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1.
We recently discovered that MG53, a muscle-specific tripartite motif (TRIM) family protein, functions as a sensor of oxidation to nucleate the assembly of cell membrane repair machinery. Our data showed that disulfide bond formation mediated by Cys242 is critical for MG53-mediated translocation of intracellular vesicles toward the injury sites. Here we test the hypothesis that leucine zipper motifs in the coiled-coil domain of MG53 constitute an additional mechanism that facilitates oligomerization of MG53 during cell membrane repair. Two leucine zipper motifs in the coiled-coil domain of MG53 (LZ1 - L176/L183/L190/V197 and LZ2 - L205/L212/L219/L226) are highly conserved across the different animal species. Chemical cross-linking studies show that LZ1 is critical for MG53 homodimerization, whereas LZ2 is not. Mutations of the conserved leucines into alanines in LZ1, not in LZ2, diminish the redox-dependent oligomerization of MG53. Live cell imaging studies demonstrate that the movement of green fluorescent protein (GFP)-tagged MG53 mutants (GFP-LA1 and GFP-LA2) is partially compromised in response to mechanical damage of the cell membrane, and the GFP-LA1/2 double mutant is completely ineffective in translocation toward the injury sites. In addition to the leucine zipper-mediated intermolecular interaction, redox-dependent cross talk between MG53 appears to be an obligatory step for cell membrane repair, since in vivo modification of cysteine residues with alkylating reagents can prevent the movement of MG53 toward the injury sites. Our data show that oxidation of the thiol group of Cys242 and leucine zipper-mediated interaction among the MG53 molecules both contribute to the nucleation process for MG53-mediated cell membrane repair.  相似文献   

2.
Membrane recycling and remodeling contribute to multiple cellular functions, including cell fusion events during myogenesis. We have identified a tripartite motif (TRIM72) family member protein named MG53 and defined its role in mediating the dynamic process of membrane fusion and exocytosis in striated muscle. MG53 is a muscle-specific protein that contains a TRIM motif at the amino terminus and a SPRY motif at the carboxyl terminus. Live cell imaging of green fluorescent protein-MG53 fusion construct in cultured myoblasts showed that although MG53 contains no transmembrane segment it is tightly associated with intracellular vesicles and sarcolemmal membrane. RNA interference-mediated knockdown of MG53 expression impeded myoblast differentiation, whereas overexpression of MG53 enhanced vesicle trafficking to and budding from sarcolemmal membrane. Co-expression studies indicated that MG53 activity is regulated by a functional interaction with caveolin-3. Our data reveal a new function for TRIM family proteins in regulating membrane trafficking and fusion in striated muscles.When myoblasts exit the cell cycle during myogenesis, dramatic changes in membrane organization occur as myoblast fusion allows the formation of multinucleated muscle fibers. In addition to cell fusion events, differentiation of myotubes involves establishment of specialized membrane structures (1, 2). The transverse tubular invagination of sarcolemmal membrane and the intracellular membrane network known as the sarcoplasmic reticulum are two highly organized membrane architectures in cardiac and skeletal muscle. Establishment of these intricate membrane compartments requires extensive remodeling of the immature myoblast membranes. Dynamic membrane remodeling also contributes to many physiologic processes in mature muscle, including Ca2+ signaling, trafficking of glucose transporter (GLUT4), and other membrane internalization events involving caveolae structures (3-6). Although defects in membrane integrity have been linked to various forms of muscular dystrophy (7, 8), the molecular machinery regulating these specific membrane recycling and remodeling events in striated muscle is not well defined.The large tripartite motif (TRIM)5 family of proteins is involved in numerous cellular functions in a wide variety of cell types. Members of this protein family contain signature motifs that include a RING finger, a zinc binding moiety (B-box), and a coiled coil structure (RBCC), which invariably comprise the amino-terminal domain of TRIM family members (9). The carboxyl-terminal sequence of TRIM proteins is variable; in some cases a subfamily of TRIM proteins contains a SPRY domain, a sequence first observed in the ryanodine receptor Ca2+ channel in the sarcoplasmic reticulum membrane of excitable cells (10). Extensive studies have revealed that protein-protein interactions in the cytosol mediate the defined functions of TRIM proteins. For example, the ubiquitin E3 ligase enzymatic activity of several TRIM family members requires the B-box motif (11, 12). Recent studies have also indicated a role for TRIM proteins in defense against events involving membrane penetration, such as protection against infection by various viruses, including human immunodeficiency virus (13-15). Although most of the studies concentrate on the cytosolic action of TRIM, limited reports have investigated the role of TRIM proteins in membrane signaling or recycling.We have previously established an immunoproteomics approach that allows definition of novel components involved in myogenesis, Ca2+ signaling, and maintenance of membrane integrity in striated muscle (16). Using this approach, we have shown that junctophilin is a structural protein that establishes functional communication between sarcoplasmic reticulum and transverse tubule membranes at triad and dyad junctions in striated muscle (17-19). Further studies identified mitsugumin 29, a synaptophysin-related protein that is essential for biogenesis of triad membrane structures and Ca2+ signaling in skeletal muscle (20, 21). Screening of this immunoproteomics library led to the recent identification of MG53, a muscle-specific TRIM family protein (22). Domain homology analysis revealed that MG53 contains the prototypical RBCC motifs plus a SPRY domain at the carboxyl terminus. Genetic knock-out and functional studies reveal that MG53 nucleates the assembly of the sarcolemmal membrane repair machinery to restore cellular integrity following acute damage to the muscle fiber (22).Here we present evidence illustrating that MG53, in contrast to other known TRIM proteins, can localize to intracellular vesicles and the sarcolemmal membrane. A functional interaction between MG53 and caveolin-3, another muscle-specific protein, plays an essential role in regulating the dynamic process of membrane budding and exocytosis in skeletal muscle.  相似文献   

3.
Repair of acute injury to the cell membrane is an elemental process of normal cellular physiology, and defective membrane repair has been linked to many degenerative human diseases. The recent discovery of MG53 as a key component of the membrane resealing machinery allows for a better molecular understanding of the basic biology of tissue repair, as well as for potential translational applications in regenerative medicine. Here we detail the experimental protocols for exploring the in vivo function of MG53 in repair of muscle injury using treadmill exercise protocols on mouse models, for testing the ex vivo membrane repair capacity by measuring dye entry into isolated muscle fibers, and for monitoring the dynamic process of MG53-mediated vesicle trafficking and cell membrane repair in cultured cells using live cell confocal microscopy.  相似文献   

4.
Mitsugumin 53 (MG53) is a member of the membrane repair system in skeletal muscle. However, the roles of MG53 in the unique functions of skeletal muscle have not been addressed, although it is known that MG53 is expressed only in skeletal and cardiac muscle. In the present study, MG53-binding proteins were examined along with proteins that mediate skeletal muscle contraction and relaxation using the binding assays of various MG53 domains and quadrupole time-of-flight mass spectrometry. MG53 binds to sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase 1a (SERCA1a) via its tripartite motif (TRIM) and PRY domains. The binding was confirmed in rabbit skeletal muscle and mouse primary skeletal myotubes by co-immunoprecipitation and immunocytochemistry. MG53 knockdown in mouse primary skeletal myotubes increased Ca2+-uptake through SERCA1a (more than 35%) at micromolar Ca2+ but not at nanomolar Ca2+, suggesting that MG53 attenuates SERCA1a activity possibly during skeletal muscle contraction or relaxation but not during the resting state of skeletal muscle. Therefore MG53 could be a new candidate for the diagnosis and treatment of patients with Brody syndrome, which is not related to the mutations in the gene coding for SERCA1a, but still accompanies exercise-induced muscle stiffness and delayed muscle relaxation due to a reduction in SERCA1a activity.  相似文献   

5.
6.
Defective membrane repair can contribute to the progression of muscular dystrophy. Although mutations in caveolin-3 (Cav3) and dysferlin are linked to muscular dystrophy in human patients, the molecular mechanism underlying the functional interplay between Cav3 and dysferlin in membrane repair of muscle physiology and disease has not been fully resolved. We recently discovered that mitsugumin 53 (MG53), a muscle-specific TRIM (Tri-partite motif) family protein (TRIM72), contributes to intracellular vesicle trafficking and is an essential component of the membrane repair machinery in striated muscle. Here we show that MG53 interacts with dysferlin and Cav3 to regulate membrane repair in skeletal muscle. MG53 mediates active trafficking of intracellular vesicles to the sarcolemma and is required for movement of dysferlin to sites of cell injury during repair patch formation. Mutations in Cav3 (P104L, R26Q) that cause retention of Cav3 in Golgi apparatus result in aberrant localization of MG53 and dysferlin in a dominant-negative fashion, leading to defective membrane repair. Our data reveal that a molecular complex formed by MG53, dysferlin, and Cav3 is essential for repair of muscle membrane damage and also provide a therapeutic target for treatment of muscular and cardiovascular diseases that are linked to compromised membrane repair.Membrane recycling and remodeling contribute to multiple cellular functions, including cell fusion events during myogenesis and maintenance of sarcolemma integrity in striated muscle. During the life cycle of striated muscle, membrane repair is a fundamental process in maintaining cellular integrity, as shown by recent studies that link defective membrane repair to the progression of muscular dystrophy (13). Repair of the plasma membrane damage requires recruitment of intracellular vesicles to injury sites (4, 5). One protein that has been linked to membrane repair in skeletal muscle is dysferlin (6, 7), which is thought to fuse intracellular vesicles to patch the damaged membrane and restore sarcolemmal integrity following muscle injury. Like dysferlin, caveolin-3 (Cav3)3 is a muscle-specific protein, and many mutations in Cav3, including P104L, R26Q, and C71W, have been linked to muscular dystrophy (811). Despite extensive research efforts on Cav3 and dysferlin (1214), the molecular function of these two proteins in membrane repair in muscle physiology and dystrophy have not been fully defined.Animal model studies reveal that either loss or gain of Cav3 function both result in dystrophic phenotypes in skeletal muscle (15, 16), suggesting that associated cellular components may be involved in the etiology of Cav3-related dystrophy. Although the discovery of dysferlin highlights the importance of membrane repair in the etiology of muscular dystrophy, dysferlin itself does not appear to participate in recruitment of intracellular vesicles because dysferlin−/− muscle retains accumulation of vesicles near membrane damage sites (7). This indicates that proteins other than dysferlin are required for nucleation of intracellular vesicles at the sites of acute membrane damage. Recently, we discovered that MG53, a muscle-specific TRIM family protein (TRIM72), is an essential component of the acute membrane repair machinery. MG53 acts as a sensor of oxidation to nucleate recruitment of intracellular vesicles to the injury site for membrane patch formation (17). We also found that MG53 can regulate membrane budding and exocytosis in muscle cells, and this membrane-recycling function of MG53 can be modulated through a functional interaction with Cav3 (18).Here we present evidence that MG53 interacts with dysferlin to facilitate intracellular vesicle trafficking during repair of acute membrane damage. In addition, we show that transgenic overexpression of P104L-Cav3 in striated muscle produces defects in membrane repair that are linked to altered subcellular distribution of MG53 and dysferlin. Our results suggest that altered MG53 localization can be used as a marker for muscular dystrophy involving reduced sarcolemmal membrane repair capacity due to Cav3 mutation, and potentially, in other forms of dystrophy as well.  相似文献   

7.
A role for Zn2+ in accelerating wound healing is established, yet, the signaling pathways linking Zn2+ to tissue repair are not well known. We show that in the human HaCaT keratinocytes extracellular Zn2+ induces a metabotropic Ca2+ response that is abolished by silencing the expression of the G-protein-coupled receptor GPR39, suggesting that this Zn2+-sensing receptor, ZnR, is mediating the response. Keratinocytic-ZnR signaling is highly selective for Zn2+ and can be triggered by nanomolar concentrations of this ion. Interestingly, Zn2+ was also released following cellular injury, as monitored by a specific non-permeable fluorescent Zn2+ probe, ZnAF-2. Chelation of Zn2+ and scavenging of ATP from conditioned medium, collected from injured epithelial cultures, was sufficient to eliminate the metabotropic Ca2+ signaling. The signaling triggered by Zn2+, via ZnR, or by ATP further activated MAP kinase and induced up-regulation of the sodium/proton exchanger NHE1 activity. Finally, activation of ZnR/GPR39 signaling or application of ATP enhanced keratinocytes scratch closure in an in vitro model. Thus our results indicate that extracellular Zn2+, which is either applied or released following injury, activates ZnR/GPR39 to promote signaling leading to epithelial repair.  相似文献   

8.
Triggering receptor expressed on myeloid cells-2 (TREM-2) is rapidly emerging as a key regulator of the innate immune response via its regulation of macrophage inflammatory responses. Here we demonstrate that proximal TREM-2 signaling parallels other DAP12-based receptor systems in its use of Syk and Src-family kinases. However, we find that the linker for activation of T cells (LAT) is severely reduced as monocytes differentiate into macrophages and that TREM-2 exclusively uses the linker for activation of B cells (LAB encoded by the gene Lat2−/−) to mediate downstream signaling. LAB is required for TREM-2-mediated activation of Erk1/2 and dampens proximal TREM-2 signals through a novel LAT-independent mechanism resulting in macrophages with proinflammatory properties. Thus, Lat2−/− macrophages have increased TREM-2-induced proximal phosphorylation, and lipopolysaccharide stimulation of these cells leads to increased interleukin-10 (IL-10) and decreased IL-12p40 production relative to wild type cells. Together these data identify LAB as a critical, LAT-independent regulator of TREM-2 signaling and macrophage development capable of controlling subsequent inflammatory responses.  相似文献   

9.
SK1 (sphingosine kinase 1) plays an important role in many aspects of cellular regulation. Most notably, elevated cellular SK1 activity leads to increased cell proliferation, protection from apoptosis, and induction of neoplastic transformation. We have previously shown that translocation of SK1 from the cytoplasm to the plasma membrane is integral for oncogenesis mediated by this enzyme. The molecular mechanism mediating this translocation of SK1 has remained undefined. Here, we demonstrate a direct role for CIB1 (calcium and integrin-binding protein 1) in this process. We show that CIB1 interacts with SK1 in a Ca2+-dependent manner at the previously identified “calmodulin-binding site” of SK1. We also demonstrate that CIB1 functions as a Ca2+-myristoyl switch, providing a mechanism whereby it translocates SK1 to the plasma membrane. Both small interfering RNA knockdown of CIB1 and the use of a dominant-negative CIB1 we have generated prevent the agonist-dependent translocation of SK1. Furthermore, we demonstrate the requirement of CIB1-mediated translocation of SK1 in controlling cellular sphingosine 1-phosphate generation and associated anti-apoptotic signaling.  相似文献   

10.
11.
The adaptor protein APPL1 (adaptor protein containing pleckstrin homology (PH), phosphotyrosine binding (PTB), and leucine zipper motifs) was first identified as a binding protein of AKT2 by yeast two-hybrid screening. APPL1 was subsequently found to bind to several membrane-bound receptors and was implicated in their signal transduction through AKT and/or MAPK pathways. To determine the unambiguous role of Appl1 in vivo, we generated Appl1 knock-out mice. Here we report that Appl1 knock-out mice are viable and fertile. Appl1-null mice were born at expected Mendelian ratios, without obvious phenotypic abnormalities. Moreover, Akt activity in various fetal tissues was unchanged compared with that observed in wild-type littermates. Studies of isolated Appl1−/− murine embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs) showed that Akt activation by epidermal growth factor, insulin, or fetal bovine serum was similar to that observed in wild-type MEFs, although Akt activation by HGF was diminished in Appl1−/− MEFs. To rule out a possible redundant role played by the related Appl2, we used small interfering RNA to knock down Appl2 expression in Appl1−/− MEFs. Unexpectedly, cell survival was unaffected under normal culture conditions, and activation of Akt was unaltered following epidermal growth factor stimulation, although Akt activity did decrease further after HGF stimulation. Furthermore, we found that Appl proteins are required for HGF-induced cell survival and migration via activation of Akt. Our studies suggest that Appl1 is dispensable for development and only participate in Akt signaling under certain conditions.  相似文献   

12.
Transient receptor potential melastatin 7 (TRPM7) channels are novel Ca2+-permeable non-selective cation channels ubiquitously expressed. Activation of TRPM7 channels has been shown to be involved in cellular Mg2+ homeostasis, diseases caused by abnormal magnesium absorption, and in Ca2+-mediated neuronal injury under ischemic conditions. Here we show strong evidence suggesting that TRPM7 channels also play an important role in cellular Zn2+ homeostasis and in Zn2+-mediated neuronal injury. Using a combination of fluorescent Zn2+ imaging, small interfering RNA, pharmacological analysis, and cell injury assays, we show that activation of TRPM7 channels augmented Zn2+-induced injury of cultured mouse cortical neurons. The Zn2+-mediated neurotoxicity was inhibited by nonspecific TRPM7 blockers Gd3+ or 2-aminoethoxydiphenyl borate, and by knockdown of TRPM7 channels with small interfering RNA. In addition, Zn2+-mediated neuronal injury under oxygen-glucose deprivation conditions was also diminished by silencing TRPM7. Furthermore, we show that overexpression of TRPM7 channels in HEK293 cells increased intracellular Zn2+ accumulation and Zn2+-induced cell injury, while silencing TRPM7 by small interfering RNA attenuated the Zn2+-mediated cell toxicity. Thus, TRPM7 channels may represent a novel target for neurological disorders where Zn2+ toxicity plays an important role.  相似文献   

13.
The persistent inflammatory response at the wound site is a cardinal feature of nonhealing wounds. Prolonged neutrophil presence in the wound site due to failed clearance by reduced monocyte-derived macrophages delays the transition from the inflammatory to the proliferative phase of wound healing. Angiopoietin-like 4 protein (Angptl4) is a matricellular protein that has been implicated in many inflammatory diseases. However, its precise role in the immune cell response during wound healing remains unclear. Therefore, we performed flow cytometry and single-cell RNA sequencing to examine the immune cell landscape of excisional wounds from Angptl4+/+ and Angptl4−/− mice. Chemotactic immune cell recruitment and infiltration were not compromised due to Angptl4 deficiency. However, as wound healing progresses, Angptl4−/− wounds have a prolonged neutrophil presence and fewer monocyte-derived macrophages than Angptl4+/+ and Angptl4LysM−/− wounds. The underlying mechanism involves a novel Angptl4-interferon activated gene 202B (ifi202b) axis that regulates monocyte differentiation to macrophages, coordinating neutrophil removal and inflammation resolution. An unbiased kinase inhibitor screen revealed an Angptl4-mediated kinome signaling network involving S6K, JAK, and CDK, among others, that modulates the expression of ifi202b. Silencing ifi202b in Angptl4−/− monocytes, whose endogenous expression was elevated, rescued the impaired monocyte-to-macrophage transition in the in vitro reconstituted wound microenvironment using wound exudate. GSEA and IPA functional analyses revealed that ifi202b-associated canonical pathways and functions involved in the inflammatory response and monocyte cell fate were enriched. Together, we identified ifi202b as a key gatekeeper of monocyte differentiation. By modulating ifi202b expression, Angptl4 orchestrates the inflammatory state, innate immune landscape, and wound healing process.Subject terms: Acute inflammation, Acute inflammation  相似文献   

14.
Zinc is the second-most abundant transition metal within cells and an essential micronutrient. Although adequate zinc is essential for cellular function, intracellular free zinc (Zn2+) is tightly controlled, as sustained increases in free Zn2+ levels can directly contribute to apoptotic endothelial cell death. Moreover, exposure of endothelial cells to acute nitrosative and/or oxidative stress induces a rapid rise of Zn2+ with mitochondrial dysfunction and the initiation of apoptosis. This apoptotic induction can be mimicked through addition of exogenous ZnCl2 and mitigated by zinc-chelation strategies, indicating Zn2+-dependent mechanisms in this process. However, the molecular mechanisms of Zn2+-mediated mitochondrial dysfunction are unknown. Here we report that free Zn2+ disrupts cellular redox status through inhibition of glutathione reductase, and induces apoptosis by redox-mediated inhibition of the mitochondrial adenine nucleotide transporter (ANT). Inhibition of ANT causes increased mitochondrial oxidation, loss of ADP uptake, mitochondrial translocation of bax, and apoptosis. Interestingly, pre-incubation with glutathione ethyl ester protects endothelial cells from these observed effects. We conclude that key mechanisms of Zn2+-mediated apoptotic induction include disruption of cellular glutathione homeostasis leading to ANT inhibition and decreases in mitochondrial ATP synthesis. These pathways could represent novel therapeutic targets during acute oxidative or nitrosative stress in cells and tissues.  相似文献   

15.
Ferroptosis is an iron-dependent form of regulated necrosis associated with lipid peroxidation. Despite its key role in the inflammatory outcome of ferroptosis, little is known about the molecular events leading to the disruption of the plasma membrane during this type of cell death. Here we show that a sustained increase in cytosolic Ca2+ is a hallmark of ferroptosis that precedes complete bursting of the cell. We report that plasma membrane damage leading to ferroptosis is associated with membrane nanopores of a few nanometers in radius and that ferroptosis, but not lipid peroxidation, can be delayed by osmoprotectants. Importantly, Ca2+ fluxes during ferroptosis induce the activation of the ESCRT-III-dependent membrane repair machinery, which counterbalances the kinetics of cell death and modulates the immunological signature of ferroptosis. Our findings with ferroptosis provide a unifying concept that sustained increase of cytosolic Ca2+ prior to plasma membrane rupture is a common feature of regulated types of necrosis and position ESCRT-III activation as a general protective mechanism in these lytic cell death pathways.Subject terms: Cell biology, Molecular biology  相似文献   

16.
Cutaneous wound healing is a complicated process that is characterized by an initial inflammatory phase followed by a proliferative phase. NLRC3 plays important roles in innate immunity, inflammatory regulation and tumor cell growth. However, the function of NLRC3 in wound healing remains unclear. Here, we investigated the function of NLRC3 in acute cutaneous wound healing using Nlrc3 gene knockout (Nlrc3?/?) mice. Our results demonstrated that skin wound repair in Nlrc3?/? mice was significantly accelerated compared with that in wild-type (WT) mice. NLRC3 deficiency promoted the inflammatory and proliferative phases in wounds enhanced the inflammatory response and increased re-epithelialization and granulation tissue formation, and these phenotypes were primarily ascribed to regulatory effects on p53 signaling. Mechanistically, we uncovered novel crosstalk between NLRC3 and p53 signaling and revealed that NLRC3 could mediate the ubiquitination and degradation of p53 in an Hsp90-dependent manner. In conclusion, our study suggests that NLRC3 is a critical negative regulator of the inflammatory response and cell proliferation during wound healing and that blocking NLRC3 may represent a potential approach for accelerating wound healing.  相似文献   

17.
Xu H  Zhang X  Yang FY 《Bioscience reports》1998,18(5):265-277
Human erythrocyte band 3 is purified and reconstituted into vesicles, forming right-side-out proteoliposomes. Zn2+entrapped inside the proteoliposomes inhibits the anion transport activity of band 3, and removal of the cytoplasmic domain of band 3 is able to diminish Zn2+ inhibition. Thus, the inhibition of activity of band 3 results from the Zn2+ induced conformational change of the cytoplasmic domain, which in turn is transmitted to the membrane domain. The results of intrinsic fluorescence and its quenching by HB and the 35Cl NMR study indicate that the cytoplasmic domain is essential for the conformational change induced by Zn2+.SH-blocking reagents, CH3I and GSSG, are used to modify the cytoplasmic domain, where they specifically bind to Cys201 and Cys317. It is observed that the Zn2+ induced inhibition of anion transport activity is blocked. This demonstrates that Cys201 and Cys317 are required in Zn2+-mediated domain–domain communication.  相似文献   

18.
Cardiomyocytes proliferate during fetal life but lose their ability to proliferate soon after birth and further increases in cardiac mass are achieved through an increase in cell size or hypertrophy. Mammalian target of rapamycin complex 1 (mTORC1) is critical for cell growth and proliferation. Rheb (Ras homologue enriched in brain) is one of the most important upstream regulators of mTORC1. Here, we attempted to clarify the role of Rheb in the heart using cardiac-specific Rheb-deficient mice (Rheb−/−). Rheb−/− mice died from postnatal day 8 to 10. The heart-to-body weight ratio, an index of cardiomyocyte hypertrophy, in Rheb−/− was lower than that in the control (Rheb+/+) at postnatal day 8. The cell surface area of cardiomyocytes isolated from the mouse hearts increased from postnatal days 5 to 8 in Rheb+/+ mice but not in Rheb−/− mice. Ultrastructural analysis indicated that sarcomere maturation was impaired in Rheb−/− hearts during the neonatal period. Rheb−/− hearts exhibited no difference in the phosphorylation level of S6 or 4E-BP1, downstream of mTORC1 at postnatal day 3 but showed attenuation at postnatal day 5 or 8 compared with the control. Polysome analysis revealed that the mRNA translation activity decreased in Rheb−/− hearts at postnatal day 8. Furthermore, ablation of eukaryotic initiation factor 4E-binding protein 1 in Rheb−/− mice improved mRNA translation, cardiac hypertrophic growth, sarcomere maturation, and survival. Thus, Rheb-dependent mTORC1 activation becomes essential for cardiomyocyte hypertrophic growth after early postnatal period.  相似文献   

19.
While nitric oxide (NO)-mediated biological interactions have been intensively studied, the underlying mechanisms of nitrosative stress with resulting pathology remain unclear. Previous studies have demonstrated that NO exposure increases free zinc ions (Zn2+) within cells. However, the resulting effects on endothelial cell survival have not been adequately resolved. Thus the purpose of this study was to investigate the role of altered zinc homeostasis on endothelial cell survival. Initially, we confirmed the previously observed significant increase in free Zn2+ with a subsequent induction of apoptosis in our pulmonary artery endothelial cells (PAECs) exposed to the NO donor N-[2-aminoethyl]-N-[2-hydroxy-2-nitrosohydrazino]-1,2-ethylenediamine. However, NO has many effects upon cell function and we wanted to specifically evaluate the effects mediated by zinc. To accomplish this we utilized the direct addition of zinc chloride (ZnCl2) to PAEC. We observed that Zn2+-exposed PAECs exhibited a dose-dependent increase in superoxide (O2·) generation that was localized to the mitochondria. Furthermore, we found Zn2+-exposed PAECs exhibited a significant reduction in mitochondrial membrane potential, loss of cardiolipin from the inner leaflet, caspase activation, and significant increases in TdT-mediated dUTP nick end labeling-positive cells. Furthermore, using an adenoviral construct for the overexpression of the Zn2+-binding protein, metallothionein-1 (MT-1), we found either MT-1 overexpression or coincubation with a Zn2+-selective chelator, N,N,N',N'-tetrakis(2-pyridylmethyl)ethylene-diamide, in PAECs significantly protected the mitochondria from both NO and Zn2+-mediated disruption and induction of apoptosis and cell death. In summary, our results indicate that a loss of Zn2+ homeostasis produces mitochondrial dysfunction, increased oxidative stress, and apoptotic cell death. We propose that regulation of Zn2+ levels may represent a potential therapeutic target for disease associated with both nitrosative and oxidative stress. reactive nitrogen species; apoptosis mitochondrial dysfunction  相似文献   

20.
Phosphorylation is important in p53-mediated DNA damage responses. After UV irradiation, p53 is phosphorylated specifically at murine residue Ser389. Phosphorylation mutant p53.S389A cells and mice show reduced apoptosis and compromised tumor suppression after UV irradiation. We investigated the underlying cellular processes by time-series analysis of UV-induced gene expression responses in wild-type, p53.S389A, and p53−/− mouse embryonic fibroblasts. The absence of p53.S389 phosphorylation already causes small endogenous gene expression changes for 2,253, mostly p53-dependent, genes. These genes showed basal gene expression levels intermediate to the wild type and p53−/−, possibly to readjust the p53 network. Overall, the p53.S389A mutation lifts p53-dependent gene repression to a level similar to that of p53−/− but has lesser effect on p53-dependently induced genes. In the wild type, the response of 6,058 genes to UV irradiation was strictly biphasic. The early stress response, from 0 to 3 h, results in the activation of processes to prevent the accumulation of DNA damage in cells, whereas the late response, from 12 to 24 h, relates more to reentering the cell cycle. Although the p53.S389A UV gene response was only subtly changed, many cellular processes were significantly affected. The early response was affected the most, and many cellular processes were phase-specifically lost, gained, or altered, e.g., induction of apoptosis, cell division, and DNA repair, respectively. Altogether, p53.S389 phosphorylation seems essential for many p53 target genes and p53-dependent processes.  相似文献   

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