Keatingpetersen9064

Z Iurium Wiki

Verze z 4. 10. 2024, 14:10, kterou vytvořil Keatingpetersen9064 (diskuse | příspěvky) (Založena nová stránka s textem „Surprisingly, the mitochondrial sirtuins Sirt3 and Sirt5 were resistant to inhibition by cysteine oxidants. Collectively, these results suggest that nitric…“)
(rozdíl) ← Starší verze | zobrazit aktuální verzi (rozdíl) | Novější verze → (rozdíl)

Surprisingly, the mitochondrial sirtuins Sirt3 and Sirt5 were resistant to inhibition by cysteine oxidants. Collectively, these results suggest that nitric oxide-derived oxidants may causatively link nuclear and cytoplasmic sirtuin inhibition to aging-related inflammatory disease development. Cyclopamine in vivo Published under license by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.The selective pressure imposed by extrinsic death signals and stressors adds to the challenge of isolating and interpreting the roles of proteins in stress-activated signaling networks. By expressing a kinase with activating mutations and a caged lysine blocking the active site, we can rapidly switch on catalytic activity with light and monitor the ensuing dynamics. Applying this approach to MAP kinase kinase 6 (MKK6), which activates the p38 subfamily of MAPKs, we found that decaging active MKK6 in fibroblasts is sufficient to trigger apoptosis in a p38-dependent manner. In both fibroblasts and in a murine melanoma cell line expressing mutant B-Raf, MKK6 activation rapidly and potently inhibited the pro-proliferative extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) pathway; to our surprise, this negative cross-regulation was equally robust when all p38 isoforms were inhibited. These results position MKK6 as a new pleiotropic signal transducer that promotes both pro-apoptotic and anti-proliferative signaling, and they highlight the utility of caged, light-activated kinases for dissecting stress-activated signaling networks. Published under license by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) gene expression is coordinately regulated both pre- and post-transcriptionally, and its perturbation can lead to human pathologies. Mitochondrial ribosomal RNAs (mt-rRNAs) undergo a series of nucleotide modifications after release from polycistronic mitochondrial RNA (mtRNA) precursors, which is essential for mitochondrial ribosomal biogenesis. Cytosine N4-methylation (m4C) at position 839 (m4C839) of the 12S small subunit (SSU) mt-rRNA was identified decades ago; however, its biogenesis and function have not been elucidated in detail. Here, using several approaches, including immunofluorescence, RNA immunoprecipitation and methylation assays, and bisulfite mapping, we demonstrate that human methyltransferase-like 15 (METTL15), encoded by a nuclear gene, is responsible for 12S mt-rRNA methylation at m4C839 both in vivo and in vitro We tracked the evolutionary history of RNA m4C methyltransferases and identified a difference in substrate preference between METTL15 and its bacterial ortholog rsmH. Additionally, unlike the very modest impact of a loss of m4C methylation in bacterial SSU rRNA on the ribosome, we found that METTL15 depletion results in impaired translation of mitochondrial protein-coding mRNAs and decreases mitochondrial respiration capacity. Our findings reveal that human METTL15 is required for mitochondrial function, delineate the evolution of methyltransferase substrate specificities and modification patterns in rRNA, and highlight a differential impact of m4C methylation on prokaryotic ribosomes and eukaryotic mitochondrial ribosomes. Published under license by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.Overexpression of centromeric proteins has been identified in a number of human malignancies, but the functional and mechanistic contributions of these proteins to disease progression have not been characterized. The centromeric histone H3 variant centromere protein A (CENPA) is an epigenetic mark that determines centromere identity. Here, using an array of approaches, including RNA-seq and ChIP-seq analyses, immunohistochemistry-based tissue microarrays, and various cell biology assays, we demonstrate that CENPA is highly overexpressed in prostate cancer in both tissue and cell lines and that the level of CENPA expression correlates with the disease stage in a large cohort of patients. Gain-of-function and loss-of-function experiments confirmed that CENPA promotes prostate cancer cell line growth. Results from the integrated sequencing experiments suggested a previously unidentified function of CENPA as a transcriptional regulator that modulates expression of critical proliferation, cell-cycle, and centromere/kinetochore genes. Taken together, our findings show that CENPA overexpression is crucial to prostate cancer growth. Published under license by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.Pleckstrin homology domain-containing A7 (PLEKHA7) is a cytoplasmic protein at adherens junctions that has been implicated in hypertension, glaucoma, and responses to Staphylococcus aureus α-toxin. Complex formation of PLEKHA7, PDZ domain-containing 11 (PDZD11), tetraspanin-33, and the α-toxin receptor ADAM metallopeptidase domain 10 (ADAM10) promotes junctional clustering of ADAM10 and α-toxin-mediated pore formation. However, how the N-terminal region of PDZD11 interacts with the N-terminal tandem WW domains of PLEKHA7 and how this interaction promotes tetraspanin-33 binding to the WW1 domain is unclear. Here, we used site-directed mutagenesis, GST pulldowns, immunofluorescence, molecular modeling, and docking experiments to characterize the mechanisms driving these interactions. We found that Asp-30 of WW1 and His-75 of WW2 interact through a hydrogen bond and, together with Thr-35 of WW1, form a binding pocket that accommodates a polyproline stretch within the N-terminal PDZD11 region. By strengthening the interactions of the ternary complex, the WW2 domain stabilized the WW1 domain and cooperatively promoted the interaction with PDZD11. Modeling results indicated that, in turn, PDZD11 binding induces a conformational rearrangement, which strengthens the ternary complex, and contributes to enlarging a "hydrophobic hotspot" region on the WW1 domain. The last two lipophilic tetraspanin-33 residues, Trp-283 and Tyr-282, were required for its interaction with PLEKHA7. Docking of the tetraspanin-33 C terminus revealed that it fits into the hydrophobic hotspot region of the accessible surface of WW1. We conclude that communication between the two tandem WW domains of PLEKHA7 and the PLEKHA7-PDZD11 interaction modulate the ligand-binding properties of PLEKHA7. Published under license by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.

Autoři článku: Keatingpetersen9064 (Muir Locklear)