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Query: EC:3.4.25.1 (
proteasome
)
28,817
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
p53 is a short-lived transcription factor that is frequently mutated in tumor cells. Work by several laboratories has already shown that the ubiquitin-
proteasome
pathway can largely account for p53 destruction, at least under specific experimental conditions. We report here that, in vitro, wild-type p53 is a sensitive substrate for milli- and microcalpain, which are abundant and ubiquitous cytoplasmic proteases. Degradation was dependent on p53 protein conformation. Mutants of p53 with altered tertiary structure displayed a wide range of susceptibility to calpains, some of them being largely resistant to degradation and others being more sensitive. This result suggests that the different mutants tested here adopt slightly different conformations to which calpains are sensitive but that cannot be discriminated by using monoclonal antibodies such as PAb1620 and PAb240. Inhibition of calpains by using the physiological inhibitor calpastatin leads to an elevation of p53 steady-state levels in cells expressing wild-type p53. Conversely, activation of calpains by calcium ionophore led to a reduction of p53 in mammalian cells, and the effect was blocked by cell-permeant
calpain
inhibitors. Cotransfection of p53-null cell lines with p53 and calpastatin expression vectors resulted in an increase in p53-dependent transcription activity. Taken together, these data support the idea that calpains may also contribute to the regulation of wild-type p53 protein levels in vivo.
...
PMID:Proteolysis by calpains: a possible contribution to degradation of p53. 911 52
Several observations have suggested that the enhanced proteolysis and atrophy of skeletal muscle in various pathological states is due primarily to activation of the ubiquitin-
proteasome
pathway. To test this idea, we investigated whether peptide aldehyde inhibitors of the
proteasome
, N-acetyl-leucyl-leucyl-norleucinal (LLN), or the more potent CBZ-leucyl-leucyl-leucinal (MG132) suppressed proteolysis in incubated rat skeletal muscles. These agents (e.g., MG132 at 10 microM) inhibited nonlysosomal protein breakdown by up to 50% (P < 0.01), and this effect was rapidly reversed upon removal of the inhibitor. The peptide aldehydes did not alter protein synthesis or amino acid pools, but improved overall protein balance in the muscle. Upon treatment with MG132, ubiquitin-conjugated proteins accumulated in the muscle. The inhibition of muscle proteolysis correlated with efficacy against the
proteasome
, although these agents could also inhibit
calpain
-dependent proteolysis induced with Ca2+. These inhibitors had much larger effects on proteolysis in atrophying muscles than in controls. In the denervated soleus undergoing atrophy, the increase in ATP-dependent proteolysis was reduced 70% by MG132 (P < 0.001). Similarly, the rise in muscle proteolysis induced by administering thyroid hormones was reduced 40-70% by the inhibitors. Finally, in rats made septic by cecal puncture, the increase in muscle proteolysis was completely blocked by MG132. Thus, the enhanced proteolysis in many catabolic states (including denervation, hyperthyroidism, and sepsis) is due to a
proteasome
-dependent pathway, and inhibition of
proteasome
function may be a useful approach to reduce muscle wasting.
...
PMID:Inhibitors of the proteasome reduce the accelerated proteolysis in atrophying rat skeletal muscles. 920 72
Cerebral deposition of amyloid beta-protein (Abeta) as senile plaques is a pathological hallmark of Alzheimer's disease (AD). Abeta falls into two major subspecies defined by their C-termini, Abeta40 and Abeta42, ending in Val-40 and Ala-42, respectively. Although Abeta42 accounts for only approximately 10% of secreted Abeta, Abeta42 is the predominant species accumulated in senile plaques in AD brain and appears to be the initially deposited species. Its secretion level has recently been reported to be increased in the plasma or culture media of fibroblasts from patients affected by any of early-onset familial AD (FAD). Thus, inhibition of Abeta42 production would be one of the therapeutic targets for AD. However, there is little information about the cleavage mechanism via which Abeta40 and Abeta42 are generated and its relationship to intracellular protease activity. Here, we examined by well-characterized enzyme immunoassay the effects of
calpain
and
proteasome
inhibitors on the levels of Abeta40 and Abeta42 secretion by cultured cells. A calpastatin peptide homologous to the inhibitory domain of calpastatin, an endogenous
calpain
specific inhibitor, induced a specific increase in secreted Abeta42 relative to the total secreted Abeta level, a characteristic of the cultured cells transfected with FAD-linked mutated genes, while a
proteasome
specific inhibitor, lactacystin, showed no such effect. These findings suggest that the Abeta42 secretion ratio is modulated by the
calpain
-calpastatin system and may point to the possibility of exploring particular compounds that inhibit Abeta42 secretion through this pathway.
...
PMID:Specific increase in amyloid beta-protein 42 secretion ratio by calpain inhibition. 920 85
Recent studies have demonstrated that cell-permeant protease inhibitors arrest human fibroblasts in late G1. The target for the inhibitors has been claimed to be either the
proteasome
, or a
calpain
-like cysteine protease activity. In the present investigation, the progression of serum-stimulated WI-38 fibroblasts into S-phase was partially inhibited by the cell-permeant general inhibitor of cysteine proteases, E64d, but not by its non-permeant anolog, E64c. Exposure of fibroblasts in late G1 to the proteasome inhibitor, lactacystin, produced only a modest inhibition of progression into S-phase, and did not influence the extensive inhibition produced by the
calpain
-selective inhibitor, ZLLY-DMK. ZLLnV-CHO and ZLLL-CHO, which are reportedly selective for the
proteasome
, were less potent than ZLLY-DMK as inhibitors of S-phase progression. These results argue for the involvement of a calpain-like protease acting in late G1 to allow transit into S-phase.
...
PMID:Evidence for participation of a calpain-like cysteine protease in cell cycle progression through late G1 phase. 924 87
Fas (APO1/CD95) is a type 1 transmembrane protein critically involved in receptor-mediated apoptosis. Previous studies have shown that Fas exists in monomeric form in resting cells and aggregates upon cross-linking to form a complex that serves to recruit additional signaling molecules to the cell membrane. To study the molecular fate of the Fas antigen following receptor activation, a monoclonal antibody specific for the cell death domain of Fas has been generated. This monoclonal antibody (3D5) could be used in Western blot analysis using total cell lysates to identify different forms of Fas antigens without immunoprecipitation. High molecular mass (>200 kDa), SDS- and beta-mercaptoethanol-resistant Fas aggregates were formed immediately following receptor cross-linking, and a 97-kDa band (p97) was detected about 2 h later. p97 could be detected by antibodies against either the death domain or the C terminus. However, p97 could not be precipitated by antiextracellular domain antibodies. Thus, p97 most likely represents a processed form of the high molecular weight Fas aggregates. Although p97 generation followed a similar time course as CPP32 activation and poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase cleavage, it could not be inhibited by cysteine protease,
calpain
, or
proteasome
inhibitors.
...
PMID:Activation-induced aggregation and processing of the human Fas antigen. Detection with cytoplasmic domain-specific antibodies. 926 81
The combination of epidermal growth factor (EGF) plus transforming growth factor-beta 1 (TGF-beta 1) causes hypertrophy in renal epithelial cells. One mechanism contributing to hypertrophy is that EGF induces activation of the cell cycle and increases protein synthesis, whereas TGF-beta 1 prevents cell division, thereby converting hyperplasia to hypertrophy. To assess whether suppression of proteolysis is another mechanism causing hypertrophy induced by these growth factors, we measured protein degradation in primary cultures of proximal tubule cells and in cultured NRK-52E kidney cells. A concentration of 10(-8) M EGF alone or EGF plus 10(-10) M TGF-beta 1 decreased proteolysis by approximately 30%. TGF-beta 1 alone did not change protein degradation. Using inhibitors, we examined which proteolytic pathway is suppressed. Neither
proteasome
nor
calpain
inhibitors prevented the antiproteolytic response to EGF + TGF-beta 1. Inhibitors of lysosomal proteases eliminated the antiproteolytic response to EGF + TGF-beta 1, suggesting that these growth factors act to suppress lysosomal proteolysis. This antiproteolytic response was not caused by impaired EGF receptor signaling, since lysosomal inhibitors did not block EGF-induced protein synthesis. We conclude that suppression of lysosomal proteolysis contributes to growth factor-mediated hypertrophy of cultured kidney cells.
...
PMID:Mechanisms of renal tubular cell hypertrophy: mitogen-induced suppression of proteolysis. 931 4
Cyclin D1, a critical positive regulator of G1 progression, has been implicated in the pathogenesis of certain cancers. Regulation of cyclin D1 occurs at the transcriptional and posttranscriptional level. Here we present evidence that cyclin D1 levels are regulated at the posttranscriptional level by the Ca2+-activated protease
calpain
. Serum starvation of NIH 3T3 cells resulted in rapid loss of cyclin D1 protein that was completely reversible by
calpain
inhibitors. Actinomycin D and lovastatin induced rapid loss of cyclin D1 in prostate and breast cancer cells that was reversible by
calpain
inhibitors and not by phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, caspase inhibitors, or lactacystin, a specific inhibitor of the 26 S
proteasome
. Treatment of intact NIH 3T3, prostate, and breast cancer cells with a calpain inhibitor dramatically increased the half-life of cyclin D1 protein. Addition of purified
calpain
to PC-3-M lysates resulted in Ca2+-dependent cyclin D1 degradation. Transient expression of the calpain inhibitor calpastatin increased cyclin D1 protein in serum-starved NIH 3T3 cells. Cyclins A, E, and B1 have been reported to be regulated by
proteasome
-associated proteolysis. The data presented here implicate
calpain
in cyclin D1 posttranslational regulation.
...
PMID:Regulation of cyclin D1 by calpain protease. 935 8
Cell-permeant peptidyl aldehydes and diazomethylketones are frequently utilized as inhibitors of regulatory intracellular proteases. In the present study the specificities of several peptidyl inhibitors for purified human mu-calpain and 20 S
proteasome
were investigated. Acetyl-LLnL aldehyde, acetyl-LLM aldehyde, carbobenzyloxy-LLnV aldehyde (ZLLnVal), and carbobenzyloxy-LLY-diazomethyl ketone produced half-maximum inhibition of the caseinolytic activity of mu-calpain at concentrations of 1-5 x 10(-7) M. In contrast, only ZLLnVal was a reasonably potent inhibitor of the caseinolytic activity of 20 S
proteasome
, producing 50% inhibition at 10(-5) M. The other inhibitors were at least 10-fold less potent, producing substantial inhibition only at near saturating concentrations in the assay buffer. Further studies with ZLLnVal demonstrated that its inhibition of the
proteasome
was independent of casein concentration over a 25-fold range. Proteolysis of calpastatin or lysozyme by the
proteasome
was half-maximally inhibited by 4 and 22 microM ZLLnVal, respectively. Thus, while other studies have shown that ZLLnVal is a potent inhibitor of the hydrophobic peptidase activity of the
proteasome
, it appears to be a much weaker inhibitor of its proteinase activity. The ability of the cell permeant peptidyl inhibitors to inhibit growth of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae was studied because this organism expresses
proteasome
but not calpains. Concentrations of ZLLnVal as high as 200 microM had no detectable effect on growth rates of overnight cultures. However, yeast cell lysates prepared from these cultures contained 2 microM ZLLnVal, an amount which should have been sufficient to fully inhibit hydrophobic peptidase activity of yeast
proteasome
. Degradation of ubiquitinylated proteins in yeast extracts by endogenous
proteasome
was likewise sensitive only to high concentrations of ZLLnVal. The higher sensitivity of the proteinase activity of calpains to inhibition by the cell permeant inhibitors suggests that
calpain
-like activities may be targets of these inhibitors in animal cells.
...
PMID:Specificities of cell permeant peptidyl inhibitors for the proteinase activities of mu-calpain and the 20 S proteasome. 936 65
One of the common features of cells from senescent tissues is the accumulation of abnormal proteins. Several hypotheses have been proposed to explain the origin of those abnormal proteins. A defect in proteolytic systems usually responsible for the elimination of altered proteins from the cells could clearly contribute to such accumulation. Here we describe the effect of age on the major proteolytic systems within cells: the ubiquitin-
proteasome
pathway, the calcium-activated
calpain
pathways, and multiple lysosomal pathways. Our group has contributed to the characterization of a selective pathway of degradation of cytosolic proteins in lysosomes that is activated under conditions of nutrient deprivation. In this lysosomal pathway of proteolysis proteins are transported through the lysosomal membrane assisted by cytosolic and lysosomal molecular chaperones and a receptor protein in the lysosomal membrane. The activity of this pathway significantly decreases with age, and this decrease might account for the cytosolic accumulation of aberrant substrate proteins in senescent cells. The cellular consequences of the decline of this lysosomal pathway together with possible methods to restore the reduced function are also addressed in this review.
...
PMID:How do intracellular proteolytic systems change with age? 940 52
The Rel/NF-kappaB family of transcription factors is sequestered in the cytoplasm of most mammalian cells by inhibitor proteins belonging to the IkappaB family. Degradation of IkappaB by a phosphorylation-dependent ubiquitin-
proteasome
(inducible) pathway is believed to allow nuclear transport of active Rel/NF-kappaB dimers. Rel/NF-kappaB (a p50-c-Rel dimer) is constitutively nuclear in murine B cells, such as WEHI231 cells. In these cells, p50, c-Rel, and IkappaB alpha are synthesized at high levels but only IkappaB alpha is rapidly degraded. We have examined the mechanism of IkappaB alpha degradation and its relation to constitutive p50-c-Rel activation. We demonstrate that all IkappaB alpha is found complexed with c-Rel protein in the cytoplasm. Additionally, rapid IkappaB alpha proteolysis is independent of but coexistent with the inducible pathway and can be inhibited by calcium chelators and some
calpain
inhibitors. Conditions that prevent degradation of IkappaB alpha also inhibit nuclear p50-c-Rel activity. Furthermore, the half-life of nuclear c-Rel is much shorter than that of the cytoplasmic form, underscoring the necessity for its continuous nuclear transport to maintain constitutive p50-c-Rel activity. We observed that IkappaB beta, another NF-kappaB inhibitor, is also complexed with c-Rel but slowly degraded by a
proteasome
-dependent process in WEHI231 cells. In addition, IkappaB beta is basally phosphorylated and cytoplasmic. We thus suggest that calcium-dependent IkappaB alpha proteolysis maintains nuclear transport of a p50-c-Rel heterodimer which in turn activates the synthesis of IkappaB alpha, p50, and c-Rel to sustain this dynamic process in WEHI231 B cells.
...
PMID:Novel IkappaB alpha proteolytic pathway in WEHI231 immature B cells. 941 49
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