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51.
52.
Evidence for coupled biogenesis of yeast Gap1 permease and sphingolipids: essential role in transport activity and normal control by ubiquitination 总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2 下载免费PDF全文
Current models for plasma membrane organization integrate the emerging concepts that membrane proteins tightly associate with surrounding lipids and that biogenesis of surface proteins and lipids may be coupled. We show here that the yeast general amino acid permease Gap1 synthesized in the absence of sphingolipid (SL) biosynthesis is delivered to the cell surface but undergoes rapid and unregulated down-regulation. Furthermore, the permease produced under these conditions but blocked at the cell surface is inactive, soluble in detergent, and more sensitive to proteases. We also show that SL biogenesis is crucial during Gap1 production and secretion but that it is dispensable once Gap1 has reached the plasma membrane. Moreover, the defects displayed by cell surface Gap1 neosynthesized in the absence of SL biosynthesis are not compensated by subsequent restoration of SL production. Finally, we show that down-regulation of Gap1 caused by lack of SL biogenesis involves the ubiquitination of the protein on lysines normally not accessible to ubiquitination and close to the membrane. We propose that coupled biogenesis of Gap1 and SLs would create an SL microenvironment essential to the normal conformation, function, and control of ubiquitination of the permease. 相似文献
53.
Fernando A. Monteiro Tatiana Peretolchina Cristiano Lazoski Kecia Harris Ellen M. Dotson Fernando Abad-Franch Elsa Tamayo Pamela M. Pennington Carlota Monroy Celia Cordon-Rosales Paz Maria Salazar-Schettino Andrés Gómez-Palacio Mario J. Grijalva Charles B. Beard Paula L. Marcet 《PloS one》2013,8(8)
Background
Triatoma dimidiata is among the main vectors of Chagas disease in Latin America. However, and despite important advances, there is no consensus about the taxonomic status of phenotypically divergent T. dimidiata populations, which in most recent papers are regarded as subspecies.Methodology and Findings
A total of 126 cyt b sequences (621 bp long) were produced for specimens from across the species range. Forty-seven selected specimens representing the main cyt b clades observed (after a preliminary phylogenetic analysis) were also sequenced for an ND4 fragment (554 bp long) and concatenated with their respective cyt b sequences to produce a combined data set totalling 1175 bp/individual. Bayesian and Maximum-Likelihood phylogenetic analyses of both data sets (cyt b, and cyt b+ND4) disclosed four strongly divergent (all pairwise Kimura 2-parameter distances >0.08), monophyletic groups: Group I occurs from Southern Mexico through Central America into Colombia, with Ecuadorian specimens resembling Nicaraguan material; Group II includes samples from Western-Southwestern Mexico; Group III comprises specimens from the Yucatán peninsula; and Group IV consists of sylvatic samples from Belize. The closely-related, yet formally recognized species T. hegneri from the island of Cozumel falls within the divergence range of the T. dimidiata populations studied.Conclusions
We propose that Groups I–IV, as well as T. hegneri, should be regarded as separate species. In the Petén of Guatemala, representatives of Groups I, II, and III occur in sympatry; the absence of haplotypes with intermediate genetic distances, as shown by multimodal mismatch distribution plots, clearly indicates that reproductive barriers actively promote within-group cohesion. Some sylvatic specimens from Belize belong to a different species – likely the basal lineage of the T. dimidiata complex, originated ∼8.25 Mya. The evidence presented here strongly supports the proposition that T. dimidiata is a complex of five cryptic species (Groups I–IV plus T. hegneri) that play different roles as vectors of Chagas disease in the region. 相似文献54.
Katharina Meurer Jennie Barron Claire Chenu Elsa Coucheney Matthew Fielding Paul Hallett Anke M. Herrmann Thomas Keller John Koestel Mats Larsbo Elisabet Lewan Dani Or David Parsons Nargish Parvin Astrid Taylor Harry Vereecken Nicholas Jarvis 《Global Change Biology》2020,26(10):5382-5403
Soil degradation is a worsening global phenomenon driven by socio‐economic pressures, poor land management practices and climate change. A deterioration of soil structure at timescales ranging from seconds to centuries is implicated in most forms of soil degradation including the depletion of nutrients and organic matter, erosion and compaction. New soil–crop models that could account for soil structure dynamics at decadal to centennial timescales would provide insights into the relative importance of the various underlying physical (e.g. tillage, traffic compaction, swell/shrink and freeze/thaw) and biological (e.g. plant root growth, soil microbial and faunal activity) mechanisms, their impacts on soil hydrological processes and plant growth, as well as the relevant timescales of soil degradation and recovery. However, the development of such a model remains a challenge due to the enormous complexity of the interactions in the soil–plant system. In this paper, we focus on the impacts of biological processes on soil structure dynamics, especially the growth of plant roots and the activity of soil fauna and microorganisms. We first define what we mean by soil structure and then review current understanding of how these biological agents impact soil structure. We then develop a new framework for modelling soil structure dynamics, which is designed to be compatible with soil–crop models that operate at the soil profile scale and for long temporal scales (i.e. decades, centuries). We illustrate the modelling concept with a case study on the role of root growth and earthworm bioturbation in restoring the structure of a severely compacted soil. 相似文献
55.
Gustavo Palacios Mady Hornig Daniel Cisterna Nazir Savji Ana Valeria Bussetti Vishal Kapoor Jeffrey Hui Rafal Tokarz Thomas Briese Elsa Baumeister W. Ian Lipkin 《PloS one》2009,4(12)
Background
Initial reports in May 2009 of the novel influenza strain H1N1pdm estimated a case fatality rate (CFR) of 0.6%, similar to that of seasonal influenza. In July 2009, however, Argentina reported 3056 cases with 137 deaths, representing a CFR of 4.5%. Potential explanations for increased CFR included virus reassortment or genetic drift, or infection of a more vulnerable population. Virus genomic sequencing of 26 Argentinian samples representing both severe and mild disease indicated no evidence of reassortment, mutations associated with resistance to antiviral drugs, or genetic drift that might contribute to virulence. Furthermore, no evidence was found for increased frequency of risk factors for H1N1pdm disease.Methods/Principal Findings
We examined nasopharyngeal swab samples (NPS) from 199 cases of H1N1pdm infection from Argentina with MassTag PCR, testing for 33 additional microbial agents. The study population consisted of 199 H1N1pdm-infected subjects sampled between 23 June and 4 July 2009. Thirty-nine had severe disease defined as death (n = 20) or hospitalization (n = 19); 160 had mild disease. At least one additional agent of potential pathogenic importance was identified in 152 samples (76%), including Streptococcus pneumoniae (n = 62); Haemophilus influenzae (n = 104); human respiratory syncytial virus A (n = 11) and B (n = 1); human rhinovirus A (n = 1) and B (n = 4); human coronaviruses 229E (n = 1) and OC43 (n = 2); Klebsiella pneumoniae (n = 2); Acinetobacter baumannii (n = 2); Serratia marcescens (n = 1); and Staphylococcus aureus (n = 35) and methicillin-resistant S. aureus (MRSA, n = 6). The presence of S. pneumoniae was strongly correlated with severe disease. S. pneumoniae was present in 56.4% of severe cases versus 25% of mild cases; more than one-third of H1N1pdm NPS with S. pneumoniae were from subjects with severe disease (22 of 62 S. pneumoniae-positive NPS, p = 0.0004). In subjects 6 to 55 years of age, the adjusted odds ratio (OR) of severe disease in the presence of S. pneumoniae was 125.5 (95% confidence interval [CI], 16.95, 928.72; p<0.0001).Conclusions/Significance
The association of S. pneumoniae with morbidity and mortality is established in the current and previous influenza pandemics. However, this study is the first to demonstrate the prognostic significance of non-invasive antemortem diagnosis of S. pneumoniae infection and may provide insights into clinical management. 相似文献56.
In this study we investigated the dynamic behavior of the chimeric cell-penetrating peptide transportan in membrane-like environments using NMR. Backbone amide 15N spin relaxation was used to investigate the dynamics in two bicelles: neutral DMPC bicelles and partly negatively charged DMPG-containing bicelles. The structure of the peptide as judged from CD and chemical shifts is similar in the two cases. Both the overall motion as well as the local dynamics is, however, different in the two types of bicelles. The overall dynamics of the peptide is significantly slower in the partly negatively charged bicelle environment, as evidenced by longer global correlation times for all measured sites. The local motion, as judged from generalized order parameters, is for all sites in the peptide more restricted when bound to negatively charged bicelles than when bound to neutral bicelles (increase in S
2 is on average 0.11 ± 0.07). The slower dynamics of transportan in charged membrane model systems cause significant line broadening in the proton NMR spectrum, which in certain cases limits the observation of 1H signals for transportan when bound to the membrane. The effect of transportan on DMPC and DHPC motion in zwitterionic bicelles was also investigated, and the motion of both components in the bicelle was found to be affected.Electronic Supplementary Material Supplementary material is available for this article at http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10858-006-9008-y and is accessible for authorized users. 相似文献
57.
Maintaining active zone structure is crucial for synaptic function. In this issue of EMBO reports, NMNAT is shown to act as a chaperone that protects the active zone structural protein Bruchpilot from degradation.EMBO reports (2013) 14
1, 87–94 doi:10.1038/embor.2012.181Synapses perform several tasks independently from the cell body of the neuron, including synaptic vesicle recycling through endocytosis or local protein maturation and degradation. Failure to regulate protein function locally is detrimental to the nervous system as evidenced by neuronal dysfunctions that arise as a consequence of synaptic ageing. This relative synaptic autonomy comes with a need for mechanisms that ensure correct protein (re)folding, and there is accumulating evidence that key chap-erones have a central role in the regulation and maintenance of synaptic structural integrity and function [1]. Work by Grace Zhai''s group, published in this issue of EMBO reports, demonstrates a key role of the Drosophila nicotinamide mononucleotide adenylyltransferase (NMNAT) chaperone in the protection of active zone components against activity-induced degeneration (Fig 1; [2]).Open in a separate windowFigure 1Results reported by Zang and colleagues [2] reveal a specific role of nicotinamide mononucleotide adenylyltransferase (NMNAT) in preserving active zone structure against use-dependent decline. This protection is exerted by direct interaction with BRP and protection of this key structural protein against ubiquitination and subsequent degradation. BRP, Bruchpilot; Ub, ubiquitin.Active zones, the specialized sites for neurotransmitter release at presynaptic terminals, are characterized by a dense protein network called the cytomatrix at the active zone (CAZ). The protein machinery of the CAZ is responsible for efficient synaptic vesicle tethering, docking and fusion with the presynaptic membrane and, thus, for reliable signal transmission from the neuron to the postsynaptic cell. Clearly, proteins in the CAZ are tightly regulated, especially in response to external cues such as synaptic activity [3,4]. Yet, this particularly crowded protein environment might be favourable for the formation of non-functional—and sometimes toxic—protein aggregates. Chaperones that act at the synapse reduce the probability of crucial protein aggregation by preventing and reverting these inappropriate interactions, which happen as a result of environmental stress.One of these chaperones, the Drosophila neuroprotective NMNAT, was identified in a genetic screen for factors involved in synapse function [5]. Its chaperone activity was later confirmed by using in vitro and in vivo protein folding assays [6]. NMNAT null mutants show severe and early onset neurodegeneration, whereas neurodevelopment does not seem to be strongly affected. Interestingly, degeneration of photoreceptors lacking NMNAT can be significantly attenuated by limiting synaptic activity, either by rearing flies in the dark or by introducing the no receptor potential A (norpA) mutation that blocks phototransduction [5]. These results indicate that NMNAT protects adult neurons from activity-induced degeneration.In this issue of EMBO reports, Zang and colleagues report a role for NMNAT at the synapse. They observed that loss or reduced levels of NMNAT leads to a concomitant loss of several synaptic markers including cysteine-string protein (CSP), synaptotagmin and the active zone structural protein Bruchpilot (BRP). Remarkably, BRP was the only one of these proteins found to co-immunoprecipitate with NMNAT from brain lysates. Both proteins show approximately 50% co-localization at the neuromuscular junction when imaged by 3D-SIM™ super-resolution microscopy, suggesting that NMNAT might act directly as a chaperone for maintaining a functional BRP conformation.Consistent with a protective role of NMNAT against BRP degradation, RNA interference-mediated NMNAT knockdown leads to BRP ubiquitination, whereas this modification was not detected in control brain lysates. Given the involvement of the ubiquitin proteasome pathway in regulating synaptic development and function [1], the authors tested the effect of the proteasome inhibitor MG-132 on BRP ubiquitination. They observed an increased level of BRP ubiquitination in wild-type flies fed with this drug, suggesting a role for the proteasome in the clearance of ubiquitinated BRP. By contrast, overexpression of NMNAT reduces the level of BRP ubiquitination both in the absence and the presence of MG-132, providing further evidence for the protective role of this chaperone against ubiquitination of BRP (Fig 1).a key role of the […] nicotinamide mononucleotide adenylyltransferase (NMNAT) chaperone in the protection of active zone components against activity-induced degenerationBRP is a cytoskeletal-like protein that is an integral component of T-bars—electron-dense structures that project from the presynaptic membrane and around which synaptic vesicles cluster. In agreement with a protective role of NMNAT against BRP ubiquitination, reduced levels of this chaperone give rise to a marked decrease in T-bar size in an age-dependent manner (Fig 1). Active zones are known to show dynamic changes in response to synaptic activity, and NMNAT was previously reported to protect photoreceptors against activity-induced degeneration [5]. The authors thus tested the effect of minimizing photoreceptor activity on active zone structure by keeping flies in the dark or inhibiting phototransduction by means of the norpA mutation. Both manipulations largely reversed the effect of NMNAT knockdown on T-bar size. Absence of light exposure also significantly reduced the amount of BRP that co-immunoprecipitates with NMNAT, indicating that neuronal activity regulates NMNAT–BRP interaction. Further experiments are needed to examine whether there is a positive correlation between synaptic activity and BRP ubiquitination levels, and whether NMNAT can indeed keep T-bar structure intact by protecting BRP against this modification under conditions of high synaptic activity.Finally, the study shows that reduced NMNAT levels not only caused a loss of BRP from the synapse but also a specific mislocalization of this protein to the cell body, where it accumulates in clusters together with the remaining NMNAT protein. Under these conditions BRP co-immunoprecipitated with the stress-induced Hsp70, a chaperone classically used as a marker for protein aggregation. It is still unclear whether these BRP clusters form as a result of defective anterograde trafficking and/or of enhanced retrograde transport of BRP. In the absence of light stimulation T-bars are properly assembled in nmnat null photoreceptors, but at this stage a role of NMNAT in regulating the axonal transport of BRP under conditions of normal synaptic activity cannot be excluded. Noticeably, two independent recent reports show involvement of NMNAT in mitochondrial mobility [7,8].As BRP and NMNAT co-localize and interact with one another, the simplest model that accounts for all the observations by Zang et al is that NMNAT directly prevents activity-induced ubiquitination of BRP and subsequent degradation. Yet, as its name indicates, this chaperone is an essential enzyme in NAD synthesis. It was previously shown by the Bellen lab that mutant versions of NMNAT, impaired for NAD production, rescue photoreceptor degeneration caused by loss of NMNAT [5]. This strongly suggests that NAD production is not required for stabilization of BRP but this might need further scrutiny [9].…reduced levels of this chaperone [NMNAT] give rise to a marked decrease in T-bar sizeWhile providing further insights into the role of NMNAT at the active zone in Drosophila, the paper by Zang et al might also have important implications for neurodegeneration in mammals. When ectopically expressed in mice, Nmnat has a protective role against Wallerian degeneration, that is, synapse and axon degeneration that rapidly occurs distal from an axonal wound in wild-type animals. This process is significantly delayed in mice overexpressing a chimaeric protein consisting of the amino-terminal 70 residues of the ubiquitination factor E4B (Ube4b) fused through a linker to Nmnat1, known as the Wallerian degeneration slow (Wlds) protein. Conversely, mutations in the human NMNAT1 gene were characterized in several families with Leber congenital amaurosis—a severe, early-onset neurodegenerative disease of the retina [10,11,12,13]. As Wlds or Nmnat1 overexpression protects axons from degeneration in various disease models [9], Nmnat1 emerges as a promising candidate for developing protective strategies against axonal degeneration in peripheral neuropathies such as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis but also in glaucoma, AIDS and other diseases [9]. 相似文献
58.
Elsa Froufe Sónia Ferreira Jean‐Pierre Boudot Paulo C. Alves David James Harris 《Biological journal of the Linnean Society. Linnean Society of London》2014,111(1):49-57
Although Odonata are a key component of many freshwater ecosystems, their taxonomy and evolutionary history is still far from being well resolved. In the present study, we report the first molecular phylogeny for the Western Palaearctic Cordulegaster genus (Odonata: Anisoptera: Cordulegastridae). We sequenced fragments of both mitochondrial and nuclear genes [cytochrome c oxidase I (COI) and Internal Transcribed Spacer‐1 (ITS‐1)] from eight species and 13 subspecies, from western, southern and central Europe, Turkey, and Morocco. Our data support the existence of two major groups corresponding to the traditional boltonii‐ and bidentata‐groups. Both groups are monophyletic based on COI sequences and the distinctiveness of Cordulegaster princeps, Cordulegaster trinacriae, Cordulegaster picta and Cordulegaster heros relative to Cordulegaster boltonii, and Cordulegaster helladica and Cordulegaster insignis relative to Cordulegaster bidentata, is confirmed. All species are also monophyletic for ITS‐1, with the exception of Cordulegaster helladica buchholzi, which shares the haplotype with C. insignis. Although moderate levels of genetic diversity were found within C. boltonii, there was no clear separation among the four subspecies, with the exception of the populations of Cordulegaster boltonii algirica from North Africa. Similarly, no genetic differentiation was found between the two subspecies of C. bidentata, Cordulegaster bidentata bidentata and Cordulegaster bidenta sicilica. © 2013 The Linnean Society of London, Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, 2014, 111, 49–57. 相似文献
59.
Paula M. Nogueira Rafael R. Assis Ana C. Torrecilhas Elvira M. Saraiva Natália L. Pessoa Marco A. Campos Eric F. Marialva Cláudia M. Ríos-Velasquez Felipe A. Pessoa Nágila F. Secundino Jer?nimo N. Rugani Elsa Nieves Salvatore J. Turco Maria N. Melo Rodrigo P. Soares 《PLoS neglected tropical diseases》2016,10(8)
The immunomodulatory properties of lipophosphoglycans (LPG) from New World species of Leishmania have been assessed in Leishmania infantum and Leishmania braziliensis, the causative agents of visceral and cutaneous leishmaniasis, respectively. This glycoconjugate is highly polymorphic among species with variation in sugars that branch off the conserved Gal(β1,4)Man(α1)-PO4 backbone of repeat units. Here, the immunomodulatory activity of LPGs from Leishmania amazonensis, the causative agent of diffuse cutaneous leishmaniasis, was evaluated in two strains from Brazil. One strain (PH8) was originally isolated from the sand fly and the other (Josefa) was isolated from a human case. The ability of purified LPGs from both strains was investigated during in vitro interaction with peritoneal murine macrophages and CHO cells and in vivo infection with Lutzomyia migonei. In peritoneal murine macrophages, the LPGs from both strains activated TLR4. Both LPGs equally activate MAPKs and the NF-κB inhibitor p-IκBα, but were not able to translocate NF-κB. In vivo experiments with sand flies showed that both stains were able to sustain infection in L. migonei. A preliminary biochemical analysis indicates intraspecies variation in the LPG sugar moieties. However, they did not result in different activation profiles of the innate immune system. Also those polymorphisms did not affect infectivity to the sand fly. 相似文献
60.
Elsa Addessi Sabrina Rossi 《Proceedings. Biological sciences / The Royal Society》2011,278(1707):849-854
In humans and apes, one of the most adaptive functions of symbols is to inhibit strong behavioural predispositions. However, to our knowledge, no study has yet investigated whether using symbols provides some advantage to non-ape primates. We aimed to trace the evolutionary roots of symbolic competence by examining whether tokens improve performance in the reverse–reward contingency task in capuchin monkeys, which diverged from the human lineage approximately 35 Ma. Eight capuchins chose between: (i) two food quantities, (ii) two quantities of ‘low-symbolic distance tokens’ (each corresponding to one unit of food), and (iii) two ‘high-symbolic distance tokens’ (each corresponding to a different amount of food). In all conditions, subjects had to select the smaller quantity to obtain the larger reward. No procedural modifications were employed. Tokens did improve performance: five subjects succeeded with high-symbolic distance tokens, though only one succeeded with food, and none succeeded with low-symbolic distance tokens. Moreover, two of the five subjects transferred the rule to novel token combinations. Learning effects or preference reversals could not account for the successful performance with high-symbolic distance tokens. This is, to our knowledge, the first demonstration that tokens do allow monkeys to inhibit strong behavioural predispositions, as occurs in chimpanzees and children. 相似文献