Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.4.25.1 (proteasome)
28,817 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Mammalian ornithine decarboxylase (ODC) is a very unstable protein which is degraded in an ATP-dependent manner by proteasome 26S, after making contact with the regulatory protein antizyme. PEST regions are sequences described as signals for protein degradation. The C-terminal PEST region of mammalian ODC is essential for its degradation by proteasome 26S. Mammalian histidine decarboxylase (HDC) is also a short-lived protein. The full primary sequence of mammalian HDC contains PEST-regions at both the N- and C-termini. Rat ODC and different truncated and full versions of rat HDC were expressed in vitro. In vitro degradation of rat ODC and rat 1-512 HDC were compared. Like ODC, rat 1-512 HDC is degraded mainly by an ATP-dependent mechanism. However, antizyme has no effect on the degradation of 1-512 HDC. The use of the inhibitors MG-132 and lactacystine significantly inhibited the degradation of 1-512 HDC, suggesting that a ubiquitin-dependent, proteasome 26S proteolytic pathway is involved. Results obtained with the different modifications of rat HDC containing all three PEST regions (full version, 1-656 HDC), only the N-terminal PEST region (1-512 HDC), or no PEST region (69-512 HDC), indicate that the N-terminal (1-69) fragment, but not the C-terminal fragment, determines that the HDC protein is a proteasome substrate in vitro.
...
PMID:In vitro study of proteolytic degradation of rat histidine decarboxylase. 1069 92

Ornithine decarboxylase (ODC) catalyses the first step in the synthesis of the polyamines putrescine, spermidine and spermine. The polyamines are essential for cell growth, but at elevated levels they may be tumorigenic, toxic, or may induce apoptosis. Therefore, ODC activity is highly regulated. It is induced when cells are stimulated to grow, and it is subjected to feedback inhibition by the polyamines. By causing ribosomal frameshifting, polyamines induce the synthesis of antizyme, a 23-kDa protein, which binds to ODC, inhibits its activity and promotes its degradation by the 26 S proteasome. Antizyme, in turn, is inhibited by antizyme inhibitor (AZI). We describe the cloning of a mouse AZI cDNA, encoding a protein with high homology to mouse ODC. Using purified recombinant proteins, we show that AZI (which has no ODC activity) can release enzymically active ODC from antizyme suppression in vitro. We also show that ODC reactivation takes place in mouse fibroblasts upon transient transfection with an AZI-expressing plasmid construct. Finally we demonstrate that the AZI mRNA content of mouse fibroblasts increases significantly within an hour of growth stimulation, i.e. much earlier than ODC transcripts. Our results indicate that induction of AZI synthesis may represent a means of rescuing ODC molecules that have been inactivated and tagged for degradation by antizyme, when culture conditions improve and polyamine production is needed for cell growth and proliferation.
...
PMID:Antizyme inhibitor is rapidly induced in growth-stimulated mouse fibroblasts and releases ornithine decarboxylase from antizyme suppression. 1069 96

Control of enzymatic function by peptide hormones can occur at a number of different levels and can involve diverse pathways that regulate cleavage, intracellular trafficking, and protein degradation. Gastrin is a peptide hormone that binds to the cholecystokinin B-gastrin receptor and regulates the activity of L-histidine decarboxylase (HDC), the enzyme that produces histamine. Here we show that gastrin can increase the steady-state levels of at least six HDC isoforms without affecting HDC mRNA levels. Pulse-chase experiments indicated that HDC isoforms are rapidly degraded and that gastrin-dependent increases are due to enhanced isoform stability. Deletion analysis identified two PEST domains (PEST1 and PEST2) and an intracellular targeting domain (ER2) which regulate HDC protein expression levels. Experiments with PEST domain fusion proteins demonstrated that PEST1 and PEST2 are strong and portable degradation-promoting elements which are positively regulated by both gastrin stimulation and proteasome inhibition. A chimeric protein containing the PEST domain of ornithine decarboxylase was similarly affected, indicating that gastrin can regulate the stability of other PEST domain-containing proteins and does so independently of antizyme/antizyme inhibitor regulation. At the same time, endoplasmic reticulum localization of a fluorescent chimera containing the ER2 domain of HDC was unaltered by gastrin stimulation. We conclude that gastrin stabilization of HDC isoforms is dependent upon two transferable and sequentially unrelated PEST domains that regulate degradation. These experiments revealed a novel regulatory mechanism by which a peptide hormone such as gastrin can disrupt the degradation function of multiple PEST-domain-containing proteins.
...
PMID:Amino- and carboxy-terminal PEST domains mediate gastrin stabilization of rat L-histidine decarboxylase isoforms. 1084 18

Agmatine, a product of arginine decarboxylation in mammalian cells, is believed to govern cell polyamines by inducing antizyme, which in turn suppresses ornithine decarboxylase (ODC) activity and polyamine uptake. However, since agmatine is structurally similar to the polyamines, it is possible that it exerts antizyme-independent actions on polyamine regulatory pathways. The present study determined whether agmatine inhibited ODC activity and polyamine transport in rat pulmonary artery endothelial cells (PAECs) by an antizyme-dependent mechanism. Agmatine caused time-dependent reductions in ODC activity, which occurred before increases in antizyme. Interventions that suppressed proteasome function caused large increases in ODC activity but failed to attenuate inhibitory effects of agmatine. When agmatine was present in the culture medium, 14C-polyamine uptake was competitively inhibited as evidenced by substantial elevations in K(m) values. If PAECs were incubated with agmatine for periods sufficient to increase antizyme, there were modest decreases in V(max) for putrescine and spermidine but not for spermine. These effects of agmatine on polyamine transport were insensitive to protein synthesis inhibition. Collectively, our findings show that agmatine decreases ODC activity and polyamine transport in PAECs, but a causal role for antizyme in these actions of agmatine is difficult to establish. Nevertheless, these observations are consistent with a model in which PAECs express both antizyme-1 and -2, but only the latter contributes to agmatine-mediated suppression of ODC activity.
...
PMID:Regulation of ornithine decarboxylase activity and polyamine transport by agmatine in rat pulmonary artery endothelial cells. 1116 Jun 20

The polyamines are important regulators of cell growth and differentiation. Cells acquire polyamines by energy-dependent transport and by synthesis where the highly regulated ornithine decarboxylase (ODC) catalyzes the first and rate-controlling step. Inactivation of ODC is mainly exerted by antizyme (AZ), a 20--25 kDa polyamine-induced protein that binds to ODC, inactivates it, and targets it for degradation by the 26S proteasome without ubiquitination. In the present study, we have performed a systematic analysis of the expression of ODC and AZ, at the mRNA and protein levels, during mouse development. The expression patterns for ODC and AZ were found to be developmentally regulated, suggesting important functions for the polyamines in early embryogenesis, axonogenesis, epithelial-mesenchymal interaction, and in apoptosis. In addition, AZ protein was found to translocate to the nucleus in a developmentally regulated manner. The nuclear localization is consistent with the fact that the amino acid sequence of AZ exhibits features that characterize nuclear proteins. Interestingly, we found that cultivation of mandibular components of the first branchial arch in the presence of a selective proteasome inhibitor caused ODC accumulation in the nucleus of a subset of cells, suggesting that the observed nuclear translocation of AZ is linked to proteasome-mediated ODC degradation in the nucleus. The presence of AZ in the nucleus may suggest that nuclear ODC activity is under tight control, and that polyamine production can be rapidly interrupted when those developmental events, which depend on access to nuclear polyamines, have been completed.
...
PMID:Nuclear translocation of antizyme and expression of ornithine decarboxylase and antizyme are developmentally regulated. 1124 34

Proteins that are degraded by the proteasome are first modified by a set of enzymes that attach multiple copies of ubiquitin to substrate lysines, but a tiny minority, including the polyamine-synthesizing enzyme ornithine decarboxylase, is handled differently. This enzyme is targeted for destruction by another protein--antizyme. Why does ornithine decarboxylase have its own dedicated destruction mechanism, how does it work, and is it the only protein to be targeted to the proteasome in this way?
...
PMID:Regulation of cellular polyamines by antizyme. 1126 48

The mechanism of the regulatory degradation of ornithine decarboxylase (ODC) by polyamines was studied in fission yeast, Schizosaccharomyces pombe. To regulate cellular spermidine experimentally, we cloned and disrupted S-adenosylmethionine decarboxylase gene (spe2) in S. pombe. The null mutant of spe2 was devoid of spermidine and spermine, accumulated putrescine, and contained a high level of ODC. Addition of spermidine to the culture medium resulted in rapid decrease in the ODC activity caused by the acceleration of ODC degradation, which was dependent on de novo protein synthesis. A fraction of ODC forming an inactive complex concomitantly increased. The accelerated ODC degradation was prevented either by knockout of antizyme gene or by selective inhibitors of proteasome. Thus, unlike budding yeast, mammalian type antizyme-mediated ODC degradation by proteasome is operating in S. pombe.
...
PMID:Antizyme regulates the degradation of ornithine decarboxylase in fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe. Study in the spe2 knockout strains. 1128 13

Ornithine decarboxylase (ODC) is among the small set of proteasome substrates that is not ubiquitinated. It is instead degraded in conjunction with the protein antizyme (AZ). ODC and AZ are participants in a regulatory circuit that restricts pools of polyamines, the downstream products of ODC enzymatic activity. Functional studies using directed mutagenesis have identified regions of ODC and AZ required for the process of ODC degradation. Within ODC, there is a region that is required for AZ binding which lies on the surface of an alpha-beta barrel forming one domain of the ODC monomer. A carboxy-terminal ODC domain is needed for both AZ-dependent and AZ-independent degradation. Within AZ, the carboxy-terminal half molecule is sufficient for binding to ODC, but an additional domain found within the AZ amino terminus must be present for stimulation of ODC degradation by the proteasome. Recently, the AZs have been found to consist of an ancient gene family. Within vertebrate species, multiple isoforms are found, with distinct functions that remain to be sorted out. Although AZ homologs have been found in some yeast species, homology searches have failed to identify an AZ homolog in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Nevertheless, the close parallel between polyamine-induced ODC degradation in S. cerevisiae and in animal cells suggests that this organism will also be found to harbor an AZ-like protein.
...
PMID:Antizyme, a mediator of ubiquitin-independent proteasomal degradation. 1129 92

Antizyme is a polyamine-induced cellular protein that binds to ornithine decarboxylase (ODC), and targets it to rapid ubiquitin-independent degradation by the 26S proteasome. However, the metabolic fate of antizyme is not clear. We have tested the stability of antizyme in mammalian cells. In contrast with previous studies demonstrating stability in vitro in a reticulocyte lysate-based degradation system, in cells antizyme is rapidly degraded and this degradation is inhibited by specific proteasome inhibitors. While the degradation of ODC is stimulated by the presence of cotransfected antizyme, degradation of antizyme seems to be independent of ODC, suggesting that antizyme degradation does not occur while presenting ODC to the 26S proteasome. Interestingly, both species of antizyme, which represent initiation at two in-frame initiation codons, are rapidly degraded. The degradation of both antizyme proteins is inhibited in ts20 cells containing a thermosensitive ubiquitin-activating enzyme, E1. Therefore we conclude that in contrast with ubiquitin-independent degradation of ODC, degradation of antizyme requires a functional ubiquitin system.
...
PMID:Ornithine decarboxylase-antizyme is rapidly degraded through a mechanism that requires functional ubiquitin-dependent proteolytic activity. 1185 66

In rat lung and cultured lung vascular cells, hypoxia decreases ornithine decarboxylase (ODC) activity and increases polyamine import. In this study, we used rat cultured pulmonary artery endothelial cells to explore the mechanism of hypoxia-induced reduction in ODC activity and determined whether this event was functionally related to the increase in polyamine import. Two strategies known to suppress proteasome-mediated ODC degradation, lactacystin treatment and use of cells expressing a truncated ODC incapable of interacting with the proteasome, prevented the hypoxia-induced decrease in ODC activity. Interestingly, though, cellular abundance of the 24-kDa antizyme, a known physiological accelerator of ODC degradation, was not increased by hypoxia. These observations suggest that an antizyme-independent ODC degradation pathway contributes to hypoxia-induced reductions of ODC activity. When reductions in ODC activity in hypoxia were prevented by the proteasome inhibitor strategies, hypoxia failed to increase polyamine transport. The induction of polyamine transport in hypoxic pulmonary artery endothelial cells thus seems to require decreased ODC activity as an initiating event.
...
PMID:Regulation of ornithine decarboxylase and polyamine import by hypoxia in pulmonary artery endothelial cells. 1188 Mar 11


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Next >>