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1.
Unlike conventional αβ T cells, γδ T cells typically recognize nonpeptide ligands independently of major histocompatibility complex (MHC) restriction. Accordingly, the γδ T cell receptor (TCR) can potentially recognize a wide array of ligands; however, few ligands have been described to date. While there is a growing appreciation of the molecular bases underpinning variable (V)δ1+ and Vδ2+ γδ TCR-mediated ligand recognition, the mode of Vδ3+ TCR ligand engagement is unknown. MHC class I–related protein, MR1, presents vitamin B metabolites to αβ T cells known as mucosal-associated invariant T cells, diverse MR1-restricted T cells, and a subset of human γδ T cells. Here, we identify Vδ1/2 γδ T cells in the blood and duodenal biopsy specimens of children that showed metabolite-independent binding of MR1 tetramers. Characterization of one Vδ3Vγ8 TCR clone showed MR1 reactivity was independent of the presented antigen. Determination of two Vδ3Vγ8 TCR-MR1-antigen complex structures revealed a recognition mechanism by the Vδ3 TCR chain that mediated specific contacts to the side of the MR1 antigen-binding groove, representing a previously uncharacterized MR1 docking topology. The binding of the Vδ3+ TCR to MR1 did not involve contacts with the presented antigen, providing a basis for understanding its inherent MR1 autoreactivity. We provide molecular insight into antigen-independent recognition of MR1 by a Vδ3+ γδ TCR that strengthens an emerging paradigm of antibody-like ligand engagement by γδ TCRs.

Characterized by both innate and adaptive immune cell functions, γδ T cells are an unconventional T cell subset. While the functional role of γδ T cells is yet to be fully established, they can play a central role in antimicrobial immunity (1), antitumor immunity (2), tissue homeostasis, and mucosal immunity (3). Owing to a lack of clarity on activating ligands and phenotypic markers, γδ T cells are often delineated into subsets based on the expression of T cell receptor (TCR) variable (V) δ gene usage, grouped as Vδ2+ or Vδ2.The most abundant peripheral blood γδ T cell subset is an innate-like Vδ2+subset that comprises ∼1 to 10% of circulating T cells (4). These cells generally express a Vγ9 chain with a focused repertoire in fetal peripheral blood (5) that diversifies through neonatal and adult life following microbial challenge (6, 7). Indeed, these Vγ9/Vδ2+ T cells play a central role in antimicrobial immune response to Mycobacterium tuberculosis (8) and Plasmodium falciparum (9). Vγ9/Vδ2+ T cells are reactive to prenyl pyrophosphates that include isopentenyl pyrophosphate and (E)-4-Hydroxy-3-methyl-but-2-enyl pyrophosphate (8) in a butyrophilin 3A1- and BTN2A1-dependent manner (1013). Alongside the innate-like protection of Vγ9/Vδ2+ cells, a Vγ9 population provides adaptive-like immunobiology with clonal expansions that exhibit effector function (14).The Vδ2 population encompasses the remaining γδ T cells but most notably the Vδ1+ and Vδ3+ populations. Vδ1+ γδ T cells are an abundant neonatal lineage that persists as the predominating subset in adult peripheral tissue including the gut and skin (1518). Vδ1+ γδ T cells display potent cytokine production and respond to virally infected and cancerous cells (19). Vδ1+ T cells were recently shown to compose a private repertoire that diversifies, from being unfocused to a selected clonal TCR pool upon antigen exposure (2023). Here, the identification of both Vδ1+ Tnaive and Vδ1+ Teffector subsets and the Vδ1+ Tnaive to Teffector differentiation following in vivo infection point toward an adaptive phenotype (22).The role of Vδ3+ γδ T cells has remained unclear, with a poor understanding of their lineage and functional role. Early insights into Vδ3+ γδ T cell immunobiology found infiltration of Vδ3+ intraepithelial lymphocytes (IEL) within the gut mucosa of celiac patients (24). More recently it was shown that although Vδ3+ γδ T cells represent a prominent γδ T cell component of the gut epithelia and lamina propria in control donors, notwithstanding pediatric epithelium, the expanding population of T cells in celiac disease were Vδ1+ (25). Although Vδ3+ IELs compose a notable population of gut epithelia and lamina propria T cells (∼3 to 7%), they also formed a discrete population (∼0.2%) of CD4CD8 T cells in peripheral blood (26). These Vδ3+ DN γδ T cells are postulated to be innate-like due to the expression of NKG2D, CD56, and CD161 (26). When expanded in vitro, these cells degranulated and killed cells expressing CD1d and displayed a T helper (Th) 1, Th2, and Th17 response in addition to promoting dendritic cell maturation (26). Peripheral Vδ3+ γδ T cells frequencies are known to increase in systemic lupus erythematosus patients (27, 28), and upon cytomegalovirus (29) and HIV infection (30), although, our knowledge of their exact role and ligands they recognize remains incomplete.The governing paradigms of antigen reactivity, activation principles, and functional roles of γδ T cells remain unresolved. This is owing partly due to a lack of knowledge of bona fide γδ T cell ligands. Presently, Vδ1+ γδ T cells remain the best characterized subset with antigens including Major Histocompatibility Complex (MHC)-I (31), monomorphic MHC-I–like molecules such as CD1b (32), CD1c (33), CD1d (34), and MR1 (35), as well as more diverse antigens such as endothelial protein coupled receptor (EPCR) and phycoerythrin (PE) (36, 37). The molecular determinants of this reactivity were first established for Vδ1+ TCRs in complex with CD1d presenting sulfatide (38) and α-galactosylceramide (α-GalCer) (34), which showed an antigen-dependent central focus on the presented lipids and docked over the antigen-binding cleft.In humans, mucosal-associated invariant T (MAIT) cells are an abundant innate-like αβ T cell subset typically characterized by a restricted TCR repertoire (3943) and reactivity to the monomorphic molecule MR1 presenting vitamin B precursors and drug-like molecules of bacterial origin (41, 4446). Recently, populations of atypical MR1-restricted T cells have been identified in mice and humans that utilize a more diverse TCR repertoire for MR1-recognition (42, 47, 48). Furthermore, MR1-restricted γδ T cells were identified in blood and tissues including Vδ1+, Vδ3+, and Vδ5+ clones (35). As seen with TRAV 1-2, unconventional MAITs cells the isolated γδ T cells exhibited MR1-autoreactivity with some capacity for antigen discrimination within the responding compartment (35, 48). Structural insight into one such MR1-reactive Vδ1+ γδ TCR showed a down-under TCR engagement of MR1 in a manner that is thought to represent a subpopulation of MR1-reactive Vδ1+ T cells (35). However, biochemical evidence suggested other MR1-reactive γδ T cell clones would likely employ further unusual docking topologies for MR1 recognition (35).Here, we expanded our understanding of a discrete population of human Vδ3+ γδ T cells that display reactivity to MR1. We provide a molecular basis for this Vδ3+ γδ T cell reactivity and reveal a side-on docking for MR1 that is distinct from the previously determined Vδ1+ γδ TCR-MR1-Ag complex. A Vδ3+ γδ TCR does not form contacts with the bound MR1 antigen, and we highlight the importance of non–germ-line Vδ3 residues in driving this MR1 restriction. Accordingly, we have provided key insights into the ability of human γδ TCRs to recognize MR1 in an antigen-independent manner by contrasting mechanisms.  相似文献   

2.
The formation of ordered cross-β amyloid protein aggregates is associated with a variety of human disorders. While conventional infrared methods serve as sensitive reporters of the presence of these amyloids, the recently discovered amyloid secondary structure of cross-α fibrils presents new questions and challenges. Herein, we report results using Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy and two-dimensional infrared spectroscopy to monitor the aggregation of one such cross-α–forming peptide, phenol soluble modulin alpha 3 (PSMα3). Phenol soluble modulins (PSMs) are involved in the formation and stabilization of Staphylococcus aureus biofilms, making sensitive methods of detecting and characterizing these fibrils a pressing need. Our experimental data coupled with spectroscopic simulations reveals the simultaneous presence of cross-α and cross-β polymorphs within samples of PSMα3 fibrils. We also report a new spectroscopic feature indicative of cross-α fibrils.

Amyloids are elongated fibers of proteins or peptides typically composed of stacked cross β-sheets (1, 2). Self-assembling amyloids are notorious for their involvement in human neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s diseases (1, 2). Phenol soluble modulins (PSMs) are amyloid peptides secreted by the bacteria Staphylococcus aureus (S. aureus) (35). Of the PSM family, PSMα3 is of recent interest due to its unique secondary structure upon fibrillation. Whereas other PSM variants undergo conformational changes with aggregation, the α-helical PSMα3 peptide retains its secondary structure while stacking in a manner reminiscent of β-sheets, forming what has been termed cross-α fibrils (3, 4, 6). Although “α-sheet” amyloid fibrils have been previously observed in two-dimensional infrared (2DIR) (7) and associated with PSMs (8), the novel cross-α fibril is distinct from that class of structures. To avoid confusion between these two similarly named but distinct secondary structures, a comparison between the α-sheet domain in cytosolic phosphatase A2 (9) (Protein Data Bank [PDB] identification:1rlw) (10) and cross-α fibrils adopted by PSMα3 (PDB ID:5i55) (3) has been highlighted in SI Appendix, Fig. S1. Interestingly, shorter terminations of PSMα3 have been shown to exhibit β-sheet polymorphs (11). The proposed cross-α fibril structure of the full-length PSMα3 peptide has been confirmed with X-ray diffraction and circular dichroism (4). The present study aims to further characterize these fibrils with linear and nonlinear infrared spectroscopies.S. aureus is an infectious human pathogen with the ability to form communities of microorganisms called biofilms that hinder traditional treatment methods (1214). PSMs contribute to inflammatory response and play a crucial role in structuring and detaching biofilms (11, 12, 14). While biofilm growth requires the presence of multiple PSMs (14, 15), Andreasen and Zaman have demonstrated that PSMα3 acts as a scaffold, seeding the amyloid formation of other PSMs (5). To effectively inhibit S. aureus biofilm growth, a better understanding of PSMα3 aggregation is needed.The α-helical structure of PSMα3 (12) presents a challenge for probing the vibrational modes and secondary structure of both the monomer and the fibrils. While IR spectroscopy has been used extensively to characterize β-sheets (1619), the spectral features associated with α-helices are difficult to distinguish from those of the random coil secondary structure (20, 21). This limitation has left researchers to date with an incomplete picture of the spectroscopic features unique to cross-α fibers. The present work combines a variety of 2DIR methods to remove these barriers and probe the active infrared vibrational modes of cross-α fibers.The full-length, 22-residue PSMα3 peptide was synthesized and prepared for aggregation studies following reported methods (3, 4, 11). A total of 10 mM PSMα3 was incubated in D2O at room temperature over 7 d. These data were compared to the monomer treated under similar conditions. Monomeric samples were prepared at a significantly lower concentration of 0.5 mM to prevent aggregation. Fiber formation was confirmed by transmission electron microscopy (see SI Appendix, Fig. S2 for details). Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectra were taken for both the fibrils in solution as well as the low concentration monomers. Spectroscopic simulations of the PSMα3 monomer and fibers were performed on previously reported PDB structures (PDB identification: 5i55) (3) (Fig. 1).Open in a separate windowFig. 1.PDB structures of PSMα3 (A) monomers and (B) cross-α fibers extended along the screw axis. (C) FTIR spectra of 0.5 mM monomeric PSMα3 (blue) compared to the 10 mM PSMα3 fibril (red) in D2O upon aggregation.  相似文献   

3.
The spread of pathological α-synuclein (α-syn) is a crucial event in the progression of Parkinson’s disease (PD). Cell surface receptors such as lymphocyte activation gene 3 (LAG3) and amyloid precursor-like protein 1 (APLP1) can preferentially bind α-syn in the amyloid over monomeric state to initiate cell-to-cell transmission. However, the molecular mechanism underlying this selective binding is unknown. Here, we perform an array of biophysical experiments and reveal that LAG3 D1 and APLP1 E1 domains commonly use an alkaline surface to bind the acidic C terminus, especially residues 118 to 140, of α-syn. The formation of amyloid fibrils not only can disrupt the intramolecular interactions between the C terminus and the amyloid-forming core of α-syn but can also condense the C terminus on fibril surface, which remarkably increase the binding affinity of α-syn to the receptors. Based on this mechanism, we find that phosphorylation at serine 129 (pS129), a hallmark modification of pathological α-syn, can further enhance the interaction between α-syn fibrils and the receptors. This finding is further confirmed by the higher efficiency of pS129 fibrils in cellular internalization, seeding, and inducing PD-like α-syn pathology in transgenic mice. Our work illuminates the mechanistic understanding on the spread of pathological α-syn and provides structural information for therapeutic targeting on the interaction of α-syn fibrils and receptors as a potential treatment for PD.

Aggregation and the spread of amyloid proteins, such as α-synuclein (α-syn), amyloid-β, Tau, and TDP43, are critical events in the pathogenesis of neurodegenerative disorders, including Parkinson''s disease (PD), Alzheimer’s disease, and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, respectively (1, 2). As the hallmark of PD and other α-synucleinopathies, α-syn aggregation spreads in a prion-like progressive and stepwise manner both within the brain and from other organs to the brain during disease progression (37). Pathological α-syn aggregation can template monomeric α-syn to aggregate and participate in disease pathogenesis. Pathological α-syn inclusion can spread in the grafted neurons of PD patients (4, 8). Brain extracts from patients with multiple system atrophy can transmit neurodegeneration to genetically engineered mice (9). A single administration of α-syn preformed fibrils (PFFs) in mouse brains can recapitulate the pathological phenotypes of α-synucleinopathies (1013).Selected cell surface proteins, such as lymphocyte activation gene 3 (LAG3) and amyloid precursor-like protein 1 (APLP1), have been found to serve as receptors for α-syn PFF internalization and transmission (10, 14, 15). Intriguingly, these receptors preferentially recognize α-syn PFFs rather than the monomer (10). The α-syn monomer is intrinsically disordered and forms α-helical conformation upon membrane binding as involved in synaptic vesicle trafficking (1619). Cryogenic electron microscopic (cryo-EM) structures of full-length α-syn amyloid fibrils show that the central region of α-syn, approximately covering residues 37 to 99, is involved in the formation of a cross-β fibril core (termed as FC region), while the remaining N and C termini remain flexible (2024). Despite the recent successes in the structural determination of α-syn amyloid fibrils, considerable challenges remain in linking the structural information to α-syn pathology. The structural basis underlying α-syn transmission, specifically the interplay between α-syn PFFs and receptors, is unknown. It also remains unclear how receptors, for example, LAG3 and APLP1, selectively recognize α-syn PFFs over monomers, nor do we know the role of posttranslational modification of α-syn in this process.In this work, we combined multiple biophysical, cellular, and in vivo approaches to reveal the structural basis underlying the receptor binding of α-syn amyloid fibrils during cell-to-cell transmission. We found that the D1 domain of LAG3 utilizes a positively charged surface to capture the acidic C terminus of α-syn, which is exposed and concentrated on the surface of α-syn fibrils. In contrast, α-syn monomers adopt a self-shielded conformation to impede the exposure of the C terminus. Phosphorylation at serine 129 (pS129) of α-syn, a pathological biomarker in PD (2527), significantly enhances the binding of α-syn PFFs to LAG3 and APLP1 and promotes the cell-to-cell transmission in vitro and in vivo. Our work provides the structural basis for the receptor-mediated neuronal internalization and transmission of α-syn fibrils and suggests that the C terminus, specifically residues 118 to 140, is a pathological epitope of α-syn for receptor binding and thus may serve as a promising target for the therapeutic drug development to block PD progression.  相似文献   

4.
GBA1 mutations that encode lysosomal β-glucocerebrosidase (GCase) cause the lysosomal storage disorder Gaucher disease (GD) and are strong risk factors for synucleinopathies, including Parkinson’s disease and Lewy body dementia. Only a subset of subjects with GBA1 mutations exhibit neurodegeneration, and the factors that influence neurological phenotypes are unknown. We find that α-synuclein (α-syn) neuropathology induced by GCase depletion depends on neuronal maturity, the physiological state of α-syn, and specific accumulation of long-chain glycosphingolipid (GSL) GCase substrates. Reduced GCase activity does not initiate α-syn aggregation in neonatal mice or immature human midbrain cultures; however, adult mice or mature midbrain cultures that express physiological α-syn oligomers are aggregation prone. Accumulation of long-chain GSLs (≥C22), but not short-chain species, induced α-syn pathology and neurological dysfunction. Selective reduction of long-chain GSLs ameliorated α-syn pathology through lysosomal cathepsins. We identify specific requirements that dictate synuclein pathology in GD models, providing possible explanations for the phenotypic variability in subjects with GCase deficiency.

Gaucher disease (GD) is a lysosomal storage disorder caused by loss-of-function mutations in the GBA1 gene that encodes lysosomal β-glucocerebrosidase (GCase). GCase degrades glycosphingolipids (GSLs), including glucosylceramides (GluCers), into glucose and ceramide, and GCase mutations result in the accumulation of GluCer in lysosomes of various tissues. Heterozygote carriers of the same loss-of-function GCase mutations are estimated to be at 5- to 10-fold higher risk for developing Parkinson’s disease (PD) or Lewy body dementia (1). In GD, significant variability exists in the clinical and pathological presentation, resulting in three main GD subtypes (2). Type 1 GD is characterized by visceral abnormalities, including enlarged liver and spleen and bone marrow dysfunction, leading to thrombocytopenia but without neurodegeneration and α-synuclein (α-syn) pathology (3). Types 2 and 3 demonstrate similar visceral symptoms but with additional extensive neuronal loss, α-syn pathology in the form of classical Lewy bodies, and neurological dysfunction (3, 4). As life expectancy of type 1 GD has increased because of enzyme replacement therapy, a higher percentage of patients develop PD symptoms with age (5), suggesting that aging could contribute to the penetrance of GBA1 mutations. The dramatic phenotypic heterogeneity suggests that GD is not a simple, monogenic disease but a complex disorder that is influenced by both genetic and nongenetic modifiers. Although the factors that contribute to clinical and pathological variability in GD are not known, genetic modifiers have been identified that associate with GD severity, including CLN8 and SCARB2 (6, 7). Within PD patients that harbor GBA1 mutations (GBA-PD), the search for genetic modifiers has shown that synergism may exist with the SNCA gene that encodes α-syn and CTSB that encodes lysosomal cathepsin B (8). Variants in lysosomal cathepsins could influence the severity of α-syn accumulation, since, under physiological or pathological conditions, α-syn can be degraded by the lysosome (911) and is a direct substrate of cathepsin B and L (12).An additional factor that may contribute to phenotypic variability in GD is the accumulation of specific GluCer subtypes with particular acyl chain lengths. GluCer and other GSLs exist as a family of lipid isoforms differentiated by the length of the N-acyl fatty acid moiety linked to the sphingoid base. GluCer chains range from C14 to C26 in the brain; however, C18 and C24:1 are the predominant species (13). Studies of neuronopathic GD (nGD) brain or mouse models showed intraneuronal accumulation of multiple GluCer species that correlated with neuroinflammation (1419), and some cases demonstrate selective accumulation of long-chain GluCers in nGD (20). Our recent work in PD patient midbrain neurons showed that inhibition of wild-type (wt) GCase, caused by α-syn, resulted in the selective accumulation of long-chain-length GluCers, including C22 and C24:1, while C14, 16, and C18 were unchanged (21). Together, these data indicate that GluCer accumulation plays an important role in neurodegeneration induced by GBA1 mutations; however, the specific contributions of distinct GluCer species have not been examined.Here, we extend our studies on the role of GSLs in α-syn aggregation to further define conditions that are required to induce pathology and neurological dysfunction. We previously showed that α-syn exists as monomers and high–molecular weight (HMW) oligomers under physiological conditions in human midbrain cultures (22). In vitro, we found that GluCer mildly induced aggregation of α-syn monomers but primarily acted on physiological oligomers to convert them into toxic oligomers and fibrillar inclusions (22). α-syn accumulation can be prevented or reversed by reducing GSLs with GluCer synthase inhibitors (GCSi) in both GD and PD patient cultures, as well as in mouse models (2224). While this work suggests a close relationship between GCase function and α-syn pathology, additional factors must exist that create a permissive environment for α-syn accumulation. Indeed, studies that used newborn mice or embryonic primary neuron cultures treated with the GCase inhibitor, conduritol beta epoxide (CBE), have shown no changes in α-syn despite reduced GCase activity (2527). However, other studies that use matured neuron cultures, neuronal cell lines, or adult mice have shown that CBE dramatically induces α-syn aggregates (22, 2831). We used an in vivo GD model and induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC)–derived patient midbrain cultures to identify specific conditions that are required to induce α-syn pathology, providing possible explanations for the variable neurological penetrance in patients that harbor GBA1 mutations.  相似文献   

5.
G protein–coupled receptors display multifunctional signaling, offering the potential for agonist structures to promote conformational selectivity for biased outputs. For β2-adrenergic receptors (β2AR), unbiased agonists stabilize conformation(s) that evoke coupling to Gαs (cyclic adenosine monophosphate [cAMP] production/human airway smooth muscle [HASM] cell relaxation) and β-arrestin engagement, the latter acting to quench Gαs signaling, contributing to receptor desensitization/tachyphylaxis. We screened a 40-million-compound scaffold ranking library, revealing unanticipated agonists with dihydroimidazolyl-butyl-cyclic urea scaffolds. The S-stereoisomer of compound C1 shows no detectable β-arrestin engagement/signaling by four methods. However, C1-S retained Gαs signaling—a divergence of the outputs favorable for treating asthma. Functional studies with two models confirmed the biasing: β2AR-mediated cAMP signaling underwent desensitization to the unbiased agonist albuterol but not to C1-S, and desensitization of HASM cell relaxation was observed with albuterol but not with C1-S. These HASM results indicate biologically pertinent biasing of C1-S, in the context of the relevant physiologic response, in the human cell type of interest. Thus, C1-S was apparently strongly biased away from β-arrestin, in contrast to albuterol and C5-S. C1-S structural modeling and simulations revealed binding differences compared with unbiased epinephrine at transmembrane (TM) segments 3,5,6,7 and ECL2. C1-S (R2 = cyclohexane) was repositioned in the pocket such that it lost a TM6 interaction and gained a TM7 interaction compared with the analogous unbiased C5-S (R2 = benzene group), which appears to contribute to C1-S biasing away from β-arrestin. Thus, an agnostic large chemical-space library identified agonists with receptor interactions that resulted in relevant signal splitting of β2AR actions favorable for treating obstructive lung disease.

Most G protein–coupled receptors (GPCRs) are now recognized as multisignal transducers (1, 2). Early concepts of agonist–receptor interactions were based on the idea that there was a single “active” receptor conformation induced by the binding of any agonist, resulting in an interaction with the heterotrimeric G protein and a universal, singular signal. Generally, the α-subunit of the G protein, upon its dissociation, was considered the primary activator (or inhibitor) of the effector, resulting in the intracellular signal. Subsequently, it became clear that multiple signaling outcomes from activation of a given GPCR can occur from a single agonist due to specific molecular determinants of the receptor triggering independent mechanisms (35). As these multiple functions were being identified, it was apparent that agonists with different structures could act at a given receptor to preferentially activate one signal with minimal engagement of others, a property later termed signal biasing (68). Biased agonists, then, could represent important advantages over nonbiased agonists due to this signal selectivity, activating a specified therapeutic pathway while minimally evoking unnecessary or deleterious signaling. The pathway selectivity of biased agonists is thought to be established by the stabilization of specific conformation(s) of the agonist–receptor complex via a set of interactions that differ from those of unbiased (also called balanced) agonists (912). While it is conceivable that small modifications of established cognate agonists might yield such specialized signaling, significant deviation from common agonist structures may be necessary to meet this goal (13).The signals/functions of a given GPCR that might be sought for selective activation are defined by the cell type, disease, and desired final physiologic function. In asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), active human airway smooth muscle (HASM) cellular contraction limits airflow, representing a major cause of morbidity and mortality. β2-adrenergic receptors (β2ARs) expressed on HASM cells are the targets for binding of therapeutically administered β-agonists, which relax the cells via a cyclic adenosine monophosphate–mediated mechanism (14). β-agonists are used for treating acute bronchospasm as well as for long-term prevention. However, the HASM bronchodilator response to acute β-agonist is attenuated by receptor desensitization (15), with typical treatments of humans, or isolated HASM cells, leading to a loss of receptor function over time (1618), clinically termed tachyphylaxis.Agonist-promoted desensitization of β2AR (and other GPCRs) is due to partial uncoupling of the receptor to the G protein, which is initiated by phosphorylation of intracellular Ser/Thr residues of the receptor by G protein–coupled receptor kinases (GRKs) (19, 20). The GRK-phosphorylated β2AR recruits β-arrestin1 or β-arrestin2 to these receptors, with subsequent interactions that appear to compete with the receptor for its binding to the Gα subunit, thus attenuating the intracellular response (11, 21). Such competition has been strongly inferred for the β2AR (22, 23) and is compelling for rhodopsin–arrestin interactions (24). In addition, β-arrestin binding to GPCRs can initiate receptor internalization and other events such as receptor activation of ERK1/2 (25) through its multiprotein adapter functions. Thus β-arrestin engagement can be considered an early “second signal” of the β2AR as well as a desensitization initiator for attenuating the Gs signal. An agonist that is biased toward Gαs coupling (cAMP production and airway smooth muscle [ASM] relaxation) and away from β-arrestin binding (desensitization) would be desirable in treating obstructive lung diseases, since efficacy would not be attenuated acutely, nor would tachyphylaxis be experienced from extended treatment. While biased agonists favoring either G protein or β-arrestin (6) signaling have been described for some GPCRs (such as μ-opioid and type 1 angiotensin II receptors), Gαs biasing has not been apparent from most studies with catecholamine-like compounds for the β2AR. Thus, we have little information as to whether the two β2AR pathways can be differentially activated in a selective manner by an efficacious agonist, nor is it apparent from a structural standpoint what strategy might be employed to design agonists biased in this manner for this receptor.In order to find this type of biasing for the β2AR, we screened a 40-million-compound scaffold ranking (SR) library that was agnostic to known β2AR agonist structures. We found a scaffold in which substitutions of certain R groups led to individual compounds that are apparently Gαs-biased agonists for β2AR with no apparent engagement of β-arrestin in model systems. Additional studies in HASM cells revealed a lack of tachyphylaxis of the relaxation effect by the lead compound compared with the most widely utilized β2AR agonist, albuterol. The structure of this biased agonist is very different from that of catecholamine-like agonists. To ascertain the mechanism that may underlie this biased activity, we used structural modeling and molecular simulations and studied homologous compounds with different R groups and receptor mutagenesis to predict the interaction sites with the activated β2AR. Such studies uncovered distinct structural characteristics that may be responsible for the biasing effect.  相似文献   

6.
Loss-of-function mutations in acid beta-glucosidase 1 (GBA1) are among the strongest genetic risk factors for Lewy body disorders such as Parkinson’s disease (PD) and Lewy body dementia (DLB). Altered lipid metabolism in PD patient–derived neurons, carrying either GBA1 or PD αS mutations, can shift the physiological α-synuclein (αS) tetramer–monomer (T:M) equilibrium toward aggregation-prone monomers. A resultant increase in pSer129+ αS monomers provides a likely building block for αS aggregates. 3K αS mice, representing a neuropathological amplification of the E46K PD–causing mutation, have decreased αS T:M ratios and vesicle-rich αS+ aggregates in neurons, accompanied by a striking PD-like motor syndrome. We asked whether enhancing glucocerebrosidase (GCase) expression could benefit αS dyshomeostasis by delivering an adeno-associated virus (AAV)–human wild-type (wt) GBA1 vector into the brains of 3K neonates. Intracerebroventricular AAV-wtGBA1 at postnatal day 1 resulted in prominent forebrain neuronal GCase expression, sustained through 6 mo. GBA1 attenuated behavioral deficits both in working memory and fine motor performance tasks. Furthermore, wtGBA1 increased αS solubility and the T:M ratio in both 3K-GBA mice and control littermates and reduced pS129+ and lipid-rich aggregates in 3K-GBA. We observed GCase distribution in more finely dispersed lysosomes, in which there was increased GCase activity, lysosomal cathepsin D and B maturation, decreased perilipin-stabilized lipid droplets, and a normalized TFEB translocation to the nucleus, all indicative of improved lysosomal function and lipid turnover. Therefore, a prolonged increase of the αS T:M ratio by elevating GCase activity reduced the lipid- and vesicle-rich aggregates and ameliorated PD-like phenotypes in mice, further supporting lipid modulating therapies in PD.

GBA1 gene mutations in Gaucher’s disease carriers are recognized as the most important risk factors for developing Parkinson’s disease (PD), since large multicenter patient cohorts identified GBA variants in PD, including in ∼3% of sporadic PD patients and up to ∼15% of the Ashkenazi Jewish population with PD (1). Homozygous and heterozygous GBA1 mutation carriers display a similar risk (∼20%) of developing PD (2). GBA1 mutations can impact the activity of its gene product, the lysosomal lipid metabolism enzyme glucocerebrosidase (GCase), leading to changes in cellular lipid content and lipid membrane morphologies (3, 4). Clinically, PD patients with GBA1 mutations are largely indistinguishable from the idiopathic form. Both populations exhibit widespread α-synuclein (αS)+ Lewy bodies (LBs), including in the hippocampus and other brain regions, and these are associated with motor deficits and cognitive decline (2). PD-GBA1 mutation carriers are at a greater risk of cognitive impairments, and this finding is consistent with a higher incidence of GBA1 mutations in =DLB patients (5, 6). Recent morphological analyses of “sporadic” PD brain tissues have revealed that Lewy-type inclusions also contain substantial amounts of lipid-rich membranes and vesicles, including lysosomes (7). Additional evidence for the role of GCase in αS homeostasis has been generated in mouse studies and in GBA1-mutant neural cells, suggesting increased accumulation of αS secondary to different pathogenic GBA1 mutations (811).Accumulating evidence from our laboratory (1214) and others (1518) shows that αS normally occurs in a dynamic equilibrium between helically folded tetramers and “natively unfolded” monomers. Regarding the relevance of αS tetramers to disease, we found that all familial PD (fPD)–causing αS mutations decrease the physiological tetramer–monomer (T:M) ratio and some induce cytoplasmic inclusions and neurotoxicity in human (hu) and rodent cell culture (13). Supporting these findings, neurons harboring PD-causing GBA1 mutations shifted endogenous wild-type (wt) αS tetramers to monomers that lead to abnormal phosphorylated serine 129 αS (pS129) + αS accumulation (18), indicating lipid metabolism can impact physiological αS homeostasis. Mechanistic studies have shown that saturated fatty acids (SFAs) stabilize normal tetramers, while unsaturated FAs, such as oleic acid, decrease the T:M ratio (19, 20). Accordingly, decreasing stearoyl-CoA desaturase (SCD) activity, the rate-limiting enzyme for generating monounsaturated (MU) FA, decreases αS+ neuronal inclusions in yeast, rat cortical neurons, hu wt, fPD E46K–induced neurons, and in 3K cell culture models (1921).Our recent approach to treating hu wt or 3K αS mutant mice with SCD inhibitors showed that the prolonged increases in the T:M ratio can reduce excess triacylglycerides (TAGs), lipid droplets (LDs) (rich in TAGs), and pS129 αS+ aggregates, aiding multiple PD motor phenotypes (22). Intriguingly, overexpressing hu wtGBA increased the αS T:M ratio in Gaucher’s GBA1-mutant neuronal culture (18).Whether early transduction and prolonged increase of hu wtGCase can enhance αS T:M homeostasis in vivo has yet not been examined. To begin investigating this question, we used the tetramer-abrogating “3K” αS mutant mouse line that is a biochemical amplification of the E46K mutation-causing PD. The 3K mutation shifts the normally aggregation-resistant αS tetramers (12) to increased levels of monomers that then cluster with vesicle membranes and form sizeable aggregates, thereby producing multiple PD-like motor phenotypes by the age of 6 mo (23). The Thy1.2 promotor that drives the 3K transgene reaches stable expression from postnatal day 7 onwards (24), thereby enabling us to study whether GBA1 effects the onset of αS dyshomeostasis in mouse brain when injecting it into 3K neonates. Here, we transduced an adeno-associated virus (AAV)–wtGBA1 vector by intracerebroventricular (ICV) injections in 3K and control littermate pups at P1 and then, 6 mo later, performed motor and cognitive testing and examined the brains for αS species, GCase activity, lysosomal abnormalities, and lipid aggregation patterns.  相似文献   

7.
8.
α-synuclein aggregation is present in Parkinson’s disease and other neuropathologies. Among the assemblies that populate the amyloid formation process, oligomers and short fibrils are the most cytotoxic. The human Hsc70-based disaggregase system can resolve α-synuclein fibrils, but its ability to target other toxic assemblies has not been studied. Here, we show that this chaperone system preferentially disaggregates toxic oligomers and short fibrils, while its activity against large, less toxic amyloids is severely impaired. Biochemical and kinetic characterization of the disassembly process reveals that this behavior is the result of an all-or-none abrupt solubilization of individual aggregates. High-speed atomic force microscopy explicitly shows that disassembly starts with the destabilization of the tips and rapidly progresses to completion through protofilament unzipping and depolymerization without accumulation of harmful oligomeric intermediates. Our data provide molecular insights into the selective processing of toxic amyloids, which is critical to identify potential therapeutic targets against increasingly prevalent neurodegenerative disorders.

Aberrant aggregation of α-synuclein (α-syn) into amyloid fibrils and subsequent accumulation into intracellular inclusions is a hallmark of neurodegenerative disorders such as Parkinson’s disease, dementia with Lewy bodies, and multiple system atrophy (13). In these diseases, soluble α-syn monomers misfold and self-assemble, forming small oligomeric species that retain the highly disordered structure of the monomeric state (4). These species are rather unstable and can undergo structural rearrangements, including a gain in β-sheet structure that generates more stable species (4, 5). β-structured oligomers can grow further through monomer addition or self-association, finally giving rise to well-defined amyloid fibrils (46). Despite the controversial evidence about the relationship between the different species that populate the aggregation process and cellular toxicity, the prevalent view is that both intermediate oligomers and small fibrils are neurotoxic (7). Due to their abnormal interactions with cellular components, certain types of oligomers are key pathogenic agents in the development of the disease (810). In particular, they can disrupt membranes, induce oxidative stress, dysregulate calcium homeostasis, cause mitochondria dysfunction, or impair the proteasome system (11). Furthermore, α-syn oligomers have been implicated in the spreading of the disease, as these aggregates can be transmitted between cells (12, 13). Small fibrils have also been related to intercellular spreading and propagation of neurodegeneration (1418). In contrast, large amyloid aggregates are believed to be relatively inert, as their highly ordered packing and slow diffusion reduces undesired interactions with cellular components. Even so, large aggregates can generate intermediate species that contribute to cytotoxicity through secondary processes such as fragmentation or nucleation on the aggregate surface (19, 20).To counteract the toxic effect of protein aggregates, cells have evolved a sophisticated protein homeostasis network that coordinates protein synthesis, folding, disaggregation and degradation (21). This network is composed of the translational machinery, molecular chaperones and cochaperones, the ubiquitin-proteasome system, and the autophagy machinery. The way this network tackles amyloid aggregates remains poorly understood. It has been previously reported that the constitutive human Hsp70 (Hsc70) in collaboration with its Hsp40 cochaperone (Hdj1 or DnaJB1) slowly disassembles preformed α-syn fibrils (22). This activity was further stimulated by adding the NEF Hsp110 (Apg2). HspB5, a small heat shock protein also known as αB-crystallin, potentiated α-syn fibril disassembly by the ternary chaperone mixture. Although this chaperone combination was able to disaggregate fibrils, they did it in a timescale of weeks through a depolymerization process. Only when Hsp104, a yeast representative of the Hsp100 family able of fragmenting fibrils, was added to the mixture, disassembly occurred within hours (22). The lack of Hsp104 homologs in metazoans questioned whether this activity was physiologically relevant in humans. A later study revealed that a chaperone complex composed solely of members of the Hsp70, Hsp40, and Hsp110 families was able to efficiently reverse α-syn amyloid fibrils through both fragmentation and depolymerization, generating smaller fibrils, oligomers, and, ultimately, monomers (23). Despite the importance of this emerging disaggregase functionality, its mechanism of action remains largely unknown. Recently, the same chaperone mixture has been reported to also disaggregate tau and Htt fibrils (2426), pointing to this Hsp70-based machinery as a potential human amyloid disaggregase.The two-fold aim of this work is, firstly, to test whether human disaggregase remodels with the same efficiency the different aggregates that populate the complex process of amyloid formation and, secondly, to shed light on the key mechanisms involved in the disassembly of amyloids. We show that the human disaggregase system disassembles toxic oligomers and short fibrils much better than large, less toxic fibrils, and that it does so by an enhanced destabilization of the small aggregated forms. Explicitly, fibril disassembly involves destabilization of the fibril ends and unzipping of the protofilaments, which allow depolymerization. The fast propagation of protofilament depolymerization toward the opposite fibril end is consistent with entropic pulling forces exerted by Hsc70 upon binding the fibril surface.  相似文献   

9.
10.
The generation of α-synuclein (α-syn) truncations from incomplete proteolysis plays a significant role in the pathogenesis of Parkinson’s disease. It is well established that C-terminal truncations exhibit accelerated aggregation and serve as potent seeds in fibril propagation. In contrast, mechanistic understanding of N-terminal truncations remains ill defined. Previously, we found that disease-related C-terminal truncations resulted in increased fibrillar twist, accompanied by modest conformational changes in a more compact core, suggesting that the N-terminal region could be dictating fibril structure. Here, we examined three N-terminal truncations, in which deletions of 13-, 35-, and 40-residues in the N terminus modulated both aggregation kinetics and fibril morphologies. Cross-seeding experiments showed that out of the three variants, only ΔN13-α-syn (14‒140) fibrils were capable of accelerating full-length fibril formation, albeit slower than self-seeding. Interestingly, the reversed cross-seeding reactions with full-length seeds efficiently promoted all but ΔN40-α-syn (41–140). This behavior can be explained by the unique fibril structure that is adopted by 41–140 with two asymmetric protofilaments, which was determined by cryogenic electron microscopy. One protofilament resembles the previously characterized bent β-arch kernel, comprised of residues E46‒K96, whereas in the other protofilament, fewer residues (E61‒D98) are found, adopting an extended β-hairpin conformation that does not resemble other reported structures. An interfilament interface exists between residues K60‒F94 and Q62‒I88 with an intermolecular salt bridge between K80 and E83. Together, these results demonstrate a vital role for the N-terminal residues in α-syn fibril formation and structure, offering insights into the interplay of α-syn and its truncations.

Amyloid formation of α-synuclein (α-syn) is a pathological feature of Parkinson’s disease (PD), multiple-system atrophy (MSA), and dementia with Lewy bodies (1, 2). An abundant presynaptic protein (3), α-syn is 140 amino acids in length with a putative biological function in aiding the exocytosis of synaptic vesicles (46), in which the first 89 N-terminal residues fold into a helical structure upon membrane association (7). In its disease-associated, aggregated amyloid state, residues 37 through 97 adopt β-sheet structure (8), which overlaps with the lipid-binding domain. Notably, both N- and C-terminal α-syn truncations are associated with PD (9). So far, N-terminally truncated (ΔN) α-syn variants 5‒140, 39‒140, 65‒140, 66‒140, 68‒140, and 71‒140 and C-terminally truncated (ΔC) α-syn variants, 1‒101, 1‒103, 1‒115, 1‒122, 1‒124, 1‒135, and 1‒139 have been found in brains of PD patients (1012).α-Syn truncations originate from incomplete degradation, which has been attributed to various cytosolic (1315) and lysosomal proteases (16, 17). In fact, ∼60% of the abovementioned truncations can be assigned to cleavages by lysosomal asparagine endopeptidase (AEP), cathepsin (Cts) D, CtsB, and CtsL (1517). Removal of the C terminus (residues 104–140) is shown to accelerate fibril formation both in vitro and in vivo (1825). On the other hand, perplexing behaviors of ΔN-variants have been documented; while deleting the first 20 residues has minimal perturbation, the removal of either the first 10 or 30 residues slows aggregation kinetics (26). Nevertheless, the influence of N-terminal residues on α-syn aggregation has been shown by both insertion [tandem repeat of residues 9–30 (27)] and deletion [Δ36–42 (28) and Δ52–55 (29)] mutants, in which fibril formation can be completely impeded.Recently, structure determination by cryogenic electron microscopy (cryo-EM) has revealed fibril structures for full-length α-syn (1–140) (24, 3032), C-terminal truncations (24, 33), phosphorylated Y39 (34), and PD-related mutants, E46K (35, 36), H50Q (37), and A53T (38). One striking feature of these fibrils is the eclectic mix of structures, often termed as fibril polymorphism. In fact, it was recently shown that different conformational strains of α-syn fibrils are present in PD and MSA patients (39, 40). The outstanding question still remains as to how the same polypeptide chain can produce such a vast number of polymorphic structures. While there are significant structural differences, some features of α-syn fibrils are conserved. All fibrils are formed from a twisting pair of protofilaments with the exception of a H50Q polymorph, which is composed of a single filament. A kernel motif of a bent β-arch appears in all structures. Also, at least one inter- or intramolecular salt bridge between a Lys and Glu is revealed in each structure (24, 3038, 40), which is not surprising given that there are numerous possibilities for salt bridges between the 14 Lys, 8 Glu, and 2 Asp residues located throughout the first 100 residues in the sequence (Fig. 1A and SI Appendix, Fig. S1). Generally, residues between 37 and 97 constitute the fibril core with a few exceptions that involve additional residues in the N terminus, which include phosphorylated Y39 fibrils with an extended core of 1–100 (34) and two polymorphs of 1–140 showing interactions of N-terminal β-strands (residues 14–24) (30). Fibrils derived from brains of MSA patients also indicate additional involvement of the N-terminal region extending to residue 14 (40). Due to the contribution of N-terminal residues in these structures and the fact that C-terminal truncations resulted in modest conformational changes, we hypothesize that N-terminal residues play a greater role in influencing fibril structure.Open in a separate windowFig. 1.Aggregation of ΔN-α-syns. (A) Schematic representation of α-syn primary sequence (residues 1–140), showing basic (blue) and acidic (red) residues. Underlined regions correspond to truncations used in this study: 14‒140 (blue), 36‒140 (magenta), and 41‒140 (green). (B and C) Comparison of aggregation kinetics monitored by ThT fluorescence at 37 °C. [α-Syn] = 35 µM (B) and 70 µM (C) with [ThT] = 10 µM in 20 mM NaPi, 140 mM NaCl, pH 7.4. The solid line and shaded region represent the mean and SD, respectively (n ≥ 4). Representative TEM images of (D) 1‒140, (E) 14‒140, (F) 36‒140, and (G) 41‒140 were taken at 35 µM. Different fibril polymorphs observed are noted. Additional fields of view are shown in SI Appendix, Figs. S3–S5.Here, we sought to understand the role of the N terminus in α-syn fibril formation by removing different N-terminal residues and evaluating their effects on aggregation kinetics, fibril structure, and propagation. Three ∆N-terminal constructs (14‒140, 36‒140, and 41‒140) have been examined, in which the first 13-, 35-, and 40-residues in the N terminus were deleted (Fig. 1A). We specifically chose these sites based on the locations of native Gly residues, which allows us to generate native sequences (i.e., no overhang) upon Tobacco Etch Virus (TEV) protease cleavage of the hexahistidine affinity tag, which facilitates facile protein purification. All three ∆N-α-syn exhibited different aggregation kinetics and distinct fibril ultrastructural features as determined by thioflavin-T (ThT) fluorescence and transmission electron microscopy (TEM), respectively. In cross-seeding experiments, both fibrillar 36‒140 and 41‒140 did not seed the full-length (1‒140) protein, while 14‒140 fared better but less efficient than self-seeding, supportive of the significant impact of removing N-terminal residues in fibril structure. The reverse reaction involving full-length seeds showed that fibril formation of 14‒140 and 36‒140 but not 41‒140 could be accelerated. This observation is explained by the fibril structure adopted by 41–140, which was determined by cryo-EM to an overall resolution of 3.2 Å. Unlike any currently known α-syn structure, the amyloid core is formed by two asymmetric protomers with different amino acid chain lengths, adopting an extended β-hairpin (E61‒D98) and the bent β-arch kernel (E46‒K96) with a large nonpolar interfilament interface (442 Å2) stabilized by an intermolecular salt bridge between K80 and E83. Collectively, these results establish the important role of N-terminal residues in fibril formation and structure.  相似文献   

11.
Intraneuronal inclusions of misfolded α-synuclein (α-syn) and prion-like spread of the pathologic α-syn contribute to progressive neuronal death in Parkinson’s disease (PD). Despite the pathologic significance, no efficient therapeutic intervention targeting α-synucleinopathy has been developed. In this study, we provide evidence that astrocytes, especially those cultured from the ventral midbrain (VM), show therapeutic potential to alleviate α-syn pathology in multiple in vitro and in vivo α-synucleinopathic models. Regulation of neuronal α-syn proteostasis underlies the therapeutic function of astrocytes. Specifically, VM-derived astrocytes inhibited neuronal α-syn aggregation and transmission in a paracrine manner by correcting not only intraneuronal oxidative and mitochondrial stresses but also extracellular inflammatory environments, in which α-syn proteins are prone to pathologic misfolding. The astrocyte-derived paracrine factors also promoted disassembly of extracellular α-syn aggregates. In addition to the aggregated form of α-syn, VM astrocytes reduced total α-syn protein loads both by actively scavenging extracellular α-syn fibrils and by a paracrine stimulation of neuronal autophagic clearance of α-syn. Transplantation of VM astrocytes into the midbrain of PD model mice alleviated α-syn pathology and protected the midbrain dopamine neurons from neurodegeneration. We further showed that cografting of VM astrocytes could be exploited in stem cell–based therapy for PD, in which host-to-graft transmission of α-syn pathology remains a critical concern for long-term cell therapeutic effects.

Parkinson’s disease (PD) is a prevalent neurodegenerative disorder with movement symptoms characterized by progressive loss of dopaminergic (DA) neurons in the substantia nigra (SN) pars compacta of the midbrain with the concomitant loss of nigrostriatal DA neurotransmission. A pathologic hallmark of PD is intraneuronal inclusion of α-synuclein (α-syn) aggregates, called Lewy bodies and Lewy neurites. The α-syn aggregates cause various cellular dysfunctions including mitochondrial impairment, defective endoplasmic reticulum (ER) function, autolysosomal pathways, and synaptic and nuclear dysfunctions (1, 2). Aggregated α-syn is released from neuronal cells and acts as a ligand for patterned recognition receptors, which activate inflammatory responses in glial cells (3, 4). Furthermore, the pathologic protein aggregates undergo neuron-to-neuron transmission in a prion-like fashion (reviewed in ref. 5). The α-syn propagation and neuroinflammation are closely related to disease progression and clinical severity (6).Given its pathologic significance, the α-syn proteinopathy is a major research focus to develop disease-modifying therapies for PD and other synucleinopathic disorders such as Lewy body dementia, multiple system atrophy, and certain forms of Alzheimer’s disease. However, no therapeutic intervention to effectively eliminate the pathologic α-syn has been developed to date. In addition to the diseased conditions, the aggregated species of α-syn are also accumulated in the midbrain SN during normal aging, but not in young brain tissues (7), suggesting the existence of homeostatic regulation to prevent and resolve α-syn aggregation in young and healthy brains. This suggests homeostatic functions may be useful in developing therapeutic tools. In this regard, astrocytes are a prime cell type to be studied for therapeutic applications, as this glia cell type has multiple functions related to maintaining brain homeostasis, including those for correct functioning of neurons and protecting neuronal cells from pathologic insults (reviewed in ref. 8). Recent studies have shown the capacity of astrocytes to efficiently take up and degrade α-syn (912). Due to the astrocyte scavenging effect, α-syn inclusions are usually not detected in astrocytes of PD patients except in advanced stages of the disease (1318). In addition, in contrast to efficient transmission of neuronal α-syn proteins into astrocytes, α-syn transfer from astrocytes to neuronal cells is inefficient (11), collectively suggesting a role for astrocytes in scavenging α-syn rather than in spreading it. The role of homeostatic astrocytes in α-syn pathology, however, remains to be unraveled.In this study, we showed that astrocytes, especially those cultured from the ventral midbrain (VM), the brain region primarily affected in PD, substantially alleviate neuronal α-syn pathology by regulating a series of the proteostasis procedures associated with formation, transmission, disaggregation, and clearance of toxic α-syn aggregates. Upon transplantation, VM-type astrocytes efficiently eliminated pathologic α-syn accumulation and α-syn–induced DA neuron degeneration in the midbrain of PD model mice. We further show that host-to-graft propagation of toxic α-syn, reported as a critical concern in the cell-based therapeutic approach for PD (19, 20), was greatly prevented by cografting the cultured astrocytes. Based on these findings, the therapeutic actions of astrocytes are proposed for use in relieving α-syn–mediated neuronal toxicity and in setting up a desirable cell-based therapy free from host-to-graft α-syn propagation in PD.  相似文献   

12.
The interaction of signal regulatory protein α (SIRPα) on macrophages with CD47 on cancer cells is thought to prevent antibody (Ab)-dependent cellular phagocytosis (ADCP) of the latter cells by the former. Blockade of the CD47-SIRPα interaction by Abs to CD47 or to SIRPα, in combination with tumor-targeting Abs such as rituximab, thus inhibits tumor formation by promoting macrophage-mediated ADCP of cancer cells. Here we show that monotherapy with a monoclonal Ab (mAb) to SIRPα that also recognizes SIRPβ1 inhibited tumor formation by bladder and mammary cancer cells in mice, with this inhibitory effect being largely dependent on macrophages. The mAb to SIRPα promoted polarization of tumor-infiltrating macrophages toward an antitumorigenic phenotype, resulting in the killing and phagocytosis of cancer cells by the macrophages. Ablation of SIRPα in mice did not prevent the inhibitory effect of the anti-SIRPα mAb on tumor formation or its promotion of the cancer cell–killing activity of macrophages, however. Moreover, knockdown of SIRPβ1 in macrophages attenuated the stimulatory effect of the anti-SIRPα mAb on the killing of cancer cells, whereas an mAb specific for SIRPβ1 mimicked the effect of the anti-SIRPα mAb. Our results thus suggest that monotherapy with Abs to SIRPα/SIRPβ1 induces antitumorigenic macrophages and thereby inhibits tumor growth and that SIRPβ1 is a potential target for cancer immunotherapy.

Macrophages are innate immune cells that show phenotypic heterogeneity and functional diversity; and they play key roles in development, tissue homeostasis and repair, and in cancer, as well as in defense against pathogens (13). In the tumor microenvironment (TME), macrophages are exposed to a variety of stimuli, including cell–cell contact, hypoxia, as well as soluble and insoluble factors such as cytokines, chemokines, metabolites, and extracellular matrix components (2, 4). These environmental cues promote the acquisition by macrophages of protumorigenic phenotypes that facilitate tumor development, progression, and metastasis as well as suppress antitumor immune responses (2, 4). A high density of macrophages within tumor tissue is associated with poor prognosis in patients with various types of cancer, including that of the bladder or breast (57). Depletion of macrophages in the TME or the reprogramming of these cells to acquire antitumorigenic phenotypes has been shown to ameliorate the immunosuppressive condition and result in a reduction in tumor burden in both preclinical and clinical studies (2, 4, 8, 9). Macrophages within the TME have therefore attracted much attention as a potential therapeutic target for cancer immunotherapy.Signal regulatory protein α (SIRPα) is a transmembrane protein that possesses one NH2-terminal immunoglobulin (Ig)-V–like and two Ig-C domains in its extracellular region, as well as immunoreceptor tyrosine-based inhibition motifs in its cytoplasmic region (10, 11). The extracellular region of SIRPα interacts with that of CD47, another member of the Ig superfamily of proteins, with this interaction constituting a means of cell–cell communication. The expression of SIRPα in hematopoietic cells is restricted to the myeloid compartment—including macrophages, neutrophils, and dendritic cells (DCs)—whereas CD47 is expressed in most normal cell types as well as cancer cells (12, 13). The interaction of SIRPα on macrophages with CD47 on antibody (Ab)-opsonized viable cells such as blood cells or cancer cells prevents phagocytosis of the latter cells by the former (1315), with this negative regulation of macrophages being thought to be mediated by SHP1, a protein tyrosine phosphatase that binds to the cytoplasmic region of SIRPα (14). Indeed, blockade of the CD47–SIRPα interaction by Abs to either SIRPα or CD47, in combination with a tumor-targeting Ab such as rituximab (anti-CD20), was found to enhance the Ab-dependent cellular phagocytosis (ADCP) activity of macrophages for cancer cells that do not express SIRPα, resulting in marked suppression of tumor formation in mice (1519). Targeting of SIRPα in combination with a tumor-targeting Ab therefore provides a potential approach to cancer immunotherapy dependent on enhancement of the ADCP activity of macrophages for cancer cells. In contrast, the effect of Abs to SIRPα in the absence of a tumor-targeting Ab on the phagocytosis by macrophages of, as well as on tumor formation by, cancer cells that do not express SIRPα was minimal or limited.We have now further examined the antitumor efficacy of a monoclonal Ab (mAb) to mouse SIRPα (MY-1) (20) in immunocompetent mice transplanted subcutaneously with several types of murine cancer cells that do not express SIRPα. This Ab prevents the binding of mouse CD47 to SIRPα and cross-reacts with mouse SIRPβ1 (15). We found that monotherapy with MY-1 efficiently attenuated the growth of tumors formed by bladder or mammary cancer cells. In addition, MY-1 markedly promoted the induction of antitumorigenic macrophages able to target these cancer cells. Furthermore, our results suggest that SIRPβ1 on macrophages likely participated in the antitumorigenic effect of MY-1.  相似文献   

13.
The importin α family belongs to the conserved nuclear transport pathway in eukaryotes. However, the biological functions of importin α in the plasma membrane are still elusive. Here, we report that importin α, as a plasma membrane–associated protein, is exploited by the rice stripe virus (RSV) to enter vector insect cells, especially salivary gland cells. When the expression of three importin α genes was simultaneously knocked down, few virions entered the salivary glands of the small brown planthopper, Laodelphax striatellus. Through hemocoel inoculation of virions, only importin α2 was found to efficiently regulate viral entry into insect salivary-gland cells. Importin α2 bound the nucleocapsid protein of RSV with a relatively high affinity through its importin β–binding (IBB) domain, with a dissociation constant KD of 9.1 μM. Furthermore, importin α2 and its IBB domain showed a distinct distribution in the plasma membrane through binding to heparin in heparan sulfate proteoglycan. When the expression of importin α2 was knocked down in viruliferous planthoppers or in nonviruliferous planthoppers before they acquired virions, the viral transmission efficiency of the vector insects in terms of the viral amount and disease incidence in rice was dramatically decreased. These findings not only reveal the specific function of the importin α family in the plasma membrane utilized by viruses, but also provide a promising target gene in vector insects for manipulation to efficiently control outbreaks of rice stripe disease.

The importin α family belongs to the conserved importin α/β nuclear transport pathway in eukaryotes (13). It is well known that the importin α family plays an indispensable role in transporting proteins from the cytoplasm to the nucleus, with diverse functions in gene regulation, cell physiology, and differentiation (1, 4, 5). In addition to nucleocytoplasmic transport, some members of the importin α family localize to the plasma membrane with palmitoylation modification or through binding to heparin in heparan sulfate proteoglycan (HSPG) (68). Increased importin α levels in the plasma membrane are concomitant with decreased importin α levels in the cytoplasm, which affect the nuclear import of cargos and regulates intracellular scaling (7). However, the function of the importin α family in the plasma membrane is still elusive.Many plant viruses are transmitted by vector insects in a persistent, circulative mode, which is characterized by systemic invasion of diverse tissues prior to entering salivary glands and release in saliva (913). The salivary glands are the last barriers for viral transmission to overcome (1418). Unfortunately, the molecular mechanisms underlying viral entry into salivary-gland cells are not well known. The rice stripe virus (RSV) is a typical persistent, circulative plant virus and is capable of proliferating in the midgut epithelial cells and of being efficiently transmitted by the vector insect small brown planthopper (Laodelphax striatellus) (19). This virus causes one of the most destructive rice stripe diseases, showing an incidence of up to 80% and causing yield losses of 30 to 40% in the rice fields of Asian countries (20). RSV is a nonenveloped negative-strand RNA virus of the Tenuivirus genus (21, 22). The genome of RSV contains four single-stranded RNA segments, each of which is encapsidated by a viral nucleocapsid protein (NP). In addition to the NP, RSV encodes an RNA-dependent RNA polymerase and five nonstructural proteins (NS2, NSvc2, NS3, SP, and NSvc4) (2325).In our recent work, we found that three importin α proteins, importin α1 (GenBank registration number MT036051), α2 (MT036050), and α3 (MT036052), of the small brown planthopper participate in the nuclear entry of RSV through direct interactions with RSV NPs, triggering an antiviral caspase-dependent apoptotic reaction (26). Knockdown of the expression of all the three importin α genes retarded the nuclear entry of RSV and led to an increase in viral load in planthoppers (26). However, we did not determine the influence on viral transmission. In the present study, we surprisingly found that one of the importin α proteins, importin α2, is associated with the plasma membrane and efficiently facilitates viral entry into insect salivary glands and subsequent viral transmission.  相似文献   

14.
15.
α-Synuclein (α-syn) phosphorylation at serine 129 (pS129–α-syn) is substantially increased in Lewy body disease, such as Parkinson’s disease (PD) and dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB). However, the pathogenic relevance of pS129–α-syn remains controversial, so we sought to identify when pS129 modification occurs during α-syn aggregation and its role in initiation, progression and cellular toxicity of disease. Using diverse aggregation assays, including real-time quaking-induced conversion (RT-QuIC) on brain homogenates from PD and DLB cases, we demonstrated that pS129–α-syn inhibits α-syn fibril formation and seeded aggregation. We also identified lower seeding propensity of pS129–α-syn in cultured cells and correspondingly attenuated cellular toxicity. To build upon these findings, we developed a monoclonal antibody (4B1) specifically recognizing nonphosphorylated S129–α-syn (WT–α-syn) and noted that S129 residue is more efficiently phosphorylated when the protein is aggregated. Using this antibody, we characterized the time-course of α-syn phosphorylation in organotypic mouse hippocampal cultures and mice injected with α-syn preformed fibrils, and we observed aggregation of nonphosphorylated α-syn followed by later pS129–α-syn. Furthermore, in postmortem brain tissue from PD and DLB patients, we observed an inverse relationship between relative abundance of nonphosphorylated α-syn and disease duration. These findings suggest that pS129–α-syn occurs subsequent to initial protein aggregation and apparently inhibits further aggregation. This could possibly imply a potential protective role for pS129–α-syn, which has major implications for understanding the pathobiology of Lewy body disease and the continued use of reduced pS129–α-syn as a measure of efficacy in clinical trials.

Parkinson’s disease (PD) and dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB) are both associated with underlying Lewy body disease, which represents the second most common neurodegenerative disorder after Alzheimer’s disease (1, 2). The neuropathological hallmark of Lewy body disease is the intracellular aggregation of the protein α-synuclein (α-syn) into spherical cytoplasmic inclusions, termed Lewy bodies, but are also observed in neuronal processes as Lewy neurites (LNs) (3).α-Syn is thought to play a central role in the pathobiology of Lewy body disease. Single-point mutations and genetic modifications affecting α-syn expression—through duplications, triplications, or polymorphisms in its promoter—have been linked to both idiopathic and familial forms of Lewy body disease (46). Nevertheless, neuropathological studies utilizing pan–α-syn antibodies, recognizing both physiological and pathological forms of the protein, do not consistently report a relationship between the load of Lewy body pathology and clinical disease severity (2). To reconcile the apparent importance of α-syn in Lewy body disease with the difficulty relating Lewy body burdens in the brain to phenotypic severity, continued research has focused on the identification of particularly disease-relevant forms of α-syn. α-Syn undergoes various posttranslational modifications (PTMs)—including acetylation, nitration, ubiquitination, and glycosylation and phosphorylation at serine 129 (pS129)—increases from ∼4% under physiological conditions to 90% in Lewy body disease, suggesting it is associated with the disease state (79).Previous studies have reported that pS129 enhances intracellular aggregate formation in SH-SY5Y cells (10), and mediates cell death through activation of the unfolded protein response pathway (11). Furthermore, studies in rodent models have suggested that pS129 exacerbates the rate of pathological protein aggregation and deposition, with subsequent negative effects on neuronal functioning (12). However, these studies are counterbalanced by others reporting a potentially neuroprotective function of phosphorylation in animal models (13, 14) and cellular model systems (15). Additionally, studies have reported neutral findings regarding pS129 modification as neither enhancing nor diminishing cellular toxicity and α-syn aggregation (16, 17). Despite the uncertain pathogenic role of pS129 in Lewy body disease, antibodies against pS129 are widely used, based on the putative view that they label a species of α-syn that is particularly disease-relevant. These studies often employ pS129–α-syn as a marker of the abundance of protein inclusions to stage disease severity and evaluate the relationship between its abundance and important clinical or pathological variables, such as disease duration, phenotypic severity, or cell loss (18). Such studies typically identify that pS129 abundance throughout the brain correlates with disease severity (1921), though it remains uncertain whether phosphorylation precedes protein aggregation or occurs secondarily to deposition of nonphosphorylated α-syn, and whether pS129 is a key driver of pathogenicity or simply a useful marker of a neurodegenerative process (22, 23). Therefore, although there is a substantial literature on pS129 in Lewy body disease, there is continued controversy regarding its potential contribution to disease states, with numerous studies reporting discordant findings. Despite contradictory findings regarding the disease-relevance of pS129, it is widely viewed as a particularly disease-associated modification, thus necessitating further research to address its importance for Lewy body disease.To address the key questions regarding the pathogenic relevance of pS129–α-syn, the present study aimed to undertake a comprehensive and multidisciplinary project to address this important and pressing question. The key aim of the study was to better understand the role of pS129 in the natural history of Lewy body disease, by determining when pS129 occurs in the development of α-syn aggregates and how it affects the aggregation-propensity and cytotoxicity of α-syn  相似文献   

16.
The biogenesis of integral β-barrel outer membrane proteins (OMPs) in gram-negative bacteria requires transport by molecular chaperones across the aqueous periplasmic space. Owing in part to the extensive functional redundancy within the periplasmic chaperone network, specific roles for molecular chaperones in OMP quality control and assembly have remained largely elusive. Here, by deliberately perturbing the OMP assembly process through use of multiple folding-defective substrates, we have identified a role for the periplasmic chaperone Skp in ensuring efficient folding of OMPs by the β-barrel assembly machine (Bam) complex. We find that β-barrel substrates that fail to integrate into the membrane in a timely manner are removed from the Bam complex by Skp, thereby allowing for clearance of stalled Bam–OMP complexes. Following the displacement of OMPs from the assembly machinery, Skp subsequently serves as a sacrificial adaptor protein to directly facilitate the degradation of defective OMP substrates by the periplasmic protease DegP. We conclude that Skp acts to ensure efficient β-barrel folding by directly mediating the displacement and degradation of assembly-compromised OMP substrates from the Bam complex.

The cell envelopes of gram-negative bacteria, mitochondria, and chloroplasts all contain an outer membrane (OM) consisting of integral transmembrane proteins that assume a β-barrel conformation (1, 2). In gram-negative bacteria such as Escherichia coli, β-barrel outer membrane proteins (OMPs) contribute to the selective permeability of the OM, protecting the cell from harmful molecules while still allowing for the uptake of nutrients (3). Structurally and functionally diverse OMPs serve a number of roles critical to cell viability, namely the selective passage of small molecules, efflux of toxins, insertion of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) onto the cell surface, and assembly of OMPs themselves (1, 4). Reflective of their importance in maintaining cellular integrity, defects in OMP biogenesis confer sensitivity to a wide array of toxic molecules including detergents, bile salts, and most importantly, antibiotics (5, 6). As such, considerable efforts have been made to identify agents that inhibit essential cellular processes performed by OMPs (712), with hopes of hastening the development of novel therapeutics to combat the ever-growing threat of antibiotic-resistant infections caused by gram-negative microbes (13, 14).Ensuring efficient OMP biogenesis is a particularly challenging cellular feat. Newly synthesized OMPs must traverse the aqueous, oxidizing periplasm in an unfolded state, avoid self-aggregation, and subsequently complete proper assembly, all in an environment devoid of cellular energy such as adenosine triphosphate (15). A multitude of molecular chaperones and proteases function to overcome this challenge by minimizing unfolded OMP accumulation and facilitating OMP transport to the OM assembly machinery (16). Although more than a dozen chaperones and proteases with clear implications in OMP biogenesis have been identified (1618), the most well-characterized and predominant proteins in E. coli are the chaperones SurA and Skp, as well as the chaperone protease DegP. Numerous genetic, biochemical, and proteomic studies have demonstrated that SurA is the primary periplasmic chaperone that facilitates transport of the bulk mass of OMP substrates to the OM (1924). Skp and DegP, on the other hand, comprise a secondary, partially redundant OMP biogenesis pathway that primarily serves to minimize accumulation of unfolded OMPs, either by rescuing their assembly or promoting their degradation (19, 20).Notably, Skp binds unfolded OMPs with dissociation constants in the low nanomolar range (25, 26), exceeding the binding affinities of either SurA or DegP (2729), to form highly stable Skp–OMP complexes that display lifetimes on the order of hours (30). Given the substantial stability of Skp–OMP complexes, the precise mechanism of OMP release from Skp remains poorly understood. The rapid conformational dynamics of OMPs bound within the Skp cavity have been proposed to enable local substrate release that is ultimately driven by the recognition and folding of OMPs by the OM assembly machinery (30), thus coupling client release from Skp to the thermodynamic stability provided by OMP integration into a membrane (31). Indeed, substrate release and folding of OMPs from Skp–OMP complexes is enabled in vitro by incubation with OM folding machinery–containing liposomes (28, 32), demonstrating that Skp can facilitate productive OMP assembly. This mechanism of folding-driven substrate release has been similarly observed in genetic and biochemical studies indicating that Skp is capable of directly inserting OMPs into lipid bilayers in vitro (33), as well as the inner membrane in vivo (34), without assistance from the OM assembly machinery.Whether OMPs are capable of being removed from Skp within physiological timescales in the absence of coupled folding, however, is not entirely clear. Under conditions of periplasmic stress, in which the burden of unfolded OMPs exceeds the rate at which they can be assembled, the activities of both Skp and DegP become crucial (19, 20, 24, 35). Given that Skp not only binds substrates with a higher affinity than DegP (29) but also does so several orders of magnitude faster (36), how unfolded OMPs are transferred from Skp to DegP for degradation under stress conditions is not obvious. Indeed, direct transfer of an OMP from Skp to DegP has yet to be demonstrated, and intriguingly, the formation of Skp–DegP–OMP ternary complexes has been reported in such experiments (29, 36).Folding and insertion of nascent OMPs into the OM is catalyzed by the heteropentameric β-barrel assembly machine (Bam) complex, consisting of the BamA β-barrel and four accessory lipoproteins, BamBCDE (37, 38). Recent biochemical and structural studies have provided a relatively clear current model for the mechanism of β-barrel assembly. Following substrate recruitment to BamD (39), BamA catalyzes the sequential addition of β-hairpins in a C-to-N-terminal manner (40), with early folding occurring within the interior of the BamA barrel (41). Folding proceeds until membrane integration occurs, and subsequent stepwise hydrogen-bond formation between N and C substrate termini facilitates barrel closure and substrate release into the membrane (40).One outstanding question concerns the fate of OMP substrates that have stalled while folding on the Bam complex. Protein misfolding in the periplasm, translational error, or impaired Bam complex function can result in substrates arresting on the assembly machinery, a condition that can ultimately be lethal if left unchecked (4244). Until recently, investigations of stalled OMP substrates have been largely impeded by a lack of structurally defined folding intermediates and the absence of an established general mechanism of OMP assembly. Several studies to date have utilized mutant alleles of the large β-barrel LptD to probe Bam complex assembly (39, 41, 45, 46), and multiple proteases that degrade assembly-compromised LptD within distinct stages of its folding regime have been identified (46, 47). It is unclear, however, whether these stringent quality control mechanisms monitoring assembly of LptD are exerted on all β-barrel substrates or whether LptD represents a unique case given its remarkably complex folding trajectory (48). Given that OMP assembly by the Bam complex has evolved to be incredibly efficient—so efficient that unfolded OMPs cannot be detected at steady state—it stands to reason that quality control mechanisms ensuring the efficient assembly of all β-barrel substrates exist. Recently, it has been shown that extracellular loop deletions within the C-terminal half of the BamA β-barrel cause early folding defects and thus render stalled BamA susceptible to proteolysis by DegP (40). How DegP actively disengages a partially folded, stalled substrate from its folding on BamA, given the relatively weak and slow nature of DegP binding, is not obvious.Here, we have utilized an assembly-defective variant of a slow-folding β-barrel OMP to investigate the fate of substrates that engage the OM assembly machinery but otherwise fail to undergo efficient folding and membrane integration. We identify a specific role for the periplasmic chaperone Skp in facilitating the degradation of defective OMP substrates by the protease DegP, thus imposing an active quality control mechanism that serves to remove assembly-compromised substrates from the Bam complex. Strikingly, we find that Skp is degraded alongside its bound substrate by DegP, thereby functioning as a sacrificial adaptor protein. By evaluating the requirement for Skp in degradation of a series of sequentially stalled β-barrel substrates, we find that Skp is only required to degrade substrates that have initiated folding on the Bam complex. Thus, β-barrel OMPs that have stalled during assembly specifically require Skp for their removal from the Bam complex and subsequent degradation by DegP. We conclude that Skp acts to ensure efficient β-barrel assembly by facilitating both the direct removal and degradation of stalled substrates from the Bam complex.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Estrogen receptor α (ER-α) mediates estrogen-dependent cancer progression and is expressed in most breast cancer cells. However, the molecular mechanisms underlying the regulation of the cellular abundance and activity of ER-α remain unclear. We here show that the protein phosphatase calcineurin regulates both ER-α stability and activity in human breast cancer cells. Calcineurin depletion or inhibition down-regulated the abundance of ER-α by promoting its polyubiquitination and degradation. Calcineurin inhibition also promoted the binding of ER-α to the E3 ubiquitin ligase E6AP, and calcineurin mediated the dephosphorylation of ER-α at Ser294 in vitro. Moreover, the ER-α (S294A) mutant was more stable and activated the expression of ER-α target genes to a greater extent compared with the wild-type protein, whereas the extents of its interaction with E6AP and polyubiquitination were attenuated. These results suggest that the phosphorylation of ER-α at Ser294 promotes its binding to E6AP and consequent degradation. Calcineurin was also found to be required for the phosphorylation of ER-α at Ser118 by mechanistic target of rapamycin complex 1 and the consequent activation of ER-α in response to β-estradiol treatment. Our study thus indicates that calcineurin controls both the stability and activity of ER-α by regulating its phosphorylation at Ser294 and Ser118. Finally, the expression of the calcineurin A–α gene (PPP3CA) was associated with poor prognosis in ER-α–positive breast cancer patients treated with tamoxifen or other endocrine therapeutic agents. Calcineurin is thus a promising target for the development of therapies for ER-α–positive breast cancer.

Estrogen receptor α (ER-α) plays a central role in the proliferation of breast cancer cells by increasing the expression of oncogenes, such as those encoding cyclin D1 and c-Myc (1). The expression and activity of ER-α are increased in >70% of breast cancer cases, and the receptor is targeted by drugs such as tamoxifen (2, 3). A substantial proportion of ER-α–positive breast cancer cells become resistant to anti‐estrogens, however, resulting in the progression of the disease. The mechanisms by which the cancer cells acquire resistance to these agents include the generation of splice variants of ER-α, the mutation of the ER-α gene (ESR1), and changes in stability of the ER-α protein (4).Increased protein stability appears to be a key contributor to the up-regulation of ER-α in breast cancer. The ubiquitination of ER-α is one mechanism responsible for ER-α degradation. Several E3 ligases that mediate the degradation of ER-α have been identified and include E6-associated protein (E6AP) (5), carboxyl terminus of Hsp70-interacting protein (CHIP) (6), breast cancer type 1 (BRCA1) (7), BRCA1-associated RING domain 1 (8), S phase kinase–associated protein 2 (SKP2) (9), and mouse double minute 2 homolog (10). On the other hand, other E3 ligases—such as RING finger protein (RNF) 31, shank-associated RH domain–interacting protein, and RNF8 (1113)—have been shown to promote ER-α signaling by stabilizing ER-α protein.The residues Lys302 and Lys303 of ER-α are targeted for ubiquitination (14). The ubiquitination of ER-α is associated with its phosphorylation, with several kinases such as cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK) 11 (15), Src (5), protein kinase C (16), p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase (9), and extracellular signal–regulated kinase 7 (17) having been shown to phosphorylate the protein. The phosphorylation of ER-α at Ser294 has thus been related to its ubiquitination by SKP2 (9), with the Ser294-phosphorylated form of ER-α being a preferred substrate for ubiquitination by SKP2 in vitro. However, the expression level of ER-α was found to be unaltered in cells depleted of SKP2, suggesting that other E3 ligases may contribute to the degradation of ER-α subsequent to its phosphorylation at Ser294.Calcium is an important regulator of signaling pathways that control oncogenesis and cancer progression, and Ca2+ signaling has been linked to signaling by ER-α. β-estradiol (E2) has been shown to induce rapid Ca2+ influx in cells, and the Ca2+-binding protein calmodulin interacts with ER-α, increases its stability, and modulates E2-regulated gene expression (18). Calcineurin is a Ca2+/calmodulin-activated serine–threonine phosphatase that plays a major role in the regulation of immediate cellular responses and gene expression by Ca2+ signaling (19). It is also a target of immunosuppressive drugs administered in clinical practice, such as cyclosporine A and FK506. Calcineurin is composed of two subunits: a catalytic subunit, designated calcineurin A, that is encoded by three genes (PPP3CA, PPP3CB, and PPP3CC), and a regulatory subunit, designated calcineurin B, that is encoded by two genes (PPP3R1 and PPP3R2).In the present study, we found that calcineurin plays a previously unrecognized role as a positive regulator of the stability and activity of ER-α in breast cancer cells by mediating its dephosphorylation at Ser294, as well as the activation of mechanistic target of rapamycin complex 1 (mTORC1) and the consequent phosphorylation of ER-α at Ser118, respectively. Furthermore, a high-expression level of PPP3CA was associated with poor prognosis in a subset of breast cancer patients, suggesting that the selective inhibition of calcineurin might be an effective approach to the treatment of ER-α–positive breast cancer.  相似文献   

19.
β-Lactams are the most important class of antibacterials, but their use is increasingly compromised by resistance, most importantly via serine β-lactamase (SBL)-catalyzed hydrolysis. The scope of β-lactam antibacterial activity can be substantially extended by coadministration with a penicillin-derived SBL inhibitor (SBLi), i.e., the penam sulfones tazobactam and sulbactam, which are mechanism-based inhibitors working by acylation of the nucleophilic serine. The new SBLi enmetazobactam, an N-methylated tazobactam derivative, has recently completed clinical trials. Biophysical studies on the mechanism of SBL inhibition by enmetazobactam reveal that it inhibits representatives of all SBL classes without undergoing substantial scaffold fragmentation, a finding that contrasts with previous reports on SBL inhibition by tazobactam and sulbactam. We therefore reinvestigated the mechanisms of tazobactam and sulbactam using mass spectrometry under denaturing and nondenaturing conditions, X-ray crystallography, and NMR spectroscopy. The results imply that the reported extensive fragmentation of penam sulfone–derived acyl–enzyme complexes does not substantially contribute to SBL inhibition. In addition to observation of previously identified inhibitor-induced SBL modifications, the results reveal that prolonged reaction of penam sulfones with SBLs can induce dehydration of the nucleophilic serine to give a dehydroalanine residue that undergoes reaction to give a previously unobserved lysinoalanine cross-link. The results clarify the mechanisms of action of widely clinically used SBLi, reveal limitations on the interpretation of mass spectrometry studies concerning mechanisms of SBLi, and will inform the development of new SBLi working by reaction to form hydrolytically stable acyl–enzyme complexes.

β-Lactamases are a major mechanism of resistance to the clinically vital β-lactam antibiotics, with >2,000 different β-lactamases reported (1). β-Lactamases are grouped into classes A, C, and D, which employ a nucleophilic serine in catalysis (serine β-lactamases, SBLs), and class B, which employ metal ions in catalysis (2). Presently, SBLs are the most important β-lactamases from a clinical perspective. SBL inhibitors (SBLi) have been developed for use in combination with a β-lactam antibiotic, with tazobactam (3), sulbactam (4), and clavulanic acid (5) being the most widely used SBLi. These SBLi all contain a β-lactam ring which reacts with SBLs to produce an acyl–enzyme complex (AEC) intermediate, as is also the case for efficient SBL substrates (Fig. 1A). With efficient substrates the β-lactam–derived AEC is readily hydrolyzed. With SBLi the reaction bifurcates at the AEC stage; in addition to hydrolysis, reaction of the AEC via opening of the β-lactam fused five-membered ring occurs to give one or more relatively hydrolytically stable species (Figs. 1B and and2).2). The nature of these species is central to SBLi inhibition and has been studied by crystallography (611) and ultraviolet-visible (UV/Vis) (10, 12) and Raman (6, 7, 9, 1215) spectroscopy, as well as different types of mass spectrometry (MS) (10, 1622).Open in a separate windowFig. 1.Sulfone derivatives of penicillins are potent clinically used mechanism-based inhibitors of SBLs. (A) Outline mechanism for penicillin hydrolysis as catalyzed by SBLs; reaction proceeds via an AEC, which is efficiently hydrolyzed. (B) Sulfone derivatives of penicillins are SBLi that react to give one or more hydrolytically stable complex(es), the nature of which was the focus of our work.Open in a separate windowFig. 2.Pathways for reactions of penam sulfones with SBLs. Following initial acyl–enzyme 2 formation the main transient inactivation pathway occurs via thiazolidine ring opening to give species 3-5 which are relatively stable to hydrolysis. Fragmentation of 3-5 can occur in rare cases and is promoted by acid to give 6-8 or heat to give 11. In rare cases fragmentation of 2-5 can result in irreversible inactivation of the SBL to give 9 and 10. Efficient hydrolysis of the β-lactam occurs to give a β-amino acid product 12, which in solution fragments to give 13-16. Our results imply biologically relevant inhibition involves 3-5, or equivalent mass species.The structures of tazobactam and sulbactam are closely related to those of the penicillins; they differ by lack of a C-6 side chain, functionalization of the pro-S methyl group (in case of tazobactam), and by oxidation of the thiazolidine to a sulfone. These differences result in a loss of useful antibacterial activity but a gain of potent SBL inhibition. Although the presence of sulfur in drugs is common [e.g., sulfonamide antibiotics (23)] and there is growing interest in covalently acting drugs (24, 25), sulfones are rare in drugs and, as far as we are aware, sulbactam and tazobactam are the only clinically approved sulfone-containing drugs working by covalent reaction with their targets (2628).Since the clinical introduction of the pioneering SBLi, β-lactamases have evolved and SBLi use is increasingly compromised by extended spectrum β-lactamases (ESBLs) and inhibitor-resistant SBLs (29). Efforts have been made to develop new SBLi, including those with and without a β-lactam. The latter include diazabicyclooctanes (30) and cyclic boronates (31, 32). However, β-lactam–containing SBLi remain of most clinical importance. Among SBLi in clinical development, enmetazobactam (formerly AAI-101; Fig. 1) is of particular interest because it is a “simple” N-methylated derivative of the triazole ring of tazobactam (33). In combination with cefepime, enmetazobactam is reported to manifest substantially better antimicrobial properties against class A ESBL-producing strains than the commonly used piperacillin/tazobactam combination (20, 33, 34).We report studies on the mechanism of SBL inhibition by enmetazobactam using denaturing and nondenaturing (native) MS methods, NMR spectroscopy, and crystallography. The results led us to reevaluate the mechanisms of SBL inhibition by the clinically important sulfone-containing SBLi, i.e., tazobactam and sulbactam, and reveal limitations on the interpretation of MS studies concerning SBL inhibition.  相似文献   

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