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1.
BMC Dev Biol ; 8: 18, 2008 Feb 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18289368

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Signals from the extracellular environment control many aspects of cell behaviour including proliferation, survival, differentiation, adhesion and migration. It is increasingly evident that these signals can be modulated by a group of matricellular proteins called the CCN family. CCN proteins have multiple domains through which they regulate the activities of a variety of signalling molecules including TGFbeta, BMPs and integrins, thereby influencing a wide range of processes in development and disease. Whilst the developmental roles of CCN1 and CCN2 have been elucidated, very little is known about the function of CCN3 (NOV). To investigate this, we have generated mice carrying a targeted mutation in the Nov gene (Novdel3) which reveal for the first time its diverse functions in embryos and adults. RESULTS: By replacing Nov exon 3 with a TKneomycin cassette, we have generated Novdel3-/- mice which produce no full length NOV protein and express at a barely detectable level a mutant NOV protein that lacks the VWC domain. In Novdel3-/- embryos, and to a lesser extent in Novdel3+/- embryos, development of the appendicular and axial skeleton was affected with enlarged vertebrae, elongated long bones and digits, delayed ossification, increased bone mineralization and severe joint malformations. Primary embryo fibroblasts from Novdel3-/- mutant embryos showed enhanced chondrogenesis and osteogenesis. Cardiac development was also influenced leading to enlargement and abnormal modelling of the endocardial cushions, associated with septal defects and delayed fusion. In adults, cardiomyopathy was apparent, with hypertrophy and calcification of the septum and left ventricle dilation. Muscle atrophy was seen by 5 months of age, associated with transdifferentiation to fat. Premature tissue degeneration was also seen in the lens, with cataracts present from 6 months. CONCLUSION: We have generated the first mice with a mutation in the Nov gene (Novdel3). Our data demonstrate that NOV is a regulator of skeletal and cardiac development, and implicates NOV in various disease processes including cardiomyopathy, muscle atrophy and cataract formation. Novdel3 mutants represent a valuable resource for studying NOV's role in the modulation and co-ordination of multiple signalling pathways that underpin organogenesis and tissue homeostasis.


Assuntos
Osso e Ossos/anormalidades , Cardiomiopatias/genética , Catarata/genética , Marcação de Genes , Coração/embriologia , Proteínas Imediatamente Precoces/genética , Peptídeos e Proteínas de Sinalização Intercelular/genética , Atrofia Muscular/genética , Animais , Osso e Ossos/embriologia , Calcinose/genética , Diferenciação Celular , Condrócitos/patologia , Condrogênese , Fator de Crescimento do Tecido Conjuntivo , Embrião de Mamíferos/anormalidades , Embrião de Mamíferos/metabolismo , Fibroblastos/metabolismo , Regulação da Expressão Gênica no Desenvolvimento , Heterozigoto , Homozigoto , Proteínas Imediatamente Precoces/metabolismo , Peptídeos e Proteínas de Sinalização Intercelular/metabolismo , Camundongos , Proteínas Mutantes/metabolismo , Proteína Sobre-Expressa em Nefroblastoma , Osteogênese
2.
Mol Cell Biol ; 25(16): 6964-79, 2005 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16055710

RESUMO

The inducible transcriptional complex AP-1, composed of c-Fos and c-Jun proteins, is crucial for cell adaptation to many environmental changes. While its mechanisms of activation have been extensively studied, how its activity is restrained is poorly understood. We report here that lysine 265 of c-Fos is conjugated by the peptidic posttranslational modifiers SUMO-1, SUMO-2, and SUMO-3 and that c-Jun can be sumoylated on lysine 257 as well as on the previously described lysine 229. Sumoylation of c-Fos preferentially occurs in the context of c-Jun/c-Fos heterodimers. Using nonsumoylatable mutants of c-Fos and c-Jun as well as a chimeric protein mimicking sumoylated c-Fos, we show that sumoylation entails lower AP-1 transactivation activity. Interestingly, single sumoylation at any of the three acceptor sites of the c-Fos/c-Jun dimer is sufficient to substantially reduce transcription activation. The lower activity of sumoylated c-Fos is not due to inhibition of protein entry into the nucleus, accelerated turnover, and intrinsic inability to dimerize or to bind to DNA. Instead, cell fractionation experiments suggest that decreased transcriptional activity of sumoylated c-Fos is associated with specific intranuclear distribution. Interestingly, the phosphorylation of threonine 232 observed upon expression of oncogenically activated Ha-Ras is known to superactivate c-Fos transcriptional activity. We show here that it also inhibits c-Fos sumoylation, revealing a functional antagonism between two posttranslational modifications, each occurring within a different moiety of a bipartite transactivation domain of c-Fos. Finally we report that the sumoylation of c-Fos is a dynamic process that can be reversed via multiple mechanisms. This supports the idea that this modification does not constitute a final inactivation step that necessarily precedes protein degradation.


Assuntos
Regulação para Baixo , Regulação Neoplásica da Expressão Gênica , Proteínas Proto-Oncogênicas c-fos/metabolismo , Proteínas Proto-Oncogênicas c-jun/metabolismo , Fator de Transcrição AP-1/metabolismo , Sítios de Ligação , Dimerização , Glutationa Transferase/metabolismo , Células HeLa , Humanos , Immunoblotting , Imunoprecipitação , Cinética , Luciferases/metabolismo , Lisina/química , Microscopia de Fluorescência , Proteína Quinase 1 Ativada por Mitógeno/metabolismo , Proteína Quinase 3 Ativada por Mitógeno/metabolismo , Mutagênese Sítio-Dirigida , Fosforilação , Ligação Proteica , Estrutura Terciária de Proteína , Proteínas Proto-Oncogênicas c-jun/química , Proteínas Proto-Oncogênicas p21(ras)/metabolismo , Proteínas Recombinantes de Fusão/química , Proteína SUMO-1/metabolismo , Proteínas Modificadoras Pequenas Relacionadas à Ubiquitina/metabolismo , Frações Subcelulares , Treonina/química , Fatores de Tempo , Fator de Transcrição AP-1/química , Transcrição Gênica , Ativação Transcricional , Transfecção
3.
Crit Rev Oncol Hematol ; 54(1): 31-51, 2005 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15780906

RESUMO

The proteasome is the main proteolytic machinery of the cell. It is responsible for the basal turnover of many intracellular polypeptides, the elimination of abnormal proteins and the generation of the vast majority of peptides presented by class I major histocompatibility complex molecules. Proteasomal proteolysis is also involved in the control of virtually all cellular functions and major decisions through the spatially and timely regulated destruction of essential cell regulators. Therefore, the elucidation of its molecular mechanisms is crucial for the full understanding of the physiology of cells and whole organisms. Conversely, it is increasingly clear that proteasomal degradation is either altered in numerous pathological situations, including many cancers and diseases resulting from aberrant cell differentiation, or instrumental for the development of these pathologies. This, consequently, makes it an attractive target for therapeutical intervention. There is ample evidence that most cell proteins must be polyubiquitylated prior to proteasomal degradation. If the structure and the mode of functioning of the proteasome, as well as the enzymology of ubiquitylation, are relatively well understood, how substrates are delivered to and recognized by the proteolytic machine has remained mysterious till recently. The recent literature indicates that the mechanisms involved are multiple, complex and exquisitely regulated and provides new potential targets for anti-cancer pharmacological intervention.


Assuntos
Neoplasias/tratamento farmacológico , Complexo de Endopeptidases do Proteassoma/fisiologia , Proteínas/metabolismo , Ubiquitina/metabolismo , Animais , Sistemas de Liberação de Medicamentos , Humanos , Neoplasias/enzimologia
4.
Med Sci (Paris) ; 21(2): 141-9, 2005 Feb.
Artigo em Francês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15691484

RESUMO

The proteasome is the main intracellular proteolytic machinery. It is involved in all major cellular functions and decisions. It has long been thought that prior ubiquitinylation of almost all of its substrates was necessary for degradation. It has also long been considered that ubiquitinylation and degradation were two uncoupled mechanisms and that the recruitment of ubiquitinylated species was only performed by specialized subunits of the proteasome. The recent literature questions this simplified view. It also suggests that, on the one hand, the fraction of proteins hydrolyzed by the proteasome independently of their ubiquitinylation has largely been underestimated and, on the other hand, that the recognition of ubiquitinylated proteins involves complex addressing systems. Furthermore, it indicates a higher order structuration of the ubiquitin/proteasome pathway, a fraction of the proteasome and of ubiquitinylation enzymes being engaged in supramolecular complexes. Finally, proteasomal degradation is altered in a number of pathological situations. It, thus, constitutes a therapeutic target and the first applications are emerging.


Assuntos
Complexo de Endopeptidases do Proteassoma/fisiologia , Proteínas/metabolismo , Animais , Humanos , Neoplasias/tratamento farmacológico , Neoplasias/enzimologia , Ubiquitina/fisiologia
5.
Oncogene ; 22(10): 1461-74, 2003 Mar 13.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12629509

RESUMO

c-fos gene is expressed constitutively in a number of tissues as well as in certain tumor cells and is inducible, in general rapidly and transiently, in virtually all other cell types by a variety of stimuli. Its protein product, c-Fos, is a short-lived transcription factor that heterodimerizes with various protein partners within the AP-1 transcription complex via leucine zipper/leucine zipper interactions for binding to specific DNA sequences. It is mostly, if not exclusively, degraded by the proteasome. To localize the determinant(s) responsible for its instability, we have conducted a genetic analysis in which the half-lives of c-Fos mutants and chimeras made with the stable EGFP reporter protein were compared under two experimental conditions taken as example of continous and inducible expression. Those were constitutive expression in asynchronously growing Balb/C 3T3 mouse embryo fibroblasts and transient induction in the same cells undergoing the G0/G1 phase transition upon stimulation by serum. Our work shows that c-Fos is degraded faster in synchronous- than in asynchronous cells. This difference in turnover is primarily accounted for by several mechanisms. First, in asynchronous cells, a unique C-terminal destabilizer is active whereas, in serum-stimulated cells two destabilizers located at both extremities of the protein are functional. Second, heterodimerization and/or binding to DNA accelerates protein degradation only during the G0/G1 phase transition. Adding another level of complexity to turnover control, phosphorylation at serines 362 and 374, which are c-Fos phosphorylation sites largely modified during the G0/G1 phase transition, stabilizes c-Fos much more efficiently in asynchronous than in serum-stimulated cells. In both cases, the reduced degradation rate is due to inhibition of the activity of the C-terminal destabilizer. However, in serum-stimulated cells, this effect is partially masked by the activation of the N-terminal destabilizer and basic domain/leucine zipper-dependent mechanisms. Taken together, our data show that multiple degradation mechanisms, differing according to the conditions of expression, may operate on c-Fos to ensure a proper level and/or timing of expression. Moreover, they also indicate that the half-life of c-Fos during the G0/G1 phase transition is determined by a delicate balance between opposing stabilizing and destabilizing mechanisms operating at the same time.


Assuntos
Cisteína Endopeptidases/metabolismo , Complexos Multienzimáticos/metabolismo , Proteínas Proto-Oncogênicas c-fos/metabolismo , Animais , Divisão Celular/fisiologia , Células Cultivadas , Embrião de Mamíferos/citologia , Fator de Crescimento Epidérmico/genética , Fibroblastos , Fase G1/fisiologia , Regulação da Expressão Gênica , Genes Reporter , Meia-Vida , Camundongos , Camundongos Endogâmicos BALB C , Fosforilação , Complexo de Endopeptidases do Proteassoma , Estrutura Terciária de Proteína , Proteínas Proto-Oncogênicas c-fos/química , Proteínas Proto-Oncogênicas c-fos/genética , Ratos , Proteínas Recombinantes/genética , Proteínas Recombinantes/metabolismo , Deleção de Sequência , Serina/metabolismo
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