3 resultados para Referral pathways

em ArchiMeD - Elektronische Publikationen der Universität Mainz - Alemanha


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The study presented here encompasses identification, analysis and characterization of the strombine dehydrogenase (StDH) from the sponge S. domuncula, on the gene and protein level. StDH is an opine dehydrogenase which is involved in opine production pathways found mainly in marine invertebrates. These anaerobic pathways are regarded as analogues to the classical anaerobic glycolytic pathway (lactate production pathway), which is predominant in vertebrates. The StDH was previously annotated as a tauropine dehydrogenase (TaDH) on the basis of its 68% identity with the TaDH protein from Halichondria japonica. Subsequent enzymatic assays showed that S. domuncula opine dehydrogenase is in fact strombine dehydrogenase which possesses specific characteristics not found in other proteins of the same family. It is described here for the first time the StDH gene in Eukaryotes. Two allelic variants have been identified which are present in the different specimens either as a homozygotic or a heterozygotic. Phylogenetic analyses supported with enzymatic assays indicate that S. domuncula StDH is only distantly related to the opine dehydrogenases from marine invertebrates. StDH showed that the protein is highly specific to glycine and inhibited by the substrate pyruvate. Furthermore, S. domunucla StDH has a dimeric structure (~75 kDa) which is not observed in so far described OpDHs that are monomeric proteins. This enzyme showed similarities to the OCD/mu-cristallyin protein family. Results showed that a sponge StDH is unusual enzyme that belongs to the independent enzyme class. In addition, expression studies revealed that the StDH is down-regulated with aeration. Immunohistology analyses showed high expression of the protein in almost all sponge cells. A strong accumulation of the enzyme was seen around the bacteria indicating that under aerobic conditions the bacteria might metabolize strombine (end product of the reaction). In conclusion, the data documented here shed new light on the anaerobic pathways in marine invertebrates. Potential mutual influences between bacteria and sponge are discussed as well. Hopefully, these results could have a small but important contribution to the better understanding of the evolution in the animal kingdom.

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Many age-related neurodegenerative disorders such as Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and polyglutamine disorders, including Huntington’s disease, are associated with the aberrant formation of protein aggregates. These protein aggregates and/or their precursors are believed to be causally linked to the pathogenesis of such protein conformation disorders, also referred to as proteinopathies. The accumulation of protein aggregates, frequently under conditions of an age-related increase in oxidative stress, implies the failure of protein quality control and the resulting proteome instability as an upstream event of proteinopathies. As aging is a main risk factor of many proteinopathies, potential alterations of protein quality control pathways that accompany the biological aging process could be a crucial factor for the onset of these disorders.rnrnThe focus of this dissertation lies on age-related alterations of protein quality control mechanisms that are regulated by the co-chaperones of the BAG (Bcl-2-associated athanogene) family. BAG proteins are thought to promote nucleotide exchange on Hsc/Hsp70 and to couple the release of chaperone-bound substrates to distinct down-stream cellular processes. The present study demonstrates that BAG1 and BAG3 are reciprocally regulated during aging leading to an increased BAG3 to BAG1 ratio in cellular models of replicative senescence as well as in neurons of the aging rodent brain. Furthermore, BAG1 and BAG3 were identified as key regulators of protein degradation pathways. BAG1 was found to be essential for effective degradation of polyubiquitinated proteins by the ubiquitin/proteasome system, possibly by promoting Hsc/Hsp70 substrate transfer to the 26S proteasome. In contrast, BAG3 was identified to stimulate the turnover of polyubiquitinated proteins by macroautophagy, a catabolic process mediated by lysosomal hydrolases. BAG3-regulated protein degradation was found to depend on the function of the ubiquitin-receptor protein SQSTM1 which is known to sequester polyubiquitinated proteins for macroautophagic degradation. It could be further demonstrated that SQSTM1 expression is tightly coupled to BAG3 expression and that BAG3 can physically interact with SQSTM1. Moreover, immunofluorescence-based microscopic analyses revealed that BAG3 co-localizes with SQSTM1 in protein sequestration structures suggesting a direct role of BAG3 in substrate delivery to SQSTM1 for macroautophagic degradation. Consistent with these findings, the age-related switch from BAG1 to BAG3 was found to determine that aged cells use the macroautophagic system more intensely for the turnover of polyubiquitinated proteins, in particular of insoluble, aggregated quality control substrates. Finally, in vivo expression analysis of macroautophagy markers in young and old mice as well as analysis of the lysosomal enzymatic activity strongly indicated that the macroautophagy pathway is also recruited in the nervous system during the organismal aging process.rnrnTogether these findings suggest that protein turnover by macroautophagy is gaining importance during the aging process as insoluble quality control substrates are increasingly produced that cannot be degraded by the proteasomal system. For this reason, a switch from the proteasome regulator BAG1 to the macroautophagy stimulator BAG3 occurs during cell aging. Hence, it can be concluded that the BAG3-mediated recruitment of the macroauto-phagy pathway is an important adaptation of the protein quality control system to maintain protein homeostasis in the presence of an enhanced pro-oxidant and aggregation-prone milieu characteristic of aging. Future studies will explore whether an impairment of this adaptation process may contribute to age-related proteinopathies.

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Methane is the most abundant reduced organic compound in the atmosphere. As the strongest known long-lived greenhouse gas after water vapour and carbon dioxide methane perturbs the radiation balance of Earth’s atmosphere. The abiotic formation of methane requires ultraviolet irradiation of organic matter or takes place in locations with high temperature and/or pressure, e.g. during biomass burning or serpentinisation of olivine, under hydrothermal conditions in the oceans deep or below tectonic plates. The biotic methane formation was traditionally thought to be formed only by methanogens under strictly anaerobic conditions, such as in wetland soils, rice paddies and agricultural waste. rnIn this dissertation several chemical pathways are described which lead to the formation of methane under aerobic and ambient conditions. Organic precursor compounds such as ascorbic acid and methionine were shown to release methane in a chemical system including ferrihydrite and hydrogen peroxide in aquatic solution. Moreover, it was shown by using stable carbon isotope labelling experiments that the thio-methyl group of methionine was the carbon precursor for the methane produced. Methionine, a compound that plays an important role in transmethylation processes in plants was also applied to living plants. Stable carbon isotope labelling experiments clearly verified that methionine acts as a precursor compound for the methane from plants. Further experiments in which the electron transport chain was inhibited suggest that the methane generation is located in the mitochondria of the plants. The abiotic formation of methane was shown for several soil samples. Important environmental parameter such as temperature, UV irradiation and moisture were identified to control methane formation. The organic content of the sample as well as water and hydrogen peroxide might also play a major role in the formation of methane from soils. Based on these results a novel scheme was developed that includes both biotic and chemical sources of methane in the pedosphere.rn