11 resultados para p85

em DigitalCommons@The Texas Medical Center


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Phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K) phosphorylates membrane constituent phosphatidylinositols, producing second messengers that link membrane bound receptor signals to cellular proliferation and survival. PI3K, a heterodimer consisting of a catalytic p110 subunit and a regulatory p85 subunit, can be activated through induced association with other signaling molecules. The p85 subunit serves to both stabilize and inactivate p110. The inhibitory activity of P85 is relieved by occupancy of the N terminal SH2 domain by phosphorylated tyrosine. PI3K becomes phosphorylated and activated subsequent to a variety of stimuli. Indeed, Src family kinases have been demonstrated to phosphorylate p85 at tyrosine 688, but the role of phosphorylation in PI3K function is unclear. We decided to evaluate the importance of tyrosine phosphorylation to PI3K activity. We demonstrate that tyrosine phosphorylated p85 is associated with a higher specific activity than is non-phosphorylated PI3K. Wild type p85 inhibits PI3K enzyme activity, a process accentuated by mutation of tyrosine 688 to alanine and reversed by mutation to aspartate which functions as a phosphotyrosine mimic in multiple systems. Strikingly, the Y688D mutation completely reverses the p85 inhibitory activity on cell viability and activation of downstream protein NFkB. We demonstrate that tyrosine phosphorylated Y688 or Y688D is sufficient to bind the p85 N terminal SH2 domain, either within full length p85 or in an isolated N terminal SH2 domain, suggesting the possibility of an intramolecular interaction between phosphorylated Y688 and the p85 N terminal SH2 domain that can relieve the p85-induced inhibition of p110. Further, we provide evidence that dephosphorylation of Y688 reduces phosphorylation-induced PI3K activity. We demonstrate that tyrosine phosphatase SHP-1 can physically associate with p85 in a SH2-mediated interaction with the C terminal tail of SHP-1. This association is concomitant with both p85 dephosphorylation and decreased PI3K activity. Altogether, our data suggests the phosphorylation state of p85 is the focal point of a novel mechanism for PI3K activity regulation. As PI3K has been shown to be involved in the vital physiological processes of cell proliferation and apoptosis, a thorough understanding of the regulation of this signaling protein may provide opportunities for the design of novel treatments for cancer. ^

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We have developed a novel way to assess the mutagenicity of environmentally important metal carcinogens, such as nickel, by creating a positive selection system based upon the conditional expression of a retroviral transforming gene. The target gene is the v-mos gene in MuSVts110, a murine retrovirus possessing a growth temperature dependent defect in expression of the transforming gene due to viral RNA splicing. In normal rat kidney cells infected with MuSVts110 (6m2 cells), splicing of the MuSVts110 RNA to form the mRNA from which the transforming protein, p85$\sp{\rm gag-mos}$, is translated is growth-temperature dependent, occurring at 33 C and below but not at 39 C and above. This splicing "defect" is mediated by cis-acting viral sequences. Nickel chloride treatment of 6m2 cells followed by growth at 39 C, allowed the selection of "revertant" cells which constitutively express p85$\sp{\rm gag-mos}$ due to stable changes in the viral RNA splicing phenotype, suggesting that nickel, a carcinogen whose mutagenicity has not been well established, could induce mutations in mammalian genes. We also show by direct sequencing of PCR-amplified integrated MuSVts110 DNA from a 6m2 nickel-revertant cell line that the nickel-induced mutation affecting the splicing phenotype is a cis-acting 70-base duplication of a region of the viral DNA surrounding the 3$\sp\prime$ splice site. These findings provide the first example of the molecular basis for a nickel-induced DNA lesion and establish the mutagenicity of this potent carcinogen. ^

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The v-mos gene of Moloney murine sarcoma virus (Mo-MuSv) encodes a serine/threonine protein kinase capable of inducing cellular transformation. The c-mos protein is an important cell cycle regulator that functions during meiotic cell division cycles in germ cells. The overall function of c-mos in controlling meiosis is becoming better understood but the role of v-mos in malignant transformation of cells is largely unknown.^ In this study, v-mos protein was shown to be phosphorylated by M phase kinase in vitro and in vivo. The kinase activity and neoplastic transforming ability of v-mos is positively regulated by the phosphorylation. Together with the earlier finding of activation of M phase kinase by c-mos, these results raise the possibility of mutual regulation between M phase kinase and mos kinases.^ In addition to its functional interaction with the M phase kinase, the v-mos protein was shown to be present in the same protein complex with a cyclin-dependent kinase (cdk). In addition, an antibody that recognizes the cdk proteins was shown to co-precipitate the v-mos proteins in the interphase and mitotic cells transformed by p85$\sp{\rm gag-mos}$. Cdk proteins have been shown to be associated with nonmitotic cyclins which are potential oncogenes. The perturbation of cdk kinase or the activation of non-mitotic cyclins as oncogenes by v-mos could contribute directly to v-mos induced cellular transformation. v-mos proteins were also shown to interact with tubulin and vimentin, the essential components of microtubules and type IV intermediate filaments, respectively. The organizations of both microtubules and intermediate filaments are cell cycle-regulated. These results suggest that the v-mos kinase could be directly involved in inducing morphological changes typically seen in transformed cells.^ The interactions between the v-mos protein and these cell cycle control elements in regards to v-mos induced neoplastic transformation are discussed in detail in the text. ^

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Trophism as a "clonal dominance" support mechanism for tumor cells is an unexplored area of tumor progression. This report presents evidence that the human melanoma low-affinity neurotrophin receptor (p75) can signal independently of its high-affinity tyrosine kinase counterparts, the TRK family of kinases. Signaling may be accomplished by a p75-associated purine-analog-sensitive kinase and results in enhanced invasion into a reconstituted basement membrane with a corresponding stimulation of matrix metalloproteinase-2 expression. Additionally, a "stress culture" survival assay was developed to mimic the growth limiting conditions encountered by melanoma cells in a rapidly growing primary tumor or metastatic deposit prior to neoangiogenesis. Under these conditions, p75, promotes the survival of high p75 expressing brain-colonizing melanoma cells. Extensive 70W melanoma cell-cell contact, which downregulates p75, immediately precedes the induction of cell death associated with diminished production of two key cell survival factors, bcl-2 and the p85 subunit of phosphoinositol-3-kinase, and an elevation in apoptosis promoting intracellular reactive oxygen species (ROSs). Since one function of bcl-2 may be to control the generation of ROSs via the antioxidant pathway, these cells may receive a apoptosis-prompting "double hit". 70W melanoma cell death occurred by an apoptotic mechanism displaying classical morphological changes including plasma membrane blebbing, loss of microvilli and redistribution of ribosomes. 70W apoptosis could be pharmacologically triggered following anti-p75 monoclonal antibody-mediated clustering of p75 receptors. 70W cells fluorescently sorted for high-p75 expression (p75$\sp{\rm H}$ cells) exhibited an augmented survival potential and a predilection to sort with the S + G2/M growth phase, relative to their low p75 expressing, p75$\sp{\rm L}$ counterparts. Apoptosis is significantly delayed by p75$\sp{\rm H}$ cells, whereas p75$\sp{\rm L}$ cells are exquisitely prone to initiate apoptosis. Importantly, the p75$\sp{\rm L}$ cells that survive apoptosis, highly re-expressed p75 and were remarkably responsive to exogenous NGF.^ These are the first data to implicate p75-mediated neurotrophism as an invasion and survival support mechanism employed by brain-metastatic cells. In particular, these results may have implications in little understood phenomena of tumor progression, such as the emergence of "clonal dominance" and tumor dormancy. ^

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Epidemiological studies have shown cadmium to induce cancer in humans, while experimental studies have proven this metal to be a potent tumor inducer in animals. However, cadmium appears nonmutagenic in most prokaryotic and eukaryotic mutagenesis assays. In this study, we present the identification of mutations in normal rat kidney cells infected with the mutant MuSVts110 retrovirus (6m2 cells) as a result of treatment with cadmium chloride. The detection of these mutations was facilitated by the use of a novel mutagenesis assay established in this laboratory. The 6m2 reversion assay is a positive selection system based on the conditional expression of the MuSVts110 v-mos gene. In MuSVts110 the gag and mos genes are fused out of frame, thus the translation of the v-mos sequence requires a frameshift in the genomic RNA. In 6m2 cells this frameshift is accomplished by the temperature-dependent splicing of the primary MuSVts110 transcript. Splicing of MuSVts110, which is mediated by cis-acting sequences, occurs when 6m2 cells are grown at 33$\sp\circ$C and below, but not at 39$\sp\circ$C. Therefore, 6m2 cells appear transformed at low growth temperatures, but take on a morphologically normal appearance when grown at high temperatures. The treatment of 6m2 cells with cadmium chloride resulted in the outgrowth of a number of cells that reverted to the transformed state at high growth temperatures. Analysis of the viral proteins expressed in these cadmium-induced 6m2 revertants suggested that they contained mutations in their MuSVts110 DNA. Sequencing of the viral DNA from three revertants that constitutively expressed the P85$\sp{gag{-}mos}$ transforming protein revealed five different mutations. The Cd-B2 revertant contained three of those mutations: an A-to-G transition 48 bases downstream of the MuSVts110 3$\sp\prime$ splice site, plus a G-to-T and an A-to-T transversion 84 and 100 bases downstream of the 5$\sp\prime$ splice site, respectively. The Cd-15-5 revertant also contained a point mutation, a T-to-C transition 46 bases downstream of the 5$\sp\prime$ splice site, while Cd-10-5 contained a three base deletion of MuSVts110 11 bases upstream of the 3$\sp\prime$ splice site. A fourth revertant, Cd-10, expressed a P100$\sp{gag{-}mos}$ transforming protein, and was found to have a two base deletion. This deletion accomplished the frameshift necessary for v-mos expression, but did not alter MuSVts110 RNA splicing and the expression of p85$\sp{gag{-}mos}.$ Lastly, sequencing of the MuSVts110 DNA from three spontaneous revertants revealed the same G to T transversion in each one. This was the same mutation that was found in the Cd-B2 revertant. These findings provide the first example of mutations resulting from exposure to cadmium and suggest, by the difference in each mutation, the complexity of the mechanism utilized by cadmium to induce DNA damage. ^

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By the use of Moloney murine sarcoma virus (Mo-MSV)-induced rat bone tumor (RBT) cells as immunogens, and the hybridoma technique, a mouse hybridoma clone was isolated in Dr. Chan's lab (Chan et al., 1983), which produced a monoclonal antibody, designated MC. MC detected specific antigens in three different Mo-MSV-transformed rat cell lines: 78A1 WRC, RBT and 6M2 (NRK cells infected with the ts110 mutant of Mo-MSV), but not in their untransformed counterparts. These antigens are tentatively termed transformation associated proteins (TAP). In this study, TAP were hypothesized to be the rat specific proteins which are activated by Mo-MSV and play an important role in cellular transformation, and were further investigated. Their properties are summarized as follows: (1) TAP may represent cellular products localized in the cytoplasm of 6M2 cells. (2) The expression of TAP is temperature-sensitive and related to cellular transformation, and probably activated by the v-mos gene products. The optimal temperature for the expression of both P85('gag-mos), the only known viral transforming protein in 6M2 cells, and TAP was 28(DEGREES)C. The expression of both P85('gag-mos) and TAP was proportional to the degree of transformation of 6M2 cells. (3) There were four antigenically-related forms of intracellular TAP (P66, P63, P60 and P58) in 6M2 cells. After synthesis, the 58Kd TAP was probably converted to one of the other three forms. These three polypeptides (P66, P63 and P60) were rapidly converted to two (P68 and P64) and subsequently secreted to the extracellular medium with a 50% secretion rate of 78 min. The conversion of these molecular sizes of TAP is probably related to glycosylation. Inhibition of TAP glycosylation by 0.5 ug/ml of tunicamycin could retard the secretion rate of TAP by 39%. (4) TAP are phosphoproteins, but not associated with any protein kinase activity. (5) TAP have been purified, and found to be mitogenic NRK-2 cells. TAP can bind to the receptors of NRK-2 cells with a K(,d) of 1.4 pM and with about 2 x 10('5) binding sites for TAP per NRK-2 cell. (6) Some weak proteolytic activity was found to associate with purified TAP. ^

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The viral proteins synthesized by a Moloney murine sarcoma virus (Mo-MuSV) with a temperature-sensitive mutation in a function required for the maintenance of the transformed state (ts110) were examined. Normal rat kidney cells (NRK) were infected with the ts110 virus and a non-virus-producing cell clone, termed 6m2, was isolated. This cell clone had a malignant phenotype at 33(DEGREES), the permissive temperature, but changed to a normal phenotype at 39(DEGREES).^ Two viral proteins were detected in 6m2 cells. A 58,000 dalton protein (P58) was detected at both 33(DEGREES) and 39(DEGREES) and contained only core protein (gag) coded sequences. An 85,000 dalton protein (P85) was detected only at 33(DEGREES) and contained sequences of viral core proteins p15, pp12, and part of p30 as well as protein sequences attributed by peptide mapping to P23 and P38, two candidate viral mouse src (v-mos) gene products. These results provide good evidence that P85 is a gag-mos polyprotein. As expected for a functional mos-gene product, P85 synthesis preceded parameters characteristic of the transformed state, including changes in cell morphology, in the cytoplasmic microtubule complex (CMTC) and in the rate of hexose uptake.^ Other studies were conducted to ascertain the defect which prohibited the synthesis of P85 at 39(DEGREES), the non-permissive temperature. When 6m2 cells were treated with actinomycin D at 39(DEGREES) and shifted to 33(DEGREES), the cells were unable to synthesize P85, but P58 continued to be made. P85 mRNA, active at 33(DEGREES), continued to be translated for two to three hours after shifting to 39(DEGREES) as judged by pulse-labeling experiments. Virus harvested at 33(DEGREES) from ts110 MuSV producer cells packaged both P85 and P58 coding RNAs while virus harvested at 39(DEGREES) was deficient in the amount of P85 coding RNA. Agarose gel electrophoresis of 6m2 cellular RNA showed that RNA harvested at 33(DEGREES) contained the 4.0 and 3.5 kb RNAs. Similar experiments on cells maintained at 39(DEGREES) have detected only the 4.0 kb RNA, suggesting that the 3.5 kb RNA codes for P85. The defect appeared to be in the long term stability of the P85 coding RNA at 39(DEGREES), since, in shift-up experiments (33(DEGREES) (--->) 39(DEGREES)), P85 was translated for only three hours at 39(DEGREES), while P58 was synthesized for at least eight hours. However, at 33(DEGREES) in the presence of actinomycin D, the ratio of P85 and P58 synthesis at hourly intervals was similar throughout a 12 hour period. ^

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Various Moloney murine sarcoma virus (Mo-MuSV) isolates contain a cellular sequence, termed mos, which is responsible for the transforming ability of Mo-MuSV. A serine kinase activity has been found to be associated with mos gene products of several isolates of Mo-MuSV. A mutant of Mo-MuSV strain 124 (designated MuSV ts110) is temperature-sensitive (ts) for transformation and encodes two proteins, P85('gag-mos) (an 85,000 M(,r) protein encoded by the gag and mos genes) and P58('gag), at the permissive temperature (28(DEGREES)C). At the nonpermissive temperature (39(DEGREES)C), only P58('gag) is found in MuSV ts110-infected NRK cells (6m2 cells). Both P85('gag-mos) and P58('gag) were phosphorylated when anti-gag immune complexes containing these proteins were incubated at 22(DEGREES)C with (lamda)-('32)P -ATP and MnCl(,2). The kinase detected in anti-gag complexes from 6m2 cells at permissive temperature was associated with P85('gag-mos) since immune complexes from 39(DEGREES)C 6m2 cells, which lack P85('gag-mos), produced no phosphorylated P58('gag) molecules. In addition, an anti-mos complex (anti-mos 37-55 complexes) allowed in vitro phosphorylation of P85('gag-mos) in the absence of P58('gag). No kinase activity was detectable with other gag gene products (e.g., Mo-MuSV-124 P62('gag)), suggesting that the P85('gag-mos) kinase activity was present within the mos portion of the protein. The P85('gag-mos) kinase activity was very thermolabile upon shifting 6m2 cells from permissive to nonpermissive temperatures (t(, 1/2) for inactivation = 5 min). In contrast, a spontaneous revertant of MuSV ts110 encodes a larger gag-mos protein (termed P100('gag-mos)) which contained a kinase activity stable to 39(DEGREES)C. Using the optimal conditions developed for the P85('gag-mos) kinase, Mo-MuSV-encoded p37('mos) was also found to be associated with a serine kinase activity. Phosphorylation of p37('mos) and a 43 Kd protein (super-phosphorylated p37('mos)) occurred in anti-mos(37-55) complexes from Mo-MuSV-124 acutely-infected NIH 3T3 cells, but neither in mos 37-55 peptide-blocked anti-mos(37-55) complexes nor in immune complexes from uninfected NIH 3T3 cells. Antibodies directed against the C-terminus of v-mos were found to inhibit the in vitro phosphorylation of p37('mos), suggesting that the extreme C-terminal sequence of v-mos may be important for an intrinsic kinase activity. This inhibitory action by antibodies to the C-terminus of p37('mos), when considered with all the other data reported here, provides convincing evidence that the v-mos gene encodes a serine protein kinase activity. ^

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Cells infected with a temperature sensitive phenotypic mutant of Moloney sarcoma virus (MuSVts110) exhibit a transformed phenotype at 33('(DEGREES)) and synthesize two virus specific proteins, p85('gag-mos), a gag-mos fusion protein and p58('gag), a truncated gag precursor protein (the gag gene codes for viral structural proteins and mos is the MuSV transforming gene). At 39('(DEGREES)) only p58('gag) is synthesized and the morphology of the cells is similar to uninfected NRK parental cells. Two MuSVts110 specific RNAs are made in MuSVts110-infected cells, one of 4.0 kb in length, the other of 3.5 kb. Previous work indicated that each of these RNAs arose by a single central deletion of parental MuSV genetic material, and that p58('gag) was made by the 4.0 kb RNA and p85('gag-mos) from the 3.5 kb RNA. The objective of my dissertation research was to map precisely the deletion boundaries of both of the MuSVts110 RNAs, and to determine the proper reading frame across both deletion borders. This work succeeded in arriving at the following conclusions: (a) Using S-1 nuclease analysis and primer extension sequencing, it was found that the 4.0 kb MuSVts110 RNA arose by a 1488 base deletion of 5.2 kb parental MuSV genomic RNA. This deletion resulted in an out of frame fusion of the gag and mos genes that resulted in the formation of a "stop" codon which causes termination of translation just beyond the c-terminus of the gag region. Thus, this RNA can only be translated into the truncated gag protein p58('gag). (b) S-1 analysis of RNA from cells cultivated at different temperatures demonstrated that the 4.0 kb RNA was synthesized at all temperatures but that synthesis of the 3.5 kb RNA was temperature sensitive. These observations supported the data derived from blot hybridization experiments the interpretation of which argued for the existence of a single provirus in MuSVts110 infected cells, and hence only a single primary transcript (the 4.0 kb RNA). (c) Analyses similar to those described in (a) above showed that the 3.5 kb RNA was derived from the 4.0 kb MuSVts110 RNA by a further deletion of 431 bases, fusing the gag and mos genes into a continuous reading frame capable of directing synthesis of the p85('gag-mos) protein. These sequence data and the presence of only one MuSVts110-specific provirus, indicate that a splice mechanism is employed to generate the 3.5 kb RNA since the gag and mos genes are observed to be fused in frame in this RNA. . . . (Author's abstract exceeds stipulated maximum length. Discontinued here with permission of author.) UMI ^

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Phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K) generates membrane phospholipids that serve as second messengers to recruit signaling proteins to plasma membrane consequently regulating cell growth and survival. PI3K is a heterodimer consisting of a catalytic p110 subunit and a regulatory p85 subunit. Association of the p85 with other signal proteins is critical for induced PI3K activation. Activated PI3K, in turn, leads to signal flows through a variety of PI3K effectors including PDK1, AKT, GSK3, BAD, p70 S6K and NFκB. The PI3K pathway is under regulation by multiple signal proteins representing cross-talk between different signaling cascades. In this study, we have evaluated the role of protein kinase C family kinases on signaling through PI3K at multiple levels. Firstly, we observed that the action of PKC specific inhibitors like Ro-31-8220 and GF109203X was associated with an increased AKT phosphorylation and activity, suggesting that PKC kinases might play a negative role in the regulation of PI3K pathway. Then, we demonstrated the stimulation of AKT by PKC inhibition was dependent on functional PI3K enzyme and able to be transmitted to the AKT effector p70 S6K. Furthermore, we showed an inducible physical association between the PKCζ isotype and AKT, which was accompanied by an attenuated AKT activity. However, a kinase-dead form of PKC failed to affect AKT. In the second part of our research we revealed the ability of a different PKC family member, PKCδ to bind to the p85 subunit of PI3K in response to oxidative stress, a process requiring the activity of src tyrosine kinases. The interaction was demonstrated to be a direct and specific contact between the carboxyl terminal SH2 domain of p85 and tyrosine phosphorylated PKCδ. Several different types of agonists were capable to induce this association including tyrosine kinases and phorbol esters with PKCδ tyrosine phosphorylation being integral components. Finally, the PKCδ-PI3K complex was related to a reduction in the AKT phosphorylation induced by src. A kinase-deficient mutant of PKCδ was equally able to inhibit AKT signal as the wild type, indicative of a process independent of PKCδ catalytic activity. Altogether, our data illustrate different PKC isoforms regulating PI3K pathway at multiple levels, suggesting a mechanism to control signal flows through PI3K for normal cell activities. Although further investigation is required for full understanding of the regulatory mechanism, we propose that complex formation of signal proteins in PI3K pathway and specific PKC isoforms plays important role in their functional linkage. ^

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Cells infected with the conditionally defective MuSVts110 mutant of Moloney murine sarcoma virus are transformed at 33$\sp\circ$C but appear morphologically normal at 39$\sp\circ$C. The molecular basis for this phenotype is as follows: MuSVts110 contains a 1487 nucleotide central deletion that has truncated the 3$\sp\prime$ end to the gag gene and the 5$\sp\prime$ end of the mos gene. The resulting gag-mos junction is out-of-frame and the v-mos protein is not expressed. At 33$\sp\circ$C or lower, a splicing event is activated such that a 431 base intron is removed to realign the gag and mos gene in-frame, allowing the expression of a transforming protein P85$\sp{gag-mos}$. Temperature-dependent splicing appeared to be an intrinsic property of MuSVts110 transcripts and not a general feature of pre-mRNA splicing in 6m2 cells since splicing activity of a heterologous transcript in the same cells did not vary with temperature. The possibility that the splice event was not temperature-sensitive, but that the accumulation of spliced transcript at the lower growth temperatures was due to its selective thermolability was ruled out as stability studies revealed that the relative turnover rates of the unspliced and spliced MuSVts110 transcripts were not affected by temperature.^ The consensus sequences containing the splice sites activated in the MuSVts110 mutant (5$\sp\prime$ gag and 3$\sp\prime$ mos) are present, but not utilized, in wild-type MuSV-124. To test the hypothesis that it was the reduction of the 1919 base intervening sequence in MuSV-124 to 431 bases in MuSVts110 which activated splicing, the identical 1487 base deletion was introduced into cloned wild-type MuSV-124 DNA to create the MuSVts110 equivalent, ts32.^ To examine conditions permissive for splicing, we assayed splice site activation in a series of MuSV-124 "intron-modification" mutants. Data suggest that splicing in wild-type MuSV-124 may be blocked due to the lack of a proximal branchpoint sequence, but can be activated by those intron mutations which reposition a branch site closer to the 3$\sp\prime$ splice site. (Abstract shortened with permission of author.) ^