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1.
Disabled Is a Putative Adaptor Protein That Functions during Signaling by the Sevenless Receptor Tyrosine Kinase 总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0 下载免费PDF全文
DRK, the Drosophila homolog of the SH2-SH3 domain adaptor protein Grb2, is required during signaling by the sevenless receptor tyrosine kinase (SEV). One role of DRK is to provide a link between activated SEV and the Ras1 activator SOS. We have investigated the possibility that DRK performs other functions by identifying additional DRK-binding proteins. We show that the phosphotyrosine-binding (PTB) domain-containing protein Disabled (DAB) binds to the DRK SH3 domains. DAB is expressed in the ommatidial clusters, and loss of DAB function disrupts ommatidial development. Moreover, reduction of DAB function attenuates signaling by a constitutively activated SEV. Our biochemical analysis suggests that DAB binds SEV directly via its PTB domain, becomes tyrosine phosphorylated upon SEV activation, and then serves as an adaptor protein for SH2 domain-containing proteins. Taken together, these results indicate that DAB is a novel component of the SEV signaling pathway. 相似文献
2.
Analysis of the Import of Carboxyl-Terminal Truncations of the 23-Kilodalton Subunit of the Oxygen-Evolving Complex Suggests That Its Structure Is an Important Determinant for Thylakoid Transport 总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3 下载免费PDF全文
A series of deletions from the carboxyl terminus of the 23-kD subunit of the photosynthetic oxygen-evolving complex OE23 revealed that these truncations result in various degrees of inhibition of translocation across thylakoid membranes and their subsequent assembly to the oxygen-evolving complex. Import of in vitro translated precursors across the chloroplast envelopes was not inhibited by these truncations. Time-course studies of the import of truncated OE23 precursors into intact chloroplasts revealed that the stromal intermediate was subsequently translocated into the thylakoid lumen, where it was processed to a smaller size and rapidly degraded. In contrast to the full-length OE23 intermediate, the truncated intermediate forms that accumulated in the stroma as a result of de-energization of thylakoid membranes could be found associated with the membrane rather than free in the stroma. Protease digestion experiments revealed that the deletions evidently altered the folded conformation of the protein. These results suggest that the carboxyl-terminal portion of the OE23 precursor is important for the maintenance of an optimal structure for import into thylakoids, implying that the efficient translocation of OE23 requires the protein to be correctly folded. In addition, the rapid degradation of the truncated forms of the processed OE23 within the lumen indicates that a protease (or proteases) active in the lumen can recognize and remove misfolded polypeptides. 相似文献
3.
The Adaptor Protein Paxillin Is Essential for Normal Development in the Mouse and Is a Critical Transducer of Fibronectin Signaling 总被引:14,自引:0,他引:14 下载免费PDF全文
Margit Hagel Elizabeth L. George Ann Kim Rulla Tamimi Sarah L. Opitz Christopher E. Turner Akira Imamoto Sheila M. Thomas 《Molecular and cellular biology》2002,22(3):901-915
The integrin family of cell adhesion receptors are important for a diverse set of biological responses during development. Although many integrins have been shown to engage a similar set of cytoplasmic effector proteins in vitro, the importance of these proteins in the biological events mediated by different integrin receptors and ligands is uncertain. We have examined the role of one of the best-characterized integrin effectors, the focal adhesion protein paxillin, by disruption of the paxillin gene in mice. Paxillin was found to be critically involved in regulating the development of mesodermally derived structures such as heart and somites. The phenotype of the paxillin(-/-) mice closely resembles that of fibronectin(-/-) mice, suggesting that paxillin is a critical transducer of signals from fibronectin receptors during early development. Paxillin was also found to play a critical role in fibronectin receptor biology ex vivo since cultured paxillin-null fibroblasts display abnormal focal adhesions, reduced cell migration, inefficient localization of focal adhesion kinase (FAK), and reduced fibronectin-induced phosphorylation of FAK, Cas, and mitogen-activated protein kinase. In addition, we found that paxillin-null fibroblasts show some defects in the cortical cytoskeleton and cell spreading on fibronectin, raising the possibility that paxillin could play a role in structures distinct from focal adhesions. Thus, paxillin and fibronectin regulate some common embryonic developmental events, possibly due to paxillin modulation of fibronectin-regulated focal adhesion dynamics and organization of the membrane cytoskeletal structures that regulate cell migration and spreading. 相似文献
4.
5.
Nupura Hirve Roman M. Levytskyy Stephanie Rigaud David M. Guimond Tomasz Zal Karsten Sauer Constantine D. Tsoukas 《PloS one》2012,7(9)
Binding of the membrane phospholipid phosphatidylinositol 3,4,5-trisphosphate (PIP3) to the Pleckstrin Homology (PH) domain of the Tec family protein tyrosine kinase, Inducible T cell Kinase (ITK), is critical for the recruitment of the kinase to the plasma membrane and its co-localization with the TCR-CD3 molecular complex. Three aromatic residues, termed the FYF motif, located in the inner walls of the phospholipid-binding pocket of the ITK PH domain, are conserved in the PH domains of all Tec kinases, but not in other PH-domain containing proteins, suggesting an important function of the FYF motif in the Tec kinase family. However, the biological significance of the FYF amino acid motif in the ITK-PH domain is unknown. To elucidate it, we have tested the effects of a FYF triple mutant (F26S, Y90F, F92S), henceforth termed FYF-ITK mutant, on ITK function. We found that FYF triple mutation inhibits the TCR-induced production of IL-4 by impairing ITK binding to PIP3, reducing ITK membrane recruitment, inducing conformational changes at the T cell-APC contact site, and compromising phosphorylation of ITK and subsequent phosphorylation of PLCγ1. Interestingly, however, the FYF motif is dispensable for the interaction of ITK with two of its signaling partners, SLP-76 and LAT. Thus, the FYF mutation uncouples PIP3-mediated ITK membrane recruitment from the interactions of the kinase with key components of the TCR signalosome and abrogates ITK function in T cells. 相似文献
6.
YSL16 Is a Phloem-Localized Transporter of the Copper-Nicotianamine Complex That Is Responsible for Copper Distribution in Rice 总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2
Cu is an essential element for plant growth, but the molecular mechanisms of its distribution and redistribution within the plants are unknown. Here, we report that Yellow stripe-like16 (YSL16) is involved in Cu distribution and redistribution in rice (Oryza sativa). Rice YSL16 was expressed in the roots, leaves, and unelongated nodes at the vegetative growth stage and highly expressed in the upper nodes at the reproductive stage. YSL16 was expressed at the phloem of nodes and vascular tissues of leaves. Knockout of this gene resulted in a higher Cu concentration in the older leaves but a lower concentration in the younger leaves at the vegetative stage. At the reproductive stage, a higher Cu concentration was found in the flag leaf and husk, but less Cu was present in the brown rice, resulting in a significant reduction in fertility in the knockout line. Isotope labeling experiments with 65Cu showed that the mutant lost the ability to transport Cu-nicotianamine from older to younger leaves and from the flag leaf to the panicle. Rice YSL16 transported the Cu-nicotianamine complex in yeast. Taken together, our results indicate that Os-YSL16 is a Cu-nicotianamine transporter that is required for delivering Cu to the developing young tissues and seeds through phloem transport. 相似文献
7.
Daniel Aubert Douglas K. MacDonald Miguel A. Valvano 《The Journal of biological chemistry》2010,285(46):35988-35998
The type VI secretion system (T6SS) contributes to the virulence of Burkholderia cenocepacia, an opportunistic pathogen causing serious chronic infections in patients with cystic fibrosis. BcsKC is a highly conserved protein among the T6SSs in Gram-negative bacteria. Here, we show that BcsKC is required for Hcp secretion and cytoskeletal redistribution in macrophages upon bacterial infection. These two phenotypes are associated with a functional T6SS in B. cenocepacia. Experiments employing a bacterial two-hybrid system and pulldown assays demonstrated that BcsKC interacts with BcsLB, another conserved T6SS component. Internal deletions within BcsKC revealed that its N-terminal domain is necessary and sufficient for interaction with BcsLB. Fractionation experiments showed that BcsKC can be in the cytosol or tightly associated with the outer membrane and that BcsKC and BcsLB form a high molecular weight complex anchored to the outer membrane that requires BcsFH (a ClpV homolog) to be assembled. Together, our data show that BcsKC/BcsLB interaction is essential for the T6SS activity in B. cenocepacia. 相似文献
8.
Steven J. Werden Jerry Lanchbury Donna Shattuck Chris Neff Max Dufford Grant McFadden 《Journal of virology》2009,83(23):12068-12083
Most poxviruses express multiple proteins containing ankyrin (ANK) repeats accounting for a large superfamily of related but unique determinants of poxviral tropism. Recently, select members of this novel family of poxvirus proteins have drawn considerable attention for their potential roles in modulating intracellular signaling networks during viral infection. The rabbit-specific poxvirus, myxoma virus (MYXV), encodes four unique ANK repeat proteins, termed M-T5, M148, M149, and M150, all of which include a carboxy-terminal PRANC domain which closely resembles a cellular protein motif called the F-box domain. Here, we show that each MYXV-encoded ANK repeat protein, including M-T5, interacts directly with the Skp1 component of the host SCF ubiquitin ligase complex, and that the binding of M-T5 to cullin 1 is indirect via binding to Skp1 in the host SCF complex. To understand the significance of these virus-host protein interactions, the various binding domains of M-T5 were mapped. The N-terminal ANK repeats I and II were identified as being important for interaction with Akt, whereas the C-terminal PRANC/F-box-like domain was essential for binding to Skp1. We also report that M-T5 can bind Akt and the host SCF complex (via Skp1) simultaneously in MYXV-infected cells. Finally, we report that M-T5 specifically mediates the relocalization of Akt from the nucleus to the cytoplasm during infection with the wild-type MYXV, but not the M-T5 knockout version of the virus. These results indicate that ANK/PRANC proteins play a critical role in reprogramming disparate cellular signaling cascades to establish a new cellular environment more favorable for virus replication.Myxoma virus (MYXV) is a rabbit-specific poxvirus that has proven to be a useful model system to study the mechanism by which virus-encoded immunoregulatory proteins function to manipulate the various host immune responses during the course of viral infection (50). In its long-term evolutionary host (Sylvilagus sp.), MYXV causes a benign disease localized to the site of inoculation, but when the virus infects European rabbits (Oryctolagus cuniculus), it causes a rapid systemic and highly lethal infection called myxomatosis (13). The success of MYXV as a pathogen can be attributed to the ability of the virus to effectively avoid recognition and clearance by the immune systems of susceptible rabbit hosts. At the level of individual virus-infected cells, poxviruses, like MYXV, are particularly adept at binding and entering most mammalian cells, where they attempt to establish a favorable intracellular environment, which promotes viral replication. Thus, the ability of poxviruses to reconfigure or disable the various host antiviral responses of the infected cell directly dictates the outcome of a viral infection at the cellular level (28). To this end, poxviruses possess a large genomic capacity, and all encode a unique repertoire of immunoregulatory and host-interactive proteins that have evolved to specifically mediate a broad range of cellular processes critical for successful viral replication. To date, a large collection of poxvirus-encoded immunoregulatory proteins have been identified and characterized, including virokines, viroreceptors, signaling modulators, and inhibitors of various antiviral responses, such as apoptotic pathways and interferon signaling (43). More recently, a novel category of poxvirus ankyrin (ANK) repeat proteins have drawn considerable attention for their potential roles in modulating intracellular signaling networks during viral infection (48, 49, 53).With the exception of poxviruses, the ANK motif is not commonly reported in viruses, although numerous examples have been identified in eukaryotic, bacterial, and archaeal proteins (6). The ANK motif, a tandemly repeated consensus module of approximately 33 amino acid residues, has been demonstrated to mediate diverse protein-protein interactions between cellular proteins having a broad spectrum of functional roles (32, 42). Solved crystal structures have revealed a conserved fold structure of the ANK repeat unit, by which each repeat forms a characteristic helix-loop-helix structure with a beta-hairpin/loop region projecting out from the helices at a 90° angle (3, 16, 19, 26). However, the ANK fold appears to be defined by its structure rather than any conserved biological function since there is no specific conserved substrate or binding partner structure that is universally recognized by members of the superfamily.The majority of poxviral ANK repeat-containing proteins also include a conserved carboxy-terminal PRANC (pox protein repeats of ankyrin C terminus) motif, which closely resembles a cellular protein motif called the F-box domain (30). Characterized as substrate adaptors, F-box-containing host proteins function to recruit cellular substrate proteins to the SCF ubiquitin-ligase complex (named after their main components, Skp1, cullin 1 [CUL1], and an F-box protein), where the substrates selected by the complex are ubiquitinated and targeted for degradation by the proteasome (21, 45, 60). The process of selective ubiquitination is an essential regulatory step for many cellular processes, and the human genome encodes more than 70 different F-box proteins, which collectively are thought to specifically target a broad collection of cellular substrates for delivery to the SCF complex to initiate turnover (62).Accounting for the largest family of poxviral proteins, almost all chordopoxviruses encode multiple ANK repeat-containing proteins, some of which have been defined as viral host range or virulence factors (30). For example, canarypox virus encodes 51 ANK repeat proteins, accounting for greater than 20% of the genome; however, most other poxviruses express less than a half dozen ANK repeat proteins (52). MYXV encodes four unique ANK repeat proteins, termed M-T5, M148, M149, and M150, all of which have been described as virulence factors for myxomatosis in rabbits (5, 8, 33). The MYXV host range factor M-T5 was first characterized for its ability to regulate viral tropism within rabbit lymphocytes and, later, some classes of human cancer cell lines (33, 51). In human cancer cells, the direct physical interaction between M-T5 and the host cell Akt was shown to be a key restriction determinant for MYXV tropism in a subset referred to as type II cancer cells (56). Furthermore, M-T5 was shown to be functionally interchangeable with a host ANK repeat protein called PIKE-A, and the activation of Akt by either the viral M-T5 or the host PIKE-A protein was critical for MYXV permissiveness in type II human cancer cells (57). M-T5 was also demonstrated to protect MYXV-infected cells from virus-induced cell cycle arrest, a property which was linked to its ability to interact with a member of the host cell SCF complex called CUL1 (20). Unlike M-T5, no specific host binding partners or target substrates have yet been identified for M148, M149, or M150. However, in tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-α)-stimulated cells, M150 was shown to colocalize in the nucleus with NF-κB p65, suggesting that this MYXV protein may modulate the NF-κB pathway (8).In this study, we demonstrate that M-T5, M148, M149, and M150 all have functional carboxy-terminal PRANC/F-box-like domains and that each one can interact directly with the Skp1 component of the host SCF complex. We further examined the various binding domains of M-T5 and identified ANK repeats I and II as being important for interaction with Akt, whereas the PRANC/F-box-like domain was essential for binding to Skp1. We also show that the previously reported interaction of M-T5 with CUL1 was in fact, indirect linking of M-T5 to the host SCF complex via Skp1. More specifically, we investigated the ability of M-T5 to function as a molecular scaffold to link disparate cellular binding partners together within a single complex and report that the viral protein binds Akt and the SCF complex (via Skp1) simultaneously in MYXV-infected cells. Finally, we demonstrate that M-T5 specifically mediates the relocalization of Akt from the nucleus to the cytoplasm during MYXV infection. These results suggest that ANK/PRANC proteins, such as M-T5, play a critical role in reprogramming disparate cellular signaling cascades to establish a new cellular environment more favorable for viral replication. 相似文献
9.
The amyloid precursor protein (APP) is a ubiquitously expressed single-pass transmembrane protein that undergoes proteolytic processing by secretases to generate the pathogenic amyloid-β peptide, the major component in Alzheimer plaques. The traffic of APP through the cell determines its exposure to secretases and consequently the cleavages that generate the pathogenic or nonpathogenic peptide fragments. Despite the likely importance of APP traffic to Alzheimer disease, we still lack clear models for the routing and regulation of APP in cells. Like the traffic of most transmembrane proteins, the binding of adaptors to its cytoplasmic tail, which is 47 residues long and contains at least four distinct sorting motifs, regulates that of APP. We tested each of these for effects on the traffic of APP from the Golgi by mutating key residues within them and examining adaptor recruitment at the Golgi and traffic to post-Golgi site(s). We demonstrate strict specificity for recruitment of the Mint3 adaptor by APP at the Golgi, a critical role for Tyr-682 (within the YENPTY motif) in Mint3 recruitment and export of APP from the Golgi, and we identify LAMP1+ structures as the proximal destination of APP after leaving the Golgi. Together, these data provide a detailed view of the first sorting step in its route to the cell surface and processing by secretases and further highlight the critical role played by Mint3. 相似文献
10.
Jeffrey A. DeGrasse Kelly N. DuBois Damien Devos T. Nicolai Siegel Andrej Sali Mark C. Field Michael P. Rout Brian T. Chait 《Molecular & cellular proteomics : MCP》2009,8(9):2119-2130
The nuclear pore complex (NPC) is a macromolecular assembly embedded within the nuclear envelope that mediates bidirectional exchange of material between the nucleus and cytoplasm. Our recent work on the yeast NPC has revealed a simple modularity in its architecture and suggested a common evolutionary origin of the NPC and vesicle coating complexes in a progenitor protocoatomer. However, detailed compositional and structural information is currently only available for vertebrate and yeast NPCs, which are evolutionarily closely related. Hence our understanding of NPC composition in a full evolutionary context is sparse. Moreover despite the ubiquitous nature of the NPC, sequence searches in distant taxa have identified surprisingly few NPC components, suggesting that much of the NPC may not be conserved. Thus, to gain a broad perspective on the origins and evolution of the NPC, we performed proteomics analyses of NPC-containing fractions from a divergent eukaryote (Trypanosoma brucei) and obtained a comprehensive inventory of its nucleoporins. Strikingly trypanosome nucleoporins clearly share with metazoa and yeast their fold type, domain organization, composition, and modularity. Overall these data provide conclusive evidence that the majority of NPC architecture is indeed conserved throughout the Eukaryota and was already established in the last common eukaryotic ancestor. These findings strongly support the hypothesis that NPCs share a common ancestry with vesicle coating complexes and that both were established very early in eukaryotic evolution.Nearly all eukaryotic cells possess an extensive endomembrane system that is principally responsible for protein targeting and modification (1). The nucleus, the defining eukaryotic feature, is separated from the cytoplasm by a double bilayered nuclear envelope (NE)1 that is contiguous with the rest of this endomembrane system via connections to the endoplasmic reticulum. Nuclear pore complexes (NPCs) fenestrate the NE, serving as the exclusive sites mediating exchange between the nucleoplasmic and cytoplasmic compartments. Macromolecules are chaperoned through the NPC by numerous transport factors. It has been proposed that the endomembrane system and nucleus have an autogenous origin (i.e. evolving from invaginations of an ancestral plasma membrane) and were established early in eukaryotic evolution (2).The composition of the NPC has been cataloged at ∼30 distinct nucleoporins (Nups) (3) for the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae (4) and vertebrates (5), two members of the Opisthokonta (animals, fungi, and closely related protists). Ultrastructural studies have identified objects morphologically similar (at a first approximation) to opisthokont NPCs in the other major eukaryote supergroups (6–8). However, very few data are available concerning the detailed NPC molecular composition and architecture for nearly all eukaryotic lineages, leaving a relatively narrow view of the “typical” NPC and its origins. A few examples of potential Nup orthologs beyond the opisthokonts have been reported, leading to the suggestion that substantial portions of the NPC may have an ancient, pre-last common eukaryotic ancestor (LCEA) origin (9). However, a more extensive study has concluded that LCEA possessed a primitive ancestral NPC that passed few components to its modern descendants (10).In yeast and vertebrates, the NPC consists of an eight-spoked core surrounding a central tube that serves as the conduit for macromolecular exchange. Each spoke can be divided into two similar nucleoplasmic and cytoplasmic halves. The eight spokes connect to form several coaxial rings: the membrane rings, the two outer rings at the nucleoplasmic and cytoplasmic periphery, and the two adjacent inner rings (11). Groups of Nups that we term “linker Nups” are attached between both sets of outer and inner rings. Another group of related proteins, collectively termed phenylalanine-glycine (FG) Nups, are largely exposed on the inner surface of the spokes and anchored either to the inner rings or to the linker Nups (11).Opisthokont Nups can be grouped into three structural classes (11, 12). The first class comprises membrane-bound proteins that anchor the NPC into the NE. The second class is the core scaffold Nups; these proteins constitute the bulk of the NPC mass, form the central tube, and provide the scaffold for the deployment of the third class of Nups across both faces of the NPC. The core scaffold Nups are remarkably restricted at the structural level and contain only three distinct arrangements of 2-fold types: proteins dominated by an α-solenoid fold (also termed a helix-turn-helix repeat domain), proteins consisting of a β-propeller fold, and finally proteins composed of an amino-terminal β-propeller fold followed by a carboxyl-terminal α-solenoid fold (which we here term a β-α structure) (12). FG Nups comprise the third class. These Nups carry multiply repeated degenerate “Phe-Gly” motifs (FG repeats) separated by hydrophilic or charged residues that form large unstructured domains. Each FG Nup also contains a small structured domain (often a coiled coil motif) that serves as the anchor site for interaction with the remainder of the NPC.Many transport factors belong to a structurally related protein family collectively termed karyopherins (Kaps) (13, 14). Transport across the NPC depends on the interactions between Kaps, cargo molecules, and the disordered repeat domains of FG Nups; the latter are thought to form the selective barrier for nucleocytoplasmic transport, guiding the Kap·cargo complexes (and other transport factors) through the central tube while excluding other macromolecules (for reviews, see Refs. 3 and 15–22).Significantly we have previously noted that the fold composition and arrangement of many of the core scaffold Nups are shared with proteins that form coating structures that participate in the generation and transport of vesicles between different endomembrane compartments; significantly many vesicle coating complex proteins and NPC scaffold Nups share an α-solenoid fold, β-propeller fold, or β-α structure (12, 23–28). These similarities gave rise to the “protocoatomer hypothesis,” which suggests a common ancestry for the NPC and these vesicle coat complexes. However, it is unclear how many, if any, of these particular core scaffold Nups are widely conserved, and hence it is unclear how general this potential relationship is throughout the Eukaryota. Thus, two scenarios are possible. The first is that the coatomer-like proteins are only found in a subset of the eukaryotes (including the opisthokonts), indicating that they are a relatively recent acquisition of only some eukaryotes and are not a general feature of all NPCs. The second is that the coatomer-like proteins are conserved in all eukaryotes, providing strong support to the protocoatomer hypothesis. To directly address this issue we characterized the NPC of Trypanosoma brucei, a highly divergent but experimentally tractable organism, using proteomics. The resulting data indicate an ancient origin for the majority of the NPC components and shed light on the origin of LCEA itself. 相似文献
11.
Chunhua Zhang Eileen Mallery Sara Reagan Vitaly P. Boyko Simeon O. Kotchoni Daniel B. Szymanski 《Plant physiology》2013,162(2):689-706
During plant cell morphogenesis, signal transduction and cytoskeletal dynamics interact to locally organize the cytoplasm and define the geometry of cell expansion. The WAVE/SCAR (for WASP family verprolin homologous/suppressor of cyclic AMP receptor) regulatory complex (W/SRC) is an evolutionarily conserved heteromeric protein complex. Within the plant kingdom W/SRC is a broadly used effector that converts Rho-of-Plants (ROP)/Rac small GTPase signals into Actin-Related Protein2/3 and actin-dependent growth responses. Although the components and biochemistry of the W/SRC pathway are well understood, a basic understanding of how cells partition W/SRC into active and inactive pools is lacking. In this paper, we report that the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) is an important organelle for W/SRC regulation. We determined that a large intracellular pool of the core W/SRC subunit NAP1, like the known positive regulator of W/SRC, the DOCK family guanine nucleotide-exchange factor SPIKE1 (SPK1), localizes to the surface of the ER. The ER-associated NAP1 is inactive because it displays little colocalization with the actin network, and ER localization requires neither activating signals from SPK1 nor a physical association with its W/SRC-binding partner, SRA1. Our results indicate that in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) leaf pavement cells and trichomes, the ER is a reservoir for W/SRC signaling and may have a key role in the early steps of W/SRC assembly and/or activation.The W/SRC (for WASP family verprolin homologous/suppressor of cAMP receptor regulatory complex) and Actin-Related Protein (ARP)2/3 complex are part of an evolutionarily conserved Rho-of-Plants (ROP)/Rac small GTPase signal transduction cascade that controls actin-dependent morphogenesis in a wide variety of tissues and developmental contexts (Smith and Oppenheimer, 2005; Szymanski, 2005; Yalovsky et al., 2008). Many of the components and regulatory relationships among the complexes were discovered based on the stage-specific cell-swelling and -twisting phenotypes of the distorted class of Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) trichome mutants (Szymanski et al., 1999; Zhang et al., 2005, 2008; Djakovic et al., 2006; Le et al., 2006; Uhrig et al., 2007). However, in both maize (Zea mays) and Arabidopsis, W/SRC and/or ARP2/3 are required for normal pavement cell morphogenesis (Frank and Smith, 2002; Mathur et al., 2003b; Brembu et al., 2004). Compared with other Arabidopsis pavement cell mutants, the shape defects of the distorted group are relatively mild. However, the distorted mutants and spike1 (spk1) differ from most other morphology mutants in that they display gaps in the shoot epidermis, most frequently at the interface of pavement cells and stomata (Qiu et al., 2002; Le et al., 2003; Li et al., 2003; Mathur et al., 2003b; Zhang et al., 2005; Djakovic et al., 2006). The cell gaps may reflect either uncoordinated growth between neighboring cells or defective cortical actin-dependent secretion of polysaccharides and/or proteins that promote cell-cell adhesion (Smith and Oppenheimer, 2005; Hussey et al., 2006; Leucci et al., 2007).In tip-growing cells, there is a strict requirement for actin to organize the trafficking and secretion activities of the cell to restrict growth to the apex. In Arabidopsis, the W/SRC-ARP2/3 pathway is not an essential tip growth component, because null alleles of both W/SRC and ARP2/3 subunits do not cause noticeable pollen tube or root hair phenotypes (Le et al., 2003; Djakovic et al., 2006). However, reverse genetic analysis of the W/SRC subunit BRK1 and ARP2/3 in the tip-growing protonemal cells of Physcomitrella patens revealed the obvious importance of this pathway (Harries et al., 2005; Perroud and Quatrano, 2008). Along similar lines, in two different legume species, W/SRC subunits are required for a normal root nodulation response to symbiotic bacteria (Yokota et al., 2009; Miyahara et al., 2010), indicating a conditional importance for this pathway in root hair growth. These genetic studies centered on the W/SRC and ARP2/3 pathways, in addition to those that involve a broader collection of actin-based morphology mutants (Smith and Oppenheimer, 2005; Blanchoin et al., 2010), are defining important cytoskeletal proteins and new interactions with the endomembrane system during morphogenesis. However, it is not completely clear how unstable actin filaments and actin bundle networks dictate the growth patterns of cells (Staiger et al., 2009).The difficulty of understanding the functions of specific actin arrays can be explained, in part, by the fact that plant cells that employ a diffuse growth mechanism have highly unstable cortical actin filaments and large actin bundles that do not have a geometry that obviously relates to the direction of growth or a specific subcellular activity (Blanchoin et al., 2010). This is in contrast to the cortical endocytic actin patches in yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae; Evangelista et al., 2002; Kaksonen et al., 2003) and cortical meshworks in the lamellipodia of crawling cells (Pollard and Borisy, 2003) that reveal subcellular locations where actin works to locally control membrane dynamics. In thick-walled plant cells, the magnitude of the forces that accompany turgor-driven cell expansion exceed those that could be generated by actin polymerization by orders of magnitude (Szymanski and Cosgrove, 2009). Localized cell wall loosening or the assembly of an anisotropic cell wall generates asymmetric yielding responses to turgor-induced stress (Baskin, 2005; Cosgrove, 2005). Therefore, the actin-based control of cell boundary dynamics is indirect, and the actin cytoskeleton influences cell shape change, in part, by actin and/or myosin-dependent trafficking of hormone transporters (Geldner et al., 2001) and organelles (Prokhnevsky et al., 2008), including those that control the localized delivery of protein complexes and polysaccharides that pattern the cell wall (Leucci et al., 2007; Gutierrez et al., 2009). In this scheme for actin-based growth control, the actin network dynamically rearranges at spatial scales that span from approximately 1- to 10-µm subcellular domains that may locally position organelles (Cleary, 1995; Gibbon et al., 1999; Szymanski et al., 1999) to the more than 100-µm actin bundle networks that operate at the spatial scales of entire cells (Gutierrez et al., 2009; Dyachok et al., 2011). It is clear from the work of several laboratories that the W/SRC and ARP2/3 protein complexes are required to organize cortical actin and actin bundle networks in trichomes (Szymanski et al., 1999; Le et al., 2003; Deeks et al., 2004; Zhang et al., 2005) and cylindrical epidermal cells (Mathur et al., 2003b; Dyachok et al., 2008, 2011). A key challenge now is to understand how plant cells deploy these approximately 10- to 20-nm heteromeric protein complexes to influence the patterns of growth at cellular scales.The genetic and biochemical control of ARP2/3 is complicated, but this is a tractable problem in plants, because the pathway is relatively simple compared with most other species in which it has been characterized. For example, in organisms ranging from yeast to humans, there are multiple types of ARP2/3 activators, protein complexes, and pathways that activate ARP2/3 (Welch and Mullins, 2002; Derivery and Gautreau, 2010). However, the maize and Arabidopsis genomes encode only WAVE/SCAR homologous proteins that can potently activate ARP2/3 (Frank et al., 2004; Basu et al., 2005). Detailed genetic and biochemical analyses of the WAVE/SCAR gene family in Arabidopsis demonstrated that the plant activators function interchangeably within the context of the W/SRC and define the lone pathway for ARP2/3 activation (Zhang et al., 2008). Bioinformatic analyses are consistent with a prominent role for W/SRC in the angiosperms, because in general, WASH complex subunits, which are structurally similar to WAVE/SCAR proteins, are largely absent from the higher plant genomes, while WAVE/SCAR genes are highly conserved (Kollmar et al., 2012).The components and regulatory schemes of the W/SRC-ARP2/3 pathway in Arabidopsis and P. patens are conserved compared with vertebrate species that employ these same protein complexes (Szymanski, 2005). For example, mutant complementation tests indicate that human W/SRC and ARP2/3 complex subunits can substitute for the Arabidopsis proteins (Mathur et al., 2003b). Furthermore, biochemical assays of Arabidopsis W/SRC (Basu et al., 2004; El-Assal et al., 2004; Frank et al., 2004; Le et al., 2006; Uhrig et al., 2007) and ARP2/3 assembly (Kotchoni et al., 2009) have shown that the binary interactions among W/SRC subunits and ARP2/3 complex assembly mechanisms are indistinguishable from those that have been observed for human W/SRC (Gautreau et al., 2004) and yeast ARP2/3 (Winter et al., 1999). After an initial period of controversy concerning the biochemical control of W/SRC, it is now apparent that vertebrate W/SRC (Derivery et al., 2009; Ismail et al., 2009), like the ARP2/3 complex (Machesky et al., 1999), is intrinsically inactive and requires positive regulation by Rac and other factors to fully activate ARP2/3 (Ismail et al., 2009; Lebensohn and Kirschner, 2009; Chen et al., 2010). Although overexpression of dominant negative ROP mutants causes trichome swelling and a reduced trichome branch number (Fu et al., 2002), the involvement of ROPs in trichome morphogenesis has been difficult to prove with a loss-of-function ROP allele because so many ROPs are expressed in this cell type (Marks et al., 2009). Existing reports on ROP loss-of-function mutants demonstrate the importance of pavement cell morphogenesis but do not document a trichome phenotype (Fu et al., 2005; Xu et al., 2010). A recent report describes a clever strategy to generate ROP loss-of-function lines that used the ectopic expression of ROP-specific bacterial toxins. There was a strong association between inducible expression of the toxins and the appearance of trichomes with severe trichome swelling and reduced branch number phenotypes (Singh et al., 2012). Although the exact mechanism of ROP-dependent control of W/SRC remains to be determined, the results described above in combination with the detection of direct interactions between the ROPGEF SPK1, active forms of ROP, and W/SRC subunits (Basu et al., 2004, 2008; Uhrig et al., 2007) strongly suggest that W/SRC is a ROP effector complex.The major challenge in the field now is to better understand the cellular control of W/SRC and how the complex is partitioned into active and inactive pools. In mammalian cells that crawl on a solid substrate, current models propose that a cytosolic pool of inactive WAVE/SCAR proteins and W/SRC is locally recruited and activated at specific plasma membrane surfaces in response to signals from some unknown Rac guanine nucleotide-exchange factor (GEF), protein kinase, and/or lipid kinase (Oikawa et al., 2004; Lebensohn and Kirschner, 2009; Chen et al., 2010). However, in Drosophila melanogaster neurons (Bogdan and Klämbt, 2003) and cultured human melanoma cells (Steffen et al., 2004), there are large pools of W/SRC with a perinuclear or organelle-like punctate localization that has no obvious relationship to cell shape or motility, raising uncertainty about the cellular mechanisms of W/SRC activation and the importance of different subcellular pools of the complex.In plants, cell fractionation experiments indicate that SCAR1 and ARP2/3 have an increased association with membranes compared with their animal counterparts (Dyachok et al., 2008; Kotchoni et al., 2009). In tip-growing moss protonemal cells, both the W/SRC subunit BRK1 and ARP2/3 localize to a population of unidentified organelles within the apical zone (Perroud and Quatrano, 2008). Similar live-cell imaging experiments in Arabidopsis reported a plasma membrane localization for SCAR1 and BRK1 in a variety of shoot epidermal and root cortex, and their accumulation at young trichome branch tips and at three-way cell wall junctions may define subcellular domains for W/SRC-ARP2/3-dependent actin filament nucleation at the plasma membrane (Dyachok et al., 2008). However, to our knowledge, active W/SRC, defined here as the fraction of W/SRC that colocalizes with ARP2/3 or actin, has not been reported in plants, and the plasma membrane is not necessarily the only organelle involved in W/SRC regulation. For example, the reported accumulation of BRK1 and SCAR1 at three-way cell wall junctions has a punctate appearance at the cell cortex that may not simply correspond to the plasma membrane (Dyachok et al., 2008). Also, in young stage 4 trichomes, there was an uncharacterized pool of intracellular SCAR1, but not BRK1, that localized to relatively large punctate structures (Dyachok et al., 2008). The endoplasmic reticulum (ER) may also be involved in W/SRC regulation. The ER-localized DOCK family ROPGEF SPK1 (Zhang et al., 2010) physically associates with multiple W/SRC proteins (Uhrig et al., 2007; Basu et al., 2008) and, based on genetic criteria, is an upstream, positive regulator of the W/SRC-ARP2/3 pathway (Basu et al., 2008). In the leaf, one function of SPK1 is to promote normal trafficking between the ER and Golgi; however, arp2/3 mutants do not share ER-stress phenotypes with spk1 (Zhang et al., 2010), making it unclear if SPK1 and the ER are directly involved in W/SRC signaling.This paper focuses on the localization and control of the W/SRC subunit NAP1/GNARLED/NAPP/HEM1/2. Arabidopsis NAP1 directly interacts with the ROP/Rac effector subunit SRA1/PIROGI/KLUNKER/PIRP (Basu et al., 2004; El-Assal et al., 2004; Uhrig et al., 2007). Based on the equally severe syndrome of nap1 and arp2/3 null phenotypes, and double mutant analyses, the only known function of NAP1 is to positively regulate ARP2/3 (Brembu et al., 2004; Deeks et al., 2004; El-Din El-Assal et al., 2004; Li et al., 2004). The vertebrate SRA1-NAP1 dimer is important for W/SRC assembly (Gautreau et al., 2004) and forms an extended physical surface that trans-inhibits the C-terminal ARP2/3-activating domain of WAVE/SCAR (Chen et al., 2010). The plant NAP1 and SRA1 proteins share end-to-end amino acid conservation with their vertebrate homologs and may form a heterodimer with similar functions (Basu et al., 2004; El-Assal et al., 2004; Uhrig et al., 2007). We report here that Arabidopsis NAP1 is strongly associated with ER membranes. In a detailed series of localization experiments, we detect a complicated intracellular distribution of NAP1 among the ER, the nucleus, and unidentified submicrometer punctae. A large pool of ER-associated NAP1 is inactive, based on the low level of colocalization with actin.Its accumulation on the ER does not require activating signals from either SPK1 or SRA1. These data indicate that the ER is a reservoir for W/SRC signaling and suggest that early steps in the positive regulation of NAP1 and the W/SRC occur on the ER surface. 相似文献
12.
Maya M. Zaharieva Milen Kirilov Minquang Chai Stefan M. Berger Spiro Konstantinov Martin R. Berger 《PloS one》2014,9(7)
Erufosine is a new antineoplastic agent of the group of alkylphosphocholines, which interferes with signal transduction and induces apoptosis in various leukemic and tumor cell lines. The present study was designed to examine for the first time the mechanism of resistance to erufosine in malignant cells with permanently reduced expression of the retinoblastoma (Rb) protein. Bearing in mind the high number of malignancies with reduced level of this tumor-suppressor, this investigation was deemed important for using erufosine, alone or in combination, in patients with compromised RB1 gene expression. For this purpose, clones of the leukemic T-cell line SKW-3 were used, which had been engineered to constantly express differently low Rb levels. The alkylphosphocholine induced apoptosis, stimulated the expression of the cyclin dependent kinase inhibitor p27Kip1 and inhibited the synthesis of cyclin D3, thereby causing a G2 phase cell cycle arrest and death of cells with wild type Rb expression. In contrast, Rb-deficiency impeded the changes induced by eru-fosine in the expression of these proteins and abrogated the induction of G2 arrest, which was correlated with reduced antiproliferative and anticlonogenic activities of the compound. In conclusion, analysis of our results showed for the first time that the Rb signaling pathway is essential for mediating the antineoplastic activity of erufosine and its efficacy in patients with malignant diseases may be predicted by determining the Rb status. 相似文献
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Carolina H. Thomé Guilherme A. dos Santos Germano A. Ferreira Priscila S. Scheucher Clarice Izumi Andreia M. Leopoldino Ana Maria Sim?o Pietro Ciancaglini Kleber T. de Oliveira Alice Chin Samir M. Hanash Roberto P. Falc?o Eduardo M. Rego Lewis J. Greene Vitor M. Fa?a 《Molecular & cellular proteomics : MCP》2012,11(12):1898-1912
Lipid rafts are highly ordered membrane domains rich in cholesterol and sphingolipids that provide a scaffold for signal transduction proteins; altered raft structure has also been implicated in cancer progression. We have shown that 25 μm 10-(octyloxy) decyl-2-(trimethylammonium) ethyl phosphate (ODPC), an alkylphospholipid, targets high cholesterol domains in model membranes and induces apoptosis in leukemia cells but spares normal hematopoietic and epithelial cells under the same conditions. We performed a quantitative (SILAC) proteomic screening of ODPC targets in a lipid-raft-enriched fraction of leukemic cells to identify early events prior to the initiation of apoptosis. Six proteins, three with demonstrated palmitoylation sites, were reduced in abundance. One, the linker for activation of T-cell family member 2 (LAT2), is an adaptor protein associated with lipid rafts in its palmitoylated form and is specifically expressed in B lymphocytes and myeloid cells. Interestingly, LAT2 is not expressed in K562, a cell line more resistant to ODPC-induced apoptosis. There was an early loss of LAT2 in the lipid-raft-enriched fraction of NB4 cells within 3 h following treatment with 25 μm ODPC. Subsequent degradation of LAT2 by proteasomes was observed. Twenty-five μm ODPC inhibited AKT activation via myeloid growth factors, and LAT2 knockdown in NB4 cells by shRNA reproduced this effect. LAT2 knockdown in NB4 cells also decreased cell proliferation and increased cell sensitivity to ODPC (7.5×), perifosine (3×), and arsenic trioxide (8.5×). Taken together, these data indicate that LAT2 is an early mediator of the anti-leukemic activity of alkylphospholipids and arsenic trioxide. Thus, LAT2 may be used as a target for the design of drugs for cancer therapy.The development of resistance to drugs that inhibit signaling pathways in cancer cells has emerged as a major limitation of targeted therapy. While the major mechanism of acquired resistance is the emergence of additional mutations or growth factor receptor overexpression (1), recent studies have shown an interesting mechanism of constitutional resistance to epidermal growth factor receptor inhibitors in breast cancer cells, which involves structural alterations in lipid rafts and is independent of the kinase itself (2).Lipid rafts or membrane rafts are highly ordered membrane domains that are rich in cholesterol and sphingolipids which function by compartmentalizing diverse cellular processes (3, 4), including signal transduction (5–7). Emerging evidence associates altered raft structure with cancer progression (8–10). Therefore, the development of therapeutic strategies for disrupting raft-based cell signaling in cancer represents a potentially useful approach. We and others have presented evidence that alkylphospholipid (APL)1 drugs target raft structure in leukemia (11) and lymphoma cells (12). One such APL, perifosine, is currently in clinical trials as an anti-cancer therapeutic agent (13).We demonstrated that 10-(octyloxy) decyl-2-(trimethylammonium) ethyl phosphate (ODPC) targets high cholesterol raft-like domains in model membranes and induces apoptosis in leukemia cells, with an effective dose of 25 μm after 24 h in NB4 cells, but has no effect on normal hematopoietic and epithelial cells under the same conditions (11).Here we present evidence based on quantitative proteomics (14) that the APL ODPC targets proteins recovered in a lipid raft-enriched fraction of leukemic cells. Proteins with predicted palmitoylation sites located in lipid rafts are reduced in abundance after treatment with ODPC. We provide evidence that an adaptor protein for cell signaling, linker for activation of T-cells-2 (LAT2)/non-T-cell activation linker (NTAL)/linker for activation of B-cells (LAB) (15), is involved in early events of ODPC anti-leukemic activity. Additionally, we show that LAT2 knockdown cells obtained with shRNA have suppressed AKT activation, decreased cell proliferation, and increased cell sensitivity to drugs such as ODPC, perifosine, and arsenic trioxide (ATO), indicating that LAT2 is a potential target for the design of drugs for cancer therapy. 相似文献
15.
A novel clathrin adaptor-like complex, adaptor protein (AP)-3, has recently been described in yeast and in animals. To gain insight into the role of yeast AP-3, a genetic strategy was devised to isolate gene products that are required in the absence of the AP-3 μ chain encoded by APM3. One gene identified by this synthetic lethal screen was VPS45. The Vps pathway defines the route that several proteins, including carboxypeptidase Y, take from the late Golgi to the vacuole. However, vacuolar alkaline phosphatase (ALP) is transported via an alternate, intracellular route. This suggested that the apm3-Δ vps45 synthetic phenotype could be caused by a block in both the alternate and the Vps pathways. Here we demonstrate that loss of function of the AP-3 complex results in slowed processing and missorting of ALP. ALP is no longer localized to the vacuole membrane by immunofluorescence, but is found in small punctate structures throughout the cell. This pattern is distinct from the Golgi marker Kex2p, which is unaffected in AP-3 mutants. We also show that in the apm3-Δ mutant some ALP is delivered to the vacuole by diversion into the Vps pathway. Class E vps mutants accumulate an exaggerated prevacuolar compartment containing membrane proteins on their way to the vacuole or destined for recycling to the Golgi. Surprisingly, in AP-3 class E vps double mutants these proteins reappear on the vacuole. We suggest that some AP-3–dependent cargo proteins that regulate late steps in Golgi to vacuole transport are diverted into the Vps pathway allowing completion of transfer to the vacuole in the class E vps mutant.The formation of vesicles for transport between membrane-bound organelles requires assembly of coat proteins that are recruited from the cytosol. These proteins direct the sequestration and concentration of cargo as well as invagination of the membrane. One of the best studied classes of coats involved in vesicle budding is comprised of clathrin and its adaptor proteins (APs)1, AP-1 and AP-2 (Schmid, 1997). In clathrin-mediated vesicle transport the AP complexes play the dual role of cargo selection and recruitment of clathrin to the membrane. These adaptors are heterotetramers containing two large chains (adaptins, α or γ and β), one medium chain (μ), and one small chain (σ). AP-1 (γ, β1, μ1, and σ1) functions in sorting at the TGN, whereas AP-2 (α, β2, μ2, and σ2) is involved in receptor capture at the PM during endocytosis.Although there is a great deal of evidence supporting the involvement of adaptors in clathrin-mediated vesicle budding, recent studies in animal cells have led to the discovery of a novel adaptor-like complex, AP-3, that seems to function independently of clathrin (Newman et al., 1995; Simpson et al., 1996). AP-3 has identical subunit architecture to AP-1 and AP-2, with two adaptin-like subunits (δ and β3), a medium chain (μ3), and a small chain (σ3) (Simpson et al., 1996, 1997; Dell''Angelica et al., 1997a
,
b
). AP-3 antibodies label a perinuclear region, perhaps the TGN, and punctate structures extending to the cell periphery, which may be endosomal compartments (Simpson et al., 1996, 1997; Dell''Angelica et al., 1997a
). However, the mammalian AP-3 complex does not colocalize with clathrin or AP-1 and AP-2 adaptors in cells and it does not copurify with brain clathrin-coated vesicles (Newman et al., 1995; Simpson et al., 1996, 1997; Dell''Angelica et al., 1997b
). Clues to the function of AP-3 have come from the discovery that the garnet gene of Drosophila encodes a protein closely related to δ adaptin (Ooi et al., 1997; Simpson et al., 1997). Mutations in garnet cause decreased pigmentation of the eyes and other tissues and a reduced number of pigment granules, which may be lysosome-like organelles (Ooi et al., 1997; Simpson et al., 1997). Thus, AP-3 is proposed to function in clathrin-independent transport between the TGN, endosomes and/or lysosomes, although its exact sorting function is still not known.Over the last several years, yeast homologues of the mammalian adaptor subunits have been identified, allowing for the examination of specific functions of these proteins in a genetically tractable organism. Genes encoding subunits sufficient for at least three complete AP complexes have been identified by sequence homology (Phan et al., 1994; Rad et al., 1995; Stepp et al., 1995) or by function (Panek et al., 1997). APL1-APL6 encode large chain/ adaptin-related subunits, APM1-APM4 encode μ-like chains, and APS1-APS3 are genes for σ-related proteins. Apl2p (β), Apl4p (γ), Apm1p (μ1), and Aps1p (σ1) are thought to be subunits of an AP-1–like complex that functions with clathrin at the late Golgi/TGN (Phan et al., 1994; Rad et al., 1995; Stepp et al., 1995; Payne, G., personal communication). Mutations in the yeast AP-1 genes enhance the growth and the α-factor processing defects of a temperature sensitive (ts) allele of the clathrin heavy chain gene (Phan et al., 1994; Rad et al., 1995; Stepp et al., 1995; Payne, G., personal communication). The latter phenotype is a hallmark of clathrin-deficient yeast, in which late Golgi/ TGN proteins, such as the α-factor processing enzymes Kex2p and dipeptidyl amino peptidase-A (DPAP)-A, are not retained in the late Golgi but escape to the cell surface (Seeger and Payne, 1992b
). To date, no yeast adaptor subunit has been shown to be important for endocytosis, although Apl3p, Apm4p, and Aps2p are most homologous to mammalian AP-2 α, μ2 and σ2, respectively.Recently, a yeast adaptor related to AP-3 of animal cells was described (Panek et al., 1997). It is comprised of Apl5p, Apl6p, Apm3p, and Aps3p, which show preferential homology to mammalian δ, β3, μ3, and σ3, respectively. Mutations in each of these subunits were isolated by their ability to suppress the lethality resulting from loss of function of PM casein kinase 1 encoded by a gene pair, YCK1 and YCK2. Yck activity was found to be required for constitutive endocytosis of the a-factor receptor (Ste3p), and AP-3 subunit mutations partially rescued this internalization defect (Panek et al., 1997). However, the AP complex itself is not necessary for endocytosis, nor is it required for sorting of carboxypeptidase Y (CPY) or retention of late Golgi proteins. Furthermore, unlike disruption of the yeast AP-1 complex, loss of AP-3 function causes no synthetic phenotype in combination with chc1 mutations, suggesting it may function independently of clathrin. Although these data indicated that Apl5p, Apl6p, Apm3p, and Aps3p comprise an AP-3-like adaptor, its precise sorting role was still not known.In this report we describe a genetic approach to determine the function of the yeast AP-3 complex. A colony sectoring screen was performed to identify genes that are essential in the absence of Apm3p, the yeast AP-3 μ chain. Such synthetic lethal screens can be used to identify functional homologues, genes whose proteins function in intersecting or parallel pathways, and genes whose proteins physically interact (Bender and Pringle, 1991). We have cloned the gene for the apm
three synthetic lethal mutant, mts1-1, and found it encodes Vps45p, a protein involved in vacuolar protein sorting (Vps; Cowles et al., 1994; Piper et al., 1994). The Vps pathway is defined by >40 complementation groups whose proteins are required for the transport of a number of soluble and membrane-bound proteins, including CPY, protease A (PrA), and carboxypeptidase S (CPS) from the late Golgi/TGN to the vacuole (Stack et al., 1995; Cowles et al., 1997). This pathway is also essential for proper assembly of the vacuolar ATPase (Raymond et al., 1992). However, the type II vacuolar membrane protein alkaline phosphatase (ALP) follows an alternate intracellular pathway to the vacuole (Raymond et al., 1992; Nothwehr et al., 1995; Cowles et al., 1997; Piper et al., 1997). Few vps mutants prevent localization of ALP to the vacuolar membrane and its arrival at the vacuole is not dependent upon transport through the cell surface. The requirement for Apm3p in the absence of Vps45p suggested the possibility that at least one of these routes to the vacuole must be functional for survival and led us to examine ALP sorting in the AP-3 mutants. We show here that yeast AP-3 is essential for the transport of ALP via the alternative pathway to the vacuole. 相似文献
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Phanélie Perche-Letuvée Velavan Kathirvelu Gustav Berggren Martin Clemancey Jean-Marc Latour Vincent Maurel Thierry Douki Jean Armengaud Etienne Mulliez Marc Fontecave Ricardo Garcia-Serres Serge Gambarelli Mohamed Atta 《The Journal of biological chemistry》2012,287(49):41174-41185
Wybutosine and its derivatives are found in position 37 of tRNA encoding Phe in eukaryotes and archaea. They are believed to play a key role in the decoding function of the ribosome. The second step in the biosynthesis of wybutosine is catalyzed by TYW1 protein, which is a member of the well established class of metalloenzymes called “Radical-SAM.” These enzymes use a [4Fe-4S] cluster, chelated by three cysteines in a CX3CX2C motif, and S-adenosyl-l-methionine (SAM) to generate a 5′-deoxyadenosyl radical that initiates various chemically challenging reactions. Sequence analysis of TYW1 proteins revealed, in the N-terminal half of the enzyme beside the Radical-SAM cysteine triad, an additional highly conserved cysteine motif. In this study we show by combining analytical and spectroscopic methods including UV-visible absorption, Mössbauer, EPR, and HYSCORE spectroscopies that these additional cysteines are involved in the coordination of a second [4Fe-4S] cluster displaying a free coordination site that interacts with pyruvate, the second substrate of the reaction. The presence of two distinct iron-sulfur clusters on TYW1 is reminiscent of MiaB, another tRNA-modifying metalloenzyme whose active form was shown to bind two iron-sulfur clusters. A possible role for the second [4Fe-4S] cluster in the enzyme activity is discussed. 相似文献
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Characterization of the Pseudomonas pseudoalcaligenes CECT5344 Cyanase, an Enzyme That Is Not Essential for Cyanide Assimilation 下载免费PDF全文
Víctor M. Luque-Almagro María-J. Huertas Lara P. Sez Manuel Martínez Luque-Romero Conrado Moreno-Vivin Francisco Castillo M. Dolores Roldn Rafael Blasco 《Applied microbiology》2008,74(20):6280-6288
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Signaling lymphocytic activation molecule-associated protein (SAP) is an Src homology 2 domain-only adaptor involved in multiple immune cell functions. It has also been linked to immunodeficiencies and autoimmune diseases, such as systemic lupus erythematosus. Here, we examined the role and mechanism of action of SAP in autoimmunity using a mouse model of autoimmune arthritis, collagen-induced arthritis (CIA). We found that SAP was essential for development of CIA in response to collagen immunization. It was also required for production of collagen-specific antibodies, which play a key role in disease pathogenesis. These effects required SAP expression in T cells, not in B cells. In mice immunized with a high dose of collagen, the activity of SAP was nearly independent of its ability to bind the protein tyrosine kinase Fyn and correlated with the capacity of SAP to promote full differentiation of follicular T helper (TFH) cells. However, with a lower dose of collagen, the role of SAP was more dependent on Fyn binding, suggesting that additional mechanisms other than TFH cell differentiation were involved. Further studies suggested that this might be due to a role of the SAP-Fyn interaction in natural killer T cell development through the ability of SAP-Fyn to promote Vav-1 activation. We also found that removal of SAP expression during progression of CIA attenuated disease severity. However, it had no effect on disease when CIA was clinically established. Together, these results indicate that SAP plays an essential role in CIA because of Fyn-independent and Fyn-dependent effects on TFH cells and, possibly, other T cell types. 相似文献