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1.
Recent structure analyses of αB-crystallin have proposed some models of the N-terminal domain and the manner of oligomerization, whereas the effects of the significantly high content of Pro residues at the N-terminal domain remain unclear. We report the properties of a novel P39R mutant of αB-crystallin. The content of α-helix was increased, and the molecular size of the P39R mutant was larger than that of wild-type αB-crystallin. A slight loss of chaperone-like activity was observed using alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH), while a significant increase was detected by insulin assay. The Pro residue at the N-terminal domain of αB-crystallin is important for oligomerization and function.  相似文献   

2.
Tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL) is a member of the tumor necrosis factor alpha family of cytokines that preferentially induces apoptosis in transformed cells, making it a promising cancer therapy. However, many neoplasms are resistant to TRAIL-induced apoptosis by mechanisms that are poorly understood. We demonstrate that the expression of the small heat shock protein alpha B-crystallin (but not other heat shock proteins or apoptosis-regulating proteins) correlates with TRAIL resistance in a panel of human cancer cell lines. Stable expression of wild-type alpha B-crystallin, but not a pseudophosphorylation mutant impaired in its assembly and chaperone function, protects cancer cells from TRAIL-induced caspase-3 activation and apoptosis in vitro. Furthermore, selective inhibition of alpha B-crystallin expression by RNA interference sensitizes cancer cells to TRAIL. In addition, wild-type alpha B-crystallin promotes xenograft tumor growth and inhibits TRAIL-induced apoptosis in vivo in nude mice, whereas a pseudophosphorylation alpha B-crystallin mutant impaired in its anti-apoptotic function inhibits xenograft tumor growth. Collectively, these findings indicate that alpha B-crystallin is a novel regulator of TRAIL-induced apoptosis and tumor growth. Moreover, these results demonstrate that targeted inhibition of alpha B-crystallin promotes TRAIL-induced apoptosis, thereby suggesting a novel strategy to overcome TRAIL resistance in cancer.  相似文献   

3.
alpha B-crystallin (alpha B) is known to be a cytosolic, small heat shock-like multimeric protein that has anti-aggregation, chaperone-like properties. The expression of the alpha B-crystallin gene is developmentally regulated and is induced by a variety of stress stimuli. Importantly, alpha B-crystallin expression is enhanced during oncogenic transformation of cells, in a number of tumors, and most notably, in many neurodegenerative disorders, including Alzheimer's disease and multiple sclerosis. Other than its perceived role as a structural protein in the ocular lens, the actual function of alpha B-crystallin in cellular physiology remains unknown. We have stably transfected CHO cells with an inducible alpha B-cDNA-MMTV-promoter construct that allows the synthesis of recombinant alpha B-crystallin only upon exposure of these cells to dexamethasone. Using immunostaining and conventional and confocal microscopy, we have examined the subcellular distribution of the ectopically expressed alpha B-crystallin. We find that in addition to being in the cytoplasm, the protein resides in the nuclear interior in the interphase nucleus. Double labeling with anti alpha B-crystallin and anti-tubulin, concanavallin, and wheat germ agglutinin, respectively, revealed that during cell division alpha B-crystallin is excluded from condensed chromatin and the nascent nuclei. However, the protein again appears in the newly formed nuclei after the completion of cytokinesis suggesting a conditional, regulatory role for alpha B-crystallin in the nucleus.  相似文献   

4.
Myoblasts respond to growth factor deprivation either by differentiating into multinucleated myotubes or by undergoing apoptosis; hence, the acquisition of apoptosis resistance by myogenic precursors is essential for their development. Here we demonstrate that the expression of the small heat shock protein alpha B-crystallin is selectively induced in C2C12 myoblasts that are resistant to differentiation-induced apoptosis, and we show that this induction occurs at an early stage in their differentiation in vitro. In contrast, the expression of several known anti-apoptotic proteins (FLIP, XIAP, Bcl-x(L)) was not altered during myogenesis. We also demonstrate that ectopic expression of alpha B-crystallin, but not the closely related small heat shock protein Hsp27, renders C2C12 myoblasts resistant to differentiation-induced apoptosis. Furthermore, we show that the myopathy-causing R120G alpha B-crystallin mutant is partly impaired in its cytoprotective function, whereas a pseudophosphorylation alpha B-crystallin mutant that mimics stress-induced phosphorylation is completely devoid of anti-apoptotic activity. Finally, we demonstrate that alpha B-crystallin negatively regulates apoptosis during myogenesis by inhibiting the proteolytic activation of caspase-3, whereas the R120G and pseudophosphorylation mutants are defective in this function. Taken together, our findings indicate that alpha B-crystallin is a novel negative regulator of myogenic apoptosis that directly links the differentiation program to apoptosis resistance.  相似文献   

5.
Rosenthal fibers (RFs) are abnormal inclusions within astrocytes, characteristic of Alexander's disease. We have previously isolated a 22 kd protein component of RFs from Alexander's disease brain. By Western blotting, we detected its equivalent in several rat organs, with the highest level in heart, and in a human astrocytoma cell line (U-373MG). A cDNA library established from U-373MG was screened with an anti-RF protein antibody. A partial cDNA clone encoding the lens protein alpha B-crystallin was isolated. The anti-RF protein antibodies react with lens alpha B-crystallin. Furthermore, the distribution of alpha B-crystallin mRNA in rat organs is consistent with the Western blots. Therefore, alpha B-crystallin is not lens-specific and it can accumulate in large amounts in astrocytes in pathological conditions.  相似文献   

6.
alpha B-crystallin, a major soluble protein of vertebrate eye lenses, is a small heat shock protein which transiently accumulates in response to heat shock and other kinds of stress in mouse NIH 3T3 fibroblasts. Ectopic expression of an alpha B-crystallin cDNA clone renders NIH 3T3 cells thermoresistant. alpha B-crystallin accumulates in response to the synthetic glucocorticoid hormone dexamethasone. Dexamethasone-treated NIH 3T3 cells become thermoresistant to the same extent as they accumulate alpha B-crystallin. A cell clone in which alpha B-crystallin is superinduced upon heat shock acquires augmented thermotolerance. Expression of the ras oncogene causes a rapid but transient accumulation of alpha B-crystallin within 1 day. Later, sustained ras oncogene expression suppresses the dexamethasone-mediated alpha B-crystallin accumulation. Thus, oncogenic transformation triggered by the ras oncogene interferes with hormone-mediated accumulation of alpha B-crystallin and concomitant acquisition of thermoresistance. Other known heat shock proteins do not accumulate in response to ectopic alpha B-crystallin expression or to dexamethasone treatment. These results indicate that alpha B-crystallin can protect NIH 3T3 fibroblasts from thermal shock.  相似文献   

7.
αB-Crystallin, ubiquitously expressed in many tissues including the ocular lens, is a small heat shock protein that can prevent protein aggregation. A number of post-translation modifications are reported to modify αB-crystallin function. Recent studies have identified αB-crystallin lysine residues are modified by acetylation and ubiquitination. Therefore, we sought to determine the effects of lysine to alanine substitution on αB-crystallin functions including chaperone activity and modulation of actin polymerization. Analysis of the ten substitution mutants as recombinant proteins indicated all the proteins were soluble and formed oligomeric complexes similar to wildtype protein. Lysozyme aggregation induced by chemical treatment indicated that K82, K90, K121, K166 and K174/K175 were required for efficient chaperone activity. Thermal induction of γ-crystallin aggregation could be prevented by all αB-crystallin substitution mutants. These αB-crystallin mutants also were able to mediate wildtype levels of actin polymerization. Further analysis of two clones with either enhanced or reduced chaperone activity on individual client substrates or actin polymerization indicated both retained broad chaperone activity and anti-apoptotic activity. Collectively, these studies show the requirements for lysine residues in αB-crystallin function.  相似文献   

8.
We have previously demonstrated that in non-oncogenic adenovirus-transformed baby rat kidney cells a complex of hsp27 and a 22-kDa protein is present, which is lacking in oncogenic cells (Zantema, A., de Jong, E., Lardenoije, R., and van der Eb, A. J. (1989) J. Virol. 63, 3368-3375). Here we show that the 22-kDa protein is identical to alpha B-crystallin. The complex of hsp27 and alpha B-crystallin is also found in some other (non-transformed) cells. However, in most cells tested only hsp27 and no alpha B-crystallin is synthesized. Gel filtration studies show that both proteins are present almost exclusively in a 700-kDa complex. Heat treatment makes the complex fall apart, which is accompanied by a change in the conformation of alpha B-crystallin. Upon recovery, complexes are formed again from both pre-existing and newly synthesized proteins.  相似文献   

9.
10.
Lens alpha-crystallin, alpha A- and alpha B-crystallin, and Hsp27 are members of the small heat shock protein family. Both alpha A- and alpha B-crystallin are expressed in the lens and serve as structural proteins and as chaperones, but alpha B-crystallin is also expressed in nonlenticular organs where Hsp27, rather than alpha A-crystallin, is expressed along with alpha B-crystallin. It is not known what additional function Hsp27 has besides as a heat shock protein, but it may serve, as alpha A-crystallin does in the lens, to stabilize alpha B-crystallin. In this study, we investigate aspects on conformation and thermal stability for the mixture of Hsp27 and alpha B-crystallin. Size exclusion chromatography, circular dichroism (CD), and light scattering measurements indicated that Hsp27 prevented alpha B-crystallin from heat-induced structural changes and high molecular weight (HMW) aggregation. The results indicate that Hsp27 indeed promotes stability of alpha B-crystallin.  相似文献   

11.
Vipp1 (vesicle inducing protein in plastids 1) is found in cyanobacteria and chloroplasts where it is essential for thylakoid formation. Arabidopsis thaliana mutant plants with a reduction of Vipp1 to about 20% of wild type content become albinotic at an early stage. We propose that this drastic phenotype results from an inability of the remaining Vipp1 protein to assemble into a homo-oligomeric complex, indicating that oligomerization is a prerequisite for Vipp1 function. A Vipp1-ProteinA fusion protein, expressed in the Deltavipp1 mutant background, is able to reinstate oligomerization and restore photoautotrophic growth. Plants containing Vipp1-ProteinA in amounts comparable to Vipp1 in the wild type exhibit a wild type phenotype. However, plants with a reduced amount of Vipp1-ProteinA protein are growth-retarded and significantly paler than the wild type. This phenotype is caused by a decrease in thylakoid membrane content and a concomitant reduction in photosynthetic activity. To the extent that thylakoid membranes are made in these plants they are properly assembled with protein-pigment complexes and are photosynthetically active. This strongly supports a function of Vipp1 in basic thylakoid membrane formation and not in the functional assembly of thylakoid protein complexes. Intriguingly, electron microscopic analysis shows that chloroplasts in the mutant plants are not equally affected by the Vipp1 shortage. Indeed, a wide range of different stages of thylakoid development ranging from wild-type-like chloroplasts to plastids nearly devoid of thylakoids can be observed in organelles of one and the same cell.  相似文献   

12.
《The Journal of cell biology》1994,125(6):1385-1393
The phenotypic effects of selectively altering the levels of alpha B- crystallin in cultured glial cells were analyzed using sense and antisense approaches. Rat C6 glioma cells and human U-373MG glioma cells were transfected with a rat alpha B-crystallin sense cDNA or an antisense cDNA regulated by a Rous sarcoma virus promoter to alter cellular levels of alpha B-crystallin. The antisense strategy resulted in decreased alpha B-crystallin levels, as revealed by Western blot and immunocytochemical analyses. The reduced alpha B-crystallin expression was accompanied by alterations in cellular phenotype: (a) a reduction of cell size and/or a slender cell morphology; (b) a disorganized microfilament network; and (c) a reduction of cell adhesiveness. Like HSP27, the presence of additional alpha B-crystallin protein confers a thermoresistant phenotype to stable transfectants. Thus, alpha B- crystallin in glioma cells plays a role in their thermal resistance and may contribute to the stability of cytoskeletal organization.  相似文献   

13.
The murine alpha B-crystallin/small heat shock protein gene is expressed at high levels in the lens and at lower levels in the heart, skeletal muscle, and numerous other tissues. Previously we have found a skeletal-muscle-preferred enhancer at positions -427 to -259 of the alpha B-crystallin gene containing at least four cis-acting regulatory elements (alpha BE-1, alpha BE-2, alpha BE-3, and MRF, which has an E box). Here we show that in transgenic mice, the alpha B-crystallin enhancer directs the chloramphenicol acetyltransferase reporter gene driven by the alpha B-crystallin promoter specifically to myocardiocytes of the heart. The alpha B-crystallin enhancer was active in conjugation with the herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase promoter/human growth hormone reporter gene in transfected rat myocardiocytes. DNase I footprinting and site-specific mutagenesis experiments showed that alpha BE-1, alpha BE-2, alpha BE-3, MRF, and a novel, heart-specific element called alpha BE-4 are required for alpha B-crystallin enhancer activity in transfected myocardiocytes. By contrast, alpha BE-4 is not utilized for enhancer activity in transfected lens or skeletal muscle cell lines. Alpha BE-4 contains an overlapping heat shock sequence and a reverse CArG box [5'-GG(A/T)6CC-3']. Electrophoretic mobility shift assays with an antibody to serum response factor and a CArG-box-competing sequence from the c-fos promoter indicated that a cardiac-specific protein with DNA-binding and antigenic similarities to serum response factor binds to alpha BE-4 via the reverse CArG box; electrophoretic mobility shift assays and antibody experiments with anti-USF antiserum and heart nuclear extract also raised the possibility that the MRF E box utilizes USF or an antigenically related protein. We conclude that the activity of the alpha B-crystallin enhancer in the heart utilizes a reverse CArG box and an E-box-dependent pathway.  相似文献   

14.
Alpha-crystallin, a major protein of all vertebrate lenses, consists of two different subunits, alpha A and alpha B, which form polymeric aggregates with an average molecular mass of 300-800 kDa. Both the alpha A and alpha B subunit have a molecular mass of about 20 kDa. It is not known why alpha crystallin aggregates comprise two different subunits, given that the physicochemical properties of these proteins are very similar. The present study compares the susceptibility of the alpha A and alpha B subunits to gamma-rays. We prepared a recombinant form of human alpha A- and alpha B-crystallin and then irradiated the proteins with gamma-rays. Based on far-UV CD spectra, alpha A-crystallin retained beta-sheet conformation after gamma irradiation up to 3.0 kGy, whereas alpha B-crystallin lost beta-sheet conformation upon exposure to gamma irradiation at >1.0 kGy. Size exclusion chromatography showed that the aggregation and polydispersity of recombinant alpha A-crystallin increased slightly after >1.0 kGy irradiation. In contrast, irradiation of alpha B-crystallin at 1.0 kGy resulted in the formation of huge aggregates and a marked increase in heterogeneity. We have also compared the chaperone activities of gamma-irradiated alpha A- and alpha B-crystallin aggregates. The activity of irradiated alpha A-crystallin was retained while that of the irradiated alpha B-crystallin was became inactive after irradiation of >0.5 kGy. Our results indicate that alpha A-crystallin is more stable to gamma irradiation than alpha B-crystallin.  相似文献   

15.
The inherent heterogeneity of many protein assemblies complicates characterization of their structure and dynamics, as most biophysical techniques require homogeneous preparations of isolated components. For this reason, quantitative studies of the molecular chaperone αB-crystallin, which populates a range of interconverting oligomeric states, have been difficult, and the physicochemical basis for its polydispersity has remained unknown. Here, we perform mass spectrometry experiments to study αB-crystallin and extract detailed information as to its oligomeric distribution and exchange of subunits under a range of conditions. This allows a determination of the thermodynamic and kinetic parameters that govern the polydisperse ensemble and enables the construction of a simple energy profile for oligomerization. We find that the quaternary structure and dynamics of the protein can be explained using a simple model with just two oligomer-independent interactions (i.e., interactions that are energetically identical in all oligomers from 10mers to 40mers) between constituent monomers. As such, the distribution of oligomers is governed purely by the dynamics of individual monomers. This provides a new means for understanding the polydispersity of αB-crystallin and a framework for interrogating other heterogeneous protein assemblies.  相似文献   

16.
Alpha B-crystallin in skeletal muscle: purification and localization.   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
Atrophy of rat soleus muscles by hindlimb suspension is characterized by an early dramatic decrease in a soluble 22-kDa protein. The 22-kDa protein was purified from rat red skeletal muscle and rat lens by three different methods of chromatography. The partial amino acid sequence (65% of total amino acids) determined for muscle 22-kDa protein was identical with that of rat lens crystallin. The HPLC elution patterns of lysylendopeptidase fragments of 22-kDa protein from the two sources were identical. Polyclonal antibodies to rat muscle and bovine lens alpha B-crystallin with the two proteins on immunoblotting. alpha B-Crystallin protein was expressed and synthesized efficiently in slow skeletal muscle and poorly in fast muscle. Thus, the decreased 22-kDa protein of slow muscle in the suspension treatment was confirmed to be alpha B-crystallin. Immunoblotting confirmed that most of the alpha B-crystallin was solubilized, though some was tightly bound to myofibrils. This bound portion was localized in Z-bands of isolated myofibrils by immunocytochemical light and electron microscopy. Muscle alpha B-crystallin is tentatively proposed to be a myofibril-stabilizing protein, based upon its extraction characteristics, localization, and amino acid sequence.  相似文献   

17.
The mechanism by which capping protein (CP) binds barbed ends of actin filaments is not understood, and the physiological significance of CP binding to actin is not defined. The CP crystal structure suggests that the COOH-terminal regions of the CP alpha and beta subunits bind to the barbed end. Using purified recombinant mutant yeast CP, we tested this model. CP lacking both COOH-terminal regions did not bind actin. The alpha COOH-terminal region was more important than that of beta. The significance of CP's actin-binding activity in vivo was tested by determining how well CP actin-binding mutants rescued null mutant phenotypes. Rescue correlated well with capping activity, as did localization of CP to actin patches, indicating that capping is a physiological function for CP. Actin filaments of patches appear to be nucleated first, then capped with CP. The binding constants of yeast CP for actin suggest that actin capping in yeast is more dynamic than in vertebrates.  相似文献   

18.
αB-crystallin, also called HspB5, is a molecular chaperone able to interact with unfolding proteins. By interacting, it inhibits further unfolding, thereby preventing protein aggregation and allowing ATP-dependent chaperones to refold the proteins. αB-crystallin belongs to the family of small heat-shock proteins (sHsps), which in humans consists of 10 different members. The protein forms large oligomeric complexes, containing up to 40 or more subunits, which in vivo consist of heterooligomeric complexes formed by a mixture of αB-crystallin and other sHsps. αB-crystallin is highly expressed in the lens and to a lesser extent in several other tissues, among which heart, skeletal muscle and brain. αB-crystallin plays a role in several cellular processes, such as signal transduction, protein degradation, stabilization of cytoskeletal structures and apoptosis. Mutations in the αB-crystallin gene can have detrimental effects, leading to pathologies such as cataract and cardiomyopathy. This review describes the biological roles of αB-crystallin, with a special focus on its function in the eye lens, heart muscle and brain. In addition its therapeutic potential is discussed.  相似文献   

19.
20.
To estimate the expression level of alpha B-crystallin in the brain of infantile type Alexander's disease, the amounts of protein and mRNA of alpha B-crystallin were measured by enzyme immunoassay (EIA) and Northern blot analysis, respectively, in the brain of patient and controls, and in the tissues from glioblastoma and astrocytoma. The alpha B-crystallin protein in the brain of patient was remarkably increased as compared with those of controls. The amount of alpha B-crystallin mRNA of patient was increased about 7-fold compared to the mean value of the control group and higher than that of glioblastoma tissue. These data suggest that increment of alpha B-crystallin mRNA in astrocytes leads to the overexpression of this protein and may be one of the main causes of infantile type Alexander's disease.  相似文献   

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