966 resultados para DJ194(nifZ deletion mutant of Azotobacter Vinelandii)
Resumo:
La fixation biologique d’azote (réduction du N2 atmosphérique, non biodisponible, en ammonium (NH3) bioassimilable) est catalysée par la métalloenzyme nitrogénase. Cette enzyme existe sous trois isoformes chez la bactérie du sol Azotobacter vinelandii: les nitrogénases au molybdène (Mo), au vanadium (V) et au fer (Fe). L’acquisition des métaux cofacteurs constitue un paramètre d’intérêt majeur car Mo et V sont fortement complexés à la matrice (matière organique et oxydes) ce qui peut limiter leur disponibilité. Ces travaux ont montré que la présence d’acide tannique et d’oxydes de fer entraîne des changements majeurs dans la gestion des métaux cofacteurs (Mo et V) chez A. vinelandii. Les stratégies d’acquisition des métaux cofacteurs sont fortement modifiées en présence de ces complexants avec (i) un changement important de la quantité des metallophores produits ainsi que (ii) une acquisition simultanée de Mo et V dans des conditions traditionnellement considérées comme non limitantes en Mo. Ceci se traduit par un changement important dans l’utilisation des nitrogénases; les niveaux de transcrits élevés des gènes nifD et vnfD, spécifiques des nitrogénases au Mo et au V respectivement, suggèrent une utilisation simultanée de ces isoenzymes pour assurer la fixation d’azote. Ce projet a permis de mettre en évidence que face à un stress métallique, l’utilisation des isoformes de la nitrogénase par A. vinelandii est un processus plus versatile que précédemment décrit et que le coût d’acquisition des métaux dans ces conditions constitue un facteur important de la régulation de l’activité des nitrogénases. Ceci suggère que les nitrogénases alternatives pourraient contribuer à la fixation d’azote de manière plus importante que présentement admis.
Resumo:
The checkpoint kinase Chk2 has a key role in delaying cell cycle progression in response to DNA damage. Upon activation by low-dose ionizing radiation (IR), which occurs in an ataxia telangiectasia mutated (ATM)dependent manner, Chk2 can phosphorylate the mitosis-inducing phosphatase Cdc25C on an inhibitory site, blocking entry into mitosis, and p53 on a regulatory site, causing G, arrest. Here we show that the ATM-dependent activation of Chk2 by gamma- radiation requires Nbs1, the gene product involved in the Nijmegen breakage syndrome (NBS), a disorder that shares with AT a variety of phenotypic defects including chromosome fragility, radiosensitivity, and radioresistant DNA synthesis. Thus, whereas in normal cells Chk2 undergoes a time-dependent increased phosphorylation and induction of catalytic activity against Cdc25C, in NBS cells null for Nbs1 protein, Chk2 phosphorylation and activation are both defective. Importantly, these defects in NBS cells can be complemented by reintroduction of wild-type Nbs1, but neither by a carboxy-terminal deletion mutant of Nbs1 at amino acid 590, unable to form a complex with and to transport Mre11 and Rad50 in the nucleus, nor by an Nbs1 mutated at Ser343 (S343A), the ATM phosphorylation site. Chk2 nuclear expression is unaffected in NBS cells, hence excluding a mislocalization as the cause of failed Chk2 activation in Nbs1-null cells, interestingly, the impaired Chk2 function in NBS cells correlates with the inability, unlike normal cells, to stop entry into mitosis immediately after irradiation, a checkpoint abnormality that can be corrected by introduction of the wild-type but not the S343A mutant form of Nbs1, Altogether, these findings underscore the crucial role of a functional Nbs1 complex in Chk2 activation and suggest that checkpoint defects in NBS cells may result from the inability to activate Chk2.
Resumo:
Le acque di vegetazione (AV) costituiscono un serio problema di carattere ambientale, sia a causa della loro elevata produzione sia per l’ elevato contenuto di COD che oscilla fra 50 e 150 g/l. Le AV sono considerate un refluo a tasso inquinante fra i più elevati nell’ambito dell’industria agroalimentare e la loro tossicità è determinata in massima parte dalla componente fenolica. Il presente lavoro si propone di studiare e ottimizzare un processo non solo di smaltimento di tale refluo ma anche di una sua valorizzazione, utlizzandolo come materia prima per la produzione di acidi grassi e quindi di PHA, polimeri biodegradabili utilizzabili in varie applicazioni. A tale scopo sono stati utilizzati due bioreattori anaerobici a biomassa adesa, di identica configurazione, con cui si sono condotti due esperimenti in continuo a diverse temperature e carichi organici al fine di studiare l’influenza di tali parametri sul processo. Il primo esperimento è stato condotto a 35°C e carico organico pari a 12,39 g/Ld, il secondo a 25°C e carico organico pari a 8,40 g/Ld. Si è scelto di allestire e mettere in opera un processo a cellule immobilizzate in quanto questa tecnologia si è rivelata vantaggiosa nel trattamento continuo di reflui ad alto contenuto di COD e carichi variabili. Inoltre si è scelto di lavorare in continuo poiché tale condizione, per debiti tempi di ritenzione idraulica, consente di minimizzare la metanogenesi, mediata da microrganismi con basse velocità specifiche di crescita. Per costituire il letto fisso dei due reattori si sono utilizzati due diversi tipi di supporto, in modo da poter studiare anche l’influenza di tale parametro, in particolare si è fatto uso di carbone attivo granulare (GAC) e filtri ceramici Vukopor S10 (VS). Confrontando i risultati si è visto che la massima quantità di VFA prodotta nell’ambito del presente studio si ha nel VS mantenuto a 25°C: in tale condizione si arriva infatti ad un valore di VFA prodotti pari a 524,668 mgCOD/L. Inoltre l’effluente in uscita risulta più concentrato in termini di VFA rispetto a quello in entrata: nell’alimentazione la percentuale di materiale organico presente sottoforma di acidi grassi volatili era del 54 % e tale percentuale, in uscita dai reattori, ha raggiunto il 59 %. Il VS25 rappresenta anche la condizione in cui il COD degradato si è trasformato in percentuale minore a metano (2,35 %) e questo a prova del fatto che l’acidogenesi ha prevalso sulla metanogenesi. Anche nella condizione più favorevole alla produzione di VFA però, si è riusciti ad ottenere una loro concentrazione in uscita (3,43 g/L) inferiore rispetto a quella di tentativo (8,5 g/L di VFA) per il processo di produzione di PHA, sviluppato da un gruppo di ricerca dell’università “La Sapienza” di Roma, relativa ad un medium sintetico. Si può constatare che la modesta produzione di VFA non è dovuta all’eccessiva degradazione del COD, essendo questa nel VS25 appena pari al 6,23%, ma piuttosto è dovuta a una scarsa concentrazione di VFA in uscita. Questo è di buon auspicio nell’ottica di ottimizzare il processo migliorandone le prestazioni, poiché è possibile aumentare tale concentrazione aumentando la conversione di COD in VFA che nel VS25 è pari a solo 5,87%. Per aumentare tale valore si può agire su vari parametri, quali la temperatura e il carico organico. Si è visto che il processo di acidogenesi è favorito, per il VS, per basse temperature e alti carichi organici. Per quanto riguarda il reattore impaccato con carbone attivo la produzione di VFA è molto ridotta per tutti i valori di temperatura e carichi organici utilizzati. Si può quindi pensare a un’applicazione diversa di tale tipo di reattore, ad esempio per la produzione di metano e quindi di energia.
Resumo:
Das Humane Cytomegalovirus (HCMV) stellt eine große Bedrohung für Patienten mit geschwächtem oder unausgereiftem Immunsystem dar. Bei immunkompetenten Personen hingegen werden schwere Erkrankungen insbesondere durch die Wirkung antiviraler zytotoxischer CD8+-T-Lymphozyten (CTL) weitgehend verhindert. Aus Zellkultur-Systemen war bekannt, dass virale Glykoproteine, welche in der US2-US11-Region des HCMV-Genoms kodiert werden, inhibitorisch in den MHC-Klasse-I-Präsentationsweg eingreifen und somit die entsprechende Präsentation durch infizierte Zellen behindern. Über die Bedeutung dieser US2-US11-vermittelten Immunevasion für die Präsentation viraler Antigene im Kontext der Virusinfektion war jedoch nichts bekannt. Im Rahmen der vorliegenden Arbeit sollte daher der Einfluss der Immunevasion auf die MHC-Klasse-I-Präsentation der beiden wichtigsten CTL-Zielstrukturen von HCMV, dem Tegumentprotein pp65 und dem regulatorischen immediate early Protein IE1, untersucht werden. In Ergänzung dazu sollte das immunevasive Potential eines durch HCMV kodierten Homologs des immunmodulatorischen Zytokins Interleukin-10 (cmvIL-10) analysiert werden. Hierzu wurden über Peptidimmunisierung HLA-A2-transgener Mäuse CTL-Klone hergestellt, welche ausgesuchte Peptide aus pp65 und IE1 in Assoziation mit HLA-A2 mit hoher Spezifität und Sensitivität erkannten. Auf diese Weise konnte eine direkte Beeinflussung der MHC-Klasse-I-Präsentation durch cmvIL-10 falsifiziert und somit der Hypothese, dass das von infizierten Zellen freigesetzte Zytokin die MHC-Klasse-I-Präsentation nicht infizierter Nachbarzellen beeinflussen könnte, widersprochen werden. Mit Hilfe einer US2-US11-Deletionsmutante des Virus konnte zum ersten Mal gezeigt werden, dass die Präsentation von sowohl pp65 als auch IE1 durch die Immunevasion beeinträchtigt wird. Dabei war die Präsentation des IE1-Peptids zu jedem untersuchten Zeitpunkt nach Infektion vollständig unterdrückt. Die Präsentation des pp65-Peptids hingegen war noch bis zu 72 Stunden nach Infektion detektierbar. Diese anhaltende Präsentation wurde dabei durch MHC-Klasse-I-Komplexe hervorgerufen, die trotz der Expression der US2-US11-Region an die Zelloberfläche transportiert wurden. Anhand des pp65 konnte somit erstmals gezeigt werden, dass die Immunevasion von HCMV Bildung und Transport bestimmter MHC-Klasse-I-Peptid-Komplexe zwar beeinträchtigen, jedoch nicht vollständig blockieren kann. Weitere Untersuchungen ergaben, dass die Präsentation von IE1-Peptiden durch das Vorhandensein des pp65-Proteins nicht beeinflusst wurde. Damit konnten aus der Literatur bekannte Daten anderer widerlegt werden. Mit Hilfe einer weiteren Virusmutante konnte schließlich gezeigt werden, das die Expression eines der Immunevasine, des gpUS11, hinreichend ist, die IE1-Präsentation vollständig zu unterdrücken, jedoch keinerlei messbaren Einfluss auf die Präsentation von pp65 ausübt. Die vorliegende Arbeit hat wichtige Erkenntnisse erbracht, die die Grundlage für weiterführende Untersuchungen zur Aufklärung der Bedeutung der einzelnen Immunevasionsgene für die Präsentation viraler Antigene im Rahmen der Virusinfektion darstellen.
Resumo:
MVA ist ein attenuiertes Vakziniavirus, das durch wiederholte Passagierung von Chorioallantoisvirus Ankara auf Hühnerembryofibroblasten gewonnen wurde. Es ist bis auf wenige Ausnahmen nicht mehr in der Lage, in Säugerzellen zu replizieren, zeigt aber dennoch eine vollständige virale Proteinexpression und induziert nach Immunisierung eine zu VACV vergleichbare Immunantwort. Aus diesem Grund wurde es bereits als Impfstoff gegen die menschliche Pockenerkrankung eingesetzt, ohne hierbei die bei den klassischen Impfviren beobachtbaren Nebenwirkungen hervorzurufen. Das Genom von MVA enthält jedoch noch Immunmodulatoren, deren Deletion Ansatzpunkt für die weitere Verbesserung des Impfstoffes sein kann. Im Rahmen der vorliegenden Arbeit wurde eine Deletionsmutante untersucht, bei der das Gen für den Interleukin-1β Rezeptor (IL-1βR) deletiert ist (MVA ΔIL-1βR). Es konnte nachgewiesen werden, dass der IL-1βR in murinen als auch in humanen Zellen exprimiertes IL-1β bindet und somit inaktiviert. Des Weiteren wurde gefunden, dass MVA in der Lage ist, IL-1β in antigenpräsentierenden Zellen zu induzieren, welches aber durch die Neutralisierung aufgrund des IL-1βR nur transient nachzuweisen war. Im Gegensatz dazu induzierte MVA ΔIL-1βR eine anhaltende und um ein Vielfaches erhöhte Sekretion an IL-1β. Untersuchungen in antigenpräsentierenden Zellen aus knock-out Mäusen, die verschiedene Defizienzen in den Signalwegen zur IL-1β-Induktion trugen, zeigten, dass die Sekretion von IL-1β von Caspase-1 abhängig war, welches wahrscheinlich aus der vorgeschalteten Aktivierung der NLRP3- und/oder AIM2-Inflammasomen resultierte. Interessanterweise wurden auch Caspase-1 unabhängige Mechanismen beobachtet, die auf eine Inflammasom-unabhängige IL-1β-Induktion hinweisen könnten. In Bezug auf die Immunaktivierung führte die vermehrte Sekretion von IL-1β durch MVA ΔIL-1βR vermutlich zu einer verbesserten Antigenpräsentation, die die nachfolgende T-Zellantwort beeinflusste. In Übereinstimmung mit bereits veröffentlichten Daten wurde nach Immunisierung mit MVA ΔIL-1βR eine effektivere Gedächtnis-T-Zellantwort festgestellt, deren Charakteristika und zu Grunde liegenden Mechanismen hier untersucht wurden. Jedoch konnten weder Unterschiede in weiteren pro-inflammatorischen Zytokinmustern noch im Verlauf insbesondere der CD8+ T-Zell-Aktivierung und -erhaltung zwischen MVA und MVA ΔIL-1βR beobachtet werden. Als mögliche weitere Ursache für die veränderte Gedächtnis-T-Zellantwort könnte daher eine vermehrte Stimulation durch antigenpräsentierende Zellen und eine IL-21-vermittelte bessere Unterstützungsfunktion der CD8+ Gedächtnis-T-Zellen durch CD4+ T-Zellen in Frage kommen. Zusammenfassend konnten hier neue molekulare Mechanismen, die zur Induktion von IL-1β nach einer MVA-Infektion führen, aufgedeckt werden. Darüber hinaus existieren bereits erste Hinweise auf einen Vorteil der Deletion des IL-1βR für MVA-basierte Vektorimpfstoffe. Die vorliegende Arbeit hat weitere Daten erhoben, die das Erzielen verbesserter Immunantworten nach Immunisierung mit MVA ΔIL-1βR unterstützen, woraus sich neue Ansätze für die Entwicklung MVA-basierter Impfstoffe ergeben könnten.
Resumo:
T cell uropods are enriched in specific proteins including adhesion receptors such as P-selectin glycoprotein ligand-1 (PSGL-1), lipid raft-associated proteins such as flotillins and ezrin/radixin/moesin (ERM) proteins which associate with cholesterol-rich raft domains and anchor adhesion receptors to the actin cytoskeleton. Using dominant mutants and siRNA technology we have tested the interactions among these proteins and their role in shaping the T cell uropod. Expression of wild type (WT) ezrin-EGFP failed to affect the morphology of human T cells or chemokine-induced uropod recruitment of PSGL-1 and flotillin-1 and -2. In contrast, expression of constitutively active T567D ezrin-EGFP induced a motile, polarized phenotype in some of the transfected T cells, even in the absence of chemokine. These cells featured F-actin-rich ruffles in the front and uropod enrichment of PSGL-1 and flotillins. T567D ezrin-EGFP was itself strongly enriched in the rear of the polarized T cells. Uropod formation induced by T567D ezrin-EGFP was actin-dependent as it was attenuated by inhibition of Rho-kinase or myosin II, and abolished by disruption of actin filaments. While expression of constitutively active ezrin enhanced cell polarity, expression of a dominant-negative deletion mutant of ezrin, 1-310 ezrin-EGFP, markedly reduced uropod formation induced by the chemokine SDF-1, T cell front-tail polarity, and capping of PSGL-1 and flotillins. Transfection of T cells with WT or T567D ezrin did not affect chemokine-mediated chemotaxis whereas 1-310 ezrin significantly impaired spontaneous 2D migration and chemotaxis. siRNA-mediated downregulation of flotillins in murine T cells attenuated moesin capping and uropod formation, indicating that ERM proteins and flotillins cooperate in uropod formation. In summary, our results indicate that activated ERM proteins function together with flotillins to promote efficient chemotaxis of T cells by structuring the uropod of migrating T cells.
Resumo:
Insulin negatively regulates expression of the insulin-like growth factor binding protein 1 (IGFBP-1) gene by means of an insulin-responsive element (IRE) that also contributes to glucocorticoid stimulation of this gene. We find that the Caenorhabditis elegans protein DAF-16 binds the IGFBP-1⋅IRE with specificity similar to that of the forkhead (FKH) factor(s) that act both to enhance glucocorticoid responsiveness and to mediate the negative effect of insulin at this site. In HepG2 cells, DAF-16 and its mammalian homologs, FKHR, FKHRL1, and AFX, activate transcription through the IGFBP-1⋅IRE; this effect is inhibited by the viral oncoprotein E1A, but not by mutants of E1A that fail to interact with the coactivator p300/CREB-binding protein (CBP). We show that DAF-16 and FKHR can interact with both the KIX and E1A/SRC interaction domains of p300/CBP, as well as the steroid receptor coactivator (SRC). A C-terminal deletion mutant of DAF-16 that is nonfunctional in C. elegans fails to bind the KIX domain of CBP, fails to activate transcription through the IGFBP-1⋅IRE, and inhibits activation of the IGFBP-1 promoter by glucocorticoids. Thus, the interaction of DAF-16 homologs with the KIX domain of CBP is essential to basal and glucocorticoid-stimulated transactivation. Although AFX interacts with the KIX domain of CBP, it does not interact with SRC and does not respond to glucocorticoids or insulin. Thus, we conclude that DAF-16 and FKHR act as accessory factors to the glucocorticoid response, by recruiting the p300/CBP/SRC coactivator complex to an FKH factor site in the IGFBP-1 promoter, which allows the cell to integrate the effects of glucocorticoids and insulin on genes that carry this site.
Resumo:
To assess the structural and functional significance of the N helix (residues 3-13) of avian recombinant troponin C (rTnC), we have constructed NHdel, in which residues 1-11 have been deleted, both in rTnC and in the spectral probe mutant F29W (Pearlstone, J. R., Borgford, T., Chandra, M., Oikawa, K., Kay, C. M., Herzberg, O., Moult, J., Herklotz, A., Reinach, F. C., and Smillie, L.B. (1992) Biochemistry 31, 6545-6553). Comparison of the far- and near-UV CD spectra (±Ca2+) of F29W and F29W/ NHdel and titration of the Ca2+-induced ellipticity and fluorescence changes indicates that the deletion has little effect on the global fold of the molecule but reduces the Ca2+ affinity of the N domain, but not the C domain, by 1.6-1.8-fold. Comparisons of the mutants NHdel, F29W, and F29W/NHdel with rTnC have been made using several functional assays. In reconstituted troponin-tropomyosin actomyosin subfragment 1 and myofibrillar ATPase systems, both F29W and NHdel have significantly reduced Ca2+-activated enzymic activities. These effects are cumulative in the double mutant F29W/ NHdel. On the other hand, maximal isometric tension development in Ca2+-activated reconstituted skinned fibers is not affected with F29W and NHdel, although the Ca2+ sensitivity of NHdel in this system is markedly reduced. We conclude that both mutations, NHdel and F29W, are functionally deleterious, possibly affecting interactions of the N domain with troponin I and/or T.
Resumo:
The Retinoblastoma tumor suppressor gene (RB) plays a role in a variety of human cancers. Experimental analyses have indicated that the protein product of the RB gene (pRb) plays a role in cell cycle regulation, and that this protein is required in cellular differentiation, senescence, and cell survival. pRb function is dependent on its ability to bind to cellular factors. There are multiple protein binding domains within pRb. Mutations within these domains which eliminate the ability of pRb to bind its targets result in loss of function. Loss of pRb function leads to tumorigenesis, although uncontrolled cellular proliferation is not a universal response to pRb inactivation. The ultimate response to the loss of pRb is influenced by both the genetic and epigenetic environments. Targeted disruption of RB in mice results in embryonic lethality, demonstrating the requirement for functional pRb in development. Close examination of various tissues from the embryos which lack wildtype RB shows problems in differentiation as well as showing induction of apoptosis. Although disruption of RB has provided useful information, complete inactivation of a gene precludes the possibility of discovering the functions that separate domains may have within the system. Creation of a dominant negative mutant by domain deletion whose phenotype is expressed in the presence of the wildtype may provide information about the intermediate functions of the protein. In addition, tissue specific targeting of a dominant negative mutant of pRb allows for comprehensive analysis of pRb function in organogenesis. In this thesis, a series of RB deletion mutants were created and tested for dominant negative activity as well as cellular localization. A tissue culture assay for dominant negative activity was developed which screens for the phenotype of apoptosis due to loss of pRb function. Two mutants from this series scored positive for dominant negative activity in this assay. The effect of these mutants within the assay environment can be explained by a model in which pRb acts as a facilitator of cell fate pathway decisions. ^
Resumo:
An adenovirus type 5 mutant deleted for the preterminal protein (pTP) gene was constructed using cell lines that express pTP. The pTP deletion mutant virus is incapable of replicating in the absence of complementation and does not express detectable levels of viral mRNAs that are expressed only after the onset of replication. Accumulation of early-region mRNAs, including that for E1A, exhibits a lag relative to that observed from the wild-type virus. However, E1A mRNA accumulation attains a steady-state level similar to the level of expression during the early phase of infection with the wild-type virus. In 293-pTP cells (human embryonic kidney cells that express pTP in addition to high levels of adenovirus E1A and E1B proteins), the pTP deletion mutant virus replicates efficiently and yields infectious titers within 5-fold of that of the wild-type virus. The deletion of 1.2 kb of pTP-encoding sequence increases the size of foreign DNA that can be introduced into the virus and, with an absolute block to replication, makes this virus an important tool for gene therapy.
Resumo:
A live, cold-passaged (cp) candidate vaccine virus, designated respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) B1 cp-52/2B5 (cp-52), replicated efficiently in Vero cells, but was found to be overattenuated for RSV-seronegative infants and children. Sequence analysis of reverse-transcription–PCR-amplified fragments of this mutant revealed a large deletion spanning most of the coding sequences for the small hydrophobic (SH) and attachment (G) proteins. Northern blot analysis of cp-52 detected multiple unique read-through mRNAs containing SH and G sequences, consistent with a deletion mutation spanning the SH:G gene junction. Immunological studies confirmed that an intact G glycoprotein was not produced by the cp-52 virus. Nonetheless, cp-52 was infectious and replicated to high titer in tissue culture despite the absence of the viral surface SH and G glycoproteins. Thus, our characterization of this negative-strand RNA virus identified a novel replication-competent deletion mutant lacking two of its three surface glycoproteins. The requirement of SH and G for efficient replication in vivo suggests that selective deletion of one or both of these RSV genes may provide an alternative or additive strategy for developing an optimally attenuated vaccine candidate.
Resumo:
Replication-competent, attenuated herpes simplex virus-1 (HSV-1) derivatives that contain engineered mutations into the viral γ34.5 virulence gene have been used as oncolytic agents. However, as attenuated mutants often grow poorly, they may not completely destroy some tumors and surviving cancer cells simply regrow. Thus, although HSV-1 γ34.5 mutants can reduce the growth of human tumor xenografts in mice and have passed phase I safety studies, their efficacy is limited because they replicate poorly in many human tumor cells. Previously, we selected for a γ34.5 deletion mutant variant that regained the ability to replicate efficiently in tumor cells. Although this virus contains an extragenic suppressor mutation that confers enhanced growth in tumor cells, it remains attenuated. Here, we demonstrate that the suppressor virus replicates to greater levels in prostate carcinoma cells and, importantly, is a more potent inhibitor of tumor growth in an animal model of human prostate cancer than the γ34.5 parent virus. Thus, genetic selection in cancer cells can be used as a tool to enhance the antitumor activity of a replication-competent virus. The increased therapeutic potency of this oncolytic virus may be useful in the treatment of a wide variety of cancers.
Resumo:
We have developed improved procedures for the isolation of deletion mutant, point mutant, and recombinant herpesvirus saimiri. These procedures take advantage of the absence of NotI and AscI restriction enzyme sites within the viral genome and use reporter genes for the identification of recombinant viruses. Genes for secreted engineered alkaline phosphatase and green fluorescent protein were placed under simian virus 40 early promoter control and flanked by NotI and AscI restriction sites. When permissive cells were cotransfected with herpesvirus saimiri virion DNA and one of the engineered reporter genes cloned within herpesvirus saimiri sequences, recombinant viruses were readily identified and purified on the basis of expression of the reporter gene. Digestion of recombinant virion DNA with NotI or AscI was used to delete the reporter gene from the recombinant herpesvirus saimiri. Replacement of the reporter gene can be achieved by NotI or AscI digestion of virion DNA and ligation with a terminally matched fragment or, alternatively, by homologous recombination in cotransfected cells. Any gene can, in theory, be cloned directly into the virion DNA when flanked by the appropriate NotI or AscI sites. These procedures should be widely applicable in their general form to most or all herpesviruses that replicate permissively in cultured cells.
Resumo:
Growth factor-binding protein 2 (Grb2) is an adaptor protein that links tyrosine kinases to Ras. BCR-ABL is a tyrosine kinase oncoprotein that is implicated in the pathogenesis of Philadelphia chromosome (Ph1)-positive leukemias. Grb2 forms a complex with BCR-ABL and the nucleotide exchange factor Sos that leads to the activation of the Ras protooncogene. In this report we demonstrate that Grb2 mutant proteins lacking amino- or carboxyl-terminal src homology SH3 domains suppress BCR-ABL-induced Ras activation and reverse the oncogenic phenotype. The Grb2 SH3-deletion mutant proteins bind to BCR-ABL and do not impair tyrosine kinase activity. Expression of the Grb2 SH3-deletion mutant proteins in BCR-ABL-transformed Rat-1 fibroblasts and in the human Ph1-positive leukemic cell line K562 inhibits their ability to grow as foci in soft agar and form tumors in nude mice. Furthermore, expression of the Grb2 SH3-deletion mutants in K562 cells induced their differentiation. Because Ras plays an important role in signaling by receptor and nonreceptor tyrosine kinases, the use of interfering mutant Grb2 proteins may be applied to block the proliferation of other cancers that depend in part on activated tyrosine kinases for growth.
Resumo:
Hsp90 is a molecular chaperone essential for cell viability in eukaryotes that is associated with the maturation of proteins involved in important cell functions and implicated in the stabilization of the tumor phenotype of various cancers, making this chaperone a notably interesting therapeutic target. Celastrol is a plant-derived pentacyclic triterpenoid compound with potent antioxidant, anti-inflammatory and anticancer activities; however, celastrol's action mode is still elusive. In this work, we investigated the effect of celastrol on the conformational and functional aspects of Hsp90α. Interestingly, celastrol appeared to target Hsp90α directly as the compound induced the oligomerization of the chaperone via the C-terminal domain as demonstrated by experiments using a deletion mutant. The nature of the oligomers was investigated by biophysical tools demonstrating that a two-fold excess of celastrol induced the formation of a decameric Hsp90α bound throughout the C-terminal domain. When bound, celastrol destabilized the C-terminal domain. Surprisingly, standard chaperone functional investigations demonstrated that neither the in vitro chaperone activity of protecting against aggregation nor the ability to bind a TPR co-chaperone, which binds to the C-terminus of Hsp90α, were affected by celastrol. Celastrol interferes with specific biological functions of Hsp90α. Our results suggest a model in which celastrol binds directly to the C-terminal domain of Hsp90α causing oligomerization. However, the ability to protect against protein aggregation (supported by our results) and to bind to TPR co-chaperones are not affected by celastrol. Therefore celastrol may act primarily by inducing specific oligomerization that affects some, but not all, of the functions of Hsp90α. To the best of our knowledge, this study is the first work to use multiple probes to investigate the effect that celastrol has on the stability and oligomerization of Hsp90α and on the binding of this chaperone to Tom70. This work provides a novel mechanism by which celastrol binds Hsp90α.