984 resultados para Site Cysteine Residues


Relevância:

80.00% 80.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Gewebe, Zellen und speziell Zellkompartimente unterscheiden sich in ihrer Sauerstoffkonzentration, Stoffwechselrate und in der Konzentration an gebildeten reaktiven Sauerstoffspezies. Um eine mögliche Änderung in der Aminosäurennutzung durch den Einfluss von Sauerstoff und seinen reaktiven Spezies untersuchen zu können wurden, Bereiche bzw. Kompartimente der menschlichen Zelle definiert, die einen Referenzrahmen bildeten und bekannt dafür sind, einen relativ hohen Grad an reaktiven Sauerstoffspezies aufzuweisen. Aus dem Vergleich wurde deutlich, dass vor allem die beiden redox-aktiven und schwefeltragenden Aminosäuren Cystein und Methionin durch eine besondere Verteilung und Nutzung charakterisiert sind. Cystein ist hierbei diejenige Aminosäure mit den deutlichsten Änderungen in den fünf untersuchten Modellen der oxidativen Belastung. In all diesen Modellen war die Nutzung von Cystein deutlich reduziert, wohingegen Methionin in Proteinen des Mitochondriums und der Elektronentransportkette angereichert war. Dieser auf den ersten Blick paradoxe Unterschied zwischen Cystein und Methionin wurde näher untersucht, indem die differenzierte Methioninnutzung in verschiedenen Zellkompartimenten von Homo sapiens charakterisiert wurde.rnDie sehr leicht zu oxidierende Aminosäure Methionin zeigt ein ungewöhnliches Verteilungsmuster in ihrer Nutzungshäufigkeit. Entgegen mancher Erwartung wird Methionin in zellulären Bereichen hoher oxidativer Belastung und starker Radikalproduktion intensiv verwendet. Dieses Verteilungsmuster findet man sowohl im intrazellulären Vergleich, als auch im Vergleich verschiedener Spezies untereinander, was daraufhin deutet, dass es einen lokalen Bedarf an redox-aktiven Aminosäuren gibt, der einen sehr starken Effekt auf die Nutzungshäufigkeit von Methionin ausübt. Eine hohe Stoffwechselrate, die im Allgemeinen mit einer erhöhten Produktion von Oxidantien assoziiert wird, scheint ein maßgeblicher Faktor der Akkumulation von Methionin in Proteinen der Atmungskette zu sein. Die Notwendigkeit, oxidiertes Antioxidans wieder zu reduzieren, findet auch bei Methionin Anwendung, denn zu Methioninsulfoxid oxidiertes Methionin wird durch die Methioninsulfoxidreduktase wieder zu Methionin reduziert. Daher kann die spezifische Akkumulation von Methionin in Proteinen, die verstärkt reaktiven Sauerstoffspezies ausgesetzt sind, als eine systematische Strategie angesehen werden, um andere labile Strukturen vor ungewollter Oxidation zu schützen. rnDa Cystein in allen untersuchten Modellen der oxidativen Belastung und im Besonderen in Membranproteinen der inneren Mitochondrienmembran lebensspannenabhängig depletiert war, wurde dieses Merkmal näher untersucht. Deshalb wurde die Hypothese getestet, ob ein besonderer Redox-Mechanismus der Thiolfunktion für diese selektive Depletion einer im Allgemeinen als harmlos oder antioxidativ geltenden Aminosäure verantwortlich ist. Um den Effekt von Cysteinresten in Membranen nachzustellen, wurden primäre humane Lungenfibroblasten (IMR90) mit diversen Modellsubstanzen behandelt. Geringe Konzentrationen der lipophilen Substanz Dodecanthiol verursachten eine signifikante Toxizität in IMR90-Zellen, die von einer schnellen Zunahme an polyubiquitinierten Proteinen und anderen Indikatoren des proteotoxischen Stresses, wie Sequestosom 1 (P62), HSP70 und HSP90 begleitet wurde. Dieser Effekt konnte spezifisch der Chemie der Thiolfunktion in Membranen zugeordnet werden, da Dodecanol (DOH), Dodecylmethylsulfid (DMS), Butanthiol oder wasserlösliche Thiole weder eine cytotoxische Wirkung noch eine Polyubiquitinierung von Proteinen verursachten. Die Ergebnisse stimmen mit der Hypothese überein, dass Thiole innerhalb von biologischen Membranen als radikalische Kettentransferagentien wirken. Diese Eigenschaft wird in der Polymerchemie durch Nutzung von lipophilen Thiolen in hydrophoben Milieus technisch für die Produktion von Polymeren benutzt. Da die Thiylradikal-spezifische Reaktion von cis-Fettsäuren zu trans-Fettsäuren in 12SH behandelten Zellen verstärkt ablief, kann gefolgert werden, dass 12SH zellulär radikalisiert wurde. In lebenden Organismen kann demnach die Oxidation von Cystein die Schädigung von Membranen beschleunigen und damit Einfallstore für die laterale Radikalisierung von integralen Membranproteinen schaffen, welche möglicherweise der Langlebigkeit abträglich ist, zumindest, wenn sie in der inneren Mitochondrienmembran auftritt.

Relevância:

80.00% 80.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

STIM1 and ORAI1 constitute the core machinery of the ubiquitous store-operated calcium entry pathway and loss of function in these proteins is associated with severe immune and muscular disorders. Other isoforms-STIM1L, STIM2, ORAI2 and ORAI3 exhibit varied expression levels in different cell types along with several other interaction partners and thereby play different roles to facilitate, regulate and fine-tune the calcium entry. STIM proteins convey the Ca(2+) store-depletion message to the PM and thereby participate in refilling of the ER by physically interacting with the Ca(2+)-selective ORAI channels at the PM. STIM and ORAI are exposed to oxidative modifications in the ER, the cytosol, and at the cell surface, and redox-mediated alterations in STIM/ORAI coupling might contribute to autoimmune disorders and cancer progression. This review discusses the redox reactivity of cysteine residues in STIM and ORAI isoforms, focusing on the oxidative modifications of STIM and ORAI proteins by which STIM-ORAI signaling can be modulated.

Relevância:

80.00% 80.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Transmembrane segments of polytopic membrane proteins once inserted are generally considered stably oriented due to the large free energy barrier for topological reorientation of adjacent extra-membrane domains. However, proper topology and function of the polytopic membrane protein lactose permease (LacY) of Escherichia coli is dependent on the membrane phospholipid composition revealing topological dynamics of transmembrane domains (Bogdanov, M., Heacock, P. N., and Dowhan, W. (2002) EMBO J. 21, 2107–2116). The high affinity phenylalanine permease PheP shares many topological similarities with LacY. In this study, mutant E. coli cells lacking phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) as a membrane component were used to evaluate the role of PE in the function and assembly of PheP. Active transport of phenylalanine by cells lacking PE was severely inhibited (both Vmax and Km were altered), whereas the PheP protein level in membranes was unaffected. Cysteine residues were introduced into predicted periplasmic or cytoplasmic segments of cysteine-less PheP, and the topology of the protein was explored using a membrane-impermeable thiol-specific biotinylated probe. Based on the biotinylation patterns of PheP in whole cells, the N-terminus and adjoining transmembrane hairpin of PheP adopted an inverted topological orientation in PE-lacking cells. Introduction of PE following the assembly of PheP triggered a reorientation of the N-terminus and adjacent hairpin to their native orientation associated with regain of wild type transport function. These results coupled with the results for LacY support a specific role for membrane lipid composition in determining topological organization and function of membrane proteins. Several other secondary symporters are compromised for activity in PE-lacking cells suggesting that lipid-assisted topogenesis is a general property of such transporters. The reversible orientation of these secondary transport proteins in response to a change of phospholipid composition might be a result of inherent conformational flexibility necessary for transport function or during protein assembly. ^

Relevância:

80.00% 80.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Coordinated expression of virulence genes in Bacillus anthracis occurs via a multi-faceted signal transduction pathway that is dependent upon the AtxA protein. Intricate control of atxA gene transcription and AtxA protein function have become apparent from studies of AtxA-induced synthesis of the anthrax toxin proteins and the poly-D-glutamic acid capsule, two factors with important roles in B. anthracis pathogenesis. The amino-terminal region of the AtxA protein contains winged-helix (WH) and helix-turn-helix (HTH) motifs, structural features associated with DNA-binding. Using filter binding assays, I determined that AtxA interacted non-specifically at a low nanomolar affinity with a target promoter (Plef) and AtxA-independent promoters. AtxA also contains motifs associated with phosphoenolpyruvate: sugar phosphotransferase system (PTS) regulation. These PTS-regulated domains, PRD1 and PRD2, are within the central amino acid sequence. Specific histidines in the PRDs serve as sites of phosphorylation (H199 and H379). Phosphorylation of H199 increases AtxA activity; whereas, H379 phosphorylation decreases AtxA function. For my dissertation, I hypothesized that AtxA binds target promoters to activate transcription and that DNA-binding activity is regulated via structural changes within the PRDs and a carboxy-terminal EIIB-like motif that are induced by phosphorylation and ligand binding. I determined that AtxA has one large protease-inaccessible domain containing the PRDs and the carboxy-terminal end of the protein. These results suggest that AtxA has a domain that is distinct from the putative DNA-binding region of the protein. My data indicate that AtxA activity is associated with AtxA multimerization. Oligomeric AtxA was detected when co-affinity purification, non-denaturing gel electrophoresis, and bis(maleimido)hexane (BMH) cross-linking techniques were employed. I exploited the specificity of BMH for cysteine residues to show that AtxA was cross-linked at C402, implicating the carboxy-terminal EIIB-like region in protein-protein interactions. In addition, higher amounts of the cross-linked dimeric form of AtxA were observed when cells were cultured in conditions that promote toxin gene expression. Based on the results, I propose that AtxA multimerization requires the EIIB-like motif and multimerization of AtxA positively impacts function. I investigated the role of the PTS in the function of AtxA and the impact of phosphomimetic residues on AtxA multimerization. B. anthracis Enzyme I (EI) and HPr did not facilitate phosphorylation of AtxA in vitro. Moreover, markerless deletion of ptsHI in B. anthracis did not perturb AtxA function. Taken together, these results suggest that proteins other than the PTS phosphorylate AtxA. Point mutations mimicking phosphohistidine (H to D) and non-phosphorylated histidine (H to A) were tested for an impact on AtxA activity and multimerization. AtxA H199D, AtxA H199A, and AtxA H379A displayed multimerization phenotypes similar to that of the native protein, whereas AtxA H379D was not susceptible to BMH cross-linking or co-affinity purification with AtxA-His. These data suggest that phosphorylation of H379 may decrease AtxA activity by preventing AtxA multimerization. Overall, my data support the following model of AtxA function. AtxA binds to target gene promoters in an oligomeric state. AtxA activity is increased in response to the host-related signal bicarbonate/CO2 because this signal enhances AtxA multimerization. In contrast, AtxA activity is decreased by phosphorylation at H379 because multimerization is inhibited. Future studies will address the interplay between bicarbonate/CO2 signaling and phosphorylation on AtxA function.

Relevância:

80.00% 80.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Cells govern their activities and modulate their interactions with the environment to achieve homeostasis. The heat shock response (HSR) is one of the most well studied fundamental cellular responses to environmental and physiological challenges, resulting in rapid synthesis of heat shock proteins (HSPs), which serve to protect cellular constituents from the deleterious effects of stress. In addition to its role in cytoprotection, the HSR also influences lifespan and is associated with a variety of human diseases including cancer, aging and neurodegenerative disorders. In most eukaryotes, the HSR is primarily mediated by the highly conserved transcription factor HSF1, which recognizes target hsp genes by binding to heat shock elements (HSEs) in their promoters. In recent years, significant efforts have been made to identify small molecules as potential pharmacological activators of HSF1 that could be used for therapeutic benefit in the treatment of human diseases relevant to protein conformation. However, the detailed mechanisms through which these molecules drive HSR activation remain unclear. In this work, I utilized the baker's yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae as a model system to identify a group of thiol-reactive molecules including oxidants, transition metals and metalloids, and electrophiles, as potent activators of yeast Hsf1. Using an artificial HSE-lacZ reporter and the glucocorticoid receptor system (GR), these diverse thiol-reactive compounds are shown to activate Hsf1 and inhibit Hsp90 chaperone complex activity in a reciprocal, dose-dependent manner. To further understand whether cells sense these reactive compounds through accumulation of unfolded proteins, the proline analog azetidine-2-carboxylic acid (AZC) and protein cross-linker dithiobis(succinimidyl propionate) (DSP) were used to force misfolding of nascent polypeptides and existing cytosolic proteins, respectively. Both unfolding reagents display kinetic HSP induction profiles dissimilar to those generated by thiol-reactive compounds. Moreover, AZC treatment leads to significant cytotoxicity, which is not observed in the presence of the thiol-reactive compounds at the concentrations sufficient to induce Hsf1. Additionally, DSP treatment has little to no effect on Hsp90 functions. Together with the ultracentrifugation analysis of cell lysates that detected no insoluble protein aggregates, my data suggest that at concentrations sufficient to induce Hsf1, thiol-reactive compounds do not induce the HSR via a mechanism based on accumulation of unfolded cytosolic proteins. Another possibility is that thiol-reactive compounds may influence aspects of the protein quality control system such as the ubiquitin-proteasome system (UPS). To address this hypothesis, β-galactosidase reporter fusions were used as model substrates to demonstrate that thiol-reactive compounds do not inhibit ubiquitin activating enzymes (E1) or proteasome activity. Therefore, thiol-reactive compounds do not activate the HSR by inhibiting UPS-dependent protein degradation. I therefore hypothesized that these molecules may directly inactivate protein chaperones, known as repressors of Hsf1. To address this possibility, a thiol-reactive biotin probe was used to demonstrate in vitro that the yeast cytosolic Hsp70 Ssa1, which partners with Hsp90 to repress Hsf1, is specifically modified. Strikingly, mutation of conserved cysteine residues in Ssa1 renders cells insensitive to Hsf1 activation by cadmium and celastrol but not by heat shock. Conversely, substitution with the sulfinic acid and steric bulk mimic aspartic acid led to constitutive activation of Hsf1. Cysteine 303, located in the nucleotide-binding/ATPase domain of Ssa1, was shown to be modified in vivo by a model organic electrophile using Click chemistry technology, verifying that Ssa1 is a direct target for thiol-reactive compounds through adduct formation. Consistently, cadmium pretreatment promoted cells thermotolerance, which is abolished in cells carrying SSA1 cysteine mutant alleles. Taken together, these findings demonstrate that Hsp70 acts as a sensor to induce the cytoprotective heat shock response in response to environmental or endogenously produced thiol-reactive molecules and can discriminate between two distinct environmental stressors.

Relevância:

80.00% 80.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Multiple human skeletal and craniosynostosis disorders, including Crouzon, Pfeiffer, Jackson–Weiss, and Apert syndromes, result from numerous point mutations in the extracellular region of fibroblast growth factor receptor 2 (FGFR2). Many of these mutations create a free cysteine residue that potentially leads to abnormal disulfide bond formation and receptor activation; however, for noncysteine mutations, the mechanism of receptor activation remains unclear. We examined the effect of two of these mutations, W290G and T341P, on receptor dimerization and activation. These mutations resulted in cellular transformation when expressed as FGFR2/Neu chimeric receptors. Additionally, in full-length FGFR2, the mutations induced receptor dimerization and elevated levels of tyrosine kinase activity. Interestingly, transformation by the chimeric receptors, dimerization, and enhanced kinase activity were all abolished if either the W290G or the T341P mutation was expressed in conjunction with mutations that eliminate the disulfide bond in the third immunoglobulin-like domain (Ig-3). These results demonstrate a requirement for the Ig-3 cysteine residues in the activation of FGFR2 by noncysteine mutations. Molecular modeling also reveals that noncysteine mutations may activate FGFR2 by altering the conformation of the Ig-3 domain near the disulfide bond, preventing the formation of an intramolecular bond. This allows the unbonded cysteine residues to participate in intermolecular disulfide bonding, resulting in constitutive activation of the receptor.

Relevância:

80.00% 80.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

The replication system of bacteriophage T4 uses a trimeric ring-shaped processivity clamp (gp45) to tether the replication polymerase (gp43) to the template-primer DNA. This ring is placed onto the DNA by an ATPase-driven clamp-loading complex (gp44/62) where it then transfers, in closed form, to the polymerase. It generally has been assumed that one of the functions of the loading machinery is to open the clamp to place it around the DNA. However, the mechanism by which this occurs has not been fully defined. In this study we design and characterize a double-mutant gp45 protein that contains pairs of cysteine residues located at each monomer-monomer interface of the trimeric clamp. This mutant protein is functionally equivalent to wild-type gp45. However, when all three monomer-monomer interfaces are tethered by covalent crosslinks formed (reversibly or irreversibly) between the cysteine pairs these closed clamps can no longer be loaded onto the DNA nor onto the polymerase, effectively eliminating processive strand-displacement DNA synthesis. Analysis of the individual steps of the clamp-loading process shows that the ATPase-dependent interactions between the clamp and the clamp loader that precede DNA binding are hyperstimulated by the covalently crosslinked ring, suggesting that binding of the closed ring induces a futile, ATP-driven, ring-opening cycle. These findings and others permit further characterization and ordering of the steps involved in the T4 clamp-loading process.

Relevância:

80.00% 80.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Staphylococcal α-toxin is a 293-residue, single-chain polypeptide that spontaneously assembles into a heptameric pore in target cell membranes. To identify the pore-forming domain, substitution mutants have been produced in which single cysteine residues were introduced throughout the toxin molecule. By attaching the environmentally sensitive dye acrylodan to the sulfhydryl groups, the environment of individual amino acid side chains could be probed. In liposomes, a single 23-amino acid sequence (residues 118–140) was found to move from a polar to a nonpolar environment, indicating that this sequence forms the walls of the pore. However, periodicity in side chain environmental polarity could not be detected in the liposomal system. In the present study, the fluorimetric analyses were extended to physiological target cells. With susceptible cells such as rabbit erythrocytes and human lymphocytes, the 23 central amino acids 118–140 were again found to insert into the membrane; in contrast to the previous study with liposomes, the expected periodicity was now detected. Thus, every other residue in the sequence 126–140 entered a nonpolar environment in a striking display of an amphipathic transmembrane β-barrel. In contrast, human granulocytes were found to bind α-toxin to a similar extent as lymphocytes, but the heptamers forming on these cells failed to insert their pore-forming domain into the membrane. As a consequence, nonfunctional heptamers assembled and the cells remained viable. The data resolve the molecular organization of a pore-forming toxin domain in living cells and reveal that resistant cells can prevent insertion of the functional domain into the bilayer.

Relevância:

80.00% 80.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

We established stable COS-7 cell lines overexpressing recombinant PTPMEG and an inactive mutant form in which the active site cysteine is mutated to serine (PTPMEGCS). We found that both endogenous and recombinant enzyme were primarily located in the membrane and cytoskeletal fractions of COS-7 cells. Endogenous PTPMEG accounts for only 1/3000th of the total tyrosine phosphatase activity in COS-7 cells and transfected cells expressed 2- to 7-fold higher levels of the enzyme. These levels of overexpression did not result in detectable changes in either total tyrosine phosphatase activity or the state of protein tyrosine phosphorylation as determined by immunoblotting of cell homogenates with anti-phosphotyrosine antibodies. Despite the low levels of activity for PTPMEG, we found that overexpressing cells grew slower and reached confluence at a lower density than vector transfected cells. Surprisingly, PTPMEGCS-transfected cells also reach confluence at a lower density than vector-transfected cells, although they grow to higher density than PTPMEG-transfected cells. Both constructs inhibited the ability of COS-7 cells to form colonies in soft agar, with the native PTPMEG having a greater effect (30-fold) than PTPMEGCS (10-fold). These results indicate that in COS-7 cells both PTPMEG and PTPMEGCS inhibit cell proliferation, reduce the saturation density, and block the ability of these cells to grow without adhering to a solid matrix.

Relevância:

80.00% 80.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

NF-κB is a major transcription factor consisting of 50(p50)- and 65(p65)-kDa proteins that controls the expression of various genes, among which are those encoding cytokines, cell adhesion molecules, and inducible NO synthase (iNOS). After initial activation of NF-κB, which involves release and proteolysis of a bound inhibitor, essential cysteine residues are maintained in the active reduced state through the action of thioredoxin and thioredoxin reductase. In the present study, activation of NF-κB in human T cells and lung adenocarcinoma cells was induced by recombinant human tumor necrosis factor α or bacterial lipopolysaccharide. After lipopolysaccharide activation, nuclear extracts were treated with increasing concentrations of selenite, and the effects on DNA-binding activity of NF-κB were examined. Binding of NF-κB to nuclear responsive elements was decreased progressively by increasing selenite levels and, at 7 μM selenite, DNA-binding activity was completely inhibited. Selenite inhibition was reversed by addition of a dithiol, DTT. Proportional inhibition of iNOS activity as measured by decreased NO products in the medium (NO2− and NO3−) resulted from selenite addition to cell suspensions. This loss of iNOS activity was due to decreased synthesis of NO synthase protein. Selenium at low essential levels (nM) is required for synthesis of redox active selenoenzymes such as glutathione peroxidases and thioredoxin reductase, but in higher toxic levels (>5–10 μM) selenite can react with essential thiol groups on enzymes to form RS–Se–SR adducts with resultant inhibition of enzyme activity. Inhibition of NF-κB activity by selenite is presumed to be the result of adduct formation with the essential thiols of this transcription factor.

Relevância:

80.00% 80.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

In the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the Apg12p–Apg5p conjugating system is essential for autophagy. Apg7p is required for the conjugation reaction, because Apg12p is unable to form a conjugate with Apg5p in the apg7/cvt2 mutant. Apg7p shows a significant similarity to a ubiquitin-activating enzyme, Uba1p. In this article, we investigated the function of Apg7p as an Apg12p-activating enzyme. Hemagglutinin-tagged Apg12p was coimmunoprecipitated with c-myc–tagged Apg7p. A two-hybrid experiment confirmed the interaction. The coimmunoprecipitation was sensitive to a thiol-reducing reagent. Furthermore, a thioester conjugate of Apg7p was detected in a lysate of cells overexpressing both Apg7p and Apg12p. These results indicated that Apg12p interacts with Apg7p via a thioester bond. Mutational analyses of Apg7p suggested that Cys507 of Apg7p is an active site cysteine and that both the ATP-binding domain and the cysteine residue are essential for the conjugation of Apg7p with Apg12p to form the Apg12p–Apg5p conjugate. Cells expressing mutant Apg7ps, Apg7pG333A, or Apg7pC507A showed defects in autophagy and cytoplasm-to-vacuole targeting of aminopeptidase I. These results indicated that Apg7p functions as a novel protein-activating enzyme necessary for Apg12p–Apg5p conjugation.

Relevância:

80.00% 80.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

NO2Tyr (3-Nitrotyrosine) is a modified amino acid that is formed by nitric oxide-derived species and has been implicated in the pathology of diverse human diseases. Nitration of active-site tyrosine residues is known to compromise protein structure and function. Although free NO2Tyr is produced in abundant concentrations under pathological conditions, its capacity to alter protein structure and function at the translational or posttranslational level is unknown. Here, we report that free NO2Tyr is transported into mammalian cells and selectively incorporated into the extreme carboxyl terminus of α-tubulin via a posttranslational mechanism catalyzed by the enzyme tubulin–tyrosine ligase. In contrast to the enzymatically regulated carboxyl-terminal tyrosination/detyrosination cycle of α-tubulin, incorporation of NO2Tyr shows apparent irreversibility. Nitrotyrosination of α-tubulin induces alterations in cell morphology, changes in microtubule organization, loss of epithelial-barrier function, and intracellular redistribution of the motor protein cytoplasmic dynein. These observations imply that posttranslational nitrotyrosination of α-tubulin invokes conformational changes, either directly or via allosteric interactions, in the surface-exposed carboxyl terminus of α-tubulin that compromises the function of this critical domain in regulating microtubule organization and binding of motor- and microtubule-associated proteins. Collectively, these observations illustrate a mechanism whereby free NO2Tyr can impact deleteriously on cell function under pathological conditions encompassing reactive nitrogen species production. The data also yield further insight into the role that the α-tubulin tyrosination/detyrosination cycle plays in microtubule function.

Relevância:

80.00% 80.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Various pathogenic bacteria, viruses, and protozoan bind to glycosaminoglycan-based receptors on host cells and initiate an infection. Sporozoites of Plasmodium predominantly express circumsporozoite (CS) protein on their surface, which binds to heparan sulfate proteoglycans on liver cell surface that subsequently leads to malaria. Here we show that the interaction of free heparin with this parasite ligand has the potential to be a critical component of invasion. CS protein of P. falciparum contains four cysteines at positions 361, 365, 396, and 401. In this study, all four cysteine residues were mutagenized to alanine both individually and in different combinations. Conversion of cysteine 396 to alanine (protein CS3) led to a 10-fold increase in the binding activity of the protein to HepG2 cells. Replacement of cysteines at positions 361, 365, and 401 either alone or in different combinations led to a near total loss of binding. Surprisingly, activity in these inactive mutants could be effectively restored in the presence of submolar concentrations of heparin. Heparin also up-regulated binding of CS3 at submolar concentrations with respect to the protein but down-regulated binding when present in excess. Given the significantly different concentrations of heparin in different organs of the host and the in vitro results described here one can consider in vivo ramifications of this phenomenon for pathogen targeting of specific organs and for the functional effects of antigenic variation on receptor ligand interaction.

Relevância:

80.00% 80.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

A gene, qid74, of mycoparasitic filamentous fungus Trichoderma harzianum and its allies encodes a cell wall protein that is induced by replacing glucose in the culture medium with chitin (simulated mycoparasitism conditions). Because no trace of this gene can be detected in related species such as Gibberella fujikuroi and Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the qid74 gene appears to have arisen de novo within the genus Trichoderma. Qid74 protein, 687 residues long, is now seen as highly conserved tandem repeats of the 59-residue-long unit. This unit itself, however, may have arisen as tandem repeats of the shorter 13-residue-long basic unit. Within the genus Trichoderma, the amino acid sequence of Qid74 proteins has been conserved in toto. The most striking is the fact that Qid74 shares 25.3% sequence identity with the carboxyl-terminal half of the 1,572-residue-long BR3 protein of the dipteran insect Chironomus tentans. BR3 protein is secreted by the salivary gland of each aquatic larva of Chironomus to form a tube to house itself. Furthermore, the consensus sequence derived from these 59-residue-long repeating units resembles those of epidermal growth factor-like domains found in divergent invertebrate and vertebrate proteins as to the positions of critical cysteine residues and homology of residues surrounding these cysteines.

Relevância:

80.00% 80.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

The p53 tumor suppressor protein and the MDM2 oncoprotein form a feedback-control loop that up-regulates cellular MDM2 production, blocks p53 activity, and promotes p53 decay. tsg101 was discovered as a gene whose deficiency results in neoplastic transformation of NIH 3T3 cells and the ability to generate metastatic tumors in nude mice. Its protein product contains a domain, Ubc, characteristic of the catalytic domain of ubiquitin conjugase (E2) enzymes but lacking an active-site cysteine crucial for ubiquitin conjugase activity. Here we report that TSG101 participates with MDM2 in an autoregulatory loop that modulates the cellular levels of both proteins, and also of p53, by affecting protein decay. We show that the Ubc domain of TSG101 interferes with ubiquitination of MDM2, that TSG101 inhibits MDM2 decay and elevates its steady-state level, and that these events are associated with down-regulation of p53 protein. Conversely, pulse–chase and Western blot experiments in wild-type and mutant fibroblasts indicate that elevation of MDM2 by overexpression of wild-type p53, by amplification of the endogenous MDM2 gene, or by transfection of MDM2-expressing constructs promotes TSG101 loss, which we show occurs by 26S proteasome-dependent decay. Our results identify TSG101 as both a regulator of, and target of, MDM2/p53 circuitry.