endothelial monolayer, and the basement membrane all
together constitute the vascular barrier.The structural integrity of the ECs along with their proper functionality
are the two most important factors controlling the tightness of the
endothelial barrier. Changes affecting these factors cause loss of barrier
restrictiveness and leakiness. Therefore, defining and understanding the
cellular and molecular mechanisms controlling these processes is of paramount
importance. Increased width of IEJs in response to permeability-increasing
mediators (4) regulates the
magnitude of transendothelial exchange of fluid and solutes. Disruption of
IEJs and the resultant barrier leakiness contribute to the genesis of diverse
pathological conditions, such as inflammation
(5), metastasis
(6,
7), and uncontrolled
angiogenesis (8,
9).Accumulated evidence demonstrated that IEJs changes are responsible for
increased or decreased vascular permeability, and the generally accepted
mechanism responsible for them was the myosin light chain (MLC)-mediated
contraction of ECs (5,
10). However, published
evidence showed that an increase in vascular permeability could be obtained
without a direct involvement of any contractile mechanism
(11-16).The main component of the vascular barrier, the ECs, has more than 10% of
their total protein represented by actin
(17), which under
physiological salt concentrations subsists as monomers (G-actin) and assembled
into filaments (F-actin). A large number of actin-interacting proteins may
modulate the assembly, disassembly, and organization of G-actin and of actin
filaments within a given cell type. Similar to the complexity of
actin-interacting proteins found in other cell types, the ECs utilize their
actin binding proteins to stabilize the endothelial monolayer in order to
efficiently function as a selective barrier
(11). In undisturbed ECs, the
actin microfilaments are organized as different networks with distinctive
functional and morphological characteristics: the peripheral filaments also
known as peripheral dense band (PDB), the cytoplasmic fibers identified as
stress fibers (SF), and the actin from the membrane cytoskeleton
(18). The peripheral web,
localized immediately under the membrane, is associated with (i) the luminal
plasmalemma (on the apical side), (ii) the IEJ complexes on the lateral
surfaces, and (iii) the focal adhesion complexes on the abluminal side (the
basal part) of polarized ECs. The SF reside inside the endothelial cytoplasm
and are believed to be directly connected with the plasmalemma proper on the
luminal as well as on the abluminal side of the cell. As described, the
endothelial actin cytoskeleton (specifically the SF) seems to be a stable
structure helping the cells to remain flat under flow
(19). It is also established
that the actin fibers participate in correct localization of different
junctional complexes while keeping them in place
(20). However, it was
suggested that the dynamic equilibrium between F- and G-actin might modulate
the tightness of endothelial barrier in response to different challenges
(13).Mediators effective at nanomolar concentrations or less that disrupt the
endothelial barrier and increase vascular permeability include C2 toxin of
Clostridium botulinum, vascular permeability factor, better known as
vascular endothelial growth factor, and PAF
(21). C2 toxin increases
endothelial permeability by ribosylating monomeric G-actin at Arg-177
(22). This results in the
impairment of actin polymerization
(23), followed by rounding of
ECs (16) and the disruption of
junctional integrity. Vascular permeability factor was shown to open IEJs by
redistribution of junctional proteins
(24,
25) and by interfering with
the equilibrium of actin pools
(26). PAF
(1-O-alkyl-2-acetyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocoline), a naturally
synthesized phospholipid is active at 10-10 m or less
(27). PAF is synthesized by
and acts on a variety of cell types, including platelets
(28), neutrophils
(29), monocytes
(30), and ECs
(31). PAF-mediated activation
of ECs induced cell migration
(32), angiogenesis
(7), and vascular
hyperpermeability (33)
secondary to disassembly of IEJs
(34). The effects of PAF on
the endothelium are initiated through a G protein-coupled receptor (PAF-R)
localized at the plasmalemma, in a large endosomal compartment inside the cell
(34), and also in the nuclear
membrane (35). In ECs, PAF-R
was shown to signal through Gαq and downstream activation of
phospholipase C isozymes (PLCβ3 and PLCγ1),
and via cSrc (32,
36). Studies have shown that
PAF challenge induced endothelial actin cytoskeletal rearrangement
(37) and marked vascular
leakiness (38); however, the
signaling pathways have not been elucidated.Therefore, in the present study, we carried out a systematic analysis of
PAF-induced morphological and biochemical changes of endothelial barrier
in vivo and in cultured ECs. We found that the opening of endothelial
barrier and the increased vascular leakiness induced by PAF are the result of
a shift in actin pools without involvement of EC contraction, followed by a
redistribution of tight junctional associated protein ZO-1 and adherens
junctional protein VE-cadherin. 相似文献
12.
13.
ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporters transduce the free energy of ATP
hydrolysis to power the mechanical work of substrate translocation across cell
membranes. MsbA is an ABC transporter implicated in trafficking lipid A across
the inner membrane of Escherichia coli. It has sequence similarity
and overlapping substrate specificity with multidrug ABC transporters that
export cytotoxic molecules in humans and prokaryotes. Despite rapid advances
in structure determination of ABC efflux transporters, little is known
regarding the location of substrate-binding sites in the transmembrane segment
and the translocation pathway across the membrane. In this study, we have
mapped residues proximal to the daunorubicin (DNR)-binding site in MsbA using
site-specific, ATP-dependent quenching of DNR intrinsic fluorescence by spin
labels. In the nucleotide-free MsbA intermediate, DNR-binding residues cluster
at the cytoplasmic end of helices 3 and 6 at a site accessible from the
membrane/water interface and extending into an aqueous chamber formed at the
interface between the two transmembrane domains. Binding of a nonhydrolyzable
ATP analog inverts the transporter to an outward-facing conformation and
relieves DNR quenching by spin labels suggesting DNR exclusion from proximity
to the spin labels. The simplest model consistent with our data has DNR
entering near an elbow helix parallel to the water/membrane interface,
partitioning into the open chamber, and then translocating toward the
periplasm upon ATP binding.ATP-binding cassette
(ABC)2 transporters
transduce the energy of ATP hydrolysis to power the movement of a wide range
of substrates across the cell membranes
(1,
2). They constitute the largest
family of prokaryotic transporters, import essential cell nutrients, flip
lipids, and export toxic molecules
(3). Forty eight human ABC
transporters have been identified, including ABCB1, or P-glycoprotein, which
is implicated in cross-resistance to drugs and cytotoxic molecules
(4,
5). Inherited mutations in
these proteins are linked to diseases such as cystic fibrosis, persistent
hypoglycemia of infancy, and immune deficiency
(6).The functional unit of an ABC transporter consists of four modules. Two
highly conserved ABCs or nucleotide-binding domains (NBDs) bind and hydrolyze
ATP to supply the active energy for transport
(7). ABCs drive the mechanical
work of proteins with diverse functions ranging from membrane transport to DNA
repair (3,
5). Substrate specificity is
determined by two transmembrane domains (TMDs) that also provide the
translocation pathway across the bilayer
(7). Bacterial ABC exporters
are expressed as monomers, each consisting of one NBD and one TMD, that
dimerize to form the active transporter
(3). The number of
transmembrane helices and their organization differ significantly between ABC
importers and exporters reflecting the divergent structural and chemical
nature of their substrates (1,
8,
9). Furthermore, ABC exporters
bind substrates directly from the cytoplasm or bilayer inner leaflet and
release them to the periplasm or bilayer outer leaflet
(10,
11). In contrast, bacterial
importers have their substrates delivered to the TMD by a dedicated high
affinity substrate-binding protein
(12).In Gram-negative bacteria, lipid A trafficking from its synthesis site on
the inner membrane to its final destination in the outer membrane requires the
ABC transporter MsbA (13).
Although MsbA has not been directly shown to transport lipid A, suppression of
MsbA activity leads to cytoplasmic accumulation of lipid A and inhibits
bacterial growth strongly suggesting a role in translocation
(14-16).
In addition to this role in lipid A transport, MsbA shares sequence similarity
with multidrug ABC transporters such as human ABCB1, LmrA of Lactococcus
lactis, and Sav1866 of Staphylococcus aureus
(16-19).
ABCB1, a prototype of the ABC family, is a plasma membrane protein whose
overexpression provides resistance to chemotherapeutic agents in cancer cells
(1). LmrA and MsbA have
overlapping substrate specificity with ABCB1 suggesting that both proteins can
function as drug exporters
(18,
20). Indeed, cells expressing
MsbA confer resistance to erythromycin and ethidium bromide
(21). MsbA can be photolabeled
with the ABCB1/LmrA substrate azidopine and can transport Hoechst 33342
() across membrane vesicles in an energy-dependent manner
( H3334221).The structural mechanics of ABC exporters was revealed from comparison of
the MsbA crystal structures in the apo- and nucleotide-bound states as well as
from analysis by spin labeling EPR spectroscopy in liposomes
(17,
19,
22,
23). The energy harnessed from
ATP binding and hydrolysis drives a cycle of NBD association and dissociation
that is transmitted to induce reorientation of the TMD from an inward- to
outward-facing conformation
(17,
19,
22). Large amplitude motion
closes the cytoplasmic end of a chamber found at the interface between the two
TMDs and opens it to the periplasm
(23). These rearrangements
lead to significant changes in chamber hydration, which may drive substrate
translocation (22).Substrate binding must precede energy input, otherwise the cycle is futile,
wasting the energy of ATP hydrolysis without substrate extrusion
(7). Consistent with this
model, ATP binding reduces ABCB1 substrate affinity, potentially through
binding site occlusion
(24-26).
Furthermore, the TMD substrate-binding event signals the NBD to stimulate ATP
hydrolysis increasing transport efficiency
(1,
27,
28). However, there is a
paucity of information regarding the location of substrate binding, the
transport pathway, and the structural basis of substrate recognition by ABC
exporters. In vitro studies of MsbA substrate specificity identify a
broad range of substrates that stimulate ATPase activity
(29). In addition to the
putative physiological substrates lipid A and lipopolysaccharide (LPS), the
ABCB1 substrates Ilmofosine, , and verapamil differentially enhance ATP
hydrolysis of MsbA ( H3334229,
30). Intrinsic MsbA tryptophan
(Trp) fluorescence quenching by these putative substrate molecules provides
further support of interaction
(29).Extensive biochemical analysis of ABCB1 and LmrA provides a general model
of substrate binding to ABC efflux exporters. This so-called
“hydrophobic cleaner model” describes substrates binding from the
inner leaflet of the bilayer and then translocating through the TMD
(10,
31,
32). These studies also
identified a large number of residues involved in substrate binding and
selectivity (33). When these
crucial residues are mapped onto the crystal structures of MsbA, a subset of
homologous residues clusters to helices 3 and 6 lining the putative substrate
pathway (34). Consistent with
a role in substrate binding and specificity, simultaneous replacement of two
serines (Ser-289 and Ser-290) in helix 6 of MsbA reduces binding and transport
of ethidium and taxol, although and erythromycin interactions remain
unaffected ( H3334234).The tendency of lipophilic substrates to partition into membranes confounds
direct analysis of substrate interactions with ABC exporters
(35,
36). Such partitioning may
promote dynamic collisions with exposed Trp residues and nonspecific
cross-linking in photo-affinity labeling experiments. In this study, we
utilize a site-specific quenching approach to identify residues in the
vicinity of the daunorubicin (DNR)-binding site
(37). Although the data on DNR
stimulation of ATP hydrolysis is inconclusive
(20,
29,
30), the quenching of MsbA Trp
fluorescence suggests a specific interaction. Spin labels were introduced
along transmembrane helices 3, 4, and 6 of MsbA to assess their ATP-dependent
quenching of DNR fluorescence. Residues that quench DNR cluster along the
cytoplasmic end of helices 3 and 6 consistent with specific binding of DNR.
Furthermore, many of these residues are not lipid-exposed but face the
putative substrate chamber formed between the two TMDs. These residues are
proximal to two Trps, which likely explains the previously reported quenching
(29). Our results suggest DNR
partitions to the membrane and then binds MsbA in a manner consistent with the
hydrophobic cleaner model. Interpretation in the context of the crystal
structures of MsbA identifies a putative translocation pathway through the
transmembrane segment. 相似文献
14.
15.
Cristian A. Droppelmann Jaime Guti��rrez Cecilia Vial Enrique Brandan 《The Journal of biological chemistry》2009,284(20):13551-13561
Matrix metalloproteinase-2 (MMP-2) is an important extracellular matrix
remodeling enzyme, and it has been involved in different fibrotic disorders.
The connective tissue growth factor (CTGF/CCN2), which is increased in these
pathologies, induces the production of extracellular matrix proteins. To
understand the fibrotic process observed in diverse pathologies, we analyzed
the fibroblast response to CTGF when MMP-2 activity is inhibited. CTGF
increased fibronectin (FN) amount, MMP-2 mRNA expression, and gelatinase
activity in 3T3 cells. When MMP-2 activity was inhibited either by the
metalloproteinase inhibitor GM-6001 or in MMP-2-deficient fibroblasts, an
increase in the basal amount of FN together with a decrease of its levels in
response to CTGF was observed. This paradoxical effect could be explained by
the fact that the excess of FN could block the access to other ligands, such
as CTGF, to integrins. This effect was emulated in fibroblasts by adding
exogenous FN or RGDS peptides or using anti-integrin αV
subunit-blocking antibodies. Additionally, in MMP-2-deficient cells CTGF did
not induce the formation of stress fibers, focal adhesion sites, and ERK
phosphorylation. Anti-integrin αV subunit-blocking antibodies
inhibited ERK phosphorylation in control cells. Finally, in MMP-2-deficient
cells, FN mRNA expression was not affected by CTGF, but degradation of
125I-FN was increased. These results suggest that expression,
regulation, and activity of MMP-2 can play an important role in the initial
steps of fibrosis and shows that FN levels can regulate the cellular response
to CTGF.Extracellular proteolysis is an essential physiological process that
controls the immediate cellular environment and thus plays a key role in
cellular behavior and survival
(1). The members of the matrix
metalloproteinase
(MMP)2 family of
zinc-dependent endopeptidases are major mediators of extracellular proteolysis
by promoting the degradation of extracellular matrix (ECM) components and cell
surface-associated proteins (2,
3). Each one of these enzymes
is negatively regulated by tissue inhibitors of metalloproteinases (TIMPs)
(4) and is secreted as a
zymogen (pro-MMPs) that is activated in the extracellular space
(5–7).
This mechanism is an important form of regulation of gelatinase activity and
in consequence, highly significant for ECM homeostasis. Among the members of
the MMP family, the metalloproteinase type 2 (MMP-2 or gelatinase A) is known
to be a key player in many physiological and pathological processes, such as
cell migration, inflammation, angiogenesis, and fibrosis
(8–11).Fibrotic disorders are typified by excessive connective tissue and ECM
deposition that precludes normal healing of different tissues. ECM
accumulation can be explained in two ways: increasing expression and
deposition of connective tissue proteins and/or decreasing degradation of ECM
proteins (12). Transforming
growth factor type β, a multifunctional cytokine, is strongly
overexpressed, and it is associated to the pathogenesis of these diseases
(13,
14). It stimulates the
expression of connective tissue growth factor (CTGF/CCN2)
(15), a cytokine that is
responsible for transforming growth factor type β fibrotic activity
(16,
17). The role of CTGF in
fibrosis has gained attention in recent years
(16,
18–22).
CTGF overexpression is known to occur in a variety of fibrotic skin disorders
(23,
24), renal
(25), hepatic
(26), and pulmonary fibrosis
(27) and in muscles from
patients with Duchenne muscular dystrophy
(28).On the other hand, several pathologies involving fibrosis show an increase
in MMP expression, including gelatinase A. Augmented expression of MMP-2 was
found in submucous (29), skin
(30), liver
(31), and lung fibrosis
(32,
33) and dystrophic myotubes
from fibrotic muscles of Duchenne muscular dystrophy
(34). It has been shown that
transforming growth factor type β induces an increase in the amount of
MMP-2 in fibroblasts (35) and
that CTGF induces MMP-2 expression in cultured renal interstitial fibroblasts
(36). The putative role
assigned to MMP-2 in fibrotic disorders is related to tissue regeneration
because of the capacity of this enzyme to degrade basal lamina
(37–39).
Because MMP-2 expression is up-regulated in these pathologies but still a high
ECM deposition is observed, we propose that this accumulation could be
explained by a diminution of the MMP-2 enzymatic activity.In this article, we demonstrate that CTGF increases fibronectin (FN)
amount, MMP-2 expression, and gelatinase activity in 3T3 fibroblasts. More
significantly, we show that MMP-2-deficient cells have an increased basal
amount of FN and show a response to CTGF that is opposite to that of control
cells. This paradoxical effect could be explained by the increase in the FN
amount that blocks the integrins (at least integrins with αV
subunit), which can act like CTGF receptors. 相似文献
16.
17.
Zhemin Zhou Yoshiteru Hashimoto Michihiko Kobayashi 《The Journal of biological chemistry》2009,284(22):14930-14938
18.
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
19.
Daniel Lingwood Sebastian Schuck Charles Ferguson Mathias J. Gerl Kai Simons 《The Journal of biological chemistry》2009,284(18):12041-12048
Cell membranes predominantly consist of lamellar lipid bilayers. When
studied in vitro, however, many membrane lipids can exhibit
non-lamellar morphologies, often with cubic symmetries. An open issue is how
lipid polymorphisms influence organelle and cell shape. Here, we used
controlled dimerization of artificial membrane proteins in mammalian tissue
culture cells to induce an expansion of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) with
cubic symmetry. Although this observation emphasizes ER architectural
plasticity, we found that the changed ER membrane became sequestered into
large autophagic vacuoles, positive for the autophagy protein LC3. Autophagy
may be targeting irregular membrane shapes and/or aggregated protein. We
suggest that membrane morphology can be controlled in cells.The observation that simple mixtures of amphiphilic (polar) lipids and
water yield a rich flora of phase structures has opened a long-standing debate
as to whether such membrane polymorphisms are relevant for living organisms
(1–7).
Lipid bilayers with planar geometry, termed lamellar symmetry, dominate the
membrane structure of cells. However, this architecture comprises only a
fraction of the structures seen with in vitro lipid-water systems
(7–11).
The propensity to form lamellar bilayers (a property exclusive to
cylindrically shaped lipids) is flanked by a continuum of lipid structures
that occur in a number of exotic and probably non-physiological
non-bilayer configurations
(3,
12). However, certain lipids,
particularly those with smaller head groups and more bulky hydrocarbon chains,
can adopt bilayered non-lamellar phases called cubic phases. Here the
bilayer is curved everywhere in the form of saddle shapes corresponding to an
energetically favorable minimal surface of zero mean curvature
(1,
7). Because a substantial
number of the lipids present in biological membranes, when studied as
individual pure lipids, form cubic phases
(13), cubic membranes have
received particular interest in cell biology.Since the application of electron microscopy
(EM)3 to the study of
cell ultrastructure, unusual membrane morphologies have been reported for
virtually every organelle (14,
15). However, interpretation
of three-dimensional structures from two-dimensional electron micrographs is
not easy (16). In seminal
work, Landh (17) developed the
method of direct template correlative matching, a technique that unequivocally
assesses the presence of cubic membranes in biological specimens
(16). Cubic phases adopt
mathematically well defined three-dimensional configurations whose
two-dimensional analogs have been derived
(4,
17). In direct template
correlative matching, electron micrographs are matched to these analogs. Cubic
cell membrane geometries and in vitro cubic phases of purified lipid
mixtures do differ in their lattice parameters; however, such deviations are
thought to relate to differences in water activity and lipid to protein ratios
(10,
14,
18). Direct template
correlative matching has revealed thousands of examples of cellular cubic
membranes in a broad survey of electron micrographs ranging from protozoa to
human cells (14,
17) and, more recently, in the
mitochondria of amoeba (19)
and in subcellular membrane compartments associated with severe acute
respiratory syndrome virus
(20). Analysis of cellular
cubic membranes has also been furthered by the development of EM tomography
that confirmed the presence of cubic bilayers in the mitochondrial membranes
of amoeba (21,
22).Although it is now clear that cubic membranes can exist in living cells,
the generation of such architecture would appear tightly regulated, as
evidenced by the dominance of lamellar bilayers in biology. In this light, we
examined the capability and implications of generating cubic membranes in the
endoplasmic reticulum (ER) of mammalian tissue culture cells. The ER is a
spatially interconnected complex consisting of two domains, the nuclear
envelope and the peripheral ER
(23–26).
The nuclear envelope surrounds the nucleus and is composed of two continuous
sheets of membranes, an inner and outer nuclear membrane connected to each
other at nuclear pores. The peripheral ER constitutes a network of branching
trijunctional tubules that are continuous with membrane sheet regions that
occur in closer proximity to the nucleus. Recently it has been suggested that
the classical morphological definition of rough ER (ribosome-studded) and
smooth ER (ribosome-free) may correspond to sheet-like and tubular ER domains,
respectively (27). The ER has
a strong potential for cubic architectures, as demonstrated by the fact that
the majority of cubic cell membranes in the EM record come from ER-derived
structures (14,
17). Furthermore, ER cubic
symmetries are an inducible class of organized smooth ER (OSER), a definition
collectively referring to ordered smooth ER membranes (=stacked cisternae on
the outer nuclear membrane, also called Karmelle
(28–30),
packed sinusoidal ER (31),
concentric membrane whorls
(30,
32–34),
and arrays of crystalloid ER
(35–37)).
Specifically, weak homotypic interactions between membrane proteins produce
both a whorled and a sinusoidal OSER phenotype
(38), the latter exhibiting a
cubic symmetry (16,
39).We were able to produce OSER with cubic membrane morphology via induction
of homo-dimerization of artificial membrane proteins. Interestingly, the
resultant cubic membrane architecture was removed from the ER system by
incorporation into large autophagic vacuoles. To assess whether these cubic
symmetries were favored in the absence of cellular energy, we depleted ATP. To
our surprise, the cells responded by forming large domains of tubulated
membrane, suggesting that a cubic symmetry was not the preferred conformation
of the system. Our results suggest that whereas the endoplasmic reticulum is
capable of adopting cubic symmetries, both the inherent properties of the ER
system and active cellular mechanisms, such as autophagy, can tightly control
their appearance. 相似文献
20.
Hongjie Yuan Katie M. Vance Candice E. Junge Matthew T. Geballe James P. Snyder John R. Hepler Manuel Yepes Chian-Ming Low Stephen F. Traynelis 《The Journal of biological chemistry》2009,284(19):12862-12873
Zinc is hypothesized to be co-released with glutamate at synapses of the
central nervous system. Zinc binds to NR1/NR2A
N-methyl-d-aspartate (NMDA) receptors with high affinity
and inhibits NMDAR function in a voltage-independent manner. The serine
protease plasmin can cleave a number of substrates, including
protease-activated receptors, and may play an important role in several
disorders of the central nervous system, including ischemia and spinal cord
injury. Here, we demonstrate that plasmin can cleave the native NR2A
amino-terminal domain (NR2AATD), removing the functional high
affinity Zn2+ binding site. Plasmin also cleaves recombinant
NR2AATD at lysine 317 (Lys317), thereby producing a
∼40-kDa fragment, consistent with plasmin-induced NR2A cleavage fragments
observed in rat brain membrane preparations. A homology model of the
NR2AATD predicts that Lys317 is near the surface of the
protein and is accessible to plasmin. Recombinant expression of NR2A with an
amino-terminal deletion at Lys317 is functional and Zn2+
insensitive. Whole cell voltage-clamp recordings show that Zn2+
inhibition of agonist-evoked NMDA receptor currents of NR1/NR2A-transfected
HEK 293 cells and cultured cortical neurons is significantly reduced by
plasmin treatment. Mutating the plasmin cleavage site Lys317 on
NR2A to alanine blocks the effect of plasmin on Zn2+ inhibition.
The relief of Zn2+ inhibition by plasmin occurs in
PAR1-/- cortical neurons and thus is independent of interaction
with protease-activated receptors. These results suggest that plasmin can
directly interact with NMDA receptors, and plasmin may increase NMDA receptor
responses through disruption or removal of the amino-terminal domain and
relief of Zn2+ inhibition.N-Methyl-d-aspartate
(NMDA)2 receptors are
one of three types of ionotropic glutamate receptors that play critical roles
in excitatory neurotransmission, synaptic plasticity, and neuronal death
(1–3).
NMDA receptors are comprised of glycine-binding NR1 subunits in combination
with at least one type of glutamate-binding NR2 subunit
(1,
4). Each subunit contains three
transmembrane domains, one cytoplasmic re-entrant membrane loop, one bi-lobed
domain that forms the ligand binding site, and one bi-lobed amino-terminal
domain (ATD), thought to share structural homology to periplasmic amino
acid-binding proteins
(4–6).
Activation of NMDA receptors requires combined stimulation by glutamate and
the co-agonist glycine in addition to membrane depolarization to overcome
voltage-dependent Mg2+ block of the ion channel
(7). The activity of NMDA
receptors is negatively modulated by a variety of extracellular ions,
including Mg2+, polyamines, protons, and Zn2+ ions,
which can exert tonic inhibition under physiological conditions
(1,
4). Several extracellular
modulators such as Zn2+ and ifenprodil are thought to act at the
ATD of the NMDA receptor
(8–14).Zinc is a transition metal that plays key roles in both catalytic and
structural capacities in all mammalian cells
(15). Zinc is required for
normal growth and survival of cells. In addition, neuronal death in
hypoxia-ischemia and epilepsy has been associated with Zn2+
(16–18).
Abnormal metabolism of zinc may contribute to induction of cytotoxicity in
neurodegenerative diseases, such as Alzheimer''s disease, Parkinson''s disease,
and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis
(19). Zinc is co-released with
glutamate at excitatory presynaptic terminals and inhibits native NMDA
receptor activation (20,
21). Zn2+ inhibits
NMDA receptor function through a dual mechanism, which includes
voltage-dependent block and voltage-independent inhibition
(22–24).
Voltage-independent Zn2+ inhibition at low nanomolar concentrations
(IC50, 20 nm) is observed for NR2A-containing NMDA
receptors
(25–28).
Evidence has accumulated that the amino-terminal domain of the NR2A subunit
controls high-affinity Zn2+ inhibition of NMDA receptors, and
several histidine residues in this region may constitute part of an
NR2A-specific Zn2+ binding site
(8,
9,
11,
12). For the NR2A subunit,
several lines of evidence suggest that Zn2+ acts by enhancing
proton inhibition (8,
11,
29,
30).Serine proteases present in the circulation, mast cells, and elsewhere
signal directly to cells by cleaving protease-activated receptors (PARs),
members of a subfamily of G-protein-coupled receptors. Cleavage exposes a
tethered ligand domain that binds to and activates the cleaved receptors
(31,
32). Protease receptor
activation has been studied extensively in relation to coagulation and
thrombolysis (33). In addition
to their circulation in the bloodstream, some serine proteases and PARs are
expressed in the central nervous system, and have been suggested to play roles
in physiological conditions (e.g. long-term potentiation or memory)
and pathophysiological states such as glial scarring, edema, seizure, and
neuronal death (31,
34–36).Functional interactions between proteases and NMDA receptors have
previously been suggested. Earlier studies reported that the blood-derived
serine protease thrombin potentiates NMDA receptor response more than 2-fold
through activation of PAR1
(37). Plasmin, another serine
protease, similarly potentiates NMDA receptor response
(38). Tissue-plasminogen
activator (tPA), which catalyzes the conversion of the zymogen precursor
plasminogen to plasmin and results in PAR1 activation, also interacts with and
cleaves the ATD of the NR1 subunit of the NMDA receptor
(39,
40). This raises the
possibility that plasmin may also interact directly with the NMDA receptor
subunits to modulate receptor response. We therefore investigated the ability
of plasmin to cleave the NR2A NMDA receptor subunit. We found that nanomolar
concentrations of plasmin can cleave within the ATD, a region that mediates
tonic voltage-independent Zn2+ inhibition of NR2A-containing NMDA
receptors. We hypothesized that plasmin cleavage reduces the
Zn2+-mediated inhibition of NMDA receptors by removing the
Zn2+ binding domain. In the present study, we have demonstrated
that Zn2+ inhibition of agonist-evoked NMDA currents is decreased
significantly by plasmin treatment in recombinant NR1/NR2A-transfected HEK 293
cells and cultured cortical neurons. These concentrations of plasmin may be
pathophysiologically relevant in situations in which the blood-brain barrier
is compromised, which could allow blood-derived plasmin to enter brain
parenchyma at concentrations in excess of these that can cleave NR2A. Thus,
ability of plasmin to potentiate NMDA function through the relief of the
Zn2+ inhibition could exacerbate the harmful actions of NMDA
receptor overactivation in pathological situations. In addition, if newly
cleaved NR2AATD enters the bloodstream during ischemic injury, it
could serve as a biomarker of central nervous system injury. 相似文献