scholarly journals c-Jun-Dependent CD95-L Expression Is a Rate-Limiting Step in the Induction of Apoptosis by Alkylating Agents

2000 ◽  
Vol 20 (2) ◽  
pp. 575-582 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrea Kolbus ◽  
Ingrid Herr ◽  
Martin Schreiber ◽  
Klaus-Michael Debatin ◽  
Erwin F. Wagner ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Mouse 3T3 fibroblasts derived from fetuses lacking c-Jun were used to define an essential role of c-Jun, a main component of the transcription factor AP-1, in the cellular response to the alkylating agent methyl methanesulfonate (MMS). MMS represents the most potent and selective activator of the stress-induced kinases JNK/SAPK and p38, resulting in very efficient induction of c-Jun hyperphosphorylation and c-jun transcription. This agent induced apoptosis with high efficiency in wild-type cells but not in c-jun −/− cells. Resistance to apoptosis was accompanied by impaired expression of CD95 ligand (CD95-L), a well-known inducer of apoptosis. The addition of recombinant CD95-L restored apoptosis sensitivity in c-jun −/− fibroblasts. MMS-induced apoptosis in wild-type fibroblasts or human lymphocytes was strongly reduced by neutralizing CD95-L antibodies or transdominant negative FADD, confirming the importance of CD95 signalling in MMS-induced apoptosis. The loss-of-function approach in fibroblasts allowed the identification and dissection of c-Jun-dependent and -independent processes upstream or downstream of CD95 activation. We have found that c-Jun can act as a proapoptotic regulator in cells exposed to DNA damage via induction of CD95-L. Once activated, CD95-induced death signalling is not affected by the loss of c-Jun, demonstrating that only the initiation and not the execution of stress-induced apoptosis depends on c-Jun.

2010 ◽  
Vol 84 (21) ◽  
pp. 11448-11460 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rebecca J. Cerio ◽  
Rianna Vandergaast ◽  
Paul D. Friesen

ABSTRACT The inhibitor-of-apoptosis (IAP) proteins encoded by baculoviruses bear a striking resemblance to the cellular IAP homologs of their invertebrate hosts. By virtue of the acquired selective advantage of blocking virus-induced apoptosis, baculoviruses may have captured cellular IAP genes that subsequently evolved for virus-specific objectives. To compare viral and host IAPs, we defined antiapoptotic properties of SfIAP, the principal cellular IAP of the lepidopteran host Spodoptera frugiperda. We report here that SfIAP prevented virus-induced apoptosis as well as viral Op-IAP3 (which is encoded by the Orgyia pseudotsugata nucleopolyhedrovirus) when overexpressed from the baculovirus genome. Like Op-IAP3, SfIAP blocked apoptosis at a step prior to caspase activation. Both of the baculovirus IAP repeats (BIRs) were required for SfIAP function. Moreover, deletion of the C-terminal RING motif generated a loss-of-function SfIAP that interacted and dominantly interfered with wild-type SfIAP. Like Op-IAP3, wild-type SfIAP formed intracellular homodimers, suggesting that oligomerization is a functional requirement for both cellular and viral IAPs. SfIAP possesses a ∼100-residue N-terminal leader domain, which is absent among all viral IAPs. Remarkably, deletion of the leader yielded a fully functional SfIAP with dramatically increased protein stability. Thus, the SfIAP leader contains an instability motif that may confer regulatory options for cellular IAPs that baculovirus IAPs have evolved to bypass for maximal stability and antiapoptotic potency. Our findings that SfIAP and viral IAPs have common motifs, share multiple biochemical properties including oligomerization, and act at the same step to block apoptosis support the hypothesis that baculoviral IAPs were derived by acquisition of host insect IAPs.


2019 ◽  
Vol 71 (4) ◽  
pp. 1337-1349 ◽  
Author(s):  
Huiyun Liu ◽  
Ke Wang ◽  
Zimiao Jia ◽  
Qiang Gong ◽  
Zhishan Lin ◽  
...  

Abstract The use of CRISPR/LbCpf1 and CRISPR/xCas9 systems in wheat have not yet been reported. In this study, we compared the efficiencies of three CRISPR editing systems (SpCas9, LbCpf1, and xCas9), and three different promoters (OsU6a, TaU3, and TaU6) that drive single-guide (sg)RNA, which were introduced into wheat via Agrobacterium-mediated transformation. The results indicated that TaU3 was a better choice than OsU6a or TaU6. The editing efficiency was higher using two sgRNAs than one sgRNA, and mutants with a large fragment deletion between the two sgRNAs were produced. The LbCpf1 and xCas9 systems could both be used successfully. Two endogenous genes, TaWaxy and TaMTL, were edited with high efficiency by the optimized SpCas9 system, with the highest efficiency (80.5%) being achieved when using TaU3 and two sgRNAs to target TaWaxy. Rates of seed set in the TaMTL-edited T0 transgenic plants were much lower than that of the wild-type. A haploid induction rate of 18.9% was found in the TaMTL-edited T1 plants using the CRISPR/SpCas9 system. Mutants with reverse insertion of the deleted sequences of TaMTL and TaWaxy between the two sgRNAs were identified in the edited T0 plants. In addition, wheat grains lacking embryos or endosperms were observed in the TaMTL-edited T1 generation.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Larissa Milano ◽  
Clara Forrer Charlier ◽  
Rafaela Andreguetti ◽  
Thomas Cox ◽  
Eleanor Healing ◽  
...  

Alkylating agents damage DNA and proteins and are widely used in cancer chemotherapy. While the cellular responses to alkylation-induced DNA damage have been explored, knowledge of how alkylation damage affects global cellular stress responses is still sparse. Here, we examined the effects of the alkylating agent methylmethane sulfonate (MMS) on gene expression in mouse liver taking advantage of mice deficient in alkyladenine DNA glycosylase (Aag), the enzyme that initiates the repair of alkylated DNA bases. MMS induced a robust transcriptional response in wild-type liver that included markers of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress/unfolded protein response (UPR) known to be controlled by the transcription factor XBP1, a key UPR effector. Importantly, this response is significantly reduced in the Aag knockout. To investigate a potential role for AAG in alkylation-induced UPR, the expression of UPR markers after MMS treatment was interrogated in human glioblastoma cell lines expressing different AAG levels. Alkylation induced the UPR in cells expressing AAG; conversely, AAG knock-down compromised UPR induction and led to a defect in XBP1 activation plus a decrease in the expression of the ER chaperone BiP. To verify that the DNA repair activity of AAG is required for this response, AAG knockdown cells were complemented with wild-type Aag or with a mutant version of the Aag gene producing a glycosylase-deficient AAG protein. As expected, the glycosylase-defective mutant Aag does not fully protect AAG knockdown cells against MMS-induced cytotoxicity. Remarkably, however, alkylation-induced XBP1 activation is fully complemented by the catalytically inactive AAG enzyme. This work establishes that, in addition to its enzymatic activity, AAG has non-canonical functions in alkylation-induced UPR that contribute to the overall cellular response to alkylation.


2006 ◽  
Vol 396 (3) ◽  
pp. 419-429 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christian Blenn ◽  
Felix R. Althaus ◽  
Maria Malanga

PAR [poly(ADP-ribose)] is a structural and regulatory component of multiprotein complexes in eukaryotic cells. PAR catabolism is accelerated under genotoxic stress conditions and this is largely attributable to the activity of a PARG (PAR glycohydrolase). To overcome the early embryonic lethality of parg-knockout mice and gain more insights into the biological functions of PARG, we used an RNA interference approach. We found that as little as 10% of PARG protein is sufficient to ensure basic cellular functions: PARG-silenced murine and human cells proliferated normally through several subculturing rounds and they were able to repair DNA damage induced by sublethal doses of H2O2. However, cell survival following treatment with higher concentrations of H2O2 (0.05–1 mM) was increased. In fact, PARG-silenced cells were more resistant than their wild-type counterparts to oxidant-induced apoptosis while exhibiting delayed PAR degradation and transient accumulation of ADP-ribose polymers longer than 15-mers at early stages of drug treatment. No difference was observed in response to the DNA alkylating agent N-methyl-N′-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine, suggesting a specific involvement of PARG in the cellular response to oxidative DNA damage.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (8) ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhibin Cui ◽  
Hadas Dabas ◽  
Brandon C. Leonard ◽  
Jamie V. Shiah ◽  
Jennifer R. Grandis ◽  
...  

AbstractThe cysteine protease, caspase-8, undergoes dimerization, processing, and activation following stimulation of cells with death ligands such as TRAIL, and mediates TRAIL induction of the extrinsic apoptosis pathway. In addition, caspase-8 mediates TRAIL-induced activation of NF-κB and upregulation of immunosuppressive chemokines/cytokines, via a mechanism independent of caspase-8 catalytic activity. The gene encoding procaspase-8 is mutated in 10% of human head and neck squamous cell carcinomas (HNSCCs). Despite a paucity of experimental evidence, HNSCC-associated caspase-8 mutations are commonly assumed to be loss of function. To investigate their functional properties and phenotypic effects, 18 HNSCC-associated caspase-8 mutants were expressed in doxycycline-inducible fashion in cell line models wherein the endogenous wild-type caspase-8 was deleted. We observed that 5/8 mutants in the amino-terminal prodomain, but 0/10 mutants in the carboxyl-terminal catalytic region, retained an ability to mediate TRAIL-induced apoptosis. Caspase-8 proteins with mutations in the prodomain were defective in dimerization, whereas all ten of the catalytic region mutants efficiently dimerized, revealing an inverse relationship between dimerization and apoptosis induction for the mutant proteins. Roughly half (3/8) of the prodomain mutants and 9/10 of the catalytic region mutants retained the ability to mediate TRAIL induction of immunosuppressive CXCL1, IL-6, or IL-8. Doxycycline-induced expression of wild-type caspase-8 or a representative mutant led to an increased percentage of T and NKT cells in syngeneic HNSCC xenograft tumors. These findings demonstrate that HNSCC-associated caspase-8 mutants retain properties that may influence TRAIL-mediated apoptosis and cytokine induction, as well as the composition of the tumor microenvironment.


2020 ◽  
Vol 65 (1) ◽  
pp. e01948-20
Author(s):  
Dalin Rifat ◽  
Si-Yang Li ◽  
Thomas Ioerger ◽  
Keshav Shah ◽  
Jean-Philippe Lanoix ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTThe nitroimidazole prodrugs delamanid and pretomanid comprise one of only two new antimicrobial classes approved to treat tuberculosis (TB) in 50 years. Prior in vitro studies suggest a relatively low barrier to nitroimidazole resistance in Mycobacterium tuberculosis, but clinical evidence is limited to date. We selected pretomanid-resistant M. tuberculosis mutants in two mouse models of TB using a range of pretomanid doses. The frequency of spontaneous resistance was approximately 10−5 CFU. Whole-genome sequencing of 161 resistant isolates from 47 mice revealed 99 unique mutations, of which 91% occurred in 1 of 5 genes previously associated with nitroimidazole activation and resistance, namely, fbiC (56%), fbiA (15%), ddn (12%), fgd (4%), and fbiB (4%). Nearly all mutations were unique to a single mouse and not previously identified. The remaining 9% of resistant mutants harbored mutations in Rv2983 (fbiD), a gene not previously associated with nitroimidazole resistance but recently shown to be a guanylyltransferase necessary for cofactor F420 synthesis. Most mutants exhibited high-level resistance to pretomanid and delamanid, although Rv2983 and fbiB mutants exhibited high-level pretomanid resistance but relatively small changes in delamanid susceptibility. Complementing an Rv2983 mutant with wild-type Rv2983 restored susceptibility to pretomanid and delamanid. By quantifying intracellular F420 and its precursor Fo in overexpressing and loss-of-function mutants, we provide further evidence that Rv2983 is necessary for F420 biosynthesis. Finally, Rv2983 mutants and other F420H2-deficient mutants displayed hypersusceptibility to some antibiotics and to concentrations of malachite green found in solid media used to isolate and propagate mycobacteria from clinical samples.


2019 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 199-210 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chuanman Zhou ◽  
Jintao Luo ◽  
Xiaohui He ◽  
Qian Zhou ◽  
Yunxia He ◽  
...  

NALCN (Na+leak channel, non-selective) is a conserved, voltage-insensitive cation channel that regulates resting membrane potential and neuronal excitability. UNC79 and UNC80 are key regulators of the channel function. However, the behavioral effects of the channel complex are not entirely clear and the neurons in which the channel functions remain to be identified. In a forward genetic screen for C. elegans mutants with defective avoidance response to the plant hormone methyl salicylate (MeSa), we isolated multiple loss-of-function mutations in unc-80 and unc-79. C. elegans NALCN mutants exhibited similarly defective MeSa avoidance. Interestingly, NALCN, unc-80 and unc-79 mutants all showed wild type-like responses to other attractive or repelling odorants, suggesting that NALCN does not broadly affect odor detection or related forward and reversal behaviors. To understand in which neurons the channel functions, we determined the identities of a subset of unc-80-expressing neurons. We found that unc-79 and unc-80 are expressed and function in overlapping neurons, which verified previous assumptions. Neuron-specific transgene rescue and knockdown experiments suggest that the command interneurons AVA and AVE and the anterior guidepost neuron AVG can play a sufficient role in mediating unc-80 regulation of the MeSa avoidance. Though primarily based on genetic analyses, our results further imply that MeSa might activate NALCN by direct or indirect actions. Altogether, we provide an initial look into the key neurons in which the NALCN channel complex functions and identify a novel function of the channel in regulating C. elegans reversal behavior through command interneurons.


2021 ◽  
Vol 49 (4) ◽  
pp. 030006052110059
Author(s):  
Xinwen Zhang ◽  
Shaozhi Zhao ◽  
Hongwei Liu ◽  
Xiaoyan Wang ◽  
Xiaolei Wang ◽  
...  

Fucosidosis is a rare lysosomal storage disorder characterized by deficiency of α-L-fucosidase with an autosomal recessive mode of inheritance. Here, we describe a 4-year-old Chinese boy with signs and symptoms of fucosidosis but his parents were phenotypically normal. Whole exome sequencing (WES) identified a novel homozygous single nucleotide deletion (c.82delG) in the exon 1 of the FUCA1 gene. This mutation will lead to a frameshift which will result in the formation of a truncated FUCA1 protein (p.Val28Cysfs*105) of 132 amino acids approximately one-third the size of the wild type FUCA1 protein (466 amino acids). Both parents were carrying the mutation in a heterozygous state. This study expands the mutational spectrum of the FUCA1 gene associated with fucosidosis and emphasises the benefits of WES for accurate and timely clinical diagnosis of this rare disease.


Genetics ◽  
1975 ◽  
Vol 80 (4) ◽  
pp. 667-678
Author(s):  
Mary Lee S Ledbetter ◽  
Rollin D Hotchkiss

ABSTRACT A sulfonamide-resistant mutant of pneumococcus, sulr-c, displays a genetic instability, regularly segregating to wild type. DNA extracts of derivatives of the strain possess transforming activities for both the mutant and wild-type alleles, establishing that the strain is a partial diploid. The linkage of sulr-c to strr-61, a stable chromosomal marker, was established, thus defining a chromosomal locus for sulr-c. DNA isolated from sulr-c cells transforms two mutant recipient strains at the same low efficiency as it does a wild-type recipient, although the mutant property of these strains makes them capable of integrating classical "low-efficiency" donor markers equally as efficiently as "high efficiency" markers. Hence sulr-c must have a different basis for its low efficiency than do classical low efficiency point mutations. We suggest that the DNA in the region of the sulr-c mutation has a structural abnormality which leads both to its frequent segregation during growth and its difficulty in efficiently mediating genetic transformation.


2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Biz R. Turnell ◽  
Luisa Kumpitsch ◽  
Anne-Cécile Ribou ◽  
Klaus Reinhardt

Abstract Objective Sperm ageing has major evolutionary implications but has received comparatively little attention. Ageing in sperm and other cells is driven largely by oxidative damage from reactive oxygen species (ROS) generated by the mitochondria. Rates of organismal ageing differ across species and are theorized to be linked to somatic ROS levels. However, it is unknown whether sperm ageing rates are correlated with organismal ageing rates. Here, we investigate this question by comparing sperm ROS production in four lines of Drosophila melanogaster that have previously been shown to differ in somatic mitochondrial ROS production, including two commonly used wild-type lines and two lines with genetic modifications standardly used in ageing research. Results Somatic ROS production was previously shown to be lower in wild-type Oregon-R than in wild-type Dahomey flies; decreased by the expression of alternative oxidase (AOX), a protein that shortens the electron transport chain; and increased by a loss-of-function mutation in dj-1β, a gene involved in ROS scavenging. Contrary to predictions, we found no differences among these four lines in the rate of sperm ROS production. We discuss the implications of our results, the limitations of our study, and possible directions for future research.


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