10 research outputs found

    Gatekeepers of the Gut: The Roles of Proteasomes at the Gastrointestinal Barrier

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    The gut epithelial barrier provides the first line of defense protecting the internal milieu from the environment. To circumvent the exposure to constant challenges such as pathogenic infections and commensal bacteria, epithelial and immune cells at the gut barrier require rapid and efficient means to dynamically sense and respond to stimuli. Numerous studies have highlighted the importance of proteolysis in maintaining homeostasis and adapting to the dynamic changes of the conditions in the gut environment. Primarily, proteolytic activities that are involved in immune regulation and inflammation have been examined in the context of the lysosome and inflammasome activation. Yet, the key to cellular and tissue proteostasis is the ubiquitin–proteasome system, which tightly regulates fundamental aspects of inflammatory signaling and protein quality control to provide rapid responses and protect from the accumulation of proteotoxic damage. In this review, we discuss proteasome-dependent regulation of the gut and highlight the pathophysiological consequences of the disarray of proteasomal control in the gut, in the context of aberrant inflammatory disorders and tumorigenesis

    Maintaining Golgi Homeostasis: A Balancing Act of Two Proteolytic Pathways

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    The Golgi apparatus is a central hub for cellular protein trafficking and signaling. Golgi structure and function is tightly coupled and undergoes dynamic changes in health and disease. A crucial requirement for maintaining Golgi homeostasis is the ability of the Golgi to target aberrant, misfolded, or otherwise unwanted proteins to degradation. Recent studies have revealed that the Golgi apparatus may degrade such proteins through autophagy, retrograde trafficking to the ER for ER-associated degradation (ERAD), and locally, through Golgi apparatus-related degradation (GARD). Here, we review recent discoveries in these mechanisms, highlighting the role of the Golgi in maintaining cellular homeostasis

    Altered Protein Abundance and Localization Inferred from Sites of Alternative Modification by Ubiquitin and SUMO

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    Protein modification by ubiquitin or SUMO can alter the function, stability or activity of target proteins. Previous studies have identified thousands of substrates that were modified by ubiquitin or SUMO on the same lysine residue. However, it remains unclear whether such overlap could result from a mere higher solvent accessibility, whether proteins containing those sites are associated with specific functional traits, and whether selectively perturbing their modification by ubiquitin or SUMO could result in different phenotypic outcomes. Here, we mapped reported lysine modification sites across the human proteome and found an enrichment of sites reported to be modified by both ubiquitin and SUMO. Our analysis uncovered thousands of proteins containing such sites, which we term Sites of Alternative Modification (SAMs). Among more than 36,000 sites reported to be modified by SUMO, 51.8% have also been reported to be modified by ubiquitin. SAM-containing proteins are associated with diverse biological functions including cell cycle, DNA damage, and transcriptional regulation. As such, our analysis highlights numerous proteins and pathways as putative targets for further elucidating the crosstalk between ubiquitin and SUMO. Comparing the biological and biochemical properties of SAMs versus other non-overlapping modification sites revealed that these sites were associated with altered cellular localization or abundance of their host proteins. Lastly, using S. cerevisiae as model, we show that mutating the SAM motif in a protein can influence its ubiquitination as well as its localization and abundance.</p

    The Dependence Receptor UNC5H2/B Triggers Apoptosis via PP2A-Mediated Dephosphorylation of DAP Kinase

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    International audienceThe UNC5H dependence receptors promote apoptosis in the absence of their ligand, netrin-1, and this is important for neuronal and vascular development and for limitation of cancer progression. UNC5H2 (also called UNC5B) triggers cell death through the activation of the serine-threonine protein kinase DAPk. While performing a siRNA screen to identify genes implicated in UNC5H-induced apoptosis, we identified the structural subunit PR65 beta of the holoenzyme protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A). We show that UNC5H2/B recruits a protein complex that includes PR65 beta and DAPk and retains PP2A activity. PP2A activity is required for UNC5H2/B-induced apoptosis, since it activates DAPk by triggering its dephosphorylation. Moreover, netrin-1 binding to UNC5H2/B prevents this effect through interaction of the PP2A inhibitor CIP2A to UNC5H2/B. Thus we show here that, in the absence of netrin-1, recruitment of PP2A to UNC5H2/B allows the activation of DAPk via a PP2A-mediated dephosphorylation and that this mechanism is involved in angiogenesis regulation

    Specific and Label‐Free bioFET Sensing of the Interaction Between the Electrically Neutral Small Estriol Molecule and Its Antibody in a Microliter Drop of Diluted Plasma

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    Abstract The sensing of small molecules is important to a variety of fields and particularly to clinical diagnostics. Estriol is an important small chemical molecule, as it is one of three markers measured during mid‐gestation for the Down syndrome. Point‐of‐care testing of estriol will increase maternal compliance for aneuploidy mid‐gestation screening. A bioFET technology is a promising point‐of‐care platform. The meta‐nano‐channel (MNC) bioFET is employed with its tunable channel configuration to optimize the coupling between the electrostatics of the estriol‐receptor interactions and the electrodynamics of the conducting readout current. Also, the MNC bioFET receptor layer is composed of anti‐estriol antibodies to address the high structural similarity of estriol to other estrogens. Despite the small size and the electrical neutrality of estriol, real‐time is demonstrated, specific, and label‐free sensing of estriol in 0.5 µL of 1:100 diluted plasma with excellent linearity, sensitivity, dynamic range extending to ten orders of magnitude in estriol concentration and limit‐of‐detection of 1 fg mL−1. Extensive control and non‐specific measurements are reported including the response to other neutral members of the estrogen family

    The proteasome regulator PSME4 modulates proteasome activity and antigen diversity to abrogate antitumor immunity in NSCLC

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    Immunotherapy revolutionized treatment options in cancer, yet the mechanisms underlying resistance in many patients remain poorly understood. Cellular proteasomes have been implicated in modulating antitumor immunity by regulating antigen processing, antigen presentation, inflammatory signaling and immune cell activation. However, whether and how proteasome complex heterogeneity may affect tumor progression and the response to immunotherapy has not been systematically examined. Here, we show that proteasome complex composition varies substantially across cancers and impacts tumor–immune interactions and the tumor microenvironment. Through profiling of the degradation landscape of patient-derived non-small-cell lung carcinoma samples, we find that the proteasome regulator PSME4 is upregulated in tumors, alters proteasome activity, attenuates presented antigenic diversity and associates with lack of response to immunotherapy. Collectively, our approach affords a paradigm by which proteasome composition heterogeneity and function should be examined across cancer types and targeted in the context of precision oncology

    The paradox of autophagy and its implication in cancer etiology and therapy

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    Erratum to: Guidelines for the use and interpretation of assays for monitoring autophagy (3rd edition) (Autophagy, 12, 1, 1-222, 10.1080/15548627.2015.1100356

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    Guidelines for the use and interpretation of assays for monitoring autophagy (3rd edition)

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