首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
L-Isoaspartyl (D-aspartyl) O-methyltransferase (PCMT1) is a protein repair enzyme that initiates the conversion of abnormal D-aspartyl and L-isoaspartyl residues to the normal L-aspartyl form. In the course of this reaction, PCMT1 converts the methyl donor S-adenosylmethionine (AdoMet) to S-adenosylhomocysteine (AdoHcy). Due to the high level of activity of this enzyme, particularly in the brain, it seemed of interest to investigate whether the lack of PCMT1 activity might alter the concentrations of these small molecules. AdoMet and AdoHcy were measured in mice lacking PCMT1 (Pcmt1-/-), as well as in their heterozygous (Pcmt1+/-) and wild type (Pcmt1+/+) littermates. Higher levels of AdoMet and lower levels of AdoHcy were found in the brains of Pcmt1-/- mice, and to a lesser extent in Pcmt1+/- mice, when compared with Pcmt1+/+ mice. In addition, these levels appear to be most significantly altered in the hippocampus of the Pcmt1-/- mice. The changes in the AdoMet/AdoHcy ratio could not be attributed to increases in the activities of methionine adenosyltransferase II or S-adenosylhomocysteine hydrolase in the brain tissue of these mice. Because changes in the AdoMet/AdoHcy ratio could potentially alter the overall excitatory state of the brain, this effect may play a role in the progressive epilepsy seen in the Pcmt1-/- mice.  相似文献   

2.
We report the use of a proteomic strategy to identify hitherto unknown substrates for mammalian protein l-isoaspartate O-methyltransferase. This methyltransferase initiates the repair of isoaspartyl residues in aged or stress-damaged proteins in vivo. Tissues from mice lacking the methyltransferase (Pcmt1(-/-)) accumulate more isoaspartyl residues than their wild-type littermates, with the most "damaged" residues arising in the brain. To identify the proteins containing these residues, brain homogenates from Pcmt1(-/-) mice were methylated by exogenous repair enzyme and the radiolabeled methyl donor S-adenosyl-[methyl-(3)H]methionine. Methylated proteins in the homogenates were resolved by both one-dimensional and two-dimensional electrophoresis, and methyltransferase substrates were identified by their increased radiolabeling when isolated from Pcmt1(-/-) animals compared with Pcmt1(+/+) littermates. Mass spectrometric analyses of these isolated brain proteins reveal for the first time that microtubule-associated protein-2, calreticulin, clathrin light chains a and b, ubiquitin carboxyl-terminal hydrolase L1, phosphatidylethanolamine-binding protein, stathmin, beta-synuclein, and alpha-synuclein, are all substrates for the l-isoaspartate methyltransferase in vivo. Our methodology for methyltransferase substrate identification was further supplemented by demonstrating that one of these methyltransferase targets, microtubule-associated protein-2, could be radiolabeled within Pcmt1(-/-) brain extracts using radioactive methyl donor and exogenous methyltransferase enzyme and then specifically immunoprecipitated with microtubule-associated protein-2 antibodies to recover co-localized protein with radioactivity. We comment on the functional significance of accumulation of relatively high levels of isoaspartate within these methyltransferase targets in the context of the histological and phenotypical changes associated with the methyltransferase knock-out mice.  相似文献   

3.
l-Isoaspartyl (d-aspartyl) O-methyltransferase (PCMT1) can initiate the conversion of damaged aspartyl and asparaginyl residues to normal l-aspartyl residues. Mice lacking this enzyme (Pcmt1-/- mice) have elevated levels of damaged residues and die at a mean age of 42 days from massive tonic-clonic seizures. To extend the lives of the knockout mice so that the long term effects of damaged residue accumulation could be investigated, we produced transgenic mice with a mouse Pcmt1 cDNA under the control of a neuron-specific promoter. Pcmt1 transgenic mice that were homozygous for the endogenous Pcmt1 knockout mutation ("transgenic Pcmt1-/- mice") had brain PCMT1 activity levels that were 6.5-13% those of wild-type mice but had little or no activity in other tissues. The transgenic Pcmt1-/- mice lived, on average, 5-fold longer than nontransgenic Pcmt1-/- mice and accumulated only half as many damaged aspartyl residues in their brain proteins. The concentration of damaged residues in heart, testis, and brain proteins in transgenic Pcmt1-/- mice initially increased with age but unexpectedly reached a plateau by 100 days of age. Urine from Pcmt1-/- mice contained increased amounts of peptides with damaged aspartyl residues, apparently enough to account for proteins that were not repaired intracellularly. In the absence of PCMT1, proteolysis may limit the intracellular accumulation of damaged proteins but less efficiently than in wild-type mice having PCMT1-mediated repair.  相似文献   

4.
Protein L-isoaspartate (D-aspartate) O-methyltransferase is an enzyme that catalyses the repair of isoaspartyl damage in proteins. Mice lacking this enzyme (Pcmt1-/- mice) have a progressive increase in brain size compared with wild-type mice (Pcmt1+/+ mice), a phenotype that can be associated with alterations in the PI3K/Akt signal transduction pathway. Here we show that components of this pathway, including Akt, GSK3beta and PDK-1, are more highly phosphorylated in the brains of Pcmt1-/- mice, particularly in cells of the hippocampus, in comparison with Pcmt1+/+ mice. Examination of upstream elements of this pathway in the hippocampus revealed that Pcmt1-/- mice have increased activation of insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) receptor and/or insulin receptor. Western blot analysis revealed an approximate 200% increase in insulin receptor protein levels and an approximate 50% increase in IGF-I receptor protein levels in the hippocampus of Pcmt1-/- mice. Higher levels of the insulin receptor protein were also found in other regions of the adult brain and in whole tissue extracts of brain, liver, heart and testes of both juvenile and adult Pcmt1-/- mice. There were no significant differences in plasma insulin levels for adult Pcmt1-/- mice during glucose tolerance tests. However, they did show higher peak levels of blood glucose, suggesting a mild impairment in glucose tolerance. We propose that Pcmt1-/- mice have altered regulation of the insulin pathway, possibly as a compensatory response to altered glucose uptake or metabolism or as an adaptive response to a general accumulation of isoaspartyl protein damage in the brain and other tissues.  相似文献   

5.
L-isoaspartyl (D-aspartyl) O-methyltransferase deficient mice (Pcmt1−/−) accumulate isomerized aspartyl residues in intracellular proteins until their death due to seizures at approximately 45 days. Previous studies have shown that these mice have constitutively activated insulin signaling in their brains, and that these brains are 20–30% larger than those from age-matched wild-type animals. To determine whether insulin pathway activation and brain enlargement is responsible for the fatal seizures, we administered wortmannin, an inhibitor of the phosphoinositide 3-kinase that catalyzes an early step in the insulin pathway. Oral wortmannin reduced the average brain size in the Pcmt1−/− animals to within 6% of the wild-type DMSO administered controls, and nearly doubled the lifespan of Pcmt1−/− at 60% survival of the original population. Immunoblotting revealed significant decreases in phosphorylation of Akt, PDK1, and mTOR in Pcmt1−/− mice and Akt and PDK1 in wild-type animals upon treatment with wortmannin. These data suggest activation of the insulin pathway and its resulting brain enlargement contributes to the early death of Pcmt1−/− mice, but is not solely responsible for the early death observed in these animals.  相似文献   

6.
Four hexapeptides of sequence L-Val-L-Tyr-L-Pro-(Asp)-Gly-L-Ala containing D- or L-aspartyl residues in normal or isopeptide linkages have been synthesized by the Merrifield solid-phase method as potential substrates of the erythrocyte protein carboxyl methyltransferase. This enzyme has been shown to catalyze the methylation of D-aspartyl residues in proteins in red blood cell membranes and cytosol. Using a new vapor-phase methanol diffusion assay, we have found that the normal hexapeptides containing either D- or L-aspartyl residues were not substrates for the human erythrocyte methyltransferase. On the other hand, the L-aspartyl isopeptide, in which the glycyl residue was linked in a peptide bond to the beta-carboxyl group of the aspartyl residue, was a substrate for the enzyme with a Km of 6.3 microM and was methylated with a maximal velocity equal to that observed when ovalbumin was used as a methyl acceptor. The enzyme catalyzed the transfer of up to 0.8 mol of methyl groups/mol of this peptide. Of the four synthetic peptides, only the L-isohexapeptide competitively inhibits the methylation of ovalbumin by the erythrocyte enzyme. This peptide also acts as a substrate for both of the purified protein carboxyl methyltransferases I and II which have been previously isolated from bovine brain (Aswad, D. W., and Deight, E. A. (1983) J. Neurochem. 40, 1718-1726). The L-isoaspartyl hexapeptide represents the first defined synthetic substrate for a eucaryotic protein carboxyl methyltransferase. These results demonstrate that these enzymes can not only catalyze the formation of methyl esters at the beta-carboxyl groups of D-aspartyl residues but can also form esters at the alpha-carboxyl groups of isomerized L-aspartyl residues. The implications of these findings for the metabolism of modified proteins are discussed.  相似文献   

7.
M B Mudgett  J D Lowenson    S Clarke 《Plant physiology》1997,115(4):1481-1489
Protein L-isoaspartate (D-aspartate) O-methyltransferases (MTs; EC 2.1.1.77) can initiate the conversion of detrimental L-isoaspartyl residues in spontaneously damaged proteins to normal L-aspartyl residues. We detected this enzyme in 45 species from 23 families representing most of the divisions of the plant kingdom. MT activity is often localized in seeds, suggesting that it has a role in their maturation, quiescence, and germination. The relationship among MT activity, the accumulation of abnormal protein L-isoaspartyl residues, and seed viability was explored in barley (Hordeum vulgare cultivar Himalaya) seeds, which contain high levels of MT. Natural aging of barley seeds for 17 years resulted in a significant reduction in MT activity and in seed viability, coupled with increased levels of "unrepaired" L-isoaspartyl residues. In seeds heated to accelerate aging, we found no reduction of MT activity, but we did observe decreased seed viability and the accumulation of isoaspartyl residues. Among populations of accelerated aged seed, those possessing the highest levels of L-isoaspartyl-containing proteins had the lowest germination percentages. These results suggest that the MT present in seeds cannot efficiently repair all spontaneously damaged proteins containing altered aspartyl residues, and their accumulation during aging may contribute to the loss of seed viability.  相似文献   

8.
The N-end rule relates the in vivo half-life of a protein to the identity of its N-terminal residue. In the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the UBR1-encoded ubiquitin ligase (E3) of the N-end rule pathway mediates the targeting of substrate proteins in part through binding to their destabilizing N-terminal residues. The functions of the yeast N-end rule pathway include fidelity of chromosome segregation and the regulation of peptide import. Our previous work described the cloning of cDNA and a gene encoding the 200-kDa mouse UBR1 (E3alpha). Here we show that mouse UBR1, in the presence of a cognate mouse ubiquitin-conjugating (E2) enzyme, can rescue the N-end rule pathway in ubr1Delta S. cerevisiae. We also constructed UBR1(-/-) mouse strains that lacked the UBR1 protein. UBR1(-/-) mice were viable and fertile but weighed significantly less than congenic +/+ mice. The decreased mass of UBR1(-/-) mice stemmed at least in part from smaller amounts of the skeletal muscle and adipose tissues. The skeletal muscle of UBR1(-/-) mice apparently lacked the N-end rule pathway and exhibited abnormal regulation of fatty acid synthase upon starvation. By contrast, and despite the absence of the UBR1 protein, UBR1(-/-) fibroblasts contained the N-end rule pathway. Thus, UBR1(-/-) mice are mosaics in regard to the activity of this pathway, owing to differential expression of proteins that can substitute for the ubiquitin ligase UBR1 (E3alpha). We consider these UBR1-like proteins and discuss the functions of the mammalian N-end rule pathway.  相似文献   

9.
J Lowenson  S Clarke 《Blood cells》1988,14(1):103-118
As erythrocytes age in the circulation, their proteins are subjected to a wide variety of spontaneous reactions that lead to the formation of covalent derivatives. In this article, we concentrate on nonenzymatic reactions at aspartyl and asparaginyl residues, both of which are especially vulnerable targets on the protein. These residues can be altered by a combination of deamidation, isomerization, and racemization reactions that form D- and L-aspartyl and D- and L-isoaspartyl residues. We present evidence that two of these modified residues are targets for an enzymatic methyl esterification reaction, and that methylation may represent the means by which cells respond to this type of protein damage. The metabolic fate of the methyl ester is unclear, but in vitro model studies with peptides and proteins suggest that this methylation can lead to the partial repair of the altered protein and can mitigate the loss of protein function.  相似文献   

10.
Epilepsy is a chronic encephalopathy and one of the most common neurological disorders. Death-associated protein kinase 1 (DAPK1) expression has been shown to be upregulated in the brains of human epilepsy patients compared with those of normal subjects. However, little is known about the impact of DAPK1 on epileptic seizure conditions. In this study, we aim to clarify whether and how DAPK1 is regulated in epilepsy and whether targeting DAPK1 expression or activity has a protective effect against epilepsy using seizure animal models. Here, we found that cortical and hippocampal DAPK1 activity but not DAPK1 expression was increased immediately after convulsive pentylenetetrazol (PTZ) exposure in mice. However, DAPK1 overexpression was found after chronic low-dose PTZ insults during the kindling paradigm. The suppression of DAPK1 expression by genetic knockout significantly reduced PTZ-induced seizure phenotypes and the development of kindled seizures. Moreover, pharmacological inhibition of DAPK1 activity exerted rapid antiepileptic effects in both acute and chronic epilepsy mouse models. Mechanistically, PTZ stimulated the phosphorylation of NR2B through DAPK1 activation. Combined together, these results suggest that DAPK1 regulation is a novel mechanism for the control of both acute and chronic epilepsy and provide new therapeutic strategies for the treatment of human epilepsy.  相似文献   

11.
Skin appendages, such as hair, develop as a result of complex reciprocal signaling between epithelial and mesenchymal cells. These interactions are not well understood at the molecular level. Platelet-derived growth factor-A (PDGF-A) is expressed in the developing epidermis and hair follicle epithelium, and its receptor PDGF-Ralpha is expressed in associated mesenchymal structures. Here we have characterized the skin and hair phenotypes of mice carrying a null mutation in the PDGF-A gene. Postnatal PDGF-A-/- mice developed thinner dermis, misshapen hair follicles, smaller dermal papillae, abnormal dermal sheaths and thinner hair, compared with wild-type siblings. BrdU labeling showed reduced cell proliferation in the dermis and in the dermal sheaths of PDGF-A-/- skin. PDGF-A-/- skin transplantation to nude mice led to abnormal hair formation, reproducing some of the features of the skin phenotype of PDGF-A-/- mice. Taken together, expression patterns and mutant phenotypes suggest that epidermal PDGF-A has a role in stimulating the proliferation of dermal mesenchymal cells that may contribute to the formation of dermal papillae, mesenchymal sheaths and dermal fibroblasts. Finally, we show that sonic hedgehog (shh)-/- mouse embryos have disrupted formation of dermal papillae. Such embryos fail to form pre-papilla aggregates of postmitotic PDGF-Ralpha-positive cells, suggesting that shh has a critical role in the assembly of the dermal papilla.  相似文献   

12.
We have previously reported that N-myc downstream regulated gene-1 (NDRG1) is an early inducible protein during the maturation of mouse bone marrow-derived mast cells (BMMCs) toward a connective tissue mast cell-like phenotype. To clarify the function of NDRG1 in mast cells and allergic responses, we herein analyzed mast cell-associated phenotypes of mice lacking the Ndrg1 gene. Allergic responses including IgE-mediated passive systemic and cutaneous anaphylactic reactions were markedly attenuated in Ndrg1-deficient mice as compared with those in wild-type mice. In Ndrg1-deficient mice, dermal and peritoneal mast cells were decreased in number and morphologically abnormal with impaired degranulating ability. Ex vivo, Ndrg1-deficient BMMCs cocultured with Swiss 3T3 fibroblasts in the presence of stem cell factor, a condition that facilitates the maturation of BMMCs toward a CTMC-like phenotype, displayed less exocytosis than replicate wild-type cells after the cross-linking of FcepsilonRI or stimulation with compound 48/80, even though the exocytotic response of IL-3-maintained, immature BMMCs from both genotypes was comparable. Unlike degranulation, the production of leukotriene and cytokines by cocultured BMMCs was unaffected by NDRG1 deficiency. Taken together, the altered phenotypes of Ndrg1-deficient mast cells both in vivo and ex vivo suggest that NDRG1 has roles in the terminal maturation and effector function (degranulation) of mast cells.  相似文献   

13.
Lymphocytes derived from mice deficient in STAT1 showed reduced apoptosis and enhanced proliferation in vitro. To understand the involvement of STAT1 in the observed reduction in apoptosis, we examined the levels of caspase and bcl-2 family genes that are involved in cell survival and/or apoptosis. The levels of caspase 1 and 11, two enzymes involved in both cytokine protein processing and induction of apoptosis, were reduced in STAT1-/- cells compared with wild-type. However, the levels of bcl-2 genes were comparable in both mice. STAT1-/- cells also displayed an enhanced proliferation following TCR stimulation. This hyperproliferation could not be ascribed completely to the loss of IFN-gamma-mediated antiproliferation. First, similar phenotypes were also observed in fibroblasts and pre-B cells derived from STAT1-/- mice, which do not produce IFN-gamma. Second, comparisons with cells lacking the gene for IFN-gamma or with cells treated with neutralizing Abs to IFN-gamma only partially mimicked the STAT1-/- phenotype. Interestingly, the kinetics of degradation of p27kip1, a CDK inhibitor, following TCR ligation were faster, and, concomitantly, the up-regulation of CDK2 kinase activity and protein levels were increased in stimulated T cells of STAT1-/- mice relative to those of wild-type mice. Furthermore, STAT1-/- animals were more susceptible to carcinogen-induced thymic tumors, a possible consequence of altered T cell growth and/or survival. These results demonstrate an essential role for STAT1 for lymphocyte survival and proliferation that is only partially dependent on IFN-gamma signaling.  相似文献   

14.
Late in infection, parvovirus minute virus of mice (MVMp) induces the lysis of mouse A9 fibroblasts. This effect depends on the large nonstructural phosphoprotein NS1, which plays in addition a major role in viral DNA replication and progeny particle production. Since the NS1 C-terminal region is subjected to late phosphorylation events and protein kinase C (PKC) family members regulate NS1 replicative activities, the present study was conducted to determine the impact of PKCs on NS1 cytotoxic functions. To this end, we performed site-directed mutagenesis, substituting alanine residues for two consensus PKC-phosphorylation sites located within the NS1 C-terminal region, T585 and S588. Although these substitutions had no detectable effect on virus multiplication in a single-round infection, the NS1-585A mutant virus was significantly less toxic to A9 cells than wild-type MVMp, whereas the NS1-588A mutant virus was endowed with a higher killing potential. These alterations correlated with specific changes in the late phosphorylation pattern of the mutant NS1 proteins compared to the wild-type polypeptide. Since the mutations introduced in this region of the viral genome also made changes in the minor nonstructural protein NS2, a contribution of this polypeptide to the above-mentioned phenotypes of mutant viruses cannot be excluded at present. However, the involvement of NS1 in these phenotypes was directly supported by the respective reduced and enhanced capacity of NS1-585A and NS1-588A recombinant proteins for inducing morphological alterations and cell detachment in transfected A9 cultures. Altogether, these data suggest that late-occurring phosphorylation of NS1 specifically regulates the cytotoxic functions of the viral product and that residues T585 and S588 contribute to this control in an antagonistic way.  相似文献   

15.
Zellweger syndrome is the archetypical peroxisome biogenesis disorder and is characterized by defective import of proteins into the peroxisome, leading to peroxisomal metabolic dysfunction and widespread tissue pathology. In humans, mutations in the PEX13 gene, which encodes a peroxisomal membrane protein necessary for peroxisomal protein import, can lead to a Zellweger phenotype. To develop mouse models for this disorder, we have generated a targeted mouse with a loxP-modified Pex13 gene to enable conditional Cre recombinase-mediated inactivation of Pex13. In the studies reported here, we crossed these mice with transgenic mice that express Cre recombinase in all cells to generate progeny with ubiquitous disruption of Pex13. The mutant pups exhibited many of the clinical features of Zellweger syndrome patients, including intrauterine growth retardation, severe hypotonia, failure to feed, and neonatal death. These animals lacked morphologically intact peroxisomes and showed deficient import of matrix proteins containing either type 1 or type 2 targeting signals. Biochemical analyses of tissue and cultured skin fibroblasts from these animals indicated severe impairment of peroxisomal fatty acid oxidation and plasmalogen synthesis. The brains of these animals showed disordered lamination in the cerebral cortex, consistent with a neuronal migration defect. Thus, Pex13(-/-) mice reproduce many of the features of Zellweger syndrome and PEX13 deficiency in humans.  相似文献   

16.
The protective protein was first discovered because of its deficiency in the metabolic storage disorder galactosialidosis. It associates with lysosomal beta-galactosidase and neuraminidase, toward which it exerts a protective function necessary for their stability and activity. Human and mouse protective proteins are homologous to yeast and plant serine carboxypeptidases. Here, we provide evidence that this protein has enzymatic activity similar to that of lysosomal cathepsin A: 1) overexpression of human and mouse protective proteins in COS-1 cells induces a 3-4-fold increase of cathepsin A-like activity; 2) this activity is reduced to approximately 1% in three galactosialidosis patients with different clinical phenotypes; 3) monospecific antibodies raised against human protective protein precipitate virtually all cathepsin A-like activity in normal human fibroblast extracts. Mutagenesis of the serine and histidine active site residues abolishes the enzymatic activity of the respective mutant protective proteins. These mutants, however, behave as the wild-type protein with regard to intracellular routing, processing, and secretion. In contrast, modification of the very conserved Cys60 residue interferes with the correct folding of the precursor polypeptide and, hence, its intracellular transport and processing. The secreted active site mutant precursors, endocytosed by galactosialidosis fibroblasts, restore beta-galactosidase and neuraminidase activities as effectively as wild-type protective protein. These findings indicate that the catalytic activity and protective function of the protective protein are distinct.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Metabolic modulation of neuronal excitability is becoming increasingly important as an antiepileptic therapy. It was reported that the glycolytic inhibitor 2-deoxy-d-glucose (2-DG) and the activation of the ATP-sensitive potassium ion channel (KATP channel) had an antiepileptic effect in models of epilepsy. To explore whether 2-DG exerts an antiepileptic effect through upregulation of the KATP channel subunits Kir6.1 and Kir6.2, the expression of these subunits in hippocampus of five groups of mice with pilocarpine-induced status epilepticus (SE) was evaluated. A seizure group with pilocarpine-kindling convulsions (EP) was compared to similar groups treated with high, medium, and low 2-DG concentrations (100–500 mg/kg) and a normal control group (Con). Kir6.1 and Kir6.2 mRNAs and proteins were analyzed at 4 h, 1 days (acute period), 7 days (latent period), 30, and 60 days (chronic period) following SE. In the seizure group (compared to the Con group), hippocampal expression of Kir6.1 and Kir6.2 increased dramatically at 1, 7, and 30 days, and was further increased after treatment with medium and high dose 2-DG (all P < 0.05). Our results suggest that 2-DG may exert an antiepileptic effect through up-regulation of mRNAs and protein levels of Kir6.1 and Kir6.2, which may therefore be used as molecular targets in the treatment of epilepsy with 2-DG.  相似文献   

19.
Many membrane-bound protein precursors, including cytokines and growth factors, are proteolytically shed to yield soluble intercellular regulatory ligands. The responsible protease, tumor necrosis factor-alpha converting enzyme (TACE/ADAM-17), is a transmembrane metalloprotease-disintegrin that cleaves multiple cell surface proteins, although it was initially identified for the enzymatic release of tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha). Mammalian lung growth and development are tightly controlled by cytokines and peptide growth factors. However, the biological function of the cell shedding mechanism during lung organogenesis is not understood. We therefore evaluated the role of TACE as a "sheddase" during lung morphogenesis by analyzing the developmental phenotypes of lungs in mice with an inactive TACE gene in both in vivo and ex vivo organ explant culture. Neonatal TACE-deficient mice had visible respiratory distress and their lungs failed to form normal saccular structures. These newborn mutant lungs had fewer peripheral epithelial sacs with deficient septation and thick-walled mesenchyme, resulting in reduced surface for gas exchange. At the canalicular stage of E16.5, the lungs of TACE mutant mice were impaired in branching morphogenesis, inhibited in epithelial cell proliferation and differentiation, and delayed in vasculogenesis. Embryonic TACE knockout mouse lungs (E12) branched poorly compared to wild-type lungs, when placed into serumless organ culture. Gene expression of both surfactant protein-C and aquaporin-5 were inhibited in cultured TACE-mutant embryonic lungs, indicating defects in both branching and peripheral epithelial cytodifferentiation in the absence of TACE protein. Furthermore, both the hypoplastic phenotype and the delayed cytodifferentiation in TACE-deficient lungs were rescued by exogenous addition of soluble stimulatory factors including either TNF-alpha or epidermal growth factor in embryonic lung culture. Thus, the impaired lung branching and maturation without TACE suggest a broad role for TACE in the processing of multiple membrane-anchored proteins, one or more of which is essential for normal lung morphogenesis. Taken together, our data indicate that the TACE-mediated proteolytic mechanism which enzymatically releases membrane-tethered proteins plays an indispensable role in lung morphogenesis, and its inactivation leads to abnormal lung development.  相似文献   

20.
Mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs) deficient for pocket proteins (i.e., pRB/p107-, pRB/p130-, or pRB/p107/p130-deficient MEFs) have lost proper G(1) control and are refractory to Ras(V12)-induced senescence. However, pocket protein-deficient MEFs expressing Ras(V12) were unable to exhibit anchorage-independent growth or to form tumors in nude mice. We show that depending on the level of pocket proteins, loss of adhesion induces G(1) and G(2) arrest, which could be alleviated by overexpression of the TBX2 oncogene. TBX2-induced transformation occurred only in the absence of pocket proteins and could be attributed to downregulation of the p53/p21(CIP1) pathway. Our results show that a balance between the pocket protein and p53 pathways determines the level of transformation of MEFs by regulating cyclin-dependent kinase activities. Since transformation of human fibroblasts also requires ablation of both pathways, our results imply that the mechanisms underlying transformation of human and mouse cells are not as different as previously claimed.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号