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:4.6.1.1 (
adenylate cyclase
)
19,190
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Among bacterial toxins, the
adenylate cyclase
toxin of Bordetella pertussis (CyaA) has a unique mechanism of entry that consists in the direct translocation of its catalytic domain across the plasma membrane of target cell, a mechanism supposed to be independent of any endocytic pathway. Here, we report that the CyaA toxin is delivered to the cytosolic pathway for MHC class I-restricted Ag presentation. Using peritoneal macrophages as APC, we show that the OVA 257-264 CD8+ epitope genetically inserted into a detoxified CyaA (CyaA-OVA E5) is presented to CD8+ T cells by a mechanism requiring 1)
proteasome
processing, 2) TAP, and 3) neosynthesis of MHC class I. We demonstrate that the presentation of CyaA-OVA E5, like the translocation of CyaA into eukaryotic cells, is dependent on extracellular Ca2+ and independent of vacuolar acidification. Moreover, inhibitors of the phagocytic and macropinocytic endocytic pathways do not affect the CyaA-OVA E5 presentation. The absence of specific cellular receptors for CyaA correlates with the ability of various APC to present the recombinant CyaA toxin, including dendritic cells, macrophages, splenocytes, and lymphoid tumoral lines. Taken together, our results show that the CyaA presentation pathway is not cell type specific and is unrelated to a defined type of endocytic mechanism. Thus, it represents a new and unconventional delivery of an exogenous Ag into the conventional cytosolic pathway.
...
PMID:Direct delivery of the Bordetella pertussis adenylate cyclase toxin to the MHC class I antigen presentation pathway. 997 58
The transcription factor Sp1 is important for the expression of many cellular genes. Previously, it was shown that reduced O-glycosylation of Sp1 is associated with increased
proteasome
susceptibility. Sp1 undergoes
proteasome
-dependent degradation in cells stressed with glucose deprivation and
adenylate cyclase
activation, and this process is blocked in cells treated with glucosamine. In this study, using a reconstituted in vitro system, we identified the principal structural determinant in Sp1 that targets Sp1 for
proteasome
-dependent degradation. We found by using deletion analysis that the N-terminal 54 amino acids of Sp1 is required for Sp1 degradation. This element can act as an independent processing signal by directing degradation of an unrelated protein. Recognition of this Sp1 element by the
proteasome
-dependent system is saturable, and ubiquitination of this element is not required for recognition. Time course experiments revealed that Sp1 degradation is a two-step process. First, a discrete endoproteolytic cleavage occurs downstream of the target region immediately C-terminal to Leu56. The Sp1 sequence C-terminal to the cleavage site is subsequently degraded, whereas the N-terminal peptide remains intact. The identification of this Sp1 degradation-targeting signal will facilitate the identification of the critical proteins involved in the control of Sp1
proteasome
-dependent degradation and the role of OGlcNAc in this process.
...
PMID:An N-terminal region of Sp1 targets its proteasome-dependent degradation in vitro. 1032 28
The transcription factor Sp1 was previously shown to undergo
proteasome
-dependent degradation when cells were glucose-starved and stimulated with the
adenylate cyclase
inducer, forskolin. However, the control of the Sp1 degradation process is largely unknown. Using in vitro and in vivo interaction studies, we show in the present study that Sp1 interacts with human Sug1 [hSug1, also known as p45 or thyroid-hormone-receptor interacting protein ('TRIP1')], an ATPase subunit of the 26 S
proteasome
and a putative transcriptional modulator. This interaction with Sp1 occurs through the C-terminus of hSug1, the region that contains the conserved ATPase domain in this protein. Both in vitro studies, in reconstituted degradation assays, and in vivo experiments, in which hSug1 is overexpressed in normal rat kidney cells, show that full-length hSug1 is able to stimulate the
proteasome
-dependent degradation of Sp1. However, hSug1 truncations that lack either the N- or C-terminal domain of hSug1 act as dominant negatives, inhibiting Sp1 degradation in vitro. Also, an ATPase mutant of hSug1, while still able to bind Sp1, acts as a dominant negative, blocking Sp1 degradation both in vitro and in vivo. These results demonstrate that hSug1 is involved in the degradation of Sp1 and that ATP hydrolysis by hSug1 is necessary for this process. Our findings indicate that hSug1 is an exchangeable proteasomal component that plays a critical regulatory role in the
proteasome
-dependent degradation of Sp1. However, hSug1 is not the factor limiting Sp1 degradation in the cells treated with glucosamine. This and other considerations suggest that hSug1 co-operation with other molecules is necessary to target Sp1 for
proteasome
degradation.
...
PMID:Human Sug1/p45 is involved in the proteasome-dependent degradation of Sp1. 1081 20
Patients with cancer cachexia experience a profound wasting of adipose tissue and lean body mass. Anorexia, although often present, is insufficient to account for tissue wasting because 1) cachexia involves massive depletion of skeletal muscle that does not occur during anorexia, 2) nutritional supplementation cannot replenish the loss of lean body mass, 3) cachexia can occur without anorexia, and 4) food intake might be normal for the lower weight of the cancer patient. Anorexia can arise from 1) decreased taste and smell of food, 2) early satiety, 3) dysfunctional hypothalamic membrane
adenylate cyclase
, 4) increased brain tryptophan, and 5) cytokine production. Appetite stimulants such as cyproheptadine, medroxyprogesterone acetate, and megestrol acetate do not significantly improve lean body mass. Tumor products might be more important in the development of cachexia. Cachectic patients excrete in their urine a lipid-mobilizing factor that directly stimulates lipolysis in a cyclic AMP-dependent manner and increases energy expenditure. Loss of skeletal muscle in cachexia is caused by upregulation of the ubiquitin-
proteasome
catabolic pathway. Cachexia-inducing tumors elaborate a sulfated glycoprotein, which directly initiates protein catabolism in skeletal muscle. The action of this proteolysis-inducing factor is attenuated by the polyunsaturated fatty acid eicosapentaenoic acid, which is also effective in preventing loss of skeletal muscle in cancer patients. Antagonists of tumor catabolic factors will provide important new agents in the treatment of cancer cachexia.
...
PMID:Cancer anorexia and cachexia. 1137 46
Treatment of murine myoblasts, myotubes and tumour cells with a tumour-produced lipid mobilizing factor (LMF), caused a concentration-dependent stimulation of protein synthesis, within a 24 h period. There was no effect on cell number or [(3)H] thymidine incorporation, but a similar concentration-dependent stimulation of 2-deoxyglucose uptake. LMF produced an increase in intracellular cyclic AMP levels, which was linearly (r(2)= 0.973) related to the increase in protein synthesis. The effect of LMF was attenuated by the
adenylate cyclase
inhibitor MDL(12330A), and was additive with the stimulation produced by forskolin. Both propranolol (10 microM) and the specific beta(3)-adrenergic receptor antagonist SR 59230A (10(-5)M), significantly reduced the stimulation of protein synthesis induced by LMF. Protein synthesis was also increased by 69% (P = 0.006) in soleus muscles of mice administered LMF, while there was a 26% decrease in protein degradation (P = 0.03). While LMF had no effect on the lysosomal enzymes, cathepsins B and L, there was a decrease in
proteasome
activity, as determined both by the 'chymotrypsin-like' enzyme activity, as well as expression of
proteasome
alpha-type subunits, determined by Western blotting. These results show that in addition to its lipid-mobilizing activity LMF also increases protein accumulation in skeletal muscle both by an increase in protein synthesis and a decrease in protein catabolism.
...
PMID:Effect of a tumour-produced lipid-mobilizing factor on protein synthesis and degradation. 1140 19
Inhibition of
proteasome
activity is associated with a reduction in proliferation and apoptosis in cancer cells, depending upon the extent of inhibition. We have reported that a minimal inhibition of
proteasome
activity prevented adenosine 3'5'-cyclic monophosphate (cAMP)-induced differentiation and caused apoptosis in murine neuroblastoma (NB) cells in culture. In order to establish whether an elevated cAMP level increases the sensitivity of
proteasome
to its inhibitors, MG-132 and lactacystin (
proteasome
inhibitors) were added concomitantly with a stimulator of
adenylate cyclase
(prostaglandin A1) and an inhibitor of cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase (RO20-1724). Results showed that concentrations of MG-132 that did not reduce or that minimally inhibited
proteasome
activity also did not affect the proliferation of undifferentiated NB cells. However, these concentrations of MG-132 in the presence of an elevated cAMP level markedly inhibited
proteasome
activity and caused extensive cell death. Similar results were obtained with lactacystin. In normal murine fibroblasts, cAMP-induced reduction in proliferation was not affected by any concentration of MG-132 used in this study. These results suggest that
proteasome
exhibits increased sensitivity to its inhibitors following an elevation of cAMP level in NB cells, but not in normal fibroblasts, and that this may account for the enhanced cell death in NB cells. Thus, the strategy of using low doses of a proteasome inhibitor in combination with a cAMP-stimulating agent may be useful in pre-clinical and clinical studies on NB tumor because of the selectivity of the effect on cancer cells.
...
PMID:Sensitivity of proteasome to its inhibitors increases during cAMP-induced differentiation of neuroblastoma cells in culture and causes decreased viability. 1474 34
The
adenylate cyclase
(AC)/cyclic AMP (cAMP)/cAMP-dependent protein kinase pathway controls many biological phenomena. The ubiquitin/
proteasome
system, controlling the levels of many proteins, modulates important cellular processes such as cell cycle and cell growth. Here we describe a novel mechanism for AC regulation by
proteasome
pathway. Pharmacological inhibition of
proteasome
function in human osteosarcoma U2OS cells results in up-regulation of AC activity, increase of levels of alpha subunit of heterotrimeric stimulatory GTP-binding proteins (alphas) and, remarkably, also in preventing of beta-adrenergic receptor-mediated down-regulation of alphas protein levels. Accumulation of alphas protein is also accompanied by the appearance of polyubiquitinated alphas species. Our results: (1) identify alphas protein as a novel
proteasome
substrate in mammalian cells; (2) indicate that
proteasome
might play a physiological role in controlling AC/cAMP mediated pathways by modulating the levels of Galphas protein; (3) suggest a role for the
proteasome
also in controlling alphas-mediated signaling pathways other than those affecting AC complex.
...
PMID:Adenylate cyclase regulation via proteasome-mediated modulation of Galphas levels. 1533 22
The
adenylate cyclase
(CyaA) produced by Bordetella pertussis is able to deliver CD8+ and CD4+ T-cell epitopes genetically grafted within the catalytic domain of the molecule into antigen presenting cells in vivo. We develop now a new approach in which peptides containing CD8+ epitopes are chemically linked to CyaA. We show that CTL responses were induced in mice immunized with CyaA bearing these CD8+ epitopes. Moreover, we demonstrate that the OVA257-264 CD8+ epitope chemically grafted to CyaA is presented to CD8+ T cells by a mechanism requiring (1)
proteasome
processing, (2) TAP and (3) neosynthesis of MHC class I molecules. Thus, this novel strategy represents a very versatile system as a single CyaA carrier protein could be easily and rapidly coupled to any desired synthetic peptide.
...
PMID:Bordetella pertussis adenylate cyclase delivers chemically coupled CD8+ T-cell epitopes to dendritic cells and elicits CTL in vivo. 1554 80
The initial aim of this study was to identify protein changes associated with long-term morphine treatment in a recombinant human neuroblastoma SH-SY5Y clone (sc2) stably overexpressing the human mu-opioid (MOP) receptor. In MOP receptor-overexpressing sc2 cells, short-term morphine exposure was found to be much more potent and efficacious in inhibiting forskolin-elicited production of cAMP, and long-term morphine exposure was shown to induce a substantially higher degree of opiate dependence, as reflected by
adenylate cyclase
sensitization, than it did in wild-type neuroblastoma cells. Differential proteomic analysis of detergent-resistant membrane rafts isolated from untreated and chronically morphine-treated sc2 cells revealed long-term morphine exposure to have reliably induced a 30 to 40% decrease in the abundance of five proteins, subsequently identified by mass spectrometry as G protein subunits alphai(2), alphai(3), beta(1), and beta(2), and prohibitin. Quantitative Western blot analyses of whole-cell extracts showed that long-term morphine treatment-induced down-regulation of Gbeta but not of the other proteins is highly correlated (r(2) = 0.96) with sensitization of
adenylate cyclase
. Down-regulation of Gbeta and
adenylate cyclase
sensitization elicited by long-term morphine treatment were suppressed in the presence of carbobenzoxy-l-leucyl-l-leucyl-l-norvalinal (MG-115) or lactacystin. Thus, sustained activation of the MOP receptor by morphine in sc2 cells seems to promote proteasomal degradation of Gbeta to sensitize
adenylate cyclase
. Together, our data suggest that the long-term administration of opiates may elicit dependence by altering the neuronal balance of heterotrimeric G proteins and adenylate cyclases, with the ubiquitin-
proteasome
pathway playing a pivotal role.
...
PMID:Long-term morphine treatment enhances proteasome-dependent degradation of G beta in human neuroblastoma SH-SY5Y cells: correlation with onset of adenylate cyclase sensitization. 1590 46
Phytochrome is a red (R)/far-red (FR) light-sensing photoreceptor that regulates various aspects of plant development. Among the members of the phytochrome family, phytochrome A (phyA) exclusively mediates atypical phytochrome responses, such as the FR high irradiance response (FR-HIR), which is elicited under prolonged FR. A
proteasome
-based degradation pathway rapidly eliminates active Pfr (the FR-absorbing form of phyA) under R. To elucidate the structural basis for the phyA-specific properties, we systematically constructed 16 chimeric phytochromes in which each of four parts of the phytochrome molecule, namely, the N-terminal extension plus the Per/Arnt/Sim domain (N-PAS), the cGMP phosphodiesterase/
adenyl cyclase
/FhlA domain (GAF), the phytochrome domain (PHY), and the entire C-terminal half, was occupied by either the phyA or phytochrome B sequence. These phytochromes were expressed in transgenic Arabidopsis thaliana to examine their physiological activities. Consequently, the phyA N-PAS sequence was shown to be necessary and sufficient to promote nuclear accumulation under FR, whereas the phyA sequence in PHY was additionally required to exhibit FR-HIR. Furthermore, the phyA sequence in PHY alone substantially increased the light sensitivity to R. In addition, the GAF phyA sequence was important for rapid Pfr degradation. In summary, distinct structural modules, each of which confers different properties to phyA, are assembled on the phyA molecule.
...
PMID:Arabidopsis phytochrome a is modularly structured to integrate the multiple features that are required for a highly sensitized phytochrome. 2284 85
1
2
Next >>