Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:3.4.25.1 (
proteasome
)
28,817
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In previous studies, the heat shock response, induced by hyperthermia or sodium arsenite, increased interleukin (IL)-6 production in intestinal mucosa and cultured human enterocytes. A novel way to induce the heat shock response, documented in other cell types, is treatment with
proteasome
inhibitors. It is not known if
proteasome
inhibition induces heat shock in enterocytes or influences IL-6 production. Here we tested the hypothesis that treatment of cultured Caco-2 cells, a human intestinal epithelial cell line, with
proteasome
inhibitors induces the heat shock response and stimulates IL-6 production. Treatment of Caco-2 cells with one of the
proteasome
inhibitors MG-132 or lactacystin activated the transcription factor heat shock factors (HSF)-1 and -2 and upregulated cellular levels of the 72-kDa heat shock protein
HSP
-72. The same treatment resulted in increased gene and protein expression of IL-6, a response that was blocked by quercetin. Additional experiments revealed that the IL-6 gene promoter contains a HSF-responsive element and that the IL-6 gene may be regulated by the heat shock response. The present results suggest that
proteasome
inhibition induces heat shock response and IL-6 production in enterocytes and that IL-6 may be a heat shock-responsive gene, at least under certain circumstances. The observations are important considering the multiple biological roles of IL-6, both locally in the gut mucosa and systemically, and considering recent proposals in the literature to use
proteasome
inhibitors in the clinical setting to induce the heat shock response.
...
PMID:Proteasome inhibitors induce heat shock response and increase IL-6 expression in human intestinal epithelial cells. 1189 5
Oculopharyngeal muscular dystrophy (OPMD) is a muscle disease of late onset associated with progressive ptosis of the eyelids, dysphagia, and unique tubulofilamentous intranuclear inclusions (INIs). OPMD is usually transmitted as an autosomal dominant trait (OMIM 164300). A rarer allelic autosomal recessive form has also been observed (OMIM 257950). Both forms are caused by short (GCG)8-13 expansions in the polyadenylate-binding protein nuclear 1 gene (PABPN1) located on chromosome 14q11.1. The mutations cause the lengthening of an N-terminal polyalanine domain. Both slippage and unequal recombination have been proposed as the mutation mechanisms. The size of the mutation has not yet been conclusively shown to inversely correlate with the severity of the phenotype. Mutated PABPN1 proteins have been shown to be constituents of the INIs. The INIs also contain ubiquitin,
proteasome
subunits,
HSP
40,
HSP
70, SKIP, and abundant poly(A)-mRNA. The exact mechanism responsible for polyalanine toxicity in OPMD is unknown. Various intranuclear inclusion dependent and independent mechanisms have been proposed based on the major known function of PABPN1 in polyadenylation of mRNA and its shuttling from the nucleus to the cytoplasm. OPMD is one of the few triplet-repeat diseases for which the function of the mutated gene is known. Because of the increasing number of diseases caused by polyalanine expansions and the pathological overlap with CAG/polyglutamine diseases, what pathological insight is gained by the study of OPMD could lead to a better understanding of a much larger group of developmental and degenerative diseases.
...
PMID:Oculopharyngeal muscular dystrophy: a late-onset polyalanine disease. 1452 87
Heat shock proteins (
HSP
's) closely interact with 20S
proteasome
and have been shown to maintain catalytic activity, responsible for the prevention of protein aggregation. A decrease in both
proteasome
activity and heat shock proteins (
HSP
's) has been observed with age. We investigated whether life-long calorie restriction (CR), a natural intervention, which prolongs life span, could prevent the age-associated decline in
HSP
's and restore the proteolytic activity of the 20S
proteasome
in skeletal muscle. Hence, we investigated
HSP
's and
proteasome
activity in the soleus muscle from 12-mo-old (Adult) and 26-28 mo old ad libitum fed (Old), and 26-28 mo old CR (Old-CR; fed 40% of ad libitum for their lifespan) male Fisher 344 rats. Trypsin-like
proteasome
activity in Old rats was significantly less than both Adult and Old-CR rats. Furthermore, no significant changes where found in chymotrypsin-like
proteasome
activity due to age or diet. Levels of
HSP
72 and 25 were significantly less in Old animals when compared to both Adult and Old-CR rats. In contrast, HSP 90 was elevated in Old rats by 220% compared to adult animals and life-long calorie restriction caused a significant induction (150%) compared to age-matched ad libitum fed animals. Protein carbonyls were significantly elevated in Old when compared to Adult rats, but showed no significant decline due to life long CR. This study shows that
HSP
's may be largely responsible for the restoration of the trypsin-like activity of the 20S
proteasome
with age. The large increase in HSP 90 is intriguing and further studies are required to elucidate its role in maintaining 20S
proteasome
function.
...
PMID:Life long calorie restriction increases heat shock proteins and proteasome activity in soleus muscles of Fisher 344 rats. 1566 30
Proteome analysis of human umbilical endothelial cells was performed to identify proteins that are modified during vascular endothelial cell growth factor (VEGF)-induced transition from the quiescent into the proliferating-migrative phenotype. Subtractive analysis of two-dimensional gel patterns of human endothelial cells, before and after stimulation with VEGF(165), revealed differences in 85 protein spots. All proteins were identified by peptide sequencing and peptide mass fingerprinting using an electrospray spectrometer. The proteins identified were members of specific families including Ca(2+)-binding proteins, fatty-acid binding proteins, structural proteins, and chaperones. Remarkably, there was a massive activation of cellular machinery for both protein synthesis and protein degradation. Thus, among up-regulated proteins there were members of all groups of heat shock proteins (HSPs; HSP 27,
HSP
60,
HSP
70p5,
HSP
70p8, HSP 90, and
HSP
96) and some other proteins showing either chaperone activity or which participate in assembly of multimolecular structures (TCP-1, desmoplakins, junction plakoglobin, GRP 94, thioredoxin related protein, and peptidylprolyl isomerase). The increased expression of HSPs was confirmed at the mRNA level at different stages of treatment with VEGF. Similarly, components of the proteolytic machinery for the degradation of misfolded proteins (ER-60, cathepsin D,
proteasome
subunits, and protease inhibitor 6) were also up-regulated. On the other hand, changes in the expression of structural proteins (T-plastin, vimentin, alpha tubulin, actin, and myosin) could account, at least in part, for the different morphologies displayed by migrating endothelial cells. In summary, our data show that VEGF levels similar to those during physiological stresses induce a number of genes and multiple endogenous pathways seem to be engaged in restoring cellular homeostasis. To ensure cell survival, the molecular chaperones (the heat shock family of stress proteins) are highly up-regulated providing protein-folding machinery to repair or degrade misfolded proteins.
...
PMID:Heat shock proteins and other components of cellular machinery for protein synthesis are up-regulated in vascular endothelial cell growth factor-activated human endothelial cells. 1576 53
Embryogenesis in plants is a unique process in the sense that it can be initiated from a wide range of cells other than the zygote. Upon stress, microspores or young pollen grains can be switched from their normal pollen development towards an embryogenic pathway, a process called androgenesis. Androgenesis represents an important tool for research in plant genetics and breeding, since androgenic embryos can germinate into completely homozygous, double haploid plants. From a developmental point of view, androgenesis is a rewarding system for understanding the process of embryo formation from single, haploid microspores. Androgenic development can be divided into three main characteristic phases: acquisition of embryogenic potential, initiation of cell divisions, and pattern formation. The aim of this review is to provide an overview of the main cellular and molecular events that characterize these three commitment phases. Molecular approaches such as differential screening and cDNA array have been successfully employed in the characterization of the spatiotemporal changes in gene expression during androgenesis. These results suggest that the activation of key regulators of embryogenesis, such as the BABY BOOM transcription factor, is preceded by the stress-induced reprogramming of cellular metabolism. Reprogramming of cellular metabolism includes the repression of gene expression related to starch biosynthesis and the induction of proteolytic genes (e.g. components of the 26S
proteasome
, metalloprotease, cysteine, and aspartic proteases) and stress-related proteins (e.g. GST,
HSP
, BI-1, ADH). The combination of cell tracking systems with biochemical markers has allowed the key switches in the developmental pathway of microspores to be determined, as well as programmed cell death to be identified as a feature of successful androgenic embryo development. The mechanisms of androgenesis induction and embryo formation are discussed, in relation to other biological systems, in special zygotic and somatic embryogenesis.
...
PMID:Androgenic switch: an example of plant embryogenesis from the male gametophyte perspective. 1592 15
It is well-accepted that protein quality control (occurring either after protein synthesis or after cell damage) is mainly ensured by
HSP
, but the mechanism by which
HSP
decides whether the protein will be degraded or not is poorly understood. Within this framework, it has been hypothesized that O-GlcNAc, a cytosolic and nuclear-specific glycosylation whose functions remain unclear, could take a part in the protection of proteins against degradation by modifying both the proteins themselves and the
proteasome
. Because the synthesis of O-GlcNAc is tightly correlated to glucose metabolism and Hsp70 was endowed with GlcNAc-binding property, we studied the relationship between GlcNAc-binding activity of both Hsp70 and Hsc70 (the nucleocytoplasmic forms of HSP70 family) and glucose availability and utilization. We thus demonstrated that low glucose concentration, inhibition of glucose utilization with 2DG, or inhibition of glucose transport with CytB led to an increase of Hsp70 and Hsc70 lectin activities. Interestingly, the response of Hsp70 and Hsc70 lectin activities toward variations of glucose concentration appeared different: Hsp70 lost its lectin activity when glucose concentration was >5 mM (i.e., physiological glucose concentration) in contrast to Hsc70 that exhibited a maximal lectin activity for glucose concentration approximately 5 mM and at high glucose concentrations. This work also demonstrates that HSP70 does not regulate its GlcNAc-binding properties through its own O-GlcNAc glycosylation.
...
PMID:Modulation of HSP70 GlcNAc-directed lectin activity by glucose availability and utilization. 1617 65
A non-natural 16-residue "degron" peptide has been reported to convey
proteasome
-dependent degradation when fused to proteins expressed in yeast (Gilon, T., Chomsky, O., and Kulka, R. (2000) Mol. Cell. Biol. 20, 7214-7219) or when fused to green fluorescent protein (GFP) and expressed in mammalian cells (Bence, N. F., Sampat, R. M., and Kopito, R. R. (2001) Science 292, 1552-1555). We find that expression of the GFP::degron in Caenorhabditis elegans muscle or neurons results in the formation of stable perinuclear deposits. Similar perinuclear deposition of GFP::degron was also observed upon transfection of primary rat hippocampal neurons or mouse Neuro2A cells. The generality of this observation was supported by transfection of HEK 293 cells with both GFP::degron and DsRed(monomer)::degron constructs. GFP::degron expressed in C. elegans is less soluble than unmodified GFP and induces the small chaperone protein
HSP
-16, which co-localizes and co-immunoprecipitates with GFP::degron deposits. Induction of GFP::degron in C. elegans muscle leads to rapid paralysis, demonstrating the in vivo toxicity of this aggregating variant. This paralysis is suppressed by co-expression of
HSP
-16, which dramatically alters the subcellular distribution of GFP::degron. Our results suggest that in C. elegans, and perhaps in mammalian cells, the degron peptide is not a specific
proteasome
-targeting signal but acts instead by altering GFP secondary or tertiary structure, resulting in an aggregation-prone form recognized by the chaperone system. This altered form of GFP can form toxic aggregates if its expression level exceeds the capacity of chaperone-based degradation pathways. GFP::degron may serve as an instructive "generic" aggregating control protein for studies of disease-associated aggregating proteins, such as huntingtin, alpha-synuclein, and the beta-amyloid peptide.
...
PMID:Conversion of green fluorescent protein into a toxic, aggregation-prone protein by C-terminal addition of a short peptide. 1623 15
The potent oncoprotein and receptor tyrosine kinase ErbB2 is remarkable because it resists efficient downregulation. However, ErbB2 can be downregulated by the
HSP
-90 inhibitor geldanamycin, but the underlying cellular mechanisms are uncertain. Apparently, delivery of ErbB2 to lysosomes, cleavage of the ErbB2 kinase domain and proteasomal activity are all processes that are involved. Using a non-invasive confocal microscopical assay allowing quantitative analysis of ErbB2 internalization in cell populations, we show that whereas ErbB2 is resistant to internalization in untreated SK-BR-3 cells, geldanamycin stimulates internalization and subsequent degradation in lysosomes. This process depends on proteasomal activity, which is a regulatory upstream event in ErbB2 internalization rather than the actual mechanism of degradation. ErbB2 can be internalized as a full-length protein, thus cleavage of the ErbB2 kinase domain is not a requirement for geldanamycin-stimulated internalization. Moreover, as shown by FRAP (fluorescence recovery after photobleaching) and electron microscopy, geldanamycin induces an increase in the amount of mobile ErbB2 and a redistribution of ErbB2 in the plasma membrane making the receptor accessible to endocytosis. Cells with most ErbB2 endocytosis also have the highest fraction of mobile ErbB2. It is concluded that geldanamycin stimulates internalization of full-length ErbB2 in a
proteasome
-dependent manner leading to lysosomal degradation.
...
PMID:Geldanamycin stimulates internalization of ErbB2 in a proteasome-dependent way. 1635 62
Exposure of cells to various stresses often leads to the induction of a group of proteins called heat shock proteins (HSPs, molecular chaperones). Hsp70 is one of the most highly inducible molecular chaperones, but its expression must be maintained at low levels under physiological conditions to permit constitutive cellular activities to proceed. Heat shock transcription factor 1 (HSF1) is the transcriptional regulator of
HSP
gene expression, but it remains poorly understood how newly synthesized HSPs return to basal levels when HSF1 activity is attenuated. CHIP (carboxy terminus of Hsp70-binding protein), a dual-function co-chaperone/ubiquitin ligase, targets a broad range of chaperone substrates for proteasomal degradation. Here we show that CHIP not only enhances Hsp70 induction during acute stress but also mediates its turnover during the stress recovery process. Central to this dual-phase regulation is its substrate dependence: CHIP preferentially ubiquitinates chaperone-bound substrates, whereas degradation of Hsp70 by CHIP-dependent targeting to the ubiquitin-
proteasome
system occurs when misfolded substrates have been depleted. The sequential catalysis of the CHIP-associated chaperone adaptor and its bound substrate provides an elegant mechanism for maintaining homeostasis by tuning chaperone levels appropriately to reflect the status of protein folding within the cytoplasm.
...
PMID:CHIP-mediated stress recovery by sequential ubiquitination of substrates and Hsp70. 1655 22
Abnormal accumulation of disease-causing protein is a commonly observed characteristic in chronic neurodegenerative disorders such as Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, and polyglutamine (polyQ) diseases. A therapeutic approach that could selectively eliminate would be a promising remedy for neurodegenerative disorders. Spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy (SBMA), one of the polyQ diseases, is a late-onset motor neuron disease characterized by proximal muscle atrophy, weakness, contraction fasciculations, and bulbar involvement. The pathogenic gene product is polyQ-expanded androgen receptor (AR), which belongs to the heat shock protein (Hsp) 90 client protein family. 17-Allylamino-17-demethoxygeldanamycin (17-AAG), a novel Hsp90 inhibitor, is a new derivative of geldanamycin that shares its important biological activities but shows less toxicity. 17-AAG is now in phase II clinical trials as a potential anti-cancer agent because of its ability to selectively degrade several oncoproteins. We have recently demonstrated the efficacy and safety of 17-AAG in a mouse model of SBMA. The administration of 17-AAG significantly ameliorated polyQ-mediated motor neuron degeneration by reducing the total amount of mutant AR. 17-AAG accomplished the preferential reduction of mutant AR mainly through Hsp90 chaperone complex formation and subsequent
proteasome
-dependent degradation. 17-AAG induced Hsp70 and Hsp40 in vivo as previously reported; however, its ability to induce HSPs was limited, suggesting that the
HSP
induction might support the degradation of mutant protein. The ability of 17-AAG to preferentially degrade mutant protein would be directly applicable to SBMA and other neurodegenerative diseases in which the disease-causing proteins also belong to the Hsp90 client protein family. Our proposed therapeutic approach, modulation of Hsp90 function by 17-AAG treatment, has emerged as a candidate for molecular-targeted therapies for neurodegenerative diseases. This review will consider our research findings and discuss the possibility of a clinical application of 17-AAG to SBMA and other neurodegenerative diseases.
...
PMID:Modulation of Hsp90 function in neurodegenerative disorders: a molecular-targeted therapy against disease-causing protein. 1674 51
1
2
3
4
Next >>