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1.
Upon infection of mammalian cells, Listeria monocytogenes lyses the phagosome and enters the cytosol, where it secretes proteins necessary for its intracellular growth cycle. Consequently, bacterial proteins exposed to the cytosol are potential targets for degradation by host cytosolic proteases. One pathway for degradation of host cytosolic proteins, the N-end rule pathway, involves recognition of the N-terminal amino acid and is mediated by the proteasome. However, very few natural N-end rule substrates have been identified. We have examined the L. monocytogenes ActA protein as a potential target for this pathway. ActA is an essential determinant of L. monocytogenes pathogenesis that is required to induce actin-based motility and cell-to-cell spread. We show that the half-life of a secreted form of ActA can be altered in the mammalian cytosol by changing the N-terminal amino acid. Moreover, the introduction of a destabilizing N-terminus into the functional, surface-bound form of ActA results in a small-plaque phenotype in L2 cells, which is partially reversible by an inhibitor of the proteasome. These results indicate that the L. monocytogenes ActA protein is a natural N-end rule substrate, and that optimal function of ActA in mediating cell-to-cell spread is dependent upon its intracellular turnover rate.  相似文献   

2.
Macrophages from certain inbred mouse strains are rapidly killed (< 90 min) by anthrax lethal toxin (LT). LT cleaves cytoplasmic MEK proteins at 20 min and induces caspase-1 activation in sensitive macrophages at 50-60 min, but the mechanism of LT-induced death is unknown. Proteasome inhibitors block LT-mediated caspase-1 activation and can protect against cell death, indicating that the degradation of at least one cellular protein is required for LT-mediated cell death. Proteins can be degraded by the proteasome via the N-end rule, in which a protein's stability is determined by its N-terminal residue. Using amino acid derivatives that act as inhibitors of this pathway, we show that the N-end rule is required for LT-mediated caspase-1 activation and cell death. We also found that bestatin methyl ester, an aminopeptidase inhibitor protects against LT in vitro and in vivo and that the different inhibitors of the protein degradation pathway act synergistically in protecting against LT. We identify c-IAP1, a mammalian member of the inhibitor of apoptosis protein (IAP) family, as a novel N-end rule substrate degraded in macrophages treated with LT. We also show that LT-induced c-IAP1 degradation is independent of the IAP-antagonizing proteins Smac/DIABLO and Omi/HtrA2, but dependent on caspases.  相似文献   

3.
A hybrid protein of ricin and the enzymatically active fragment A of diphtheria toxin (toxin A) has been synthesized and purified. The diphtheria toxin A fragment of the hybrid protein is shown to enter the cytosol compartment of HeLa cells, its presence assayed by the fall of intracellular elongation factor II (EF-2) and the rise of ADP-ribosylated EF-2. Hybrid entrance to HeLa cells is blocked by lactose which blocks receptor-mediated entry of ricin but not by NH4Cl which blocks the transport of diphtheria toxin. It is concluded that the diphtheria toxin fragment A moiety of the hybrid enters the cell cytosol via the ricin receptor-mediated transport system. The kinetics of intracellular ADP-ribosylation of EF-2 by diphtheria toxin have also been studied. Ribosylation is preceded by a toxin dose-dependent lag period. The data suggest that the time constant responsible for the lag period is in the transport step. Models consistent with these data are discussed.  相似文献   

4.
Proteinase yscE, the proteasome/multicatalytic-multifunctional proteinase of yeast had been shown to function in stress response and in the degradation of ubiquitinated proteins [(1991) EMBO J. 10, 555-562]. A well-defined set of proteins degraded via ubiquitin-mediated proteolysis are the substrates of the N-end rule pathway [(1986) Science 234, 179-186; (1989) Science 243, 1576-1583]. We show that mutants defective in the chymotryptic activity of proteinase yscE fail to degrade substrates of the N-end rule pathway. This gives further proof of the proteasome being a central catalyst in ubiquitin-mediated proteolysis.  相似文献   

5.
Intracellular proteolysis is a tightly regulated process responsible for the targeted removal of unwanted or damaged proteins. The non-lysosomal removal of these proteins is performed by processive enzymes, which belong to the AAA+superfamily, such as the 26S proteasome and Clp proteases. One important protein degradation pathway, that is common to both prokaryotes and eukaryotes, is the N-end rule. In this pathway, proteins bearing a destabilizing amino acid residue at their N-terminus are degraded either by the ClpAP protease in bacteria, such as Escherichia coli or by the ubiquitin proteasome system in the eukaryotic cytoplasm. A suite of enzymes and other molecular components are also required for the successful generation, recognition and delivery of N-end rule substrates to their cognate proteases. In this review we examine the similarities and differences in the N-end rule pathway of bacterial and eukaryotic systems, focusing on the molecular determinants of this pathway.  相似文献   

6.
Varshavsky A  Turner G  Du F  Xie Y 《Biological chemistry》2000,381(9-10):779-789
Eukaryotes contain a highly conserved multienzyme system which covalently links a small protein, ubiquitin, to a variety of intracellular proteins that bear degradation signals recognized by this system. The resulting ubiquitin-protein conjugates are degraded by the 26S proteasome, an ATP-dependent protease. Pathways that involve ubiquitin play major roles in a huge variety of processes, including cell differentiation, cell cycle, and responses to stress. In this article we briefly review the design of the ubiquitin system, and describe two recent advances, the finding that ubiquitin ligases interact with specific components of the 26S proteasome, and the demonstration that peptides accelerate their uptake into cells by activating the N-end rule pathway, one of several proteolytic pathways of the ubiquitin system.  相似文献   

7.
Diphtheria toxin A-fragment enters the cytosol of target cells, where it inhibits protein synthesis by catalyzing ADP-ribosylation of elongation factor 2 (EF-2). We have here analyzed toxin-induced protein synthesis inhibition in single cells by autoradiography and compared it with inhibition of protein synthesis in the whole cell culture. The data show that half-maximal protein synthesis inhibition in the whole cell population after a short incubation time is achieved by partially inhibiting protein synthesis in basically all the cells, while half-maximal protein synthesis inhibition after a long incubation time is due to a complete protein synthesis block in about half the cells in the population. We have also compared stable and unstable A-fragment mutants with respect to the kinetics of cell intoxication. While the toxicity of the stable mutants increased with time, the unstable mutants showed a similar toxicity at early and late time points. When studying the kinetics of cell intoxication by toxins with short cytosolic half-life, we could not detect any recovery of protein synthesis at late time points when all the mutant A-fragments should be degraded. This indicates that the ADP-ribosylation of EF-2 cannot be reversed by an endogenous activity in the cells. The data indicate that entry of toxin into a cell is not associated with an immediate block in protein synthesis, and that prolonged action of single A-fragment molecules in the cytosol is sufficient to obtain complete protein synthesis inhibition at low toxin concentrations.  相似文献   

8.
We describe here three different hamster cell mutants which are resistant to diphtheria toxin and which provide models for investigating some of the functions required by the toxin inactivates elongation factor 2 (EF-2). Cell-free extracts from mutants Dtx(r)-3 was codominant. The evidence suggests that the codominant phenotype is the result of a mutation in a gene coding for EF-2. The recessive phenotype might arise by alteration of an enzyme which modifies the structure of EF-2 so that it becomes a substrate for reaction with the toxin. Another mutant, Dtx(r)-2, contained EF-2 that was sensitive to the toxin and this phenotype was recessive. Pseudomonas aeruginosa exotoxin is known to inactivate EF-2 as does diphtheria toxin and we tested the mutants for cross-resistance to pseudomonas exotoxin. Dtx(r)-1 and Dtx(r)-3 were cross-resistant while Dtx(r)-2 was not. It is known that diphtheria toxin does not penetrate to the cytoplasm of mouse cells and that these cell have a naturally occurring phenotype of diphtheria toxin resistance. We fused each of the mutants with mouse 3T3 cells and measured the resistance. We fused each of the mutants with mouse 3T3 cells and measured the resistance of the hybrid cells to diphtheria toxin. Intraspecies hybrids containing the genome of mutants Dtx(r)-1 and Dtx(r)-3 had some resistance while those formed with Dtx(r)-2 were as sensitive as hybrids derived from fusions between wild-type hamster cells and mouse 3T3 cells.  相似文献   

9.
Cholera toxin travels from the plasma membrane to the endoplasmic reticulum of host cells, where a portion of the toxin, the A1-chain, is unfolded and targeted to a protein-conducting channel for retrotranslocation to the cytosol. Unlike most retrotranslocation substrates, the A1-chain escapes degradation by the proteasome and refolds in the cytosol to induce disease. How this occurs remains poorly understood. Here, we show that an unstructured peptide appended to the N terminus of the A1-chain renders the toxin functionally inactive. Cleavage of the peptide extension prior to cell entry rescues toxin half-life and function. The loss of toxicity is explained by rapid degradation by the proteasome after retrotranslocation to the cytosol. Degradation of the mutant toxin does not follow the N-end rule but depends on the two Lys residues at positions 4 and 17 of the native A1-chain, consistent with polyubiquitination at these sites. Thus, retrotranslocation and refolding of the wild-type A1-chain must proceed in a way that protects these Lys residues from attack by E3 ligases.  相似文献   

10.
The N-terminus of any protein may be used as a destabilization signal for targeted protein degradation. In the eukaryotic cytosol, the signal - the so-called N-degron--is recognized for degradation by (i) the N-end rule, a well-described degradation process involving epsilon-ubiquitination; or (ii) N-terminal ubiquitination, a more recently described pathway. Dedicated E3 ubiquitin ligases known as N-recognins then act on the protein. The proteolytic pathways involve ATP-dependent chambered proteases, such as the 26S proteasome in the cytosol, which generate short oligopeptides. The N-terminus of the polypeptide chain is also important for post-proteasome degradation by specific aminopeptidases, which complete peptide cleavage to generate free amino acids. Finally, in each compartment of the eukaryotic cell, N-terminal methionine excision creates a variety of N-termini for mature proteins. It has recently been shown that the N-terminal methionine excision pathway has a major impact early in targeted protein degradation.  相似文献   

11.
PINK1, a mitochondrial serine/threonine kinase, is the product of a gene mutated in an autosomal recessive form of Parkinson disease. PINK1 is constitutively degraded by an unknown mechanism and stabilized selectively on damaged mitochondria where it can recruit the E3 ligase PARK2/PARKIN to induce mitophagy. Here, we show that, under steady-state conditions, endogenous PINK1 is constitutively and rapidly degraded by E3 ubiquitin ligases UBR1, UBR2 and UBR4 through the N-end rule pathway. Following precursor import into mitochondria, PINK1 is cleaved in the transmembrane segment by a mitochondrial intramembrane protease PARL generating an N-terminal destabilizing amino acid and then retrotranslocates from mitochondria to the cytosol for N-end recognition and proteasomal degradation. Thus, sequential actions of mitochondrial import, PARL-processing, retrotranslocation and recognition by N-end rule E3 enzymes for the ubiquitin proteosomal degradation defines the rapid PINK1 turnover. PINK1 steady-state elimination by the N-end rule identifies a novel organelle to cytoplasm turnover pathway that yields a mechanism to flag damaged mitochondria for autophagic elimination.  相似文献   

12.
Quantal entry of diphtheria toxin to the cytosol   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The rate-limiting step in diphtheria toxin (DT) intoxication of Vero cells has been determined utilizing cycloheximide as an inhibitor of the intoxication process. Cycloheximide is shown to inhibit the toxin catalyzed ADP-ribosylation of elongation factor 2 (EF-2). The inhibition is blocked by puromycin thus establishing the ribosome as the location of cycloheximide protection. Washing cells free of cycloheximide rapidly reverses the protective effect. The initial rates of protein synthesis inhibition observed after removal of cycloheximide from DT-intoxicated cells are 5 to 12-fold greater than rates observed in unprotected cells and are shown to reflect ADP-ribosylation of EF-2 by cytosolic DT. Ten to thirty minutes after cycloheximide removal, the rate of protein synthesis inhibition abruptly changes to values identical to those of unprotected cells. Both the initial rates and extent of the initial rapid inactivation are directly related to toxin concentration and time of incubation with DT in the presence of cycloheximide. We concluded that: the rate-limiting step in protein synthesis inhibition by DT is not the ADP-ribosylation of EF-2 by cytosolic toxin but rather the earlier entry step of DT into the cytosol. DT enters the cytosol as a bolus of sufficient size to rapidly inactivate all EF-2 in that cell. It is inferred from 1 and 2 that the first order inactivation rate exhibited by DT is the result of the probability of the release of a bolus of toxin to the cytosol of any cell in the population per unit time. Autoradiographic analysis of intoxicated cell populations support this two-population state model. The size of a single bolus or quantum of DT is calculated from data over the range of 10(-11) to 10(-9) M DT and is found to remain constant. We suggest that the cytosolic entry mechanism of DT results from a unique ability of the internalized toxin molecules to destabilize the vesicular membrane resulting in a random release of a bolus of toxin into the cytosol. Because the bolus size remains constant over a 50-fold change in receptor occupancy the possibility is raised that DT undergoes a post-receptor packaging process, package size remaining a constant and package number increasing with receptor occupancy.  相似文献   

13.
K28 is a viral A/B toxin that traverses eukaryotic cells by endocytosis and retrograde transport through the secretory pathway. Here we show that toxin retrotranslocation from the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) requires Kar2p/BiP, Pdi1p, Scj1p, Jem1p, and proper maintenance of Ca(2+) homeostasis. Neither cytosolic chaperones nor Cdc48p/Ufd1p/Npl4p complex components or proteasome activity are required for ER exit, indicating that K28 retrotranslocation is mechanistically different from classical ER-associated protein degradation (ERAD). We demonstrate that K28 exits the ER in a heterodimeric but unfolded conformation and dissociates into its subunits as it emerges into the cytosol where beta is ubiquitinated and degraded. ER export and in vivo toxicity were not affected in a lysine-free K28 variant nor under conditions when ubiquitination and proteasome activity was blocked. In contrast, toxin uptake from the plasma membrane required Ubc4p (E2) and Rsp5p (E3) and intoxicated ubc4 and rsp5 mutants accumulate K28 at the cell surface incapable of toxin internalization. We propose a model in which ubiquitination is involved in the endocytic pathway of the toxin, while ER-to-cytosol retrotranslocation is independent of ubiquitination, ERAD and proteasome activity.  相似文献   

14.
The inactivation of elongation factor 2 (EF-2) by diphtheria toxin requires the presence of a post-translationally modified histidine residue in EF-2. This residue, diphthamide, has the structure 2-[3-carboxyamido-3-(trimethylammonio)propyl]histidine. The present work was undertaken to study the pathway of diphthamide biosynthesis using diphtheria toxin-resistant yeast mutants (Chen. J.-Y., Bodley, J. W., and Livingston, D. M. (1985) Mol. Cell. Biol. 5, 3357-3360) which are defective in diphthamide formation. We demonstrate here that one of these mutants (dph5) contains a toxin-resistant form of EF-2 which can be converted in vitro to a toxin-sensitive form through the action of an enzyme present in other yeast strains. Both this toxin-resistant EF-2 and its modifying enzyme have been partially purified and evidence is presented that the modifying enzyme is a specific S-adenosylmethionine:EF-2 methyltransferase. In vitro complementation to diphtheria toxin sensitivity required S-adenosylmethionine, and when partially purified components were incubated with [methyl-3H]S-adenosylmethionine, label was incorporated specifically into EF-2. Hydrolysis of labeled EF-2 yielded diphthine (the unamidated form of diphthamide) and a single chromatographically separable labeling intermediate. We conclude that the S-adenosylmethionine:EF-2 methyltransferase adds at least the last two of the three methyl groups present in diphthine and that this modification is sufficient to create diphtheria toxin sensitivity. Evidence is also presented for the existence of an ATP-dependent amidating enzyme which catalyzes the final step in the biosynthesis of diphthamide in EF-2.  相似文献   

15.
In the present study, we compared the abilities of ricin and diphtheria toxin to induce apoptosis in Vero cells. The cytolysis and DNA fragmentation by ricin paralleled its protein synthesis inhibitory activity. However, unlike ricin, diphtheria toxin could induce neither cytolysis nor DNA fragmentation in Vero cells up to very high concentration, in spite of the fact that Vero cells were even more sensitive to protein synthesis inhibition by diphtheria toxin than ricin. Interestingly, coexistence of brefeldin A (BFA) and okadaic acid (OA) significantly enhanced diphtheria toxin-mediated cytolysis and DNA fragmentation without affecting the activity of protein synthesis inhibition. Ammonium chloride almost completely abolished the ability of diphtheria toxin to induce apoptosis in the presence of BFA and OA as well as the protein synthesis inhibitory activity. The mutant CRM 197, which does not catalyze the ADP ribosylation of elongation factor-2 (EF-2), failed to induce apoptosis in Vero cells even in the presence of BFA and OA. Thus, translocation of diphtheria toxin into the cytosol and subsequent enzymatic inactivation of EF-2 may be necessary steps to induce apoptosis. Taken together our results suggest that protein synthesis inhibition by toxins is not sufficient to induce apoptosis, and underlying mechanisms of apoptosis induction may be distinct between ricin and diphtheria toxin. Since a morphological change in the Golgi complex was observed in Vero cells treated with BFA and OA, modulation of the Golgi complex by these reagents may be partly responsible for enhanced apoptosis induction by diphtheria toxin.  相似文献   

16.
Variations in two general classes of diphtheria toxin-resistant mutants which may be selected from Chinese hamster ovary (CH0-K1) cells and the conditions for their selection are described. The resistance of class I mutants can be overcome with increasing concentrations of toxin. Their entire complement of EF-2 is susceptible to ADP-ribosylation by toxin. Class I includes those strains in which resistance resides at the level of the plasma membrane. The resistance of class II, translational, mutants cannot be overcome by high concentrations of toxin, as all, or a portion, of their EF-2 is insensitive to the action of diphtheria toxin and Pseudomonas exotoxin A. Adjustment of the concentration of toxin used to select resistant mutants can be used to regulate the class of mutant recovered. Metabolic cooperation between cells does not affect recovery of either class I or class II mutants. Resistance is stable in class I strains, but class IIb strains, which possess 50% resistant and 50% sensitive EF-2, display a transient high level of resistance which is retained for varying lengths of time following exposure to toxin. Class IIa strains, which possess 100% resistant EF-2, grow normally in saturating concentrations of toxin, but class IIb strains grow at a reduced rate. Evidence is presented which suggests that the gene for EF-2 is functionally diploid in CHO-K1 cells.  相似文献   

17.
The N-end rule relates the in vivo half-life of a protein to the identity of its N-terminal residue. We used an expression-cloning screen to search for mouse proteins that are degraded by the ubiquitin/proteasome-dependent N-end rule pathway in a reticulocyte lysate. One substrate thus identified was RGS4, a member of the RGS family of GTPase-activating proteins that down-regulate specific G proteins. A determinant of the RGS4 degradation signal (degron) was located at the N terminus of RGS4, because converting cysteine 2 to either glycine, alanine, or valine completely stabilized RGS4. Radiochemical sequencing indicated that the N-terminal methionine of the lysate-produced RGS4 was replaced with arginine. Since N-terminal arginine is a destabilizing residue not encoded by RGS4 mRNA, we conclude that the degron of RGS4 is generated through the removal of N-terminal methionine and enzymatic arginylation of the resulting N-terminal cysteine. RGS16, another member of the RGS family, was also found to be an N-end rule substrate. RGS4 that was transiently expressed in mouse L cells was short-lived in these cells. However, the targeting of RGS4 for degradation in this in vivo setting involved primarily another degron, because N-terminal variants of RGS4 that were stable in reticulocyte lysate remained unstable in L cells.  相似文献   

18.
The internalization of surface-bound diphtheria toxin (DT) in BS-C-1 cells correlated with its appearance in intracellular endosomal vesicles; essentially no toxin appeared within secondary lysosomal vesicles. In contrast, internalized epidermal growth factor (EGF) was localized within both endosomal and lysosomal vesicles. Upon preincubation of cells with leupeptin, a lysosomal protease inhibitor, a threefold increase in the accumulation of EGF into lysosomes was observed. Under identical conditions, essentially all of the diphtheria toxin remained within endosomes (less than 2% of the intracellular diphtheria toxin accumulated in the lysosomal fraction), indicating that the inability to detect diphtheria toxin in lysosomes was not due to its rapid turnover within this vesicle. Following internalization of EGF or DT, up to 40% of the ligand appeared in the medium as TCA-soluble radioactivity. EGF degradation was partially leupeptin-sensitive and markedly NH4Cl-sensitive, indicating lysosomal degradation. In contrast, DT A-fragment degradation was resistant to these inhibitors, while B-fragment showed only partial sensitivity. These data suggest that the bulk of endocytosed diphtheria toxin is localized within endosomes and degraded by a pathway essentially independent of lysosomes.  相似文献   

19.
Ubiquitin-dependent proteolytic systems underlie many processes, including the cell cycle, cell differentiation and responses to stress. One such system is the N-end rule pathway, which targets proteins bearing destabilizing N-terminal residues. Here we report that Ubr1p, the main recognition component of this pathway, regulates peptide import in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae through degradation of Cup9p, a 35 kDa homeodomain protein. Cup9p was identified using a screen for mutants that bypass the previously observed requirement for Ubr1p in peptide import. We show that Cup9p is a short-lived protein (t1/2 approximately 5 min) whose degradation requires Ubr1p. Cup9p acts as a repressor of PTR2, a gene encoding the transmembrane peptide transporter. In contrast to engineered N-end rule substrates, which are recognized by Ubr1p through their destabilizing N-terminal residues, Cup9p is targeted by Ubr1p through an internal degradation signal. The Ubr1p-Cup9p-Ptr2p circuit is the first example of a physiological process controlled by the N-end rule pathway. An earlier study identified Cup9p as a protein required for an aspect of resistance to copper toxicity in S.cerevisiae. Thus, one physiological substrate of the N-end rule pathway functions as both a repressor of peptide import and a regulator of copper homeostasis.  相似文献   

20.
Ornithine decarboxylase (ODC), the first rate-limiting enzyme in the polyamine biosynthesis is one of the most rapidly degraded proteins in eukaryotic cells. Mammalian ODC is a notable exception to the widely accepted dogma that ubiquitination is always required for targeting a protein to degradation by the 26S proteasome. However, while it is well established that in mammalian cells degradation of ODC is ubiquitin independent, the requirement of ubiquitination for degradation of ODC in yeast cells remained undetermined. We have investigated ODC degradation in three mutant strains of Saccharomyces cerevisiae in which ubiquitin-dependent protein degradation activity is severely compromised. While yeast ODC was rapidly degraded in all these mutant strains the degradation of N-end rule substrates was inhibited. A mutant mouse ODC that fails to interact with Az was rapidly degraded in yeast cells but was stable in mammalian cells suggesting that interaction with a mammalian Az like yeast protein is not necessary for the degradation of ODC in yeast cells. Deletion analysis revealed that sequences from its unique N-terminus are involved in targeting yeast ODC to rapid degradation in yeast cells.  相似文献   

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