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1.
Protein ubiquitylation is essential for many events linked to intracellular protein trafficking. Despite the significance of this process, the molecular mechanisms that govern the regulation of ubiquitylation remain largely unknown. Plasma membrane transporters are subjected to tightly regulated endocytosis, and ubiquitylation is a key signal at several stages of the endocytic pathway. The yeast monocarboxylate transporter Jen1 displays glucose-regulated endocytosis. We show here that casein kinase 1-dependent phosphorylation and HECT-ubiquitin ligase Rsp5-dependent ubiquitylation are required for Jen1 endocytosis. Ubiquitylation and endocytosis of Jen1 are induced within minutes in response to glucose addition. Jen1 is modified at the cell surface by oligo-ubiquitylation with ubiquitin-Lys63 linked chain(s), and Jen1-Lys338 is one of the target residues. Ubiquitin-Lys63-linked chain(s) are also required directly or indirectly to sort Jen1 into multivesicular bodies. Jen1 is one of the few examples for which ubiquitin-Lys63-linked chain(s) was shown to be required for correct trafficking at two stages of endocytosis: endocytic internalization and sorting at multivesicular bodies.Ubiquitylation is one of the most prevalent protein post-translational modifications in eukaryotes. In addition to its role in promoting proteasomal degradation of target proteins, ubiquitylation has been shown to regulate multiple processes, including DNA repair, signaling, and intracellular trafficking. Ubiquitylation serves as a key signal mediating the internalization of plasma membrane receptors and transporters, followed by their intracellular transport and subsequent recycling or lysosomal/vacuolar degradation (1, 2). In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, transporters usually display both constitutive and accelerated endocytosis regulated by factors such as excess substrate, changes in nutrient availability, and stress conditions. Ubiquitylation of these cell surface proteins acts as a signal triggering their internalization (1). A single essential E34 ubiquitin ligase, Rsp5, has been implicated in the internalization of most, if not all, endocytosed proteins (3). Rsp5 is the unique member in S. cerevisiae of the HECT (homologous to E6AP COOH terminus)-ubiquitin ligases of the Nedd4/Rsp5 family (4). In a few cases, Rsp5-dependent cell surface ubiquitylation was shown to involve PY-containing adapters that bind to Rsp5 (57). Rsp5-mediated ubiquitylation is also required for sorting into multivesicular bodies (MVBs) of endosomal membrane proteins that come from either the plasma membrane (through endocytosis) or the Golgi (through vacuolar protein sorting (VPS) pathway) (8). Although much progress has been made in elucidating the mechanistic basis of various steps in protein trafficking, the precise requirement for a specific type and length of Ub chains at various stages of the endocytic pathway remains to be addressed.The ubiquitin profile needed for proper internalization has been established for some yeast membrane proteins (1). The α-factor receptor Ste2 was described as undergoing monoubiquitylation on several lysines (multimonoubiquitylation). The a-factor receptor, Ste3p; the general transporter of amino acids, Gap1; the zinc transporter, Ztr1; and the uracil transporter, Fur4, have been shown to be modified by short chains of two to three ubiquitins, each attached to one, two, or more target lysine residues (oligo-ubiquitylation). Among them, Fur4 and Gap1 were the only transporters demonstrated to undergo plasma membrane oligo-ubiquitylation with ubiquitin residues linked via ubiquitin-Lys63 (9, 10). In addition, the two siderophore transporters Arn1 and Sit1 were also shown to undergo Lys63-linked cell surface ubiquitylation (11, 12). Whether these four transporters are representative of a larger class of plasma membrane substrates remains to be determined. Little is known about the type of ubiquitylation involved and/or required for sorting to MVBs. Some MVB cargoes appear to undergo monoubiquitylation (8), whereas Sna3, an MVB cargo of unknown function, undergoes Lys63-linked ubiquitylation (13). Lys63-linked ubiquitin chains were also recently reported to be required, directly or indirectly, for MVB sorting of the siderophore transporter, Sit1, when trafficking through the VPS pathway in the absence of its external substrate (11). In agreement with the possibility that additional membrane-bound proteins might undergo Lys63-linked ubiquitylation, a proteomic study aiming to uncover ubiquitylated yeast proteins showed that Lys63-ubiquitin chains are far more abundant than previously thought (14).The transport of monocarboxylates, such as lactate and pyruvate, as well as ketone bodies across the plasma membrane is essential for the metabolism of cells of various organisms. A family of monocarboxylate transporters has been reported that includes mainly mammalian members (15). In S. cerevisiae, two monocarboxylate-proton symporters have been described, Jen1 and Ady2 (16, 17). These transporters exhibit differences in their mechanisms of regulation and specificity. Jen1 is a lactate-pyruvate-acetate-propionate transporter induced in lactic or pyruvic acid-grown cells (18). Ady2, which accepts acetate, propionate, or formate, is present in cells grown in non-fermentable carbon sources (19). Jen1 has unique regulatory characteristics and has been extensively studied. It was the first secondary porter of S. cerevisiae characterized by heterologous expression in Pichia pastoris at both the cell and the membrane vesicle levels (20). The addition of glucose to lactic acid-grown cells very rapidly triggers loss of Jen1 activity and repression of JEN1 gene expression (21, 22). Newly synthesized Jen1-GFP fusion protein is sorted to the plasma membrane in an active and stable form, and loss of Jen1-GFP activity upon glucose addition is the result of its endocytosis followed by vacuolar degradation (23). Data from large scale analyses based on mass spectrometry approaches led to the detection of two sites of ubiquitylation for Jen1, one located in the N terminus of the protein and the second in the central loop (14), and several sites of phosphorylation in the N terminus, central loop, and C terminus of the protein (14, 24). In the present study, we aimed at further characterizing the internalization step of endocytosis of the transporter Jen1 and the potential role of the phosphorylation and ubiquitylation events required for its correct endocytic trafficking.  相似文献   
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Na+/H+ antiporters, integral membrane proteins that exchange protons for alkali metal cations, play multiple roles in probably all living organisms (preventing cells from excessive amounts of alkali metal cations, regulating intracellular pH and cell volume). In this work, we studied the functionality of rat plasma membrane NHE1-3 exchangers upon their heterologous expression in alkali-metal-cation sensitive Saccharomyces cerevisiae, and searched for conditions that would increase their level in the plasma membrane and improve their functionality. Though three tested exchangers were partially localized to the plasma membrane (and two of them (NHE2 and NHE3) in an active form), the bulk of the synthesized proteins were arrested along the secretory pathway, mainly in the ER. To increase the level of exchangers in the yeast plasma membrane several approaches (truncation of C-terminal regulatory sequences, expression in mutant yeast strains, construction of rat/yeast protein chimeras, various growth conditions and chemical chaperones) were tested. The only increase in the amount of NHE exchangers in the plasma membrane was obtained upon expression in a strain with the npi1 mutation, which significantly lowers the level of Rsp5 ubiquitin ligase in cells. This mutation helped to stabilize proteins in the plasma membrane.  相似文献   
4.
    
Uroporphyrinogen decarboxylase (Uro-d; EC 4.1.1.37), the fifth enzyme in the heme biosynthetic pathway, which catalyzes the sequential decarboxylation of uroporphyrinogen to coproporphyrinogen, is encoded by the HEM12 gene in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The HEM12 gene is transcribed into a major short mRNA and a minor longer one, approximately 1.35 and 1.55 kb, respectively, in size, and that differ in the 5′ untranslated region. “Uroporphyric” mutants, which have no mutations in the HEM12 gene but accumulate uroporphyrinogen, a phenotype chracteristic of partial Uro-d deficiency, were investigated. Genetic analysis showed that the mutant phenotype depends on the combined action of two unlinked mutations, udt1 and either ipa1, ipa2, or ipa3. ipa1 is tightly linked to HEM12 The mutation udt1 apparently acts specifically on the HEM12 gene, and causes a six to tenfold decrease in the levels of the short HEM12 mRNA, in the β-galactosidase activity of a HEM12-lacZ fusion, in immunodetectable protein and enzyme activity. But heme synthesis is normal and porphyrin accumulation was modest. The mutations ipa1, ipa2, and ipa3 had no phenotype on their own, but they caused an increase in porphyrin accumulation in a udt1 background. This multiplicity of genetic factors leading to uroporphyric yeast cells closely resembles the situation in human porphyria cutanea tarda.  相似文献   
5.
    
The hypersensitive response has been mostly studied by molecular and biochemical methods after sample destruction. The development of imaging techniques allows the monitoring of physiological changes before any signs of cell death. Here, we follow the early steps of a hypersensitive-like response induced by the bacterial elicitor harpin in Nicotiana sp. We describe cytological modifications after inoculation of the harpin protein, using confocal fluorescence microscopy (CFM) and optical coherence tomography (OCT), an interferometric-based microscopy. The changes detected by CFM occurred 5 h after harpin infiltration and corresponded to a redistribution of the chloroplasts from the upper to the inner regions of the palisade mesophyll cells which could be related to a perturbation in the microtubule network. Using OCT, we were able to detect a decrease in chloroplast backscattered signal as early as 30 min after harpin infiltration. A simple physical model, which accounted for the structure and distribution of thylakoid membranes, suggested that this loss of scattering could be associated with a modification in the refractive index of the thylakoid membranes. Our OCT observations were correlated with a decrease in photosynthesis, emphasizing changes in chloroplast structure as one of the earliest hallmarks of plant hypersensitive cell death.  相似文献   
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7.
Neonatal lung injury has been induced experimentally by infusion of multivitamin-containing light-exposed parenteral nutrition (PN) solutions. The objective was to explore the role of ascorbate in toxic effects of light-exposed PN on primary cultured foetal rat lung epithelial cells. Hydroperoxides were measured in 3% amino acid solutions at baseline, immediately after addition of either multivitamins or ascorbate alone (400 μg/mL) and again after a 24-h period of exposure to (or protection from) ambient light. Cellular toxicity was assessed by [C(14)]adenine release. Multivitamins or ascorbate alone increased hydroperoxides in PN, which was attenuated by light protection. Light-exposed PN containing multivitamins was more toxic to cells than baseline or light-protected PN. Exposure to ascorbate at concentrations both lower (< 5 μg/mL) and higher (> 1000 μg/mL) than normally contained in PN-induced oxidant-mediated cell death, as indicated by protective effects of hydroperoxide and hydroxyl radical scavengers. This study concludes that ascorbate generates toxic amounts of peroxide in PN solutions. The types and physiological importance of hydroperoxides induced by pro-oxidant effects of ascorbate require further evaluation in vivo.  相似文献   
8.
Primary leaf metabolism requires the co-ordinated production and use of carbon skeletons and redox equivalents in several subcellular compartments. The role of the mitochondria in leaf metabolism has long been recognized, but it is only recently that molecular tools and mutants have become available to evaluate cause-and-effect relationships. In particular, analysis of the CMSII mutant of Nicotiana sylvestris, which lacks functional complex I, has provided information on the role of mitochondrial electron transport in leaf function. The essential feature of CMSII is the absence of a major NADH sink, i.e. complex I. This necessitates re-adjustment of whole-cell redox homeostasis, gene expression, and also influences metabolic pathways that use pyridine nucleotides. In air, CMSII is not able to use its photosynthetic capacity as well as the wild type. The mutant shows up-regulation of the leaf antioxidant system, lower leaf contents of reactive oxygen species, and enhanced stress resistance. Lastly, the loss of a major mitochondrial dehydrogenase has important repercussions for the integration of primary carbon and nitrogen metabolism, causing distinct changes in leaf organic acid profiles, and also affecting downstream processes such as the biosynthesis of the spectrum of leaf amino acids.  相似文献   
9.
This article is concerned with the problem of the relation between the genetic information contained in the DNA and the emergence of visible structure in multicellular animals. The answer is sought in a reappraisal of the data of experimental embryology, considering molecular, cellular and organismal aspects. The presence of specific molecules only confers a tissue identity on the cells when their concentration exceeds the 'threshold of differentiation'. When this condition is not fulfilled the activity of the genes that code for the specific molecules in question only confers on them a histogenetic potency, i.e. the capacity to form the corresponding tissue in further development (or to trans-differentiate to that tissue). The progressive restriction of histogenetic potencies during development reflects the irreversible repression of more and more genes. The establishment of a given tissue identity under the influence of an inducing tissue (or a morphogenetic hormone) is only possible when the cells have acquired the competence to respond. Tissue differentiation proceeds progressively during development thanks to the cytoplasmic 'memory' that cells retain collectively (or sometimes individually) of the items of information successively registered by their ancestors cells. The increasing complexity of visible structure emerging during development results only from the progression of tissue differentiation. This involves continual exchange of information among the cells and leads to (1) cell displacements and rearrangements, particularly during organogenesis and (2) extreme diversification of cell individualities within tissues, particularly during postembryonic growth. A mutation (just as a teratogenic factor) evokes an anomaly that is localized in both space and time because it alters a certain aspect of cell behaviour (particularly cell surface adhesiveness or mitotic activity) at the time when this is involved in the establishment of a particular structural trait. Neither the organization of the adult nor the modalities of development are encoded in the DNA. The automatic concatenation of cell interactions in the embryo and the structural amplification it entails is conditioned by the specific biochemical composition of the cytoplasm of the egg and by the heterogeneous distribution of its inclusions.  相似文献   
10.
Genome stability is jeopardized by imbalances of the dNTP pool; such imbalances affect the rate of fork progression. For example, cytidine deaminase (CDA) deficiency leads to an excess of dCTP, slowing the replication fork. We describe here a novel mechanism by which pyrimidine pool disequilibrium compromises the completion of replication and chromosome segregation: the intracellular accumulation of dCTP inhibits PARP-1 activity. CDA deficiency results in incomplete DNA replication when cells enter mitosis, leading to the formation of ultrafine anaphase bridges between sister-chromatids at “difficult-to-replicate” sites such as centromeres and fragile sites. Using molecular combing, electron microscopy and a sensitive assay involving cell imaging to quantify steady-state PAR levels, we found that DNA replication was unsuccessful due to the partial inhibition of basal PARP-1 activity, rather than slower fork speed. The stimulation of PARP-1 activity in CDA-deficient cells restores replication and, thus, chromosome segregation. Moreover, increasing intracellular dCTP levels generates under-replication-induced sister-chromatid bridges as efficiently as PARP-1 knockdown. These results have direct implications for Bloom syndrome (BS), a rare genetic disease combining susceptibility to cancer and genomic instability. BS results from mutation of the BLM gene, encoding BLM, a RecQ 3’-5’ DNA helicase, a deficiency of which leads to CDA downregulation. BS cells thus have a CDA defect, resulting in a high frequency of ultrafine anaphase bridges due entirely to dCTP-dependent PARP-1 inhibition and independent of BLM status. Our study describes previously unknown pathological consequences of the distortion of dNTP pools and reveals an unexpected role for PARP-1 in preventing DNA under-replication and chromosome segregation defects.  相似文献   
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