979 resultados para Signal-transduction Pathway
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PURPOSE: Apoptotic arterial wall vascular smooth muscle cell death is known to contribute to plaque vulnerability and rupture. Novel apoptotic markers like apolipoprotein C-I have been implicated in apoptotic human vascular smooth muscle cell death via recruiting a neutral sphingomyelinase (N-SMase)-ceramide pathway. In vivo relevance of these observations in an animal model of plaque rupture has not been shown. METHODS AND RESULTS: Using Watanabe rabbits, we investigated three different groups (group 1, three normal Watanabe rabbits; group 2, six Watanabe rabbits fed with high cholesterol diet for 3 months; group 3, five Watanabe rabbits with similar diet but additional endothelial denudation). We followed progression of atherosclerosis to pharmacologically induced plaque rupture non-invasively using novel 3D magnetic resonance Fast-Field-Echo angiography (TR=7.2, TE=3.6 ms, matrix=512 x 512) and Fast-Spin-Echo vessel wall imaging methods (TR=3 heart beats, TE=10.5 ms, matrix=304 x 304) on 1.5 T MRI. MRI provided excellent image quality with good MRI versus histology vessel wall thickness correlation (r=0.8). In six animals of group 2/3 MRI detected neo-intimal dissection in the abdominal aorta which was accompanied by immuno-histochemical demonstration of concomitant aforementioned novel apoptotic markers, previously implicated in the apoptotic smooth muscle cell death in vitro. CONCLUSIONS: Our studies suggest a potential role for the signal transduction pathway involving apolipoprotein C-I for in vivo apoptosis and atherosclerotic plaque rupture visualized by MRI.
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The Gac/Rsm signal transduction pathway positively regulates secondary metabolism, production of extracellular enzymes, and biocontrol properties of Pseudomonas fluorescens CHA0 via the expression of three noncoding small RNAs, termed RsmX, RsmY, and RsmZ. The architecture and function of the rsmY and rsmZ promoters were studied in vivo. A conserved palindromic upstream activating sequence (UAS) was found to be necessary but not sufficient for rsmY and rsmZ expression and for activation by the response regulator GacA. A poorly conserved linker region located between the UAS and the -10 promoter sequence was also essential for GacA-dependent rsmY and rsmZ expression, suggesting a need for auxiliary transcription factors. One such factor involved in the activation of the rsmZ promoter was identified as the PsrA protein, previously recognized as an activator of the rpoS gene and a repressor of fatty acid degradation. Furthermore, the integration host factor (IHF) protein was found to bind with high affinity to the rsmZ promoter region in vitro, suggesting that DNA bending contributes to the regulated expression of rsmZ. In an rsmXYZ triple mutant, the expression of rsmY and rsmZ was elevated above that found in the wild type. This negative feedback loop appears to involve the translational regulators RsmA and RsmE, whose activity is antagonized by RsmXYZ, and several hypothetical DNA-binding proteins. This highly complex network controls the expression of the three small RNAs in response to cell physiology and cell population densities.
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IB1 is a mammalian scaffold protein that interacts with components of the c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK) signal-transduction pathway mainly via its protein-protein interaction domains. Crystallization of the key Src homology 3 (SH3) domain of IB1 has been achieved. Crystallization experiments with unmodified protein and deliberately oxidized protein have led to different crystal forms. X-ray data have been collected to 3.0 A resolution from a crystal form with rectangular prism morphology. These crystals are orthorhombic (P2(1)2(1)2(1)), with unit-cell parameters a = 45.9, b = 57.0, c = 145.5 A. These are the first crystallographic data on a scaffold molecule such as IB1 to be reported.
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In the Gac/Rsm signal transduction pathway of Pseudomonas fluorescens CHA0, the dimeric RNA-binding proteins RsmA and RsmE, which belong to the vast bacterial RsmA/CsrA family, effectively repress translation of target mRNAs containing a typical recognition sequence near the translation start site. Three small RNAs (RsmX, RsmY, RsmZ) with clustered recognition sequences can sequester RsmA and RsmE and thereby relieve translational repression. According to a previously established structural model, the RsmE protein makes optimal contacts with an RNA sequence 5'- (A)/(U)CANGGANG(U)/(A)-3', in which the central ribonucleotides form a hexaloop. Here, we questioned the relevance of the hexaloop structure in target RNAs. We found that two predicted pentaloop structures, AGGGA (in pltA mRNA encoding a pyoluteorin biosynthetic enzyme) and AAGGA (in mutated pltA mRNA), allowed effective interaction with the RsmE protein in vivo. By contrast, ACGGA and AUGGA were poor targets. Isothermal titration calorimetry measurements confirmed the strong binding of RsmE to the AGGGA pentaloop structure in an RNA oligomer. Modeling studies highlighted the crucial role of the second ribonucleotide in the loop structure. In conclusion, a refined structural model of RsmE-RNA interaction accommodates certain pentaloop RNAs among the preferred hexaloop RNAs.
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In the biocontrol strain Pseudomonas fluorescens CHA0, the Gac/Rsm signal transduction pathway positively controls the synthesis of antifungal secondary metabolites and exoenzymes. In this way, the GacS/GacA two-component system determines the expression of three small regulatory RNAs (RsmX, RsmY, and RsmZ) in a process activated by the strain's own signal molecules, which are not related to N-acyl-homoserine lactones. Transposon Tn5 was used to isolate P. fluorescens CHA0 insertion mutants that expressed an rsmZ-gfp fusion at reduced levels. Five of these mutants were gacS negative, and in them the gacS mutation could be complemented for exoproduct and signal synthesis by the gacS wild-type allele. Furthermore, two thiamine-auxotrophic (thiC) mutants that exhibited decreased signal synthesis in the presence of 5 x 10(-8) M thiamine were found. Under these conditions, a thiC mutant grew normally but showed reduced expression of the three small RNAs, the exoprotease AprA, and the antibiotic 2,4-diacetylphloroglucinol. In a gnotobiotic system, a thiC mutant was impaired for biological control of Pythium ultimum on cress. Addition of excess exogenous thiamine restored all deficiencies of the mutant. Thus, thiamine appears to be an important factor in the expression of biological control by P. fluorescens.
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In the plant-beneficial soil bacterium Pseudomonas fluorescens CHA0, the production of biocontrol factors (antifungal secondary metabolites and exoenzymes) is controlled at a posttranscriptional level by the GacS/GacA signal transduction pathway involving RNA-binding protein RsmA as a key regulatory element. This protein is assumed to bind to the ribosome-binding site of target mRNAs and to block their translation. RsmA-mediated repression is relieved at the end of exponential growth by two GacS/GacA-controlled regulatory RNAs RsmY and RsmZ, which bind and sequester the RsmA protein. A gene (rsmE) encoding a 64-amino-acid RsmA homolog was identified and characterized in strain CHA0. Overexpression of rsmE strongly reduced the expression of target genes (hcnA, for a hydrogen cyanide synthase subunit; aprA, for the main exoprotease; and phlA, for a component of 2,4-diacetylphloroglucinol biosynthesis). Single null mutations in either rsmA or rsmE resulted in a slight increase in the expression of hcnA, aprA, and phlA. By contrast, an rsmA rsmE double mutation led to strongly increased and advanced expression of these target genes and completely suppressed a gacS mutation. Both the RsmE and RsmA levels increased with increasing cell population densities in strain CHA0; however, the amount of RsmA showed less variability during growth. Expression of rsmE was controlled positively by GacA and negatively by RsmA and RsmE. Mobility shift assays demonstrated specific binding of RsmE to RsmY and RsmZ RNAs. The transcription and stability of both regulatory RNAs were strongly reduced in the rsmA rsmE double mutant. In conclusion, RsmA and RsmE together account for maximal repression in the GacS/GacA cascade of strain CHA0.
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Stress induced by accumulation of unfolded proteins at the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) is a classic feature of secretory cells and is observed in many tissues in human diseases including cancer, diabetes, obesity, and neurodegeneration. Cellular adaptation to ER stress is achieved by the activation of the unfolded protein response (UPR), an integrated signal transduction pathway that transmits information about the protein folding status at the ER to the nucleus and cytosol to restore ER homeostasis. Inositol-requiring transmembrane kinase/endonuclease-1 (IRE1α), the most conserved UPR stress sensor, functions as an endoribonuclease that processes the mRNA of the transcription factor X-box binding protein-1 (XBP1). IRE1α signaling is a highly regulated process, controlled by the formation of a dynamic scaffold onto which many regulatory components assemble, here referred to as the UPRosome. Here we provide an overview of the signaling and regulatory mechanisms underlying IRE1α function and discuss the emerging role of the UPR in adaptation to protein folding stress in specialized secretory cells and in pathological conditions associated with alterations in ER homeostasis.
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Résumé La voie de signalisation de Wnt est extrêmement conservée au cours de l'évolution. Les protéines Wnt sont des molécules sécrétées qui se lient à la famille de récepteurs Frizzled. Cette interaction mène à la stabilisation de la protéine β-caténine, qui va s'accumuler dans le cytoplasme puis migrer dans le noyau où elle peut s'hétérodimériser avec les facteurs de transcription de la famille TCF/LEF. Il a été démontré que cette voie de signalisation joue un rôle important durant la lymphopoïèse et de récents résultats suggèrent un rôle clé de cette voie dans le renouvellement des Cellules Souches Hématopoïétique (CSH). Des études se basant sur un système de surexpression de protéines montrent clairement que la voie Wnt peut influencer l'hématopoïèse. Cependant, le rôle de la protéine β-caténine dans le système hématopoïétique n'a jamais été testé directement. Ce projet de thèse se propose d'étudier la fonction de la protéine β-caténine par sa délétion inductible via le système Cre-loxP. De façon surprenante, nous avons pu démontrer que les progéniteurs de la moelle osseuse, déficients en β-caténine, ne montrent aucune altération dans leur capacité à s'auto-renouveler et/ou à reconstituer toutes les lignées hématopoïétiques (myéloïde, érythroïde et lymphoïde) dans les souris-chimères. De plus, le développement, la survie des thymocytes ainsi que la prolifération des cellules T périphériques induite par un antigène, sont indépendants de β-caténine. Ces résultats suggèrent soit que la protéine β-caténine ne joue pas un rôle primordial dans le système hématopoiétique, soit que son absence pourrait être compensée par une autre protéine. Un candidat privilégié susceptible de se substituer à β-caténine, serait plakoglobine, aussi connu sous le nom de γ-caténine. En effet, ces deux protéines partagent de multiples caractéristiques structurelles. Afin de démontrer que la protéine γ-caténine peut compenser l'absence de β-caténine, nous avons généré des souris dans lesquelles, le système hématopoïétique est déficient pour ces deux protéines. Cette déficience combinée de β- caténine et γ-caténine ne perturbe pas la capacité des Cellules Souche Hématopoïétique-Long Terme (CSH-LT) de se renouveler, par contre elle agit sur un progéniteur précoce déjà différencié de la moelle osseuse. Ces résultats mettent en évidence que la protéine γ-caténine est capable de compenser l'absence de protéine β-caténine dans le système hématopoïétique. Par conséquent, ce travail contribue à une meilleure connaissance de la cascade Wnt dans l'hématopoïèse. Summary The canonical Wnt signal transduction pathway is a developmentally highly conserved. Wnts are secreted molecules which bind to the family of Frizzled receptors in a complex with the low density lipoprotein receptor related protein (LRP-5/6). This initial activation step leads to the stabilization and accumulation of β-catenin, first in the cytoplasm and subsequently in the nucleus where it forms heterodimers with TCF/LEF transcription factor family members. Wnt signalling has been shown to be important during early lymphopoiesis and has more recently, been suggested to be a key player in self-renewal of haematopoietic stem cells (HSCs). Although mostly gain of function studies indicate that components of the Wnt signalling pathway can influence the haematopoietic system, the role of β-catenin has never been directly investigated. The aim of this thesis project is to investigate the putatively critical role of β-catenin in vivo using the Cre-loxP mediated conditional loss of function approach. Surprisingly, β-catenin deficient bone marrow (BM) progenitors arc not impaired in their ability to self-renew and/or to reconstitute all haematopoietic lineages (myeloid, erythroid and lymphoid) in both mixed and straight bone marrow chimeras. In addition, both thymocyte development and survival, and antigen-induced proliferation of peripheral T cells are β- catenin independent. Our results do not necessarily exclude the possibility of an important function for β-catenin mediated Wnt signalling in the haematopoietic system, it rather raises the question that β-catenin is compensated for by another protein. A prime candidate that may take over the function of β-catenin in its absence, is the close relative plakoglobin, also know as γ-catenin. This protein shares multiple structural features with β-catenin. In order to investigate whether γ-catenin can compensate for the loss of β-catenin we have generated mice in which the haematopoietic compartment is deficient for both proteins. Combined deficiency of β-catenin and γ-catenin does not perturb Long Term-Haematopoietic Stem Cells (LT-HSC) self renewal, but affects an already lineage committed progenitor population within the BM. Our results demonstrate that y-catenin can indeed compensate for the loss of β-catenin within the haematopoietie system.
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Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection induces the endogenous interferon (IFN) system in the liver in some but not all patients with chronic hepatitis C (CHC). Patients with a pre-activated IFN system are less likely to respond to the current standard therapy with pegylated IFN-alpha. Mitochondrial antiviral signaling protein (MAVS) is an important adaptor molecule in a signal transduction pathway that senses viral infections and transcriptionally activates IFN-beta. The HCV NS3-4A protease can cleave and thereby inactivate MAVS in vitro, and, therefore, might be crucial in determining the activation status of the IFN system in the liver of infected patients. We analyzed liver biopsies from 129 patients with CHC to investigate whether MAVS is cleaved in vivo and whether cleavage prevents the induction of the endogenous IFN system. Cleavage of MAVS was detected in 62 of the 129 samples (48%) and was more extensive in patients with a high HCV viral load. MAVS was cleaved by all HCV genotypes (GTs), but more efficiently by GTs 2 and 3 than by GTs 1 and 4. The IFN-induced Janus kinase (Jak)-signal transducer and activator of transcription protein (STAT) pathway was less frequently activated in patients with cleaved MAVS, and there was a significant inverse correlation between cleavage of MAVS and the expression level of the IFN-stimulated genes IFI44L, Viperin, IFI27, USP18, and STAT1. We conclude that the pre-activation status of the endogenous IFN system in the liver of patients with CHC is in part regulated by cleavage of MAVS.
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In the plant-beneficial, root-colonizing strain Pseudomonas fluorescens CHA0, the Gac/Rsm signal transduction pathway positively regulates the synthesis of biocontrol factors (mostly antifungal secondary metabolites) and contributes to oxidative stress response via the stress sigma factor RpoS. The backbone of this pathway consists of the GacS/GacA two-component system, which activates the expression of three small regulatory RNAs (RsmX, RsmY, RsmZ) and thereby counters translational repression exerted by the RsmA and RsmE proteins on target mRNAs encoding biocontrol factors. We found that the expression of typical biocontrol factors, that is, antibiotic compounds and hydrogen cyanide (involving the phlA and hcnA genes), was significantly lower at 35 degrees C than at 30 degrees C. The expression of the rpoS gene was affected in parallel. This temperature control depended on RetS, a sensor kinase acting as an antagonist of the GacS/GacA system. An additional sensor kinase, LadS, which activated the GacS/GacA system, apparently did not contribute to thermosensitivity. Mutations in gacS or gacA were epistatic to (that is, they overruled) mutations in retS or ladS for expression of the small RNAs RsmXYZ. These data are consistent with a model according to which RetS-GacS and LadS-GacS interactions shape the output of the Gac/Rsm pathway and the environmental temperature influences the RetS-GacS interaction in P. fluorescens CHA0.
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The Wnt -Wingless (Wg) in Drosophila- signaling is an evolutionary conserved, fundamental signal transduction pathway in animals, having a crucial role in early developmental processes. In the adult animal the Wnt cascade is mainly shut off; aberrant activation leads to cancer. One physiological exception in the adult animal is the activation of Wnt signaling in the nervous system. In the present work, we investigated Wg signaling in the Drosophila neuromuscular junctions (NMJs). The fly NMJs closely resemble the glutamatergic synapses in the mammalian central nervous system and serves as a model system to investigate the mechanism of synapse formation and stability. We demonstrate that the trimeric G-protein Go has a fundamental role in the presynaptic cell in the NMJ. It is implicated in the presynaptic Wg pathway, acting downstream of the ligand Wg and its receptor Frizzled2 (Fz2). Furthermore, we prove that the presynaptic Wg-Fz2-Gαo pathway is essential for correct NMJ formation. The neuronal protein Ankyrin2 (Ank2) localizes to the NMJ and has so far been considered to be a static player in NMJ formation, linking the plasma membrane to the cytoskeleton. We identify Ank2 as a direct target of Gαo. The physical and genetic interaction of Gαo with Ank2 represents a novel branch of the presynaptic Wg pathway, regulating the microtubule cytoskeleton in NMJ formation, jointly with the previously established Futsch-dependent branch, which controls microtubule stability downstream of the kinase Sgg (the homolog of GSK3ß). We moreover demonstrate that the Gαo-Ankyrin interaction to regulate the cytoskeleton is conserved in mammalian neuronal cells. Our findings therefore provide a novel, universally valid regulation of the cytoskeleton in the nervous system. Aberrant inactivation of the neuronal Wnt pathway is believed to be involved in the pathogenesis of the Aß peptide in Alzheimer's disease (AD). We modeled AD in Drosophila by expressing Aß42 in the nervous system and in the eye. Neuronal expression drastically shortens the life span of the flies. We prove that this effect depends on the expression specifically in glutamatergic neurons. However, Aß42 does not induce any morphological changes in the NMJ; therefore this synapse is not suitable to study the mechanism of Aß42 induced neurotoxicity. We furthermore demonstrate that genetic activation of the Wnt pathway does not rescue the Aß42 induced phenotypes - in opposition to the dominating view in the field. These results advice caution when interpreting data on the potential interaction of Wnt signaling and AD in other models. -- La voie de signalisation Wnt (Wingless (Wg) chez la drosophile) est conservée dans l'évolution et fondamentale pour le développement des animaux. Cette signalisation est normalement inactive chez l'animal adulte; une activation anormale peut provoquer le cancer. Or, ceci n'est pas le cas dans le système nerveux des adultes. La présente thèse avait pour but d'analyser le rôle de la voie de signalisation Wingless dans la plaque motrice de Drosophila melanogaster. En effet, cette plaque ressemble fortement aux synapses glutaminergiques du système nerveux central des mammifères et procure ainsi un bon modèle pour l'étude des mécanismes impliqués dans la formation et la stabilisation des synapses. Nos résultats montrent que la protéine trimérique Go joue un rôle fondamental dans la fonction de la cellule présynaptique de la plaque motrice. Go est en effet impliqué dans la voie de signalisation Wg, opérant en aval du ligand Wg et de son récepteur Frizzled2. Nous avons pu démontrer que cette voie de signalisation Wg-Fz2-Gαo est essentielle pour le bon développement et le fonctionnement de la plaque motrice. Fait intéressant, nous avons montré que la protéine neuronale Ankyrin2 (Ank2), qui est connue pour jouer un rôle statique en liant la membrane plasmique au cytosquelette dans la plaque motrice, est une cible directe de Gαo. L'interaction physique et génétique entre Gαo et Ank2 constitue ainsi une bifurcation de la voie de signalisation présynaptique Wg. Cette voie régule le cytosquelette des microtubules en coopération avec la branche liée à la protéine Futsch. Cette protéine est l'homologue de la protéine liant les microtubules MAP1B des mammifères et contrôle la stabilité des microtubules opérant en aval de la kinase Sgg (l'homologue de GSK3ß). De plus, la régulation du cytosquelette par l'interaction entre Gαo et Ankyrin est conservée chez les mammifères. Dans leur ensemble, nos résultats ont permis d'identifier un nouveau mode de régulation du cytosquelette dans le système nerveux, probablement valable de manière universelle. La voie de signalisation Wnt est soupçonnée d'être impliquée dans la toxicité provoquée par le peptide Aß dans le cadre de la maladie d'Alzheimer. Nous avons tenté de modéliser la maladie chez la drosophile en exprimant Aß42 spécifiquement dans le cerveau. Cette expérience a montré que l'expression neuronale d'Aß42 réduit la durée de vie des mouches de manière significative par un mécanisme impliquant les cellules glutamatergiques. Par contre, aucune modification morphologique n'est provoquée par Aß42 dans les plaques motrices glutamatergiques. Ces résultats montrent que ce modèle de Drosophile n'est pas adéquat pour l'étude de la maladie d'Alzheimer. De plus, l'activation génétique de la voie de signalisation Wg n'a pas réussi à restaurer les phénotypes de survie ou ceux des yeux causés par Aß42. Ces résultats indiquent que l'implication de la voie de signalisation Wg dans la maladie d'Alzheimer doit être considérée avec prudence.
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RÉSUMÉ Les kinases activées par des mitogènes (MAPKs) constituent une importante famille d'enzymes conservée dans l'évolution. Elles forment un réseau de signalisation qui permet à la cellule de réguler spécifiquement divers processus impliqués dans la différenciation, la survie ou l'apoptose. Les kinases formant le module MAPK sont typiquement disposées en cascades de trois partenaires qui s'activent séquentiellement par phosphorylation. Le module minimum est constitué d'une MAPK kinase kinase (MAPKKK), d'une MAPK kinase (MAPKK) et d'une MAPK. Une fois activée, la MAPK phosphoryle différents substrats tels que des facteurs de transcription ou d'autres protéines. Chez les mammifères, trois groupes principaux de MAPKs ont été identifiés. Il s'agit du groupe des kinases régulées par des signaux extracellulaires du type «mitogènes » (ERK), ainsi que des groupes p38 et cJun NH2-terminal kinase (JNK), ou SAPK pour stress activated protein kinase, plutôt activées par des stimuli de type «stress ». De nombreuses études ont impliqué JNK dans la régulation de différents processus physiologiques et pathologiques, comme le diabète, les arthrites rhumatoïdes, l'athérosclérose, l'attaque cérébrale, les maladies de Parkinson et d'Alzheimer. JNK, en particulier joue un rôle dans la mort des cellules sécrétrices d'insuline induite par l'interleukine (IL)-1 β, lors du développement du diabète de type 1. IB1 est une protéine scaffold (échafaud) qui participe à l'organisation du module de JNK. IB1 est fortement exprimée dans les neurones et les cellules β du pancréas. Elle a été impliquée dans la survie des cellules, la régulation de l'expression du transporteur du glucose de type 2 (Glut-2) et dans le processus de sécrétion d'insuline glucose-dépendante. IBl est caractérisée par plusieurs domaines d'interaction protéine-protéine : un domaine de liaison à JNK (JBD), un domaine homologue au domaine 3 de Src (SH3) et un domaine d'interaction avec des tyrosines phosphorylées (PID). Des partenaires d'IB1, incluant les membres de la familles des kinases de lignée mélangée (MLKs), la MAPKK MKK7, la phosphatase 7 des MAPKs (MKP-7) ainsi que la chaîne légère de la kinésine, ont été isolés. Tous ces facteurs, sauf les MLKs et MKK7 interagissent avec le domaine PID ou l'extrême partie C-terminale d'IBl (la chaîne légère de la kinésine). Comme d'autres protéines scaffolds déjà décrites, IBl et un autre membre de la famille, IB2, sont capables d'homo- et d'hétérodimériser. L'interaction a lieu par l'intermédiaire de leur région C-terminale, contenant les domaines SH3 et PID. Mais ni le mécanisme moléculaire, ni la fonction de la dimérisation n'ont été caractérisés. Le domaine SH3 joue un rôle central lors de l'assemblage de complexes de macromolécules impliquées dans la signalisation intracellulaire. Il reconnaît de préférence des ligands contenant un motif riche en proline de type PxxP et s'y lie. Jusqu'à maintenant, tous les ligands isolés se liant à un domaine SH3 sont linéaires. Bien que le domaine SH3 soit un domaine important de la transmission des signaux, aucun partenaire interagissant spécifiquement avec le domaine SH3 d'IB1 n'a été identifié. Nous avons démontré qu'IBl homodimérisait par un nouveau set unique d'interaction domaine SH3 - domaine SH3. Les études de cristallisation ont démontré que l'interface recouvrait une région généralement impliquée dans la reconnaissance classique d'un motif riche en proline de type PxxP, bien que le domaine SH3 d'IB1 ne contienne aucun motif PxxP. L'homodimère d'IB1 semble extrêmement stable. Il peut cependant être déstabilisé par trois mutations ponctuelles dirigées contre des résidus clés impliqués dans la dimérisation. Chaque mutation réduit l'activation basale de JNK dépendante d'IB 1 dans des cellules 293T. La déstabilisation de la dimérisation induite par la sur-expression du domaine SH3, provoque une diminution de la sécrétion d'insuline glucose dépendant. SUMMARY Mitogen activated kinases (MAPK) are an important and conserved enzyme family. They form a signaling network required to specifically regulate process involved in cell differentiation, proliferation or death. A MAPK module is typically organized in a threekinase cascade which are activated by sequential phosphorylation. The MAPK kinase kinase (MAPKKK), the MAPK kinase (MAPKK) and the MAPK constitute the minimal module. Once activated, the MAPK phosphorylates its targets like transcription factors or other proteins. In mammals, three major groups of MAPKs have been identified : the group of extra-cellular regulated kinase (ERK) which is activated by mitogens and the group of p38 and cJun NH2-terminal kinase (JNK) or SAPK for stress activated protein kinase, which are activated by stresses. Many studies implicated JNK in many physiological or pathological process regulations, like diabetes, rheumatoid arthritis, arteriosclerosis, strokes or Parkinson and Alzheimer disease. In particular, JNK plays a crucial role in pancreatic β cell death induced by Interleukin (IL)-1 β in type 1 diabetes. Islet-brain 1 (IB 1) is a scaffold protein that interacts with components of the JNK signal-transduction pathway. IB 1 is expressed at high levels in neurons and in pancreatic β-cells, where it has been implicated in cell survival, in regulating expression of the glucose transporter type 2 (Glut-2) and in glucose-induced insulin secretion. It contains several protein-protein interaction domains, including a JNK-binding domain (JBD), a Src homology 3 domain (SH3) and a phosphotyrosine interaction domain (PID). Proteins that have been shown to associate with IB 1 include members of the Mixed lineage kinase family (MLKs), the MAPKK MKK7, the MAPK phosphatase-7 MKP7, as well as several other ligands including kinesin light chain, LDL receptor related family members and the amyloid precursor protein APP. All these factors, except MLK3 and MKK7 have been shown to interact with the PID domain or the extreme C-terminal part (Kinesin light chain) of IB 1. As some scaffold already described, IB 1 and another member of the family, IB2, have previously been shown to engage in oligomerization through their respective C-terminal regions that include the SH3 and PID domains. But neither the molecular mechanisms nor the function of dimerization have yet been characterized. SH3 domains are central in the assembly of macromolecular complexes involved in many intracellular signaling pathways. SH3 domains are usually characterized by their preferred recognition of and association with canonical PxxP motif. In all these cases, a single linear sequence is sufficient for binding to the SH3 domain. However, although SH3 domains are important elements of signal transduction, no protein that interacts specifically with the SH3 domain of IB 1 has been identified so far. Here, we show that IB 1 homodimerizes through a navel and unique set of SH3-SH3 interactions. X-ray crystallography studies indicate that the dieter interface covers a region usually engaged in PxxP-mediated ligand recognition, even though the IB 1 SH3 domain lacks this motif. The highly stable IB 1 homodimer can be significantly destabilized in vitro by individual point-mutations directed against key residues involved in dimerization. Each mutation reduces IB 1-dependent basal JNK activity in 293T cells. Impaired dimerization induced by over-expression of the SH3 domain also results in a significant reduction in glucose-dependent insulin secretion in pancreatic β-cells.
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The global activator GacA, a highly conserved response regulator in Gram-negative bacteria, is required for the production of exoenzymes and secondary metabolites in Pseudomonas spp. The gacA gene of Pseudomonas aeruginosa PAO1 was isolated and its role in cell-density-dependent gene expression was characterized. Mutational inactivation of gacA resulted in delayed and reduced formation of the cell-density signal N-butyryl-L-homoserine lactone (BHL), of the cognate transcriptional activator RhIR (VsmR), and of the transcriptional activator LasR, which is known to positively regulate RhIR expression. Amplification of gacA on a multicopy plasmid caused precocious and enhanced production of BHL, RhIR and LasR. In parallel, the gacA gene dosage markedly influenced the BHL/RhIR-dependent formation of the cytotoxic compounds pyocyanin and cyanide and the exoenzyme lipase. However, the concentrations of another known cell-density signal of P. aeruginosa, N-oxododecanoyl-L-homoserine lactone, did not always match BHL concentrations. A model accounting for these observations places GacA function upstream of LasR and RhIR in the complex, cell-density-dependent signal-transduction pathway regulating several exoproducts and virulence factors of P. aeruginosa via BHL.
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Certain strains of fluorescent pseudomonads are important biological components of agricultural soils that are suppressive to diseases caused by pathogenic fungi on crop plants. The biocontrol abilities of such strains depend essentially on aggressive root colonization, induction of systemic resistance in the plant, and the production of diffusible or volatile antifungal antibiotics. Evidence that these compounds are produced in situ is based on their chemical extraction from the rhizosphere and on the expression of antibiotic biosynthetic genes in the producer strains colonizing plant roots. Well-characterized antibiotics with biocontrol properties include phenazines, 2,4-diacetylphloroglucinol, pyoluteorin, pyrrolnitrin, lipopeptides, and hydrogen cyanide. In vitro, optimal production of these compounds occurs at high cell densities and during conditions of restricted growth, involving (i) a number of transcriptional regulators, which are mostly pathway-specific, and (ii) the GacS/GacA two-component system, which globally exerts a positive effect on the production of extracellular metabolites at a posttranscriptional level. Small untranslated RNAs have important roles in the GacS/GacA signal transduction pathway. One challenge in future biocontrol research involves development of new strategies to overcome the broad toxicity and lack of antifungal specificity displayed by most biocontrol antibiotics studied so far.
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To control many physiological responses, phytochromes directly modulate gene expression. A key regulatory event in this signal transduction pathway is the light-controlled translocation of the photoreceptor from the cytoplasm into the nucleus. Recent publications are beginning to shed light on the molecular mechanisms underlying this central control point. Interestingly, there is a specific mechanism for phytochrome A (phyA) nuclear accumulation. The dedicated phyA nuclear import pathway might be important for the distinct photosensory specificity of this atypical phytochrome. Recent studies in the field also provide a starting point for investigating how the different subcellular pools of phytochrome can control distinct responses to light.