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1.
A potent and specific small molecule inhibitor of farnesyl-protein transferase, L-739,749, caused rapid morphological reversion and growth inhibition of ras-transformed fibroblasts (Rat1/ras cells). Morphological reversion occurred within 18 h of L-739,749 addition. The reverted phenotype was stable for several days in the absence of inhibitor before the transformed phenotype reappeared. Cell enlargement and actin stress fiber formation accompanied treatment of both Rat1/ras and normal Rat1 cells. Significantly, inhibition of Ras processing did not correlate with the initiation or maintenance of the reverted phenotype. While a single treatment with L-739,749 was sufficient to morphologically revert Rat1/ras cells, repetitive inhibitor treatment was required to significantly reduce cell growth rate. Thus, the effects of L-739,749 on transformed cell morphology and cytoskeletal actin organization could be separated from effects on cell growth, depending on whether exposure to a farnesyl-protein transferase inhibitor was transient or repetitive. In contrast, L-739,749 had no effect on the growth, morphology, or actin organization of v-raf-transformed cells. Taken together, the results suggest that the mechanism of morphological reversion is complex and may involve farnesylated proteins that control the organization of cytoskeletal actin.  相似文献   

2.
Recent results have shown that the ability of farnesyltransferase inhibitors (FTIs) to inhibit malignant cell transformation and Ras prenylation can be separated. We proposed previously that farnesylated Rho proteins are important targets for alternation by FTIs, based on studies of RhoB (the FTI-Rho hypothesis). Cells treated with FTIs exhibit a loss of farnesylated RhoB but a gain of geranylgeranylated RhoB (RhoB-GG), which is associated with loss of growth-promoting activity. In this study, we tested whether the gain of RhoB-GG elicited by FTI treatment was sufficient to mediate FTI-induced cell growth inhibition. In support of this hypothesis, when expressed in Ras-transformed cells RhoB-GG induced phenotypic reversion, cell growth inhibition, and activation of the cell cycle kinase inhibitor p21WAF1. RhoB-GG did not affect the phenotype or growth of normal cells. These effects were similar to FTI treatment insofar as they were all induced in transformed cells but not in normal cells. RhoB-GG did not promote anoikis of Ras-transformed cells, implying that this response to FTIs involves loss-of-function effects. Our findings corroborate the FTI-Rho hypothesis and demonstrate that gain-of-function effects on Rho are part of the drug mechanism. Gain of RhoB-GG may explain how FTIs inhibit the growth of human tumor cells that lack Ras mutations.  相似文献   

3.
Generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) by Ras oncogene-induced NADPH oxidase (Nox) 1 is required for Ras transformation phenotypes including anchorage-independent growth, morphological transformation, and tumorigenesity, but the signaling mechanism downstream of Nox1 remains elusive. Rho is known to be a critical regulator of actin stress fiber formation. Nonetheless, Rho was reported to no longer couple to loss of actin stress fibers in Ras-transformed Swiss3T3 cells despite the elevation of Rho activity. In this study, however, we demonstrate that Rho is inactivated in K-Ras-transformed normal rat kidney cells, and that abrogation of Nox1-generated ROS by Nox1 small interference RNAs or diphenyleneiodonium restores Rho activation, suggesting that Nox1-generated oxidants mediate down-regulation of the Rho activity. This down-regulation involves oxidative inactivation of the low molecular weight protein-tyrosine phosphatase by Nox1-generated ROS and a subsequent elevation in the tyrosine-phosphorylated active form of p190RhoGAP, the direct target of the phosphatase. Furthermore, the decreased Rho activity leads to disruption of both actin stress fibers and focal adhesions in Ras-transformed cells. As for Rac1, Rac1 also appears to participate in the down-regulation of Rho via Nox1. Our discovery defines a mediating role of Nox1-redox signaling for Ras oncogene-induced actin cytoskeletal changes.  相似文献   

4.
Oncogenic transformation of cells alters their morphology, cytoskeletal organization, and adhesive interactions. When the mammary epithelial cell line MCF10A is transformed by activated H-Ras, the cells display a mesenchymal/fibroblastic morphology with decreased cell–cell junctions but increased focal adhesions and stress fibers. We have investigated whether the transformed phenotype is due to Rho activation. The Ras-transformed MCF10A cells have elevated levels of myosin light chain phosphorylation and are more contractile than their normal counterparts, consistent with the activation of Rho. Furthermore, inhibitors of contractility restore a more normal epithelial phenotype to the Ras-transformed MCF10A cells. However, inhibiting Rho by microinjection of C3 exotransferase or dominant negative RhoA only partially restores the normal phenotype, in that it fails to restore normal junctional organization. This result prompted us to examine the effect that inhibiting Rho would have on the junctions of normal MCF10A cells. We have found that inhibiting Rho by C3 microinjection leads to a disruption of E-cadherin cytoskeletal links in adherens junctions and blocks the assembly of new adherens junctions. The introduction of constitutively active Rho into normal MCF10A cells did not mimic the Ras-transformed phenotype. Thus, these results lead us to conclude that some, but not all, characteristics of Ras-transformed epithelial cells are due to activated Rho. Whereas Rho is needed for the assembly of adherens junctions, high levels of activated Rho in Ras-transformed cells contribute to their altered cytoskeletal organization. However, additional events triggered by Ras must also be required for the disruption of adherens junctions and the full development of the transformed epithelial phenotype.  相似文献   

5.
RhoB is a low molecular weight GTPase that is both farnesylated (RhoB-F) and geranylgeranylated (RhoB-GG) in cells. Based on data from rodent cell models, it has been suggested that RhoB displays differential effects on cell transformation, according to the nature of its prenylation. To test directly this hypothesis, we generated GTPase-deficient RhoB mutants that are exclusively either farnesylated or geranylgeranylated. We show that in Ras-transformed murine NIH-3T3 cells, RhoB-F enhances, whereas RhoB-GG and RhoB (F/GG) suppresses anchorage-dependent and -independent cell growth as well as tumor growth in nude mice. We then demonstrate that Ras constitutive activation of the tumor survival pathways Akt and NF-kappa B are blocked by RhoB-GG, but not by RhoB-F, providing further support for the opposing role of RhoB-F and RhoB-GG in Ras malignant transformation in NIH-3T3 cells. In addition, both RhoB (F/GG) and RhoB-GG induce apoptosis in Ras-transformed NIH-3T3 cells whereas RhoB-F has no effect. Our data demonstrate that RhoB-F and RhoB-GG which differ only by a 5-carbon isoprene behave differently in rodent cells highlighting the important role of prenyl groups in protein function and emphasize the potency of RhoB to regulate negatively the oncogenic signal.  相似文献   

6.
Accumulating evidence suggests that p21(Cip1) located in the cytoplasm might play a role in promoting transformation and tumor progression. Here we show that oncogenic H-RasV12 contributes to the loss of actin stress fibers by inducing cytoplasmic localization of p21(Cip1), which uncouples Rho-GTP from stress fiber formation by inhibiting Rho kinase (ROCK). Concomitant with the loss of stress fibers in Ras-transformed cells, there is a decrease in the phosphorylation level of cofilin, which is indicative of a compromised ROCK/LIMK/cofilin pathway. Inhibition of MEK in Ras-transformed NIH3T3 results in restoration of actin stress fibers accompanied by a loss of cytoplasmic p21(Cip1), and increased phosphorylation of cofilin. Ectopic expression of cytoplasmic but not nuclear p21(Cip1) in Ras-transformed cells was effective in preventing stress fibers from being restored upon MEK inhibition and inhibited phosphorylation of cofilin. p21(Cip1) was also found to form a complex with ROCK in Ras-transformed cells in vivo. Furthermore, inhibition of the PI 3-kinase pathway resulted in loss of p21(Cip1) expression accompanied by restoration of phosphocofilin, which was not accompanied by stress fiber formation. These results suggest that restoration of cofilin phosphorylation in Ras-transformed cells is necessary but not sufficient for stress fiber formation. Our findings define a novel mechanism for coupling cytoplasmic p21(Cip1) to the control of actin polymerization by compromising the Rho/ROCK/LIMK/cofilin pathway by oncogenic Ras. These studies suggest that localization of p21(Cip1) to the cytoplasm in transformed cells contributes to pathways that favor not only cell proliferation, but also cell motility thereby contributing to invasion and metastasis.  相似文献   

7.
Recent work suggests that farnesyltransferase inhibitors suppress cancer cell proliferation through mechanisms other than inhibiting Ras isoprenylation, which is not a crucial event. Recent evidence also suggests that the antineoplastic properties of farnesyltransferase inhibitors are due to alterations in the isoprenylation of RhoB, an endosomal Rho protein that functions in receptor trafficking. A shift in conceptual focus from Ras to Rho to understand how farnesyltransferase inhibitors act provides a new vantage to address old questions in the field and suggests strategies to improve and potentially widen clinical applications.  相似文献   

8.
Transformation by oncogenic Ras requires the function of the Rho family GTPases. We find that Ras-transformed cells have elevated levels of RhoA-GTP, which functions to inhibit the expression of the cell cycle inhibitor p21/Waf1. These high levels of Rho-GTP are not a direct consequence of Ras signalling but are selected for in response to sustained ERK-MAP kinase signalling. While the elevated levels of Rho-GTP control the level of p21/Waf, they no longer regulate the formation of actin stress fibres in transformed cells. We show that the sustained ERK-MAP kinase signalling resulting from transformation by oncogenic Ras down-regulates ROCK1 and Rho-kinase, two Rho effectors required for actin stress fibre formation. The repression of Rho- dependent stress fibre formation by ERK-MAP kinase signalling contributes to the increased motility of Ras-transformed fibroblasts. Overexpression of the ROCK target LIM kinase restores actin stress fibres and inhibits the motility of Ras-transformed fibroblasts. We propose a model in which Ras and Rho signalling pathways cross-talk to promote signalling pathways favouring transformation.  相似文献   

9.
Stengel KR  Zheng Y 《PloS one》2012,7(6):e37317
The ras proto-oncogene is one of the most frequently mutated genes in human cancer. However, given the prevalence of activating mutations in Ras and its association with aggressive forms of cancer, attempts to therapeutically target aberrant Ras signaling have been largely disappointing. This lack of progress highlights the deficiency in our understanding of cellular pathways required for Ras-mediated tumorigenesis and suggests the importance of identifying new molecular pathways associated with Ras-driven malignancies. Cdc42 is a Ras-related small GTPase that is known to play roles in oncogenic processes such as cell growth, survival, invasion, and migration. A pan-dominant negative mutant overexpression approach to suppress Cdc42 and related pathways has previously shown a requirement for Cdc42 in Ras-induced anchorage-independent cell growth, however the lack of specificity of such approaches make it difficult to determine if effects are directly related to changes in Cdc42 activity or other Rho family members. Therefore, in order to directly and unambiguously address the role of Cdc42 in Ras-mediated transformation, tumor formation and maintenance, we have developed a model of conditional cdc42 gene in Ras-transformed cells. Loss of Cdc42 drastically alters the cell morphology and inhibits proliferation, cell cycle progression and tumorigenicity of Ras-transformed cells, while non-transformed cells or c-Myc transformed cells are largely unaffected. The loss of Cdc42 in Ras-transformed cells results in reduced Akt signaling, restoration of which could partially rescues the proliferation defects associated with Cdc42 loss. Moreover, disruption of Cdc42 function in established tumors inhibited continued tumor growth. These studies implicate Cdc42 in Ras-driven tumor growth and suggest that targeting Cdc42 is beneficial in Ras-mediated malignancies.  相似文献   

10.
Farnesyl protein transferase inhibitors (FTIs) reverse the transformed phenotype of fibroblasts expressing activated H-Ras and block anchorage-independent growth and tumorigenesis of tumor cell lines independent of their Ras mutational status. FTIs induce significant tumor regression accompanied by apoptosis in several transgenic mouse tumor models. FTI treatment of tumor cells in vitro is proapoptotic under certain cell culture conditions. Induction of apoptosis by FTIs in vitro generally requires a second death-promoting signal. To better understand FTI-induced apoptosis we analyzed the effect of SCH 66336, a tricyclic FTI, on apoptosis of Ras-transformed Rat2 fibroblasts. Treatment of H-Ras-CVLS-transformed fibroblasts with MEK1,2 inhibitors provides a pharmacological second signal to enhance FTI-induced apoptosis. Simultaneous treatment of these cells with a MEK1,2 inhibitor markedly enhanced caspase-3 activity and the apoptotic response to SCH 66336. The combination treatment resulted in a more complete and sustained inhibition of MAPK pathway activity than observed with either drug alone. Surprisingly, after treatment with either agent alone or in combination, no apoptotic response was observed in Rat2 cells transformed with a geranylgeranylated form of H-Ras (H-Ras-CVLL). Differences were also observed when SCH 66336 treatment was combined with forced suspension growth or serum withdrawal, in that an increase in drug-induced apoptosis was observed in H-Ras-CVLS-transformed Rat2 cells but not H-Ras-CVLL-transformed Rat2 cells. The lack of apoptotic effect of SCH 66336 and MEK inhibitor, alone or in combination, in H-Ras-CVLL-transformed cells suggests a difference in the reliance of cells transformed with farnesylated and geranylgeranylated forms of H-Ras on the MAPK signal transduction cascade for survival. K-Ras-transformed cells underwent apoptosis upon MEK1,2 inhibition but not in response to SCH 66336 treatment. The apoptotic response induced by MEK1,2 inhibitors is much greater in magnitude in H-Ras-transformed cells than in K-Ras-transformed cells, also pointing to differences in pathway utilization and/or dependence for these two Ras isoforms.  相似文献   

11.
The Rho family GTPases RhoA, RhoB, and RhoC regulate the actin cytoskeleton, cell movement, and cell growth. Unlike Ras, up-regulation or overexpression of these GDP/GTP binding molecular switches, but not activating point mutations, has been associated with human cancer. Although they share over 85% sequence identity, RhoA, RhoB, and RhoC appear to play distinct roles in cell transformation and metastasis. In NIH 3T3 cells, RhoA or RhoB overexpression causes transformation whereas RhoC increases the cell migration rate. To specifically target RhoA, RhoB, or RhoC function, we have generated a set of chimeric molecules by fusing the RhoGAP domain of p190, a GTPase-activating protein that accelerates the intrinsic GTPase activity of all three Rho GTPases, with the C-terminal hypervariable sequences of RhoA, RhoB, or RhoC. The p190-Rho chimeras were active as GTPase-activating proteins toward RhoA in vitro, co-localized with the respective active Rho proteins, and specifically down-regulated Rho protein activities in cells depending on which Rho GTPase sequences were included in the chimeras. In particular, the p190-RhoA-C chimera specifically inhibited RhoA-induced transformation whereas p190-RhoC-C specifically reversed the migration phenotype induced by the active RhoC. In human mammary epithelial-RhoC breast cancer cells, p190-RhoC-C, but not p190-RhoA-C or p190-RhoB-C, reversed the anchorage-independent growth and invasion phenotypes caused by RhoC overexpression. In the highly metastatic A375-M human melanoma cells, p190-RhoC-C specifically reversed migration, and invasion phenotypes attributed to RhoC up-regulation. Thus, we have developed a novel strategy utilizing RhoGAP-Rho chimeras to specifically down-regulate individual Rho activity and demonstrate that this approach may be applied to multiple human tumor cells to reverse the growth and/or invasion phenotypes associated with disregulation of a distinct subtype of Rho GTPase.  相似文献   

12.
RhoB is an endosomal small GTPase that is implicated in the response to growth factors, genotoxic stress, and farnesyltransferase inhibitors. To gain insight into its physiological functions we examined the consequences of homozygous gene deletion in the mouse. Loss of RhoB did not adversely affect mouse development, fertility, or wound healing. However, embryo fibroblasts cultured in vitro exhibited a defect in motility, suggesting that RhoB has a role in this process that is conditional on cell stress. Neoplastic transformation by adenovirus E1A and mutant Ras yielded differences in cell attachment and spreading that were not apparent in primary cells. In addition, transformed -/- cells displayed altered actin and proliferative responses to transforming growth factor beta. A negative modifier role in transformation was suggested by the increased susceptibility of -/- mice to 7,12-dimethylbenz[a]anthracene-induced skin carcinogenesis and by the increased efficiency of intraperitoneal tumor formation by -/- cells. Our findings suggest that RhoB is a negative regulator of integrin and growth factor signals that are involved in neoplastic transformation and possibly other stress or disease states.  相似文献   

13.
Epithelial protein lost in neoplasm (EPLIN) is a cytoskeleton-associated protein characterized by the presence of a single centrally located lin-11, isl-1, and mec-3 (LIM) domain. We have reported previously that EPLIN is down-regulated in transformed cells. In this study, we have investigated whether ectopic expression of EPLIN affects transformation. In untransformed NIH3T3 cells, retroviral-mediated transduction of EPLIN did not alter the cell morphology or growth. NIH3T3 cells expressing EPLIN, however, failed to form colonies when transformed by the activated Cdc42 or the chimeric nuclear oncogene EWS/Fli-1. This suppression of anchorage-independent growth was not universal because EPLIN failed to inhibit the colony formation of Ras-transformed cells. Interestingly, the localization of EPLIN to the actin cytoskeleton was maintained in the EWS/Fli-1- or Cdc42-transformed cells, but not in Ras-transformed cells where it was distributed heterogeneously in the cytoplasm. Using truncated EPLIN constructs, we demonstrated that the NH(2)-terminal region of EPLIN is necessary for both the localization of EPLIN to the actin cytoskeleton and suppression of anchorage-independent growth of EWS/Fli-1-transformed cells. The LIM domain or the COOH-terminal region of EPLIN could be deleted without affecting its cytoskeletal localization or ability to suppress anchorage-dependent growth. Our study indicates EPLIN may function in growth control by associating with and regulating the actin cytoskeleton.  相似文献   

14.
Endogenous prenylation with sesquiterpene or diterpene isoprenoids facilitates membrane localization and functional activation of small monomeric GTP-binding proteins. A direct effect of isoprenoids on regulation of gene expression and protein stability has also been proposed. In this study, we determined the role of sesquiterpene or diterpene isoprenoids on the regulation of Rho G-protein expression, activation, and stability in human trabecular meshwork (TM) cells. In both primary and transformed human TM cells, limiting endogenous isoprenoid synthesis with lovastatin, a potent HMG-CoA reductase inhibitor, elicited marked increases in RhoA and RhoB mRNA and protein content. The effect of lovastatin was dose-dependent with newly synthesized inactive protein accumulating in the cytosol. Supplementation with geranylgeranyl pyrophosphate (GGPP) prevented, while inhibition of geranylgeranyl transferase-I mimicked, the effects of lovastatin on RhoA and RhoB protein content. Similarly, lovastatin-dependent increases in RhoA and RhoB mRNA expression were mimicked by geranylgeranyl transferase-I inhibition. Interestingly, GGPP supplementation selectively promoted the degradation of newly synthesized Rho proteins which was mediated, in part, through the 20S proteasome. Functionally, GGPP supplementation prevented lovastatin-dependent decreases in actin stress fiber organization while selectively facilitating the subcellular redistribution of accumulated Rho proteins from the cytosol to the membrane and increasing RhoA activation. Post-translational prenylation with geranylgeranyl diterpenes selectively facilitates the expression, membrane translocation, functional activation, and turnover of newly synthesized Rho proteins. Geranylgeranyl prenylation represents a novel mechanism by which active Rho proteins are targeted to the 20S proteasome for degradation in human TM cells.  相似文献   

15.
The fact that proteins such as Ras require farnesylation to induce malignant transformation prompted many investigators to design farnesyl transferase inhibitors (FTI) as novel anticancer drugs. FTIs inhibit the growth of ras transformed cells in vitro and induce tumor regression in ras dependent tumor in vivo. Moreover, FTIs inhibit tumor progression in human tumor xenograft models. Currently, FTIs are undergoing phase I and II trials in various cancer types. They show impressive antitumour efficacy and they lack toxicity. Despite these promising results, the development of such molecules in hindered by the absence of appropriate clinical endpoints and of surrogate biological markers. Indeed, it seems likely that Ras is not the critical target of FTIs and that inhibition of the farnesylation of proteins such as RhoB, might also contribute to the observed antitumour properties. Identification of targets that underlie their biological effect is essential in order to predict and evaluate their efficacy.  相似文献   

16.
A long-standing goal in cancer research is to identify cellular functions that have selective roles in regulating neoplastic pathophysiology. Farnesyl-transferase inhibitors (FTIs) are a novel class of cancer chemotherapeutics which have little effect on normal cell physiology but which inhibit or reverse malignant cell phenotypes. FTIs were originally developed as a strategy to inhibit oncogenic Ras, the activity of which depends upon posttranslational farnesylation. However, recent work indicates the antineoplastic effects of FTIs are not linked to Ras inhibition but instead to alteration of RhoB, a small GTPase of the Rho family of cytoskeletal regulators that controls trafficking of cell surface receptors. Rho proteins integrate signals from integrins and cytokine receptors with cell shape via the actin cytoskeleton. A connection between FTIs and Rho alteration is interesting given that histological differences have long been used to define clinical cancer. RhoB is dispensable for normal cell growth and differentiation in mice. Thus, research into the antineoplastic effects of FTIs has led to the identification of a function(s) that is unnecessary for normal cell physiology but crucial for controlling malignant phenotypes.  相似文献   

17.
NF-kappaB/Rel factors have been implicated in the regulation of liver cell death during development, after partial hepatectomy, and in hepatocytes in culture. Rat liver epithelial cells (RLEs) display many biochemical and ultrastructural characteristics of oval cells, which are multipotent cells that can differentiate into mature hepatocytes. While untransformed RLEs undergo growth arrest and apoptosis in response to transforming growth factor beta1 (TGF-beta1) treatment, oncogenic Ras- or Raf-transformed RLEs are insensitive to TGF-beta1-mediated growth arrest. Here we have tested the hypothesis that Ras- or Raf-transformed RLEs have altered NF-kappaB regulation, leading to this resistance to TGF-beta1. We show that classical NF-kappaB is aberrantly activated in Ras- or Raf-transformed RLEs, due to increased phosphorylation and degradation of IkappaB-alpha protein. Inhibition of NF-kappaB activity with a dominant negative form of IkappaB-alpha restored TGF-beta1-mediated cell killing of transformed RLEs. IKK activity mediates this hyperphosphorylation of IkappaB-alpha protein. As judged by kinase assays and transfection of dominant negative IKK-1 and IKK-2 expression vectors, NF-kappaB activation by Ras appeared to be mediated by both IKK-1 and IKK-2, while Raf-induced NF-kappaB activation was mediated by IKK-2. NF-kappaB activation in the Ras-transformed cells was mediated by both the Raf and phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase pathways, while in the Raf-transformed cells, NF-kappaB induction was mediated by the mitogen-activated protein kinase cascade. Last, inhibition of either IKK-1 or IKK-2 reduced focus-forming activity in Ras-transformed RLEs. Overall, these studies elucidate a mechanism that contributes to the process of transformation of liver cells by oncogene Ras and Raf through the IkappaB kinase complex leading to constitutive activation of NF-kappaB.  相似文献   

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