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Probing a wide range of cellular phenotypes in neurodevelopmental disorders using patient-derived neural progenitor cells (NPCs) can be facilitated by 3D assays, as 2D systems cannot entirely recapitulate the arrangement of cells in the brain. Here, we developed a previously unidentified 3D migration and differentiation assay in layered hydrogels to examine how these processes are affected in neurodevelopmental disorders, such as Rett syndrome. Our soft 3D system mimics the brain environment and accelerates maturation of neurons from human induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC)-derived NPCs, yielding electrophysiologically active neurons within just 3 wk. Using this platform, we revealed a genotype-specific effect of methyl-CpG-binding protein-2 (MeCP2) dysfunction on iPSC-derived neuronal migration and maturation (reduced neurite outgrowth and fewer synapses) in 3D layered hydrogels. Thus, this 3D system expands the range of neural phenotypes that can be studied in vitro to include those influenced by physical and mechanical stimuli or requiring specific arrangements of multiple cell types.Neuronal migration and maturation is a key step in brain development. Defects in this process have been implicated in many disorders, including autism (1) and schizophrenia (2). Thoroughly understanding how neural progenitor cell (NPC) migration is affected in neurodevelopmental disorders requires a means of dissecting the process using cells with genetic alterations matching those in patients. Existing in vitro assays of migration generally involve measurement of cell movement across a scratch or gap or through a membrane toward a chemoattractant in 2D culture systems. Although widely used, such assays may not accurately reveal in vivo differences, as neuronal migration is tightly regulated by physical and chemical cues in the extracellular matrix (ECM) that NPCs encounter as they migrate.In vitro 3D culture systems offer a solution to these limitations (37). Compared with 2D culture, a 3D arrangement allows neuronal cells to interact with many more cells (4); this similarity to the in vivo setting has been shown to lengthen viability, enhance survival, and allow formation of longer neurites and more dense networks in primary neurons in uniform matrices or aggregate culture (8, 9). Indeed, 3D culture systems have been used to study nerve regeneration, neuronal and glial development (1012), and amyloid-β and tau pathology (13). Thus, measuring neuronal migration through a soft 3D matrix would continue this trend toward using 3D systems to study neuronal development and pathology.We sought to develop a 3D assay to examine potential migration and neuronal maturation defects in Rett syndrome (RTT), a genetic neurodevelopmental disorder that affects 1 in 10,000 children in the United States and is caused by mutations in the X-linked methyl-CpG-binding protein-2 (MECP2) gene (14). Studies using induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) from RTT patients in traditional 2D adherent culture have revealed reduced neurite outgrowth and synapse number, as well as altered calcium transients and spontaneous postsynaptic currents (1). However, 2D migration assays seemed unlikely to reveal inherent defects in this developmental process, which could be affected because MeCP2 regulates multiple developmental related genes (15). Migration of RTT iPSC-derived NPCs has not previously been studied.Using a previously unidentified 3D tissue culture system that allows creation of layered architectures, we studied differences in migration of MeCP2-mutant iPSC-derived versus control iPSC-derived NPCs. This approach revealed a defect in migration of MeCP2-mutant iPSC-derived NPCs induced by either astrocytes or neurons. Further, this 3D system accelerated maturation of neurons from human iPSC-derived NPCs, yielding electrophysiologically active neurons within just 3 wk. With mature neurons derived from RTT patients and controls, we further confirmed defective neurite outgrowth and synaptogenesis in MeCP2-mutant neurons. Thus, this 3D system enables study of morphological features accessible in 2D system as well as previously unexamined phenotypes.  相似文献   

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Kinesin-1 is a dimeric motor protein, central to intracellular transport, that steps hand-over-hand toward the microtubule (MT) plus-end, hydrolyzing one ATP molecule per step. Its remarkable processivity is critical for ferrying cargo within the cell: over 100 successive steps are taken, on average, before dissociation from the MT. Despite considerable work, it is not understood which features coordinate, or “gate,” the mechanochemical cycles of the two motor heads. Here, we show that kinesin dissociation occurs subsequent to, or concomitant with, phosphate (Pi) release following ATP hydrolysis. In optical trapping experiments, we found that increasing the steady-state population of the posthydrolysis ADP·Pi state (by adding free Pi) nearly doubled the kinesin run length, whereas reducing either the ATP binding rate or hydrolysis rate had no effect. The data suggest that, during processive movement, tethered-head binding occurs subsequent to hydrolysis, rather than immediately after ATP binding, as commonly suggested. The structural change driving motility, thought to be neck linker docking, is therefore completed only upon hydrolysis, and not ATP binding. Our results offer additional insights into gating mechanisms and suggest revisions to prevailing models of the kinesin reaction cycle.Since its discovery nearly 30 years ago (1), kinesin-1—the founding member of the kinesin protein superfamily—has emerged as an important model system for studying biological motors (2, 3). During “hand-over-hand” stepping, kinesin dimers alternate between a two–heads-bound (2-HB) state, with both heads attached to the microtubule (MT), and a one–head-bound (1-HB) state, where a single head, termed the tethered head, remains free of the MT (4, 5). The catalytic cycles of the two heads are maintained out of phase by a series of gating mechanisms, thereby enabling the dimer to complete, on average, over 100 steps before dissociating from the MT (68). A key structural element for this coordination is the neck linker (NL), a ∼14-aa segment that connects each catalytic head to a common stalk (9). In the 1-HB state, nucleotide binding is thought to induce a structural reconfiguration of the NL, immobilizing it against the MT-bound catalytic domain (2, 3, 1017). This transition, called “NL docking,” is believed to promote unidirectional motility by biasing the position of the tethered head toward the next MT binding site (2, 3, 1017). The completion of an 8.2-nm step (18) entails the binding of this tethered head to the MT, ATP hydrolysis, and detachment of the trailing head, thereby returning the motor to the ATP-waiting state (2, 3, 1017). Prevailing models of the kinesin mechanochemical cycle (2, 3, 10, 14, 15, 17), which invoke NL docking upon ATP binding, explain the highly directional nature of kinesin motility and offer a compelling outline of the sequence of events following ATP binding. Nevertheless, these abstractions do not speak directly to the branching transitions that determine whether kinesin dissociates from the MT (off-pathway) or continues its processive reaction cycle (on-pathway). The distance moved by an individual motor before dissociating—the run length—is limited by unbinding from the MT. The propensity for a dimer to unbind involves a competition among multiple, force-dependent transitions in the two heads, which are not readily characterized by traditional structural or bulk biochemical approaches. Here, we implemented high-resolution single-molecule optical trapping techniques to determine transitions in the kinesin cycle that govern processivity.  相似文献   

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Membrane recruitment of cytohesin family Arf guanine nucleotide exchange factors depends on interactions with phosphoinositides and active Arf GTPases that, in turn, relieve autoinhibition of the catalytic Sec7 domain through an unknown structural mechanism. Here, we show that Arf6-GTP relieves autoinhibition by binding to an allosteric site that includes the autoinhibitory elements in addition to the PH domain. The crystal structure of a cytohesin-3 construct encompassing the allosteric site in complex with the head group of phosphatidyl inositol 3,4,5-trisphosphate and N-terminally truncated Arf6-GTP reveals a large conformational rearrangement, whereby autoinhibition can be relieved by competitive sequestration of the autoinhibitory elements in grooves at the Arf6/PH domain interface. Disposition of the known membrane targeting determinants on a common surface is compatible with multivalent membrane docking and subsequent activation of Arf substrates, suggesting a plausible model through which membrane recruitment and allosteric activation could be structurally integrated.Guanine nucleotide exchange factors (GEFs) activate GTPases by catalyzing exchange of GDP for GTP (1). Because many GEFs are recruited to membranes through interactions with phospholipids, active GTPases, or other membrane-associated proteins (15), GTPase activation can be restricted or amplified by spatial–temporal overlap of GEFs with binding partners. GEF activity can also be controlled by autoregulatory mechanisms, which may depend on membrane recruitment (611). Structural relationships between these mechanisms are poorly understood.Arf GTPases function in trafficking and cytoskeletal dynamics (5, 12, 13). Membrane partitioning of a myristoylated (myr) N-terminal amphipathic helix primes Arfs for activation by Sec7 domain GEFs (1417). Cytohesins comprise a metazoan Arf GEF family that includes the mammalian proteins cytohesin-1 (Cyth1), ARNO (Cyth2), and Grp1 (Cyth3). The Drosophila homolog steppke functions in insulin-like growth factor signaling, whereas Cyth1 and Grp1 have been implicated in insulin signaling and Glut4 trafficking, respectively (1820). Cytohesins share a modular architecture consisting of heptad repeats, a Sec7 domain with exchange activity for Arf1 and Arf6, a PH domain that binds phosphatidyl inositol (PI) polyphosphates, and a C-terminal helix (CtH) that overlaps with a polybasic region (PBR) (2128). The overlapping CtH and PBR will be referred to as the CtH/PBR. The phosphoinositide specificity of the PH domain is influenced by alternative splicing, which generates diglycine (2G) and triglycine (3G) variants differing by insertion of a glycine residue in the β1/β2 loop (29). Despite similar PI(4,5)P2 (PIP2) affinities, the 2G variant has 30-fold higher affinity for PI(3,4,5)P3 (PIP3) (30). In both cases, PIP3 is required for plasma membrane (PM) recruitment (23, 26, 3133), which is promoted by expression of constitutively active Arf6 or Arl4d and impaired by PH domain mutations that disrupt PIP3 or Arf6 binding, or by CtH/PBR mutations (8, 3436).Cytohesins are autoinhibited by the Sec7-PH linker and CtH/PBR, which obstruct substrate binding (8). Autoinhibition can be relieved by Arf6-GTP binding in the presence of the PIP3 head group (8). Active myr-Arf1 and myr-Arf6 also stimulate exchange activity on PIP2-containing liposomes (37). Whether this effect is due to relief of autoinhibition per se or enhanced membrane recruitment is not yet clear. Phosphoinositide recognition by PH domains, catalysis of nucleotide exchange by Sec7 domains, and autoinhibition in cytohesins are well characterized (8, 16, 17, 30, 3843). How Arf-GTP binding relieves autoinhibition and promotes membrane recruitment is unknown. Here, we determine the structural basis for relief of autoinhibition and investigate potential mechanistic relationships between allosteric regulation, phosphoinositide binding, and membrane targeting.  相似文献   

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Tumor heterogeneity confounds cancer diagnosis and the outcome of therapy, necessitating analysis of tumor cell subsets within the tumor mass. Elevated expression of hyaluronan (HA) and HA receptors, receptor for HA-mediated motility (RHAMM)/HA-mediated motility receptor and cluster designation 44 (CD44), in breast tumors correlates with poor outcome. We hypothesized that a probe for detecting HA–HA receptor interactions may reveal breast cancer (BCa) cell heterogeneity relevant to tumor progression. A fluorescent HA (F-HA) probe containing a mixture of polymer sizes typical of tumor microenvironments (10–480 kDa), multiplexed profiling, and flow cytometry were used to monitor HA binding to BCa cell lines of different molecular subtypes. Formulae were developed to quantify binding heterogeneity and to measure invasion in vivo. Two subsets exhibiting differential binding (HA−/low vs. HAhigh) were isolated and characterized for morphology, growth, and invasion in culture and as xenografts in vivo. F-HA–binding amounts and degree of heterogeneity varied with BCa subtype, were highest in the malignant basal-like cell lines, and decreased upon reversion to a nonmalignant phenotype. Binding amounts correlated with CD44 and RHAMM displayed but binding heterogeneity appeared to arise from a differential ability of HA receptor-positive subpopulations to interact with F-HA. HAhigh subpopulations exhibited significantly higher local invasion and lung micrometastases but, unexpectedly, lower proliferation than either unsorted parental cells or the HA−/low subpopulation. Querying F-HA binding to aggressive tumor cells reveals a previously undetected form of heterogeneity that predicts invasive/metastatic behavior and that may aid both early identification of cancer patients susceptible to metastasis, and detection/therapy of invasive BCa subpopulations.Breast tumors display substantial heterogeneity driven by genetic and epigenetic mechanisms (13). These processes select and support tumor cell subpopulations with distinct phenotypes in proliferation, metastatic/invasive proclivity, and treatment susceptibility that contribute to clinical outcomes. Currently, there is a paucity of biomarkers to identify these subpopulations (312). Although detection of genetic heterogeneity may itself be a breast cancer (BCa) prognostic marker (3, 1315), the phenotypes manifested from this diversity are context-dependent. Therefore, phenotypic markers provide additional powerful tools for biological information required to design diagnostics and therapeutics. Glycomic approaches have enormous potential for revealing tumor cell phenotypic heterogeneity because glycans are themselves highly heterogeneous and their complexity reflects the nutritional, microenvironmental, and genetic dynamics of the tumors (1618).We used hyaluronan (HA) as a model carbohydrate ligand for probing heterogeneity in glycosaminoglycan–BCa cell receptor interactions. We reasoned this approach would reveal previously undetected cellular and functional heterogeneity linked to malignant progression because the diversity of cell glycosylation patterns, which can occur as covalent and noncovalent modifications of proteins and lipids as well as different sizes of such polysaccharides as HA, is unrivaled (16, 17, 19). In particular, tumor and wound microenvironments contain different sizes of HA polymers that bind differentially to cell receptors to activate signaling pathways regulating cell migration, invasion, survival, and proliferation (1922).More than other related glycosaminoglycans, HA accumulation within BCa tumor cells and peritumor stroma is a predictor of poor outcome (23) and of the conversion of the preinvasive form of BCa, ductal carcinoma in situ, to an early invasive form of BCa (24). HA is a nonantigenic and large, relatively simple, unbranched polymer, but the manner in which it is metabolized is highly complex (19, 25). There are literally thousands of different HA sizes in remodeling microenvironments, including tumors. HA polymers bind to cells via at least six known receptors (16, 19, 20, 2632). Two of these, cluster designation 44 (CD44) and receptor for HA-mediated motility/HA-mediated motility receptor (RHAMM/HMMR), form multivalent complexes with different ranges of HA sizes (19, 29, 33), and both receptors are implicated in BCa progression (1921, 23, 29, 30, 3336). Elevated CD44 expression in the peritumor stroma is associated with increased relapse (37), and in primary BCa cell subsets may contribute to tumor initiation and progression (3840). Elevated RHAMM expression in BCa tumor subsets is a prognostic indicator of poor outcome and increased metastasis (22, 33, 41). RHAMM polymorphisms may also be a factor in BCa susceptibility (42, 43).We postulated that multivalent interactions resulting from mixture of a polydisperse population of fluorescent HA (F-HA) sizes, typical of those found in remodeling microenvironments of wounds and tumors (19, 20, 29), with cellular HA receptors would uncover a heterogeneous binding pattern useful for sorting tumor cells into distinct subsets. We interrogated the binding of F-HA to BCa lines of different molecular subtypes, and related binding/uptake patterns to CD44 and RHAMM display, and to tumor cell growth, invasion, and metastasis.  相似文献   

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To dissect the kinetics of structural transitions underlying the stepping cycle of kinesin-1 at physiological ATP, we used interferometric scattering microscopy to track the position of gold nanoparticles attached to individual motor domains in processively stepping dimers. Labeled heads resided stably at positions 16.4 nm apart, corresponding to a microtubule-bound state, and at a previously unseen intermediate position, corresponding to a tethered state. The chemical transitions underlying these structural transitions were identified by varying nucleotide conditions and carrying out parallel stopped-flow kinetics assays. At saturating ATP, kinesin-1 spends half of each stepping cycle with one head bound, specifying a structural state for each of two rate-limiting transitions. Analysis of stepping kinetics in varying nucleotides shows that ATP binding is required to properly enter the one-head–bound state, and hydrolysis is necessary to exit it at a physiological rate. These transitions differ from the standard model in which ATP binding drives full docking of the flexible neck linker domain of the motor. Thus, this work defines a consensus sequence of mechanochemical transitions that can be used to understand functional diversity across the kinesin superfamily.Kinesin-1 is a motor protein that steps processively toward microtubule plus-ends, tracking single protofilaments and hydrolyzing one ATP molecule per step (16). Step sizes corresponding to the tubulin dimer spacing of 8.2 nm are observed when the molecule is labeled by its C-terminal tail (710) and to a two-dimer spacing of 16.4 nm when a single motor domain is labeled (4, 11, 12), consistent with the motor walking in a hand-over-hand fashion. Kinesin has served as an important model system for advancing single-molecule techniques (710) and is clinically relevant for its role in neurodegenerative diseases (13), making dissection of its step a popular ongoing target of study.Despite decades of work, many essential components of the mechanochemical cycle remain disputed, including (i) how much time kinesin-1 spends in a one-head–bound (1HB) state when stepping at physiological ATP concentrations, (ii) whether the motor waits for ATP in a 1HB or two-heads–bound (2HB) state, and (iii) whether ATP hydrolysis occurs before or after tethered head attachment (4, 11, 1420). These questions are important because they are fundamental to the mechanism by which kinesins harness nucleotide-dependent structural changes to generate mechanical force in a manner optimized for their specific cellular tasks. Addressing these questions requires characterizing a transient 1HB state in the stepping cycle in which the unattached head is located between successive binding sites on the microtubule. This 1HB intermediate is associated with the force-generating powerstroke of the motor and underlies the detachment pathway that limits motor processivity. Optical trapping (7, 19, 21, 22) and single-molecule tracking studies (4, 811) have failed to detect this 1HB state during stepping. Single-molecule fluorescence approaches have detected a 1HB intermediate at limiting ATP concentrations (11, 12, 14, 15), but apart from one study that used autocorrelation analysis to detect a 3-ms intermediate (17), the 1HB state has been undetectable at physiological ATP concentrations.Single-molecule microscopy is a powerful tool for studying the kinetics of structural changes in macromolecules (23). Tracking steps and potential substeps for kinesin-1 at saturating ATP has until now been hampered by the high stepping rates of the motor (up to 100 s−1), which necessitates high frame rates, and the small step size (8.2 nm), which necessitates high spatial precision (7). Here, we apply interferometric scattering microscopy (iSCAT), a recently established single-molecule tool with high spatiotemporal resolution (2427) to directly visualize the structural changes underlying kinesin stepping. By labeling one motor domain in a dimeric motor, we detect a 1HB intermediate state in which the tethered head resides over the bound head for half the duration of the stepping cycle at saturating ATP. We further show that at physiological stepping rates, ATP binding is required to enter this 1HB state and that ATP hydrolysis is required to exit it. This work leads to a significant revision of the sequence and kinetics of mechanochemical transitions that make up the kinesin-1 stepping cycle and provides a framework for understanding functional diversity across the kinesin superfamily.  相似文献   

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

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The dismal prognosis of malignant brain tumors drives the development of new treatment modalities. In view of the multiple activities of growth hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH), we hypothesized that pretreatment with a GHRH agonist, JI-34, might increase the susceptibility of U-87 MG glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) cells to subsequent treatment with the cytotoxic drug, doxorubicin (DOX). This concept was corroborated by our findings, in vivo, showing that the combination of the GHRH agonist, JI-34, and DOX inhibited the growth of GBM tumors, transplanted into nude mice, more than DOX alone. In vitro, the pretreatment of GBM cells with JI-34 potentiated inhibitory effects of DOX on cell proliferation, diminished cell size and viability, and promoted apoptotic processes, as shown by 3-(4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl)-2,5-diphenyltetrazolium bromide proliferation assay, ApoLive-Glo multiplex assay, and cell volumetric assay. Proteomic studies further revealed that the pretreatment with GHRH agonist evoked differentiation decreasing the expression of the neuroectodermal stem cell antigen, nestin, and up-regulating the glial maturation marker, GFAP. The GHRH agonist also reduced the release of humoral regulators of glial growth, such as FGF basic and TGFβ. Proteomic and gene-expression (RT-PCR) studies confirmed the strong proapoptotic activity (increase in p53, decrease in v-myc and Bcl-2) and anti-invasive potential (decrease in integrin α3) of the combination of GHRH agonist and DOX. These findings indicate that the GHRH agonists can potentiate the anticancer activity of the traditional chemotherapeutic drug, DOX, by multiple mechanisms including the induction of differentiation of cancer cells.Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) is one of the most aggressive human cancers, and the afflicted patients inevitably succumb. The dismal outcome of this malignancy demands great efforts to find improved methods of treatment (1). Many compounds have been synthesized in our laboratory in the past few years that have proven to be effective against diverse malignant tumors (214). These are peptide analogs of hypothalamic hormones: luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (LHRH), growth hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH), somatostatin, and analogs of other neuropeptides such as bombesin and gastrin-releasing peptide. The receptors for these peptides have been found to be widely distributed in the human body, including in many types of cancers (214). The regulatory functions of these hypothalamic hormones and other neuropeptides are not confined to the hypothalamo–hypophyseal system or, even more broadly, to the central nervous system (CNS). In particular, GHRH can induce the differentiation of ovarian granulosa cells and other cells in the reproductive system and function as a growth factor in various normal tissues, benign tumors, and malignancies (24, 6, 11, 1418). Previously, we also reported that antagonistic cytototoxic derivatives of some of these neuropeptides are able to inhibit the growth of several malignant cell lines (214).Our earlier studies showed that treatment with antagonists of LHRH or GHRH rarely effects complete regression of glioblastoma-derived tumors (5, 7, 10, 11). Previous studies also suggested that growth factors such as EGF or agonistic analogs of LHRH serving as carriers for cytotoxic analogs and functioning as growth factors may sensitize cancer cells to cytotoxic treatments (10, 19) through the activation of maturation processes. We therefore hypothesized that pretreatment with one of our GHRH agonists, such as JI-34 (20), which has shown effects on growth and differentiation in other cell lines (17, 18, 21, 22), might decrease the pluripotency and the adaptability of GBM cells and thereby increase their susceptibility to cytotoxic treatment.In vivo, tumor cells were implanted into athymic nude mice, tumor growth was recorded weekly, and final tumor mass was measured upon autopsy. In vitro, proliferation assays were used for the determination of neoplastic proliferation and cell growth. Changes in stem (nestin) and maturation (GFAP) antigen expression was evaluated with Western blot studies in vivo and with immunocytochemistry in vitro. The production of glial growth factors (FGF basic, TGFβ) was verified by ELISA. Further, using the Human Cancer Pathway Finder real-time quantitative PCR, numerous genes that play a role in the development of cancer were evaluated. We placed particular emphasis on the measurement of apoptosis, using the ApoLive-Glo Multiplex Assay kit and by detection of the expression of the proapoptotic p53 protein. This overall approach permitted the evaluation of the effect of GHRH agonist, JI-34, on the response to chemotherapy with doxorubicin.  相似文献   

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A series of mono- and dinuclear alkynylplatinum(II) terpyridine complexes containing the hydrophilic oligo(para-phenylene ethynylene) with two 3,6,9-trioxadec-1-yloxy chains was designed and synthesized. The mononuclear alkynylplatinum(II) terpyridine complex was found to display a very strong tendency toward the formation of supramolecular structures. Interestingly, additional end-capping with another platinum(II) terpyridine moiety of various steric bulk at the terminal alkyne would lead to the formation of nanotubes or helical ribbons. These desirable nanostructures were found to be governed by the steric bulk on the platinum(II) terpyridine moieties, which modulates the directional metal−metal interactions and controls the formation of nanotubes or helical ribbons. Detailed analysis of temperature-dependent UV-visible absorption spectra of the nanostructured tubular aggregates also provided insights into the assembly mechanism and showed the role of metal−metal interactions in the cooperative supramolecular polymerization of the amphiphilic platinum(II) complexes.Square-planar d8 platinum(II) polypyridine complexes have long been known to exhibit intriguing spectroscopic and luminescence properties (154) as well as interesting solid-state polymorphism associated with metal−metal and π−π stacking interactions (114, 25). Earlier work by our group showed the first example, to our knowledge, of an alkynylplatinum(II) terpyridine system [Pt(tpy)(C ≡ CR)]+ that incorporates σ-donating and solubilizing alkynyl ligands together with the formation of Pt···Pt interactions to exhibit notable color changes and luminescence enhancements on solvent composition change (25) and polyelectrolyte addition (26). This approach has provided access to the alkynylplatinum(II) terpyridine and other related cyclometalated platinum(II) complexes, with functionalities that can self-assemble into metallogels (2731), liquid crystals (32, 33), and other different molecular architectures, such as hairpin conformation (34), helices (3538), nanostructures (3945), and molecular tweezers (46, 47), as well as having a wide range of applications in molecular recognition (4852), biomolecular labeling (4852), and materials science (53, 54). Recently, metal-containing amphiphiles have also emerged as a building block for supramolecular architectures (4244, 5559). Their self-assembly has always been found to yield different molecular architectures with unprecedented complexity through the multiple noncovalent interactions on the introduction of external stimuli (4244, 5559).Helical architecture is one of the most exciting self-assembled morphologies because of the uniqueness for the functional and topological properties (6069). Helical ribbons composed of amphiphiles, such as diacetylenic lipids, glutamates, and peptide-based amphiphiles, are often precursors for the growth of tubular structures on an increase in the width or the merging of the edges of ribbons (64, 65). Recently, the optimization of nanotube formation vs. helical nanostructures has aroused considerable interests and can be achieved through a fine interplay of the influence on the amphiphilic property of molecules (66), choice of counteranions (67, 68), or pH values of the media (69), which would govern the self-assembly of molecules into desirable aggregates of helical ribbons or nanotube scaffolds. However, a precise control of supramolecular morphology between helical ribbons and nanotubes remains challenging, particularly for the polycyclic aromatics in the field of molecular assembly (6469). Oligo(para-phenylene ethynylene)s (OPEs) with solely π−π stacking interactions are well-recognized to self-assemble into supramolecular system of various nanostructures but rarely result in the formation of tubular scaffolds (7073). In view of the rich photophysical properties of square-planar d8 platinum(II) systems and their propensity toward formation of directional Pt···Pt interactions in distinctive morphologies (2731, 3945), it is anticipated that such directional and noncovalent metal−metal interactions might be capable of directing or dictating molecular ordering and alignment to give desirable nanostructures of helical ribbons or nanotubes in a precise and controllable manner.Herein, we report the design and synthesis of mono- and dinuclear alkynylplatinum(II) terpyridine complexes containing hydrophilic OPEs with two 3,6,9-trioxadec-1-yloxy chains. The mononuclear alkynylplatinum(II) terpyridine complex with amphiphilic property is found to show a strong tendency toward the formation of supramolecular structures on diffusion of diethyl ether in dichloromethane or dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) solution. Interestingly, additional end-capping with another platinum(II) terpyridine moiety of various steric bulk at the terminal alkyne would result in nanotubes or helical ribbons in the self-assembly process. To the best of our knowledge, this finding represents the first example of the utilization of the steric bulk of the moieties, which modulates the formation of directional metal−metal interactions to precisely control the formation of nanotubes or helical ribbons in the self-assembly process. Application of the nucleation–elongation model into this assembly process by UV-visible (UV-vis) absorption spectroscopic studies has elucidated the nature of the molecular self-assembly, and more importantly, it has revealed the role of metal−metal interactions in the formation of these two types of nanostructures.  相似文献   

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Assembly of appropriately oriented actin cables nucleated by formin proteins is necessary for many biological processes in diverse eukaryotes. However, compared with knowledge of how nucleation of dendritic actin filament arrays by the actin-related protein-2/3 complex is regulated, the in vivo regulatory mechanisms for actin cable formation are less clear. To gain insights into mechanisms for regulating actin cable assembly, we reconstituted the assembly process in vitro by introducing microspheres functionalized with the C terminus of the budding yeast formin Bni1 into extracts prepared from yeast cells at different cell-cycle stages. EM studies showed that unbranched actin filament bundles were reconstituted successfully in the yeast extracts. Only extracts enriched in the mitotic cyclin Clb2 were competent for actin cable assembly, and cyclin-dependent kinase 1 activity was indispensible. Cyclin-dependent kinase 1 activity also was found to regulate cable assembly in vivo. Here we present evidence that formin cell-cycle regulation is conserved in vertebrates. The use of the cable-reconstitution system to test roles for the key actin-binding proteins tropomyosin, capping protein, and cofilin provided important insights into assembly regulation. Furthermore, using mass spectrometry, we identified components of the actin cables formed in yeast extracts, providing the basis for comprehensive understanding of cable assembly and regulation.Eukaryotic cells contain populations of actin structures with distinct architectures and protein compositions, which mediate varied cellular processes (1). Understanding how F-actin polymerization is regulated in time and space is critical to understanding how actin structures provide mechanical forces for corresponding biological processes. Branched actin filament arrays, which concentrate at sites of clathrin-mediated endocytosis (2, 3) and at the leading edge of motile cells (4), are nucleated by the actin-related protein-2/3 (Arp2/3) complex. In contrast, bundles of unbranched actin filaments, which sometimes mediate vesicle trafficking or form myosin-containing contractile bundles, often are nucleated by formin proteins (514).Much has been learned about how branched actin filaments are polymerized by the Arp2/3 complex and how these filaments function in processes such as endocytosis (2, 15). In contrast, relatively little is known about how actin cables are assembled under physiological conditions. In previous studies, branched actin filaments derived from the Arp2/3 complex have been reconstituted using purified proteins (1619) or cellular extracts (2025). When microbeads were coated with nucleation-promoting factors for the Arp2/3 complex and then were incubated in cell extracts, actin comet tails were formed by sequential actin nucleation, symmetry breaking, and tail elongation. Importantly, the motility behavior of F-actin assembled by the Arp2/3 complex using defined, purified proteins differs from that of F-actin assembled by the Arp2/3 complex in the full complexity of cytoplasmic extracts (19, 2628).Formin-based actin filament assembly using purified proteins also has been reported (29, 30). However, reconstitution of formin-derived actin cables under the more physiological conditions represented by cell extracts has not yet been reported.The actin nucleation activity of formin proteins is regulated by an inhibitory interaction between the N- and C-terminal domains, which can be released when GTP-bound Rho protein binds to the formin N-terminal domain, allowing access of the C terminus (FH1-COOH) to actin filament barbed ends (3140). In yeast, the formin Bni1 N terminus also has an inhibitory effect on actin nucleation through binding to the C terminus (41).Interestingly, several recent reports provided evidence for cell-cycle regulation of F-actin dynamics in oocytes and early embryos (4245). However, which specific types of actin structures are regulated by the cell cycle and what kind of nucleation factors and actin interacting-proteins are involved remain to be determined.Here, we report a reconstitution of actin cables in yeast extracts from microbeads derivatized with Bni1 FH1-COOH, identifying the proteins involved, increasing the inventory of the proteins that regulate actin cable dynamics and establishing that the actin cable reconstitution in cytoplasmic extracts is cell-cycle regulated.  相似文献   

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