scholarly journals Proline responding1 Plays a Critical Role in Regulating General Protein Synthesis and the Cell Cycle in Maize

2014 ◽  
Vol 26 (6) ◽  
pp. 2582-2600 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gang Wang ◽  
Jushan Zhang ◽  
Guifeng Wang ◽  
Xiangyu Fan ◽  
Xin Sun ◽  
...  
1997 ◽  
Vol 17 (9) ◽  
pp. 5184-5192 ◽  
Author(s):  
R Mendez ◽  
G Kollmorgen ◽  
M F White ◽  
R E Rhoads

The ability of insulin to stimulate protein synthesis and cellular growth is mediated through the insulin receptor (IR), which phosphorylates Tyr residues in the insulin receptor substrate-signaling proteins (IRS-1 and IRS-2), Gab-1, and Shc. These phosphorylated substrates directly bind and activate enzymes such as phosphatidylinositol 3'-kinase (PI3K) and the guanine nucleotide exchange factor for p21Ras (GRB-2/SOS), which are in turn required for insulin-stimulated protein synthesis, cell cycle progression, and prevention of apoptosis. We have now shown that one or more members of the atypical protein kinase C group, as exemplified by the zeta isoform (PKC zeta), are downstream of IRS-1 and P13K and mediate the effect of insulin on general protein synthesis. Ectopic expression of constitutively activated PKC zeta eliminates the requirement of IRS-1 for general protein synthesis but not for insulin-stimulated activation of 70-kDa S6 kinase (p70S6K), synthesis of growth-regulated proteins (e.g., c-Myc), or mitogenesis. The fact that PKC zeta stimulates general protein synthesis but not activation of p70S6K indicates that PKC zeta activation does not involve the proto-oncogene Akt, which is also activated by PI3K. Yet insulin is still required for the stimulation of general protein synthesis in the presence of constitutively active PKC zeta and in the absence of IRS-1, suggesting a requirement for the convergence of the IRS-1/PI3K/PKC zeta pathway with one or more additional pathways emanating from the IR, e.g., Shc/SOS/p21Ras/mitogen-activated protein kinase. Thus, PI3K appears to represent a bifurcation in the insulin signaling pathway, one branch leading through PKC zeta to general protein synthesis and one, through Akt and the target of rapamycin (mTOR), to growth-regulated protein synthesis and cell cycle progression.


1981 ◽  
Vol 194 (1) ◽  
pp. 249-255 ◽  
Author(s):  
B Mittal ◽  
C K R Kurup

Administration of the anti-hypercholesterolaemic drug clofibrate to the rat increases the activity of carnitine acetyltransferase (acetyl-CoA-carnitine O-acetyltransferase, EC 2.3.1.7) in liver and kidney. The drug-mediated increase in enzyme activity in hepatic mitochondria shows a time lag during which the activity increases in the microsomal and peroxisomal fractions. The enzyme induced in the particulate fractions is identical with one normally present in mitochondria. The increase in enzyme activity is prevented by inhibitors of RNA and general protein synthesis. Mitochondrial protein-synthetic machinery does not appear to be involved in the process. Immunoprecipitation shows increased concentration of the enzyme protein in hepatic mitochondria isolated from drug-treated animals. In these animals, the rate of synthesis of the enzyme is increased 7-fold.


2016 ◽  
Vol 37 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Courtney M. Karner ◽  
Seung-Yon Lee ◽  
Fanxin Long

ABSTRACT The bone morphogenetic protein (Bmp) family of secreted molecules has been extensively studied in the context of osteoblast differentiation. However, the intracellular signaling cascades that mediate the osteoblastogenic function of Bmp have not been fully elucidated. By profiling mRNA expression in the bone marrow mesenchymal progenitor cell line ST2, we discover that BMP2 induces not only genes commonly associated with ossification and mineralization but also genes important for general protein synthesis. We define the two groups of genes as mineralization related versus protein anabolism signatures of osteoblasts. Although it induces the expression of several Wnt genes, BMP2 activates the osteogenic program largely independently of de novo Wnt secretion. Remarkably, although Smad4 is necessary for the activation of the mineralization-related genes, it is dispensable for BMP2 to induce the protein anabolism signature, which instead critically depends on the transcription factor Atf4. Upstream of Atf4, BMP2 activates mTORC1 to stimulate protein synthesis, resulting in an endoplasmic reticulum stress response mediated by Perk. Thus, Bmp signaling induces osteoblast differentiation through both Smad4- and mTORC1-dependent mechanisms.


2013 ◽  
Vol 109 (1) ◽  
pp. 68-76 ◽  
Author(s):  
Charles A. Hoeffer ◽  
Emanuela Santini ◽  
Tao Ma ◽  
Elizabeth C. Arnold ◽  
Ashley M. Whelan ◽  
...  

Persistent forms of synaptic plasticity are widely thought to require the synthesis of new proteins. This feature of long-lasting forms of plasticity largely has been demonstrated using inhibitors of general protein synthesis, such as either anisomycin or emetine. However, these drugs, which inhibit elongation, cannot address detailed questions about the regulation of translation initiation, where the majority of translational control occurs. Moreover, general protein synthesis inhibitors cannot distinguish between cap-dependent and cap-independent modes of translation initiation. In the present study, we took advantage of two novel compounds, 4EGI-1 and hippuristanol, each of which targets a different component of the eukaryotic initiation factor (eIF)4F initiation complex, and investigated their effects on long-term potentiation (LTP) at CA3-CA1 synapses in the hippocampus. We found that 4EGI-1 and hippuristanol both attenuated long-lasting late-phase LTP induced by two different stimulation paradigms. We also found that 4EGI-1 and hippuristanol each were capable of blocking the expression of newly synthesized proteins immediately after the induction of late-phase LTP. These new pharmacological tools allow for a more precise dissection of the role played by translational control pathways in synaptic plasticity and demonstrate the importance of multiple aspects of eIF4F in processes underlying hippocampal LTP, laying the foundation for future studies investigating the role of eIF4F in hippocampus-dependent memory processes.


1986 ◽  
Vol 6 (4) ◽  
pp. 1088-1094
Author(s):  
R B Widelitz ◽  
B E Magun ◽  
E W Gerner

A single hyperthermic exposure can render cells transiently resistant to subsequent high temperature stresses. Treatment of rat embryonic fibroblasts with cycloheximide for 6 h after a 20-min interval at 45 degrees C inhibits protein synthesis, including heat shock protein (hsp) synthesis, and results in an accumulation of hsp 70 mRNA, but has no effect on subsequent survival responses to 45 degrees C hyperthermia. hsp 70 mRNA levels decreased within 1 h after removal of cycloheximide but then appeared to stabilize during the next 2 h (3 h after drug removal and 9 h after heat shock). hsp 70 mRNA accumulation could be further increased by a second heat shock at 45 degrees C for 20 min 6 h after the first hyperthermic exposure in cycloheximide-treated cells. Both normal protein and hsp synthesis appeared increased during the 6-h interval after hyperthermia in cultures which received two exposures to 45 degrees C for 20 min compared with those which received only one treatment. No increased hsp synthesis was observed in cultures treated with cycloheximide, even though hsp 70 mRNA levels appeared elevated. These data indicate that, although heat shock induces the accumulation of hsp 70 mRNA in both normal and thermotolerant cells, neither general protein synthesis nor hsp synthesis is required during the interval between two hyperthermic stresses for Rat-1 cells to express either thermotolerance (survival resistance) or resistance to heat shock-induced inhibition of protein synthesis.


1986 ◽  
Vol 6 (4) ◽  
pp. 1088-1094 ◽  
Author(s):  
R B Widelitz ◽  
B E Magun ◽  
E W Gerner

A single hyperthermic exposure can render cells transiently resistant to subsequent high temperature stresses. Treatment of rat embryonic fibroblasts with cycloheximide for 6 h after a 20-min interval at 45 degrees C inhibits protein synthesis, including heat shock protein (hsp) synthesis, and results in an accumulation of hsp 70 mRNA, but has no effect on subsequent survival responses to 45 degrees C hyperthermia. hsp 70 mRNA levels decreased within 1 h after removal of cycloheximide but then appeared to stabilize during the next 2 h (3 h after drug removal and 9 h after heat shock). hsp 70 mRNA accumulation could be further increased by a second heat shock at 45 degrees C for 20 min 6 h after the first hyperthermic exposure in cycloheximide-treated cells. Both normal protein and hsp synthesis appeared increased during the 6-h interval after hyperthermia in cultures which received two exposures to 45 degrees C for 20 min compared with those which received only one treatment. No increased hsp synthesis was observed in cultures treated with cycloheximide, even though hsp 70 mRNA levels appeared elevated. These data indicate that, although heat shock induces the accumulation of hsp 70 mRNA in both normal and thermotolerant cells, neither general protein synthesis nor hsp synthesis is required during the interval between two hyperthermic stresses for Rat-1 cells to express either thermotolerance (survival resistance) or resistance to heat shock-induced inhibition of protein synthesis.


Blood ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 128 (22) ◽  
pp. LBA-4-LBA-4
Author(s):  
Nina Cabezas-Wallscheid ◽  
Florian Buettner ◽  
Daniel Klimmeck ◽  
Pia Sommerkamp ◽  
Luisa Ladel ◽  
...  

Abstract Long-term quiescence or dormancy preserves the genomic integrity as well as the long-term self-renewal and functional capacities of hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) during homeostasis. In response to infections, inflammatory or chemotherapy induced stress, dormant HSCs (dHSCs) become reversibly activated and are critical for the re-establishment of homeostasis. In our previous work, we defined the molecular landscape of HSCs and its immediate progenitors by determining their DNA-methylome, RNA- transcriptome and their proteome (Cabezas-Wallscheid et al., Cell Stem Cell 2014). This revealed the vitamin A/retinoic acid (RA) signaling pathway to be molecularly predominantly enriched in HSCs. However, the functional relevance of dietary vitamin A for maintenance of HSCs remains uncertain. Moreover, the molecular identity of very rare dHSCs as well as the mechanism regulating their maintenance or the transition out and back into dormancy remains unknown. We now show by single-cell RNA-seq analysis of >300 dHSCs and active HSCs (aHSCs) that the molecular transition from the most inactive dHSCs cluster to the most active HSCs can be best described as a continuous stream-like process linked to a steadily increasing metabolic activation. These single cell derived data are not consistent with a binary switch model, but instead suggest that activation/ differentiation downstream of dHSCs occurs in a continuum without the generation of discrete progenitor cell types. During this process,protein synthesis is increased first, followed by the increase of cell cycle related components. We then measured the time to first division starting from either a dHSC or an aHSC for 285 SiCs by single cell live cell imaging. We found that aHSCs showed an average of 29.5±0.7 hours to enter mitosis, while dHSCs needed 40.8±1.3 hours. This pronounced difference (11.3 hours) between two initially non-cycling populations suggests that dHSCs reside in a deeper level of quiescence, namely dormancy, which is also consistent with the molecular data mentioned above. The association of delayed cell cycle entry with the extremely low biosynthetic activity defines the status of dormancy and distinguishes it from quiescence. Furthermore, based on the acquired expression signatures, we describe the first marker-based, non-label retaining mouse model to specify dHSCs (Gpr-EGFP). We show molecularly and functionally that HSC-Gpr-pos cells resemble dHSCs demonstrating that the Gpr-EGFP mouse line can now be used as a simple alternative approach to track dHSCs and thus circumvent time-consuming label-retaining assays. The Gpr-EGFP model now allows to closely follow cell cycle dynamics within the dHSC compartment. Importantly, the mechanism regulating maintenance and the transition out of dormancy remains unknown. Our data focusing specifically on the most primitive HSCs revealed a critical role for vitamin A/RA signaling in controlling the cell cycle plasticity of dHSCs. We now show by in vitro and in vivo experiments, that treatment with the RA agonist all-trans retinoic-acid (ATRA) preserves dHSCs and maintains critical properties of HSCs. This includes maintenance of long-term self-renewal, low proliferation associated with decreased levels of Cdk6, expression of key transcription factors (Hoxb4), reduced protein synthesis and low levels of reactive oxygen species (ROS) as well as low Myc protein levels. Indeed, in response to activation signals, the presence of ATRA prevents up-regulation of c-Myc protein in HSCs and the effects of ATRA or drug induced Myc inhibition result in similar consequences on HSCs. Moreover, ATRA not only represses ROS production, but also prevents HSCs from entering the cell cycle upon diverse stress stimuli (pIC, LPS, 5-FU) in vivo. Most of the studies on vitamin A deficit-associated immunodeficiency are dedicated to the impaired function of lymphocytes. Thus, we analyzed the consequences of a vitamin A deficient diet for dormant HSCs. Strikingly, we found that HSCs are progressively lost over time and dHSCs did not recover after pIC-mediated activation in the absence of vitamin A. Collectively, these data uncover a critical role of vitamin A/RA signaling for the re-establishment of the dormant HSC population after stress-mediated activation. Together, our results highlight a so far unrecognized impact of dietary vitamin A on the regulation of cell cycle mediated stem cell plasticity. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


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