inositol tetrakisphosphate
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Tetrahedron ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 76 (5) ◽  
pp. 130853
Author(s):  
Taku Ito ◽  
Hajime Itokawa ◽  
Takanori Miyaki ◽  
Miho Kamimura ◽  
Mariko Hamano ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 116 (49) ◽  
pp. 24551-24561 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yann Desfougères ◽  
Miranda S. C. Wilson ◽  
Debabrata Laha ◽  
Gregory J. Miller ◽  
Adolfo Saiardi

Inositol phosphates (IPs) comprise a network of phosphorylated molecules that play multiple signaling roles in eukaryotes. IPs synthesis is believed to originate with IP3 generated from PIP2 by phospholipase C (PLC). Here, we report that in mammalian cells PLC-generated IPs are rapidly recycled to inositol, and uncover the enzymology behind an alternative “soluble” route to synthesis of IPs. Inositol tetrakisphosphate 1-kinase 1 (ITPK1)—found in Asgard archaea, social amoeba, plants, and animals—phosphorylates I(3)P1 originating from glucose-6-phosphate, and I(1)P1 generated from sphingolipids, to enable synthesis of IP6. We also found using PAGE mass assay that metabolic blockage by phosphate starvation surprisingly increased IP6 levels in a ITPK1-dependent manner, establishing a route to IP6 controlled by cellular metabolic status, that is not detectable by traditional [3H]-inositol labeling. The presence of ITPK1 in archaeal clades thought to define eukaryogenesis indicates that IPs had functional roles before the appearance of the eukaryote.


2018 ◽  
pp. 2732-2737
Author(s):  
Yixing Zhou ◽  
Tobias M. H. Schenk ◽  
Stephen B. Shears

Author(s):  
Yixing Zhou ◽  
Tobias M. H. Schenk ◽  
Stephen B. Shears

2015 ◽  
Vol 4 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ellen Zeller ◽  
Margit Schollenberger ◽  
Imke Kühn ◽  
Markus Rodehutscord

AbstractThe objective was to characterise degradation ofmyo-inositol 1,2,3,4,5,6-hexakis (dihydrogen phosphate) (InsP6) and formation of inositol phosphate (InsP) isomers in different segments of the broiler digestive tract. Influence of anAspergillus niger(PhyA) and twoEscherichia coli-derived (PhyE1 and PhyE2) phytases was also investigated. A total of 600 16-d-old broilers were allocated to forty floor pens (ten pens per treatment). Low-P (5·2 g/kg DM) maize–soyabean meal-based diets were fed without (basal diet; BD) or with a phytase added. On day 25, digesta from different digestive tract segments were pooled per segment on a pen-basis, freeze-dried and analysed for P, InsP isomers and the marker TiO2. InsP6degradation until the lower ileum (74 %) in BD-fed birds showed a high potential of broilers and their gut microbiota to hydrolyse InsP6in low-P diets. Different InsP patterns in different gut segments suggested the involvement of phosphatases of different origin. Supplemented phytases increased InsP6hydrolysis in the crop (P < 0·01) but not in the lower ileum. Measurements in the crop and proventriculus/gizzard confirmed publishedin vitrodegradation pathways of 3- and 6-phytases for the first time. In the intestinal segments, specifically formed InsP4–5isomers of supplemented phytases were still present, indicating further activity of these enzymes.Myo-inositol tetrakisphosphate (InsP4) accumulation differed between PhyE1 and PhyE2 compared with PhyA in the anterior segments of the gut (P < 0·01). Thus, the hydrolytic cleavage of the first phosphate group is not the only limiting step in phytate degradation in broilers.


2014 ◽  
Vol 126 (36) ◽  
pp. 9662-9665 ◽  
Author(s):  
Samanta Capolicchio ◽  
Huanchen Wang ◽  
Divyeshsinh T. Thakor ◽  
Stephen B. Shears ◽  
Henning J. Jessen

2014 ◽  
Vol 53 (36) ◽  
pp. 9508-9511 ◽  
Author(s):  
Samanta Capolicchio ◽  
Huanchen Wang ◽  
Divyeshsinh T. Thakor ◽  
Stephen B. Shears ◽  
Henning J. Jessen

Blood ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 121 (2) ◽  
pp. 286-297 ◽  
Author(s):  
Karsten Sauer ◽  
Eugene Park ◽  
Sabine Siegemund ◽  
Anthony R. French ◽  
Joseph A. Wahle ◽  
...  

Abstract Natural killer (NK) cells have important functions in cancer immunosurveillance, BM allograft rejection, fighting infections, tissue homeostasis, and reproduction. NK cell–based therapies are promising treatments for blood cancers. Overcoming their currently limited efficacy requires a better understanding of the molecular mechanisms controlling NK cell development and dampening their effector functions. NK cells recognize the loss of self-antigens or up-regulation of stress-induced ligands on pathogen-infected or tumor cells through invariant NK cell receptors (NKRs), and then kill such stressed cells. Two second-messenger pathways downstream of NKRs are required for NK cell maturation and effector responses: PIP3 generation by PI3K and generation of diacylglycerol and IP3 by phospholipase-Cγ (PLCγ). In the present study, we identify a novel role for the phosphorylated IP3 metabolite inositol (1,3,4,5)tetrakisphosphate (IP4) in NK cells. IP4 promotes NK cell terminal differentiation and acquisition of a mature NKR repertoire. However, in mature NK cells, IP4 limits NKR-induced IFNγ secretion, granule exocytosis, and target-cell killing, in part by inhibiting the PIP3 effector-kinase Akt. This identifies IP4 as an important novel regulator of NK cell development and function and expands our understanding of the therapeutically important mechanisms dampening NK cell responses. Our results further suggest that PI3K regulation by soluble IP4 is a broadly important signaling paradigm.


2012 ◽  
Vol 448 (2) ◽  
pp. 273-283 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yixing Zhou ◽  
Shilan Wu ◽  
Huanchen Wang ◽  
Yoichi Hayakawa ◽  
Gary S. Bird ◽  
...  

Using immortalized [3H]inositol-labelled S3 cells, we demonstrated in the present study that various elements of the inositol phosphate signalling cascade are recruited by a Drosophila homologue from a cytokine family of so-called GBPs (growth-blocking peptides). HPLC analysis revealed that dGBP (Drosophila GBP) elevated Ins(1,4,5)P3 levels 9-fold. By using fluorescent Ca2+ probes, we determined that dGBP initially mobilized Ca2+ from intracellular pools; the ensuing depletion of intracellular Ca2+ stores by dGBP subsequently activated a Ca2+ entry pathway. The addition of dsRNA (double-stranded RNA) to knock down expression of the Drosophila Ins(1,4,5)P3 receptor almost completely eliminated mobilization of intracellular Ca2+ stores by dGBP. Taken together, the results of the present study describe a classical activation of PLC (phospholipase C) by dGBP. The peptide also promoted increases in the levels of other inositol phosphates with signalling credentials: Ins(1,3,4,5)P4, Ins(1,4,5,6)P4 and Ins(1,3,4,5,6)P5. These results greatly expand the regulatory repertoire of the dGBP family, and also characterize S3 cells as a model for studying the regulation of inositol phosphate metabolism and signalling by endogenous cell-surface receptors. We therefore created a cell-line (S3ITPK1) in which heterologous expression of human ITPK (inositol tetrakisphosphate kinase) was controlled by an inducible metallothionein promoter. We found that dGBP-stimulated S3ITPK1 cells did not synthesize Ins(3,4,5,6)P4, contradicting a hypothesis that the PLC-coupled phosphotransferase activity of ITPK1 [Ins(1,3,4,5,6)P5+Ins(1,3,4)P3→Ins(3,4,5,6)P4+Ins(1,3,4,6)P4] is driven solely by the laws of mass action [Chamberlain, Qian, Stiles, Cho, Jones, Lesley, Grabau, Shears and Spraggon (2007) J. Biol. Chem. 282, 28117–28125]. This conclusion represents a fundamental breach in our understanding of ITPK1 signalling.


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