scholarly journals Membrane Depolarization and Apoptosis-Like Cell Death in an Alkaline Environment in the Rice Pathogen Burkholderia glumae

2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yewon Nam ◽  
Eunhye Goo ◽  
Yongsung Kang ◽  
Ingyu Hwang

The rice pathogen Burkholderia glumae uses amino acids as a principal carbon source and thus produces ammonia in amino acid-rich culture medium such as Luria–Bertani (LB) broth. To counteract ammonia-mediated environmental alkaline toxicity, the bacterium produces a public good, oxalate, in a quorum sensing (QS)-dependent manner. QS mutants of B. glumae experience alkaline toxicity and may undergo cell death at the stationary phase when grown in LB medium. Here, we show that the cell-death processes of QS mutants due to alkaline environmental conditions are similar to the apoptosis-like cell death reported in other bacteria. Staining QS mutants with bis-(1,3-dibutylbarbituric acid)-trimethine oxonol revealed membrane depolarization. CellROX™ staining showed excessive generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in QS mutants. The expression of genes encoding HNH endonuclease (BGLU_1G15690), oligoribonuclease (BGLU_1G09120), ribonuclease E (BGLU_1G09400), and Hu-beta (BGLU_1G13530) was significantly elevated in QS mutants compared to that in wild-type BGR1, consistent with the degradation of cellular materials as observed under transmission electron microscopy (TEM). A homeostatic neutral pH was not attainable by QS mutants grown in LB broth or by wild-type BGR1 grown in an artificially amended alkaline environment. At an artificially adjusted alkaline pH, wild-type BGR1 underwent apoptosis-like cell death similar to that observed in QS mutants. These results show that environmental alkaline stress interferes with homeostatic neutral cellular pH, induces membrane depolarization, and causes apoptosis-like cell death in B. glumae.

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ana Krotenberg Garcia ◽  
Arianna Fumagalli ◽  
Huy Quang Le ◽  
Owen J. Sansom ◽  
Jacco van Rheenen ◽  
...  

AbstractCompetitive cell-interactions play a crucial role in quality control during development and homeostasis. Here we show that cancer cells use such interactions to actively eliminate wild-type intestine cells in enteroid monolayers and organoids. This apoptosis-dependent process boosts proliferation of intestinal cancer cells. The remaining wild-type population activates markers of primitive epithelia and transits to a fetal-like state. Prevention of this cell fate transition avoids elimination of wild-type cells and, importantly, limits the proliferation of cancer cells. JNK signalling is activated in competing cells and is required for cell fate change and elimination of wild-type cells. Thus, cell competition drives growth of cancer cells by active out-competition of wild-type cells through forced cell death and cell fate change in a JNK dependent manner.


2005 ◽  
Vol 187 (15) ◽  
pp. 5084-5089 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tao Gao ◽  
Mark R. O'Brian

ABSTRACT The heme prosthetic group of heme proteins contains iron, which can be a limiting nutrient. Here, we show that cytochrome c 1 protein from Bradyrhizobium japonicum was strongly affected by the iron status, with low expression in cells grown under iron limitation. This control was not affected in mutants encoding the iron regulator Irr or Fur. Furthermore, cytochrome c 1 mRNA was not influenced by the iron status, suggesting control at a posttranscriptional step. Cytochrome c 1 protein levels were very low in mutants defective in the genes encoding δ-aminolevulinic acid (ALA) synthase and ferrochelatase, enzymes that catalyze the first and final steps of the heme biosynthetic pathway, respectively. Iron-dependent cytochrome c 1 expression was restored in the ALA synthase mutant by supplementation of the medium with the heme precursor ALA. Supplementation with heme resulted in high levels of cytochrome c 1 protein in the wild type and in both mutants, but expression was no longer iron dependent. Cytochrome c 1 is synthesized as a protein precursor fused with cytochrome b. A plasmid-borne construct encoding only cytochrome c 1 was expressed in an iron- and heme-dependent manner similar to that of the wild-type gene, indicating that control by those effectors is not linked to posttranslational processing of the fusion protein. Mutation of the cytochrome c 1 cysteines involved in covalent binding to heme nearly abolished immunodetectable protein. Thus, defects in heme synthesis or heme binding abrogate cytochrome c 1 accumulation, apparently due to protein degradation. We suggest that iron-dependent cytochrome c 1 expression is mediated by heme availability for heme protein formation


2001 ◽  
Vol 358 (2) ◽  
pp. 481-487 ◽  
Author(s):  
Toshihiko AKI ◽  
Yoichi MIZUKAMI ◽  
Yoshitomo OKA ◽  
Kazuhito YAMAGUCHI ◽  
Koichi UEMURA ◽  
...  

Using H9c2 cells derived from rat cardiomyocytes, we investigated the mechanism of cell death during hypoxia in the presence of serum and glucose. Hypoxic cell death is by necrosis and is accompanied by metabolic acidosis. Moreover, hypoxic cell death is inhibited by Hepes buffer as well as by 2-deoxyglucose, an inhibitor of glycolysis, indicating that metabolic acidosis should play an essential role in hypoxic injury. The involvement of phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI 3-kinase), which is known to activate glucose metabolism, was examined using its inhibitor, LY290042, or adenovirus-mediated gene transfer. Hypoxic cell death was inhibited by LY294002 in a dose-dependent manner. Overexpression of dominant negative PI 3-kinase was found to reduce cell death, whereas wild-type PI 3-kinase enhanced it. Dominant negative PI 3-kinase also reduced glucose consumption and acidosis, but this was stimulated by wild-type PI 3-kinase. The data indicate that PI 3-kinase stimulates cell death by enhancing metabolic acidosis. LY294002 significantly reduced glucose uptake, showing that PI 3-kinase regulates glycolysis at the step of glucose transport. These findings indicate the pivotal role of glucose metabolism in hypoxic cell death, and reveal a novel death-promoting effect of PI 3-kinase during hypoxia, despite this enzyme being considered to be a survival-promoting factor.


2001 ◽  
Vol 69 (7) ◽  
pp. 4610-4617 ◽  
Author(s):  
Renato L. Santos ◽  
Renée M. Tsolis ◽  
Shuping Zhang ◽  
Thomas A. Ficht ◽  
Andreas J. Bäumler ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium causes cell death in bovine monocyte-derived and murine macrophages in vitro by asipB-dependent mechanism. During this process, SipB binds and activates caspase-1, which in turn activates the proinflammatory cytokine interleukin-1β through cleavage. We used bovine ileal ligated loops to address the role of serovar Typhimurium-induced cell death in induction of fluid accumulation and inflammation in this diarrhea model. Twelve perinatal calves had 6- to 9-cm loops prepared in the terminal ileum. They were divided into three groups: one group received an intralumen injection of Luria-Bertani broth as a control in 12 loops. The other two groups (four calves each) were inoculated with 0.75 × 109 CFU of either wild-type serovar Typhimurium (strain IR715) or a sopB mutant per loop in 12 loops. Hematoxylin and eosin-stained sections were scored for inflammation, and terminal deoxynucleotidyltransferase-mediated dUTP-biotin nick end labeling (TUNEL)-positive cells were detected in situ. Fluid accumulation began at 3 h postinfection (PI). Inflammation was detected in all infected loops at 1 h PI. The area of TUNEL-labeled cells in the wild-type infected loops was significantly higher than that of the controls at 12 h PI, when a severe inflammatory response and tissue damage had already developed. ThesopB mutant induced the same amount of TUNEL-positive cells as the wild type, but it was attenuated for induction of fluid secretion and inflammation. Our results indicate that serovar Typhimurium-induced cell death is not required to trigger an early inflammatory response and fluid accumulation in the ileum.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Agnes R. Banreti ◽  
Pascal Meier

SUMMARYMyc is a major driver of cell growth in many cancers, but direct inhibition of Myc’s oncogenic activity has been challenging. Interactions between wild-type and Myc-expressing cells cause Myc cells to acquire ‘supercompetitor’ behaviour that increases their fitness and enables them to overtake the tissue by killing their wild-type neighbours through TNF-induced cell death during a process called cell competition. Here we report that the competitive behaviour of Myc, RasV12 cells, and normal epithelial cells, critically depends on the NMDA receptor. Myc cells upregulate NMDAR2 (NR2) to gain supercompetitor status and subdue their wild-type neighbours. Pharmacological inhibition or genetic depletion of NR2 changes the supercompetitor status of oncogenic Myc or RasV12 clones into ‘superlosers’, resulting in their elimination via cell competition by wild-type neighbours in a TNF-dependent manner. Our data demonstrate that that the NMDA receptor (NMDAR) determines cellular fitness during cell competition, and can be targeted to change the fitness landscape of supercompetitive Myc and RasV12 clones, converting them into superlosers.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Barbara Bonomelli ◽  
Enzo Martegani ◽  
Sonia Colombo

In previous papers, using the eGFP-RBD3 probe, which binds Ras-GTP with high affinity, we showed that activated Ras proteins are localized to the plasma membrane and in the nucleus in wild-type Saccharomyces cerevisiae cells growing exponentially on glucose, while an aberrant accumulation of activated Ras in mitochondria correlates to mitochondrial dysfunction, accumulation of ROS and an increase of apoptosis. In this paper, we show that lack of TPS1, which is known to trigger apoptosis in S. cerevisiae, induces localization of active Ras proteins in mitochondria, confirming the above-mentioned correlation. Next, by characterizing the ras1Δ and ras2Δ mutants concerning localization of active Ras proteins and propensity to undergo cell death, we show that active Ras2 proteins, which accumulate in the mitochondria following addition of acetic acid, a well-known pro-apoptotic stimulus, might be the GTPases involved in regulated cell death, while active Ras1 proteins, constitutively localized in mitochondria, might be involved in a pro-survival molecular machinery. Finally, by characterizing the gpa2Δ and cyr1Δ mutants concerning the propensity to undergo cell death, we show that active mitochondrial Ras proteins promote apoptosis through the cAMP/PKA pathway.


2002 ◽  
Vol 15 (3) ◽  
pp. 281-291 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeff H. Chang ◽  
Yin-Shan Tai ◽  
Adriana J. Bernal ◽  
Daniel T. Lavelle ◽  
Brian J. Staskawicz ◽  
...  

Pto is a member of a multigene family and encodes a serine/threonine kinase that mediates gene-for-gene resistance to strains of Pseudomonas syringae pv. tomato expressing avrPto. The inferred amino acid sequence of the Pto homologs from both resistant (LpimPth2 to LpimPth4,) and susceptible (LescFen, LescPth2 to LescPth5) haplotypes suggested that most could encode functional serine/threonine kinases. In addition, the activation segments of the homologs are similar in sequence to that of Pto, and some have residues previously identified as required for binding of AvrPto by Pto in the yeast two-hybrid system. The Pto homologs were therefore characterized for transcription, for the ability of their products to interact with AvrPto in the yeast two-hybrid system, for their autophos-phorylation activity, and for their potential to elicit cell death in the presence of and absence of a ligand, as well as their dependence on Prf. LpimPth5, LpimPth4, and LescPth4 were not transcribed at levels detectable by reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction. The interaction with AvrPto was unique to Pto in the yeast two-hybrid system. LescPth2 autophosphorylated in vitro as a fusion protein. LpimPth2, LpimPth3, LpimPth4, LescPth3, and LescPth4 did not autophosphorylate in vitro. Transient expression of wild-type Fen and wild-type LpimPth3, as well as LescFen, LescPth3, and LescPth5 with perturbations in their P+1 loop caused cell death in Nicotiana benthamiana. LpimPth3 and LescPth3 with amino acid substitutions in the P+1 loop also elicited cell death in tomato; this was dependent on the presence of wild-type Prf. Consequently, some homologs could potentially encode functional resistance proteins. LescPth5 induced cell death specifically in response to expression of AvrPto in tobacco in a Prf-dependent manner; this is consistent with a homolog from a ‘susceptible’ haplotype encoding a minor recognition determinant.


2001 ◽  
Vol 183 (20) ◽  
pp. 5840-5847 ◽  
Author(s):  
Makiko Aichi ◽  
Nobuyuki Takatani ◽  
Tatsuo Omata

ABSTRACT In Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803, the genes encoding the proteins involved in nitrate assimilation are organized into two transcription units,nrtABCD-narB and nirA, the expression of which was repressed by ammonium and induced by inhibition of ammonium assimilation, suggesting involvement of NtcA in the transcriptional regulation. Under inducing conditions, expression of the two transcription units was enhanced by nitrite, suggesting regulation by NtcB, the nitrite-responsive transcriptional enhancer we previously identified in Synechococcus sp. strain PCC 7942. The slr0395 gene, which encodes a protein 47% identical to Synechococcus NtcB, was identified as theSynechocystis ntcB gene, on the basis of the inability of an slr0395 mutant to rapidly accumulate the transcripts of the nitrate assimilation genes upon induction and to respond to nitrite. While Synechococcus NtcB strictly requires nitrite for its action, Synechocystis NtcB enhanced transcription significantly even in the absence of nitrite. Whereas the Synechococcus ntcB mutant expresses the nitrate assimilation genes to a significant level in an NtcA-dependent manner, the Synechocystis ntcB mutant showed only low-level expression of the nitrate assimilation genes, indicating that NtcA by itself cannot efficiently promote expression of these genes inSynechocystis. Activities of the nitrate assimilation enzymes in the Synechocystis ntcB mutant were consequently low, being 40 to 50% of the wild-type level, and the cells grew on nitrate at a rate approximately threefold lower than that of the wild-type strain. These results showed that the contribution of NtcB to the expression of nitrate assimilation capability varies considerably among different strains of cyanobacteria.


Blood ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 116 (21) ◽  
pp. 85-85
Author(s):  
Lorrie L. Delehanty ◽  
Adam N. Goldfarb

Abstract Abstract 85 How erythropoietin (Epo) signaling promotes erythroid differentiation remains unclear. Epo is known to regulate the function of the master regulator of erythroid gene transcription, GATA-1. Using murine proerythroblasts engineered with a conditional GATA-1-ER fusion, G1ER cells, Gregory et al. showed that GATA-1 induction of erythroid differentiation required signaling by Epo; in cultures lacking Epo, activation of GATA-1 caused cell death without differentiation (Blood 94:87-96, 1999). Although several models have been proposed for Epo regulation of GATA-1, no mechanism has been established. While analyzing PKC isozymes regulated by Epo and iron in primary human erythroblasts, our lab identified PKCμ , aka PKD, as activated in a dosage-dependent manner by Epo. Subsequent studies in Epo-starved G1ER cells, and in primary human progenitors, confirmed direct Epo induction of PKD phosphorylation on Ser744/748. A major PKD pathway involves its phosphorylation of class II HDACs (4, 5, 7 and 9), leading to release of HDAC-bound transcription factors (e.g. MEF2) from tonic repression. Watamoto et al. previously identified GATA-1 as a class II HDAC regulated factor, displaying physical and functional interaction with HDAC5 (Oncogene 22:9176-9184, 2003). Accordingly, we employed G1ER cells to determine whether Epo signaling to GATA-1 involved the PKD-HDAC pathway. In G1ER cells cultured in stem cell factor (SCF) minus Epo, endogenous HDAC5, but not HDAC4, co-immunoprecipitated with GATA-1. Epo stimulation induced dissociation of the HDAC5-GATA-1 complex, without affecting levels of either factor. The function of erythroid PKD-HDAC signaling was addressed by pharmacologic and shRNA approaches. Initial experiments tested whether inhibition of HDAC activity could substitute for Epo signaling in G1ER cells undergoing estradiol activation of GATA-1-ER. As described, GATA-1 activation in cells grown in SCF without Epo caused >90% cell death with minimal hemoglobinization after 48 hours. Addition of the HDAC inhibitor SAHA completely rescued viability and partially restored hemoglobinization of cells undergoing GATA-1 activation in the absence of Epo. Along similar lines, shRNA knockdown of HDAC5, but not HDAC4, significantly enhanced viability and hemoglobinization of G1ER cells undergoing GATA-1 activation under limiting Epo concentrations (0.05 U/ml). Conversely, shRNA knockdown of PKD3 impaired hemoglobinization of cells undergoing GATA-1 activation in the presence of Epo. Further implicating PKD in erythropoiesis, differentiation of G1ER cells was blocked by the kinase inhibitor Gö6976, which targets PKC and PKD, but not by the related compound Gö6983, which targets only PKC. Similar results were obtained with primary human progenitors, in which the PKD inhibitor Gö6976 but not the classical PKC inhibitor Gö6983 inhibited erythroid differentiation. In vivo roles of PKD-HDAC signaling in erythropoiesis were addressed by studying HDAC5-/- mice. In contrast to wild type counterparts, adult HDAC5-/- mice showed elevated steady state hematocrits (56.2 ± 0.8 vs 39.3 ± 1.4, P < 0.0001), resulting from increased MCVs (68.8 ± 0.7 vs 48.2 ± 0.1, P < 0.0001). In response to PHZ-induced hemolytic anemia, HDAC5-/- mice showed higher nadir RBC counts (5.0 ± 0.3 vs 3.2 ± 0.2, P < 0.001) and displayed an unexpected increase in Hb levels at the nadir point (15.9 ± 0.8 vs 8.6 ± 0.5, P < 0.0001). Spleens and livers obtained post recovery showed increased iron deposition in HDAC5-/- mice, consistent with increased net red cell turnover. To determine whether the observed abnormalities were cell-intrinsic, we sorted CD71++ Ter119- erythroid progenitors from the marrows of adult HDAC5-/- and wild type mice. The HDAC5-/- progenitors, but not wild type counterparts, displayed erythroid differentiation, manifested by Ter119 upregulation, in medium with no or low Epo (0.01-0.05 U/ml). Our data thus implicate PKD-HDAC signaling in Epo regulation of GATA-1 function and thereby provide a mechanistic basis for an instructional function of the Epo receptor. In addition, activation of PKD in non-erythroid cells could potentially explain some of the poorly-understood clinical complications of Epo therapy. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2001 ◽  
Vol 183 (17) ◽  
pp. 5171-5179 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Bischoff ◽  
J. M. Entenza ◽  
P. Giachino

ABSTRACT The growth phase-dependent activity profile of the alternate transcription factor ςB and its effects on the expression of sar and agr were examined in three differentStaphylococcus aureus strains by Northern blot analyses and by the use of reporter gene fusion experiments. Significant ςB activity was detectable only in the clinical isolates MSSA1112 and Newman, carrying the wild-type rsbU allele, but not in the NCTC8325 derivative BB255, which is defective inrsbU. ςB activity peaked in the late exponential phase and diminished towards the stationary phase when bacteria were grown in Luria-Bertani medium. Transcriptional analysis and a sarP1-sarP2-sarP3(sarP1-P2-P3)-driven firefly luciferase (luc+) reporter gene fusion demonstrated a strong ςB activity- and growth phase-dependent increase in sar expression that was totally absent in either rsbU or ΔrsbUVWsigB mutants. In contrast, expression of theagr locus, as measured by RNAIII levels and by anhldp::luc+ fusion, was found to be higher in the absence of ςB activity, such as inrsbU or ΔrsbUVWsigB mutants, than in wild-type strains. Overexpression of ςB in BB255 derivatives resulted in a clear increase insarP1-P2-P3::luc+ expression as well as a strong decrease in hldp::luc+ expression. The data presented here suggest that ςBincreases sar expression while simultaneously reducing the RNAIII level in a growth phase-dependent manner.


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