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The ASPP2 (also known as 53BP2L) tumor suppressor is a proapoptotic member of a family of p53 binding proteins that functions in part by enhancing p53-dependent apoptosis via its C-terminal p53-binding domain. Mounting evidence also suggests that ASPP2 harbors important nonapoptotic p53-independent functions. Structural studies identify a small G protein Ras-association domain in the ASPP2 N terminus. Because Ras-induced senescence is a barrier to tumor formation in normal cells, we investigated whether ASPP2 could bind Ras and stimulate the protein kinase Raf/MEK/ERK signaling cascade. We now show that ASPP2 binds to Ras–GTP at the plasma membrane and stimulates Ras-induced signaling and pERK1/2 levels via promoting Ras–GTP loading, B-Raf/C-Raf dimerization, and C-Raf phosphorylation. These functions require the ASPP2 N terminus because BBP (also known as 53BP2S), an alternatively spliced ASPP2 isoform lacking the N terminus, was defective in binding Ras–GTP and stimulating Raf/MEK/ERK signaling. Decreased ASPP2 levels attenuated H-RasV12–induced senescence in normal human fibroblasts and neonatal human epidermal keratinocytes. Together, our results reveal a mechanism for ASPP2 tumor suppressor function via direct interaction with Ras–GTP to stimulate Ras-induced senescence in nontransformed human cells.ASPP2, also known as 53BP2L, is a tumor suppressor whose expression is altered in human cancers (1). Importantly, targeting of the ASPP2 allele in two different mouse models reveals that ASPP2 heterozygous mice are prone to spontaneous and γ-irradiation–induced tumors, which rigorously demonstrates the role of ASPP2 as a tumor suppressor (2, 3). ASPP2 binds p53 via the C-terminal ankyrin-repeat and SH3 domain (46), is damage-inducible, and can enhance damage-induced apoptosis in part through a p53-mediated pathway (1, 2, 710). However, it remains unclear what biologic pathways and mechanisms mediate ASPP2 tumor suppressor function (1). Indeed, accumulating evidence demonstrates that ASPP2 also mediates nonapoptotic p53-independent pathways (1, 3, 1115).The induction of cellular senescence forms an important barrier to tumorigenesis in vivo (1621). It is well known that oncogenic Ras signaling induces senescence in normal nontransformed cells to prevent tumor initiation and maintain complex growth arrest pathways (16, 18, 2124). The level of oncogenic Ras activation influences its capacity to activate senescence; high levels of oncogenic H-RasV12 signaling leads to low grade tumors with senescence markers, which progress to invasive cancers upon senescence inactivation (25). Thus, tight control of Ras signaling is critical to ensure the proper biologic outcome in the correct cellular context (2628).The ASPP2 C terminus is important for promoting p53-dependent apoptosis (7). The ASPP2 N terminus may also suppress cell growth (1, 7, 2933). Alternative splicing can generate the ASPP2 N-terminal truncated protein BBP (also known as 53BP2S) that is less potent in suppressing cell growth (7, 34, 35). Although the ASPP2 C terminus mediates nuclear localization, full-length ASPP2 also localizes to the cytoplasm and plasma membrane to mediate extranuclear functions (7, 11, 12, 36). Structural studies of the ASPP2 N terminus reveal a β–Grasp ubiquitin-like fold as well as a potential Ras-binding (RB)/Ras-association (RA) domain (32). Moreover, ASPP2 can promote H-RasV12–induced senescence (13, 15). However, the molecular mechanism(s) of how ASPP2 directly promotes Ras signaling are complex and remain to be completely elucidated.Here, we explore the molecular mechanisms of how Ras-signaling is enhanced by ASPP2. We demonstrate that ASPP2: (i) binds Ras-GTP and stimulates Ras-induced ERK signaling via its N-terminal domain at the plasma membrane; (ii) enhances Ras-GTP loading and B-Raf/C-Raf dimerization and forms a ASPP2/Raf complex; (iii) stimulates Ras-induced C-Raf phosphorylation and activation; and (iv) potentiates H-RasV12–induced senescence in both primary human fibroblasts and neonatal human epidermal keratinocytes. These data provide mechanistic insight into ASPP2 function(s) and opens important avenues for investigation into its role as a tumor suppressor in human cancer.  相似文献   

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A problem in understanding eukaryotic DNA mismatch repair (MMR) mechanisms is linking insights into MMR mechanisms from genetics and cell-biology studies with those from biochemical studies of MMR proteins and reconstituted MMR reactions. This type of analysis has proven difficult because reconstitution approaches have been most successful for human MMR whereas analysis of MMR in vivo has been most advanced in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Here, we describe the reconstitution of MMR reactions using purified S. cerevisiae proteins and mispair-containing DNA substrates. A mixture of MutS homolog 2 (Msh2)–MutS homolog 6, Exonuclease 1, replication protein A, replication factor C-Δ1N, proliferating cell nuclear antigen and DNA polymerase δ was found to repair substrates containing TG, CC, +1 (+T), +2 (+GC), and +4 (+ACGA) mispairs and either a 5′ or 3′ strand interruption with different efficiencies. The Msh2–MutS homolog 3 mispair recognition protein could substitute for the Msh2–Msh6 mispair recognition protein and showed a different specificity of repair of the different mispairs whereas addition of MutL homolog 1–postmeiotic segregation 1 had no affect on MMR. Repair was catalytic, with as many as 11 substrates repaired per molecule of Exo1. Repair of the substrates containing either a 5′ or 3′ strand interruption occurred by mispair binding-dependent 5′ excision and subsequent resynthesis with excision tracts of up to ∼2.9 kb occurring during the repair of the substrate with a 3′ strand interruption. The availability of this reconstituted MMR reaction now makes possible detailed biochemical studies of the wealth of mutations identified that affect S. cerevisiae MMR.DNA mismatch repair (MMR) is a critical DNA repair pathway that is coupled to DNA replication in eukaryotes where it corrects misincorporation errors made during DNA replication (19). This pathway prevents mutations and acts to prevent the development of cancer (10, 11). MMR also contributes to gene conversion by repairing mispaired bases that occur during the formation of recombination intermediates (3, 4, 12). Finally, MMR acts to suppress recombination between divergent but homologous DNA sequences, thereby preventing the formation of genome rearrangements that can result from nonallelic homologous recombination (4, 1315).Our knowledge of the mechanism of eukaryotic MMR comes from several general lines of investigation (39). Studies of bacterial MMR have provided a basic mechanistic framework for comparative studies (5). Genetic and cell-biology studies, primarily in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, have identified eukaryotic MMR genes, provided models for how their gene products define MMR pathways, and elucidated some of the details of how MMR pathways interact with replication (14). Reconstitution studies, primarily in human systems, have identified some of the catalytic features of eukaryotic MMR (79, 16, 17). Biochemical and structural studies of S. cerevisiae and human MMR proteins have provided information about the function of individual MMR proteins (69).In eukaryotic MMR, mispairs are bound by MutS homolog 2 (Msh2)–MutS homolog 6 (Msh6) and Msh2–MutS homolog 3 (Msh3), two partially redundant complexes of MutS-related proteins (3, 4, 18, 19). These complexes recruit a MutL-related complex, called MutL homoloh 1 (Mlh1)–postmeiotic segregation 1 (Pms1) in S. cerevisiae and Mlh1–postmeiotic segregation 2 (Pms2) in human and mouse (3, 4, 2023). The Mlh1–Pms1/Pms2 complex has an endonuclease activity suggested to play a role in the initiation of the excision step of MMR (24, 25). Downstream of mismatch recognition is a mispair excision step that can be catalyzed by Exonuclease 1 (Exo1) (2628); however, defects in both S. cerevisiae and mouse Exo1 result in only a partial MMR deficiency, suggesting the existence of additional excision mechanisms (26, 27, 29). DNA polymerase δ, the single-strand DNA binding protein replication protein A (RPA), the sliding clamp proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA), and the clamp loader replication factor C (RFC) are also required for MMR at different steps, including activation of Mlh1–Pms1/Pms2, stimulation of Exo1, potentially in Exo1-independent mispair excision, and in the gap-filling resynthesis steps of MMR (3, 16, 17, 24, 27, 3036). Although much is known about these core MMR proteins, it is not well understood how eukaryotic MMR is coupled to DNA replication (1, 2), how excision is targeted to the newly replicated strand (1, 25, 3739), or how different MMR mechanisms such as Exo1-dependent and -independent subpathways are selected or how many such subpathways exist (1, 24, 27, 29).S. cerevisiae has provided a number of tools for studying MMR, including forward genetic screens for mutations affecting MMR, including dominant and separation-of-function mutations, the ability to evaluate structure-based mutations in vivo, cell biological tools for visualizing and analyzing MMR proteins in vivo, and overproduction of individual MMR proteins for biochemical analysis. However, linking these tools with biochemical systems that catalyze MMR reactions in vitro for mechanistic studies has not yet been possible. Here, we describe the development of MMR reactions reconstituted using purified proteins for the analysis of MMR mechanisms.  相似文献   

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Background and objectives: Natriuretic peptides have been suggested to be of value in risk stratification in dialysis patients. Data in patients on peritoneal dialysis remain limited.Design, setting, participants, & measurements: Patients of the ADEMEX trial (ADEquacy of peritoneal dialysis in MEXico) were randomized to a control group [standard 4 × 2L continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis (CAPD); n = 484] and an intervention group (CAPD with a target creatinine clearance ≥60L/wk/1.73 m2; n = 481). Natriuretic peptides were measured at baseline and correlated with other parameters as well as evaluated for effects on patient outcomes.Results: Control group and intervention group were comparable at baseline with respect to all measured parameters. Baseline values of natriuretic peptides were elevated and correlated significantly with levels of residual renal function but not with body size or diabetes. Baseline values of N-terminal fragment of B-type natriuretic peptide (NT-proBNP) but not proANP(1–30), proANP(31–67), or proANP(1–98) were independently highly predictive of overall survival and cardiovascular mortality. Volume removal was also significantly correlated with patient survival.Conclusions. NT-proBNP have a significant predictive value for survival of CAPD patients and may be of value in guiding risk stratification and potentially targeted therapeutic interventions.Plasma levels of cardiac natriuretic peptides are elevated in patients with chronic kidney disease, owing to impairment of renal function, hypertension, hypervolemia, and/or concomitant heart disease (17). Atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) and particularly brain natriuretic peptide (BNP) levels are linked independently to left ventricular mass (35,816) and function (3,617) and predict total and cardiovascular mortality (1,3,8,10,12,18) as well as cardiac events (12,19). ANP and BNP decrease significantly during hemodialysis treatment but increase again during the interdialytic interval (1,2,4,6,7,14,17,2023). Levels in patients on peritoneal dialysis (PD) have been found to be lower than in patients on hemodialysis (11,2426), but the correlations with left ventricular function and structure are maintained in both types of dialysis modalities (11,15,27,28).The high mortality of patients on peritoneal dialysis and the failure of dialytic interventions to alter this mortality (29,30) necessitate renewed attention into novel methods of stratification and identification of patients at highest risk to be targeted for specific interventions. Cardiac natriuretic peptides are increasingly considered to fulfill this role in nonrenal patients. Evaluations of cardiac natriuretic peptides in patients on PD have been limited by small numbers (3,9,11,12,15,2426) and only one study examined correlations between natriuretic peptide levels and outcomes (12). The PD population enrolled in the ADEMEX trial offered us the opportunity to evaluate cardiac natriuretic peptides and their value in predicting outcomes in the largest clinical trial ever performed on PD (29,30). It is hoped that such an evaluation would identify patients at risk even in the absence of overt clinical disease and hence facilitate or encourage interventions with salutary outcomes.  相似文献   

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Morphological plasticity of root systems is critically important for plant survival because it allows plants to optimize their capacity to take up water and nutrients from the soil environment. Here we show that a signaling module composed of nitrogen (N)-responsive CLE (CLAVATA3/ESR-related) peptides and the CLAVATA1 (CLV1) leucine-rich repeat receptor-like kinase is expressed in the root vasculature in Arabidopsis thaliana and plays a crucial role in regulating the expansion of the root system under N-deficient conditions. CLE1, -3, -4, and -7 were induced by N deficiency in roots, predominantly expressed in root pericycle cells, and their overexpression repressed the growth of lateral root primordia and their emergence from the primary root. In contrast, clv1 mutants showed progressive outgrowth of lateral root primordia into lateral roots under N-deficient conditions. The clv1 phenotype was reverted by introducing a CLV1 promoter-driven CLV1:GFP construct producing CLV1:GFP fusion proteins in phloem companion cells of roots. The overaccumulation of CLE2, -3, -4, and -7 in clv1 mutants suggested the amplitude of the CLE peptide signals being feedback-regulated by CLV1. When CLE3 was overexpressed under its own promoter in wild-type plants, the length of lateral roots was negatively correlated with increasing CLE3 mRNA levels; however, this inhibitory action of CLE3 was abrogated in the clv1 mutant background. Our findings identify the N-responsive CLE-CLV1 signaling module as an essential mechanism restrictively controlling the expansion of the lateral root system in N-deficient environments.Living organisms have developed dynamic strategies to explore nutrients in the environment. Morphological plasticity of plant roots and microorganisms is often compared with foraging behavior of animals. Plant roots are highly dynamic systems because they can modify their structure to reach nutrient resources in soil and optimize their nutrient uptake capacities. This strategy appears to be associated with morphological adaptation, because plants are sessile in nature and nutrient availabilities in soil are often altered by surrounding biotic and abiotic factors and climate changes. Morphological modifications of plant root systems are particularly prominent when they grow in soil environments with unbalanced nutrient availabilities (14). Among the essential elements required for plant growth, nitrogen (N) has a particularly strong effect on root development (16). Lateral roots can be developed in N-rich soil patches where adequate amounts of nitrate (NO3) or ammonium (NH4+) are available, whereas this local outgrowth of lateral roots is restricted in N-deficient patches (79). In addition to these local N responses, lateral root growth is stimulated in response to mild N deficiency and suppressed under excess N supply by systemic plant signals carrying information on the nutritional status of distant plant organs (4, 1013). These morphological responses are important for plant fitness and N acquisition, despite the cost for structuring the root system architecture (2, 6). However, lateral root growth is not sustained when plants are deprived of N for an extended period (4). Under such severe circumstances, the development of new lateral roots should rather be restricted to prevent the risk of extending roots into N-poor environments. Economizing the cost for root development appears to be an important morphological strategy for plant survival.To modify root traits in response to changing N availabilities, plants use various types of signaling molecules including hormones and small RNAs (10, 1317). In particular, auxin signaling proteins and auxin transporters have been proven essential for lateral root development in response to local nitrate supplies (10, 1417). These proteins are involved in increasing auxin sensitivity or auxin accumulation at lateral root initials or lateral root tips exposed to NO3, and the NRT1.1 nitrate transporter has been suggested to play a key role in NO3 sensing (8, 17, 18). In addition, mutations of the nitrate transporter NRT2.1 have been shown to repress or stimulate lateral root initiation depending on N conditions and sucrose supply (12, 19). Thus, N-dependent root development is apparently under control of complex mechanisms, although its signaling components have remained largely unidentified. In this study, we have identified several homologs of the CLE (CLAVATA3/ESR-related) gene family (2024) to be up-regulated by N deficiency and involved in this yet unresolved regulatory mechanism. CLAVATA3 (CLV3) is known as a signaling peptide that binds to the CLAVATA1 (CLV1) leucine-rich repeat receptor-like kinase (LRR-RLK) and controls stem cell differentiation in the shoot apical meristem (2532). CLE-receptor signaling modules are also known to control meristem function in the primary and lateral roots (3335). The N-responsive CLE peptides described in the present study belong to the group of CLE peptides with the highest sequence similarity to CLAVATA3 (CLV3) (2123) and may partly substitute for CLV3 in the shoot apical meristem (31, 36, 37). Our present findings indicate that the N-responsive CLE peptides and CLV1 are signaling components required for translating an N-deficient nutritional status into a morphological response inhibiting the outgrowth of lateral root primordia in Arabidopsis. The present study demonstrates a unique function of the CLE-CLV1 signaling module in roots and provides new insights into signaling mechanisms regulating the expansion of the plant root system in N-deficient environments.  相似文献   

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The adaptor protein Numb has been implicated in the switch between cell proliferation and differentiation made by satellite cells during muscle repair. Using two genetic approaches to ablate Numb, we determined that, in its absence, muscle regeneration in response to injury was impaired. Single myofiber cultures demonstrated a lack of satellite cell proliferation in the absence of Numb, and the proliferation defect was confirmed in satellite cell cultures. Quantitative RT-PCR from Numb-deficient satellite cells demonstrated highly up-regulated expression of p21 and Myostatin, both inhibitors of myoblast proliferation. Transfection with Myostatin-specific siRNA rescued the proliferation defect of Numb-deficient satellite cells. Furthermore, overexpression of Numb in satellite cells inhibited Myostatin expression. These data indicate a unique function for Numb during the initial activation and proliferation of satellite cells in response to muscle injury.Satellite cells represent a muscle-specific stem cell population that allows for muscle growth postnatally and is necessary for muscle repair (1). In response to muscle-fiber damage, quiescent satellite cells that lie along the myofibers under the plasmalemma are activated and proliferate. Proliferating satellite cells have a binary fate decision to make—they can differentiate into myoblasts and intercalate into myofibers by fusion to repair the damaged muscle or they can renew the satellite cell population and return to a quiescent state (24). Quiescent satellite cells express paired box 7 (Pax7), but low or undetectable levels of the myogenic regulatory factors Myf5 and MyoD (5, 6). Activated satellite cells robustly express Pax7 and MyoD/Myf5, but a subset will subsequently down-regulate the myogenic regulatory factors in the process of satellite cell self-renewal (7). Recent studies have demonstrated that, in vivo, Pax7-positive cells are necessary for muscle repair (8, 9).Notch signaling is an important regulator of satellite cell function; it is implicated in satellite cell activation, proliferation (2, 10, 11), and maintenance of quiescence (12, 13). Expression of constitutively active Notch1 results in maintenance of Pax7 expression and down-regulation of Myod/Myf5 whereas inhibition of Notch signaling leads to myogenic differentiation (10, 14). In fact, conditional ablation of Rbpj embryonically results in hypotrophic muscle (15), and, if ablated in the adult, satellite cells undergo spontaneous activation and precocious differentiation with a failure of self-renewal (12, 13). In adult muscle, the Notch ligand, Delta-like1 (Dll1), is expressed on satellite cells, myofibers, and newly differentiating myoblasts and is necessary for repair (10, 11, 16). In aged muscle, impairment of regeneration is due, in part, to a failure of Dll1 expression (17).Numb en`s four proteins with molecular masses of 65, 66, 71, and 72 kDa by alternative splicing of two exons (18, 19). The Numb proteins are cytoplasmic adaptors that direct ubiquitination and degradation of Notch1 by recruiting the E3 ubiquitin ligase Itch to the receptor (1822). Numb is a cell-fate determinant that mediates asymmetric cell division, leading to selective Notch inhibition in one daughter cell and its subsequent differentiation whereas the other daughter has active Notch signaling and remains proliferative (10). Embryonically, Numb is expressed in the myotome whereas Notch1 is limited to the dermomyotome (23, 24). This pattern suggests that the expression of Numb in one daughter cell allows entry into the myogenic lineage. Indeed, overexpression of Numb embryonically increases the number of myogenic progenitors in the somite (25, 26).Numb expression increases during the activation and proliferative expansion of satellite cells, becoming asymmetrically segregated in transit-amplifying cells and leading to asymmetric cell divisions (10, 27). These observations led to a model in which Numb inhibits Notch signaling in one daughter satellite cell, allowing it to undergo myogenic differentiation. The molecular switch that controls the decision of satellite cell progeny to continue proliferating or to differentiate is not well understood. This process seems to be controlled by a decrease of Notch signaling due to increased expression of Numb and an increase in Wnt signaling (1014, 17, 28). In these studies, we examined the role of Numb in satellite cell function by genetic deletion of Numb from myogenic progenitors and satellite cells. Our observations reveal that Numb is necessary for satellite cell-mediated repair. Furthermore, Numb-deficient satellite cells have an unexpected proliferation defect due to an up-regulation of Myostatin. These data indicate a unique role for Numb in regulating the activation and proliferation of satellite cells.  相似文献   

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