7 research outputs found
Multimodal Cotranslational Interactions Direct Assembly of the Human Multi-tRNA Synthetase Complex
Amino acid ligation to cognate transfer RNAs (tRNAs) is catalyzed by aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases (aaRSs)-essential interpreters of the genetic code during translation. Mammalian cells harbor 20 cytoplasmic aaRSs, out of which 9 (in 8 proteins), with 3 non-aaRS proteins, AIMPs 1 to 3, form the similar to 1.25-MDa multi-tRNA synthetase complex (MSC). The function of MSC remains uncertain, as does its mechanism of assembly. Constituents of multiprotein complexes encounter obstacles during assembly, including inappropriate interactions, topological constraints, premature degradation of unassembled subunits, and suboptimal stoichiometry. To facilitate orderly and efficient complex formation, some complexes are assembled cotranslationally by a mechanism in which a fully formed, mature protein binds a nascent partner as it emerges from the translating ribosome. Here, we show out of the 121 possible interaction events between the 11 MSC constituents, 15 are cotranslational. AIMPs are involved in the majority of these cotranslational interactions, suggesting they are not only critical for MSC structure but also for assembly. Unexpectedly, several cotranslational events involve more than the usual dyad of interacting proteins. We show two modes of cotranslational interaction, namely a multisite mechanism in which two or more mature proteins bind the same nascent peptide at distinct sites and a second piggy-back mechanism in which a mature protein carries a second fully formed protein and binds to a single site on an emerging peptide. Multimodal mechanisms of cotranslational interaction offer a diversity of pathways for ordered, piecewise assembly of small subcomplexes into larger heteromultimeric complexes such as the mammalian MSC
Functions for rice RFL in vegetative axillary meristem specification and outgrowth
Roles for the transcription factor RFL in rice axillary meristem development were studied. Its regulatory effects on LAX1, CUC1, and OsPIN3 reveal its functions in axillary meristem specification and outgrowth.Axillary meristems (AMs) are secondary shoot meristems whose outgrowth determines plant architecture. In rice, AMs form tillers, and tillering mutants reveal an interplay between transcription factors and the phytohormones auxin and strigolactone as some factors that underpin this developmental process. Previous studies showed that knockdown of the transcription factor gene RFL reduced tillering and caused a very large decrease in panicle branching. Here, the relationship between RFL, AM initiation, and outgrowth was examined. We show that RFL promotes AM specification through its effects on LAX1 and CUC genes, as their expression was modulated on RFL knockdown, on induction of RFL:GR fusion protein, and by a repressive RFL-EAR fusion protein. Further, we report reduced expression of auxin transporter genes OsPIN1 and OsPIN3 in the culm of RFL knockdown transgenic plants. Additionally, subtle change in the spatial pattern of IR4 DR5:GFP auxin reporter was observed, which hints at compromised auxin transport on RFL knockdown. The relationship between RFL, strigolactone signalling, and bud outgrowth was studied by transcript analyses and by the tillering phenotype of transgenic plants knocked down for both RFL and D3. These data suggest indirect RFL-strigolactone links that may affect tillering. Further, we show expression modulation of the auxin transporter gene OsPIN3 upon RFL:GR protein induction and by the repressive RFL-EAR protein. These modified forms of RFL had only indirect effects on OsPIN1. Together, we have found that RFL regulates the LAX1 and CUC genes during AM specification, and positively influences the outgrowth of AMs though its effects on auxin transport
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TMIC-69. MITOCHONDRIAL TRANSFER FROM ASTROCYTES ENHANCES METABOLISM AND DRIVES PROLIFERATION OF GLIOBLASTOMA
Abstract
Mitochondrial transfer occurs both in stroke (central nervous system) and inflammatory pain (peripheral nerves). However, its role in glioblastoma (GBM) remains poorly understood. We hypothesized that mitochondrial transfer from non-malignant to GBM cells supports tumor metabolism and growth. Using transgenic mice expressing fluorophore-tagged mitochondria, we found that ~50% of orthotopically-implanted mouse GBM cells acquire mitochondria. Brain-resident cells, especially astrocytes, were the primary mitochondrial donors in vitro and in vivo. Mitochondrial transfer also occurred from immortalized human astrocytes to patient-derived xenograft (PDX) models in vitro at rates of 15-35%. GBM cells that acquired mitochondria expressed higher levels of the ATP-synthase subunit ATP5A and produced more ATP, while metabolomics revealed multiple upregulated pathways in recipient cells. These data point to increased metabolic activity in recipient cells. In vivo, mouse GBM cells that acquired mitochondria were more likely to be in S/G2/M cell cycle phases. We observed a similar effect in PDX that acquired astrocyte mitochondria in vitro, suggesting that transfer drives GBM proliferation. Using sorted mouse and human GBM cells with/without in vitro astrocyte mitochondrial acquisition, we found that mitochondrial transfer promoted in vitro self-renewal and in vivo tumorigenicity, leading to significant reduction in survival and increased penetrance in orthotopic GBM models. Transfer in mouse and human systems was contact-dependent and was abrogated by physical separation of donor and recipient cells by transwell inserts. Pharmacologic inhibition of cytoskeleton and gap junctions did not affect transfer rate, while blocking growth-associated protein 43 (GAP43) function by c-Jun N-terminus kinase inhibition decreased transfer rate by 15-30%, suggesting a potential role of GAP43. Taken together, mitochondrial transfer comprises a fundamental, protumorigenic mechanism of GBM, enhancing metabolic activity and driving tumor cell proliferation. Elucidating the molecular machinery regulating astrocyte mitochondrial transfer and its downstream protumorigenic effects will lead to therapeutic opportunities targeting this understudied tumor microenvironment interaction
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Abstract 331: Mitochondrial transfer from astrocytes drives glioblastoma tumorigenicity
Abstract Mitochondrial transfer in the central nervous system occurs from astrocytes to neurons in stroke. Mitochondrial exchange has also been reported among tumor cells in glioblastoma (GBM), the most common primary brain tumor. However, the role of mitochondrial transfer from non-neoplastic cells in the surrounding microenvironment to GBM remains poorly understood. We hypothesized that mitochondrial transfer from these non-neoplastic to GBM cells supports tumor metabolism and growth. Using transgenic mice expressing fluorophore-tagged mitochondria, we found that ~50% of orthotopically-implanted mouse GBM cells acquire host mitochondria. Brain-resident cells, mainly astrocytes, but not infiltrating immune cells were the primary mitochondrial donors in vivo and in vitro. Mitochondrial transfer also occurred from immortalized human astrocytes to a broad array of patient-derived xenograft (PDX) models of GBM in vitro at rates of 15-35%. GBM cells that acquired mitochondria expressed higher levels of the ATP-synthase subunit ATP5A and produced more ATP, while metabolomics revealed upregulated amino acid metabolism in recipient cells. In vivo, mouse GBM cells that acquired mitochondria were more likely to be in G2/M proliferative cell cycle phases. We observed a similar effect in PDX that acquired astrocyte mitochondria from co-cultures in vitro. To mechanistically link increased proliferation specifically to mitochondrial transfer, we isolated astrocyte mitochondria by differential centrifugation and found that addition and uptake of cell-free mitochondria in human GBM cells recapitulated the increased proliferation. Using sorted mouse and human GBM cells with/without astrocyte mitochondrial acquisition, we further found that mitochondrial transfer promoted in vitro self-renewal and in vivo tumorigenicity, leading to significant reduction in survival and increased penetrance in orthotopic GBM models. Transfer in mouse and human systems was contact-dependent and was abrogated by physical separation of donor and recipient cells by transwell inserts. We visualized contact-dependent transfer across actin-based intercellular connections consistent with previously reported microtubes. We confirmed the critical role of actin and the actin-associated protein, growth-associated protein 43 (GAP43) in facilitating mitochondrial transfer by showing that pharmacologic inhibition and genetic knockdown (respectively) significantly decreased the rate of mitochondrial transfer. Taken together, mitochondrial transfer comprises a fundamental, protumorigenic mechanism of GBM, enhancing metabolic activity and driving tumor cell proliferation. Further elucidating the molecular machinery regulating astrocyte mitochondrial transfer and its downstream protumorigenic effects will lead to therapeutic opportunities targeting this understudied tumor microenvironment interaction. Citation Format: Dionysios C. Watson, Defne Bayik, Simon Storevik, Shannon S. Moreino, Samuel S. Sprowls, Gauravi Deshpande, Palavalasa Sravya, Costas A. Lyssiotis, Daniel R. Wahl, Hrvoje Miletic, Justin D. Lathia. Mitochondrial transfer from astrocytes drives glioblastoma tumorigenicity [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2023; Part 1 (Regular and Invited Abstracts); 2023 Apr 14-19; Orlando, FL. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2023;83(7_Suppl):Abstract nr 331
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CNSC-15. MITOCHONDRIA TRANSFER VIA GLIOMA-ASTROCYTE NETWORK MICROTUBES REPROGRAMS TUMOR CELLS FOR ENHANCED TUMORIGENICITY
Abstract Glioblastoma (GBM) interaction with neural cells is critical to its pathobiology. Emerging evidence suggests that GBM cells form an interconnected network with astrocytes, facilitating tumor persistence. Given reports of intercellular transfer of mitochondria in ischemic stroke and other pathologic disease states outside the CNS, we hypothesized that this network facilitates mitochondria transfer from astrocytes to GBM with protumorigenic sequelae. Employing transgenic mice and intracranial viral vector transductions in rats, we found that mitochondria transfer from the TME to GBM occurs in intracranial mouse and patient-derived xenograft models (in nude rats) of GBM. Mitochondria transfer from bone marrow-derived immune cells was minimal in bone marrow chimera mouse models of orthotopic GBM, suggesting that neural cells were the primary mitochondria donors. We confirmed this in vitro, where mouse astrocytes were the major mitochondria donors, followed by microglia and to a much smaller extent bone marrow-derived macrophages. Immortalized human astrocytes transduced with mitochondria-localized mCherry (mito-mCherry) also transferred their mitochondria to numerous patient-derived glioma stem cell (GSC) models at rates of ~5-20%, assessed by flow cytometry and confocal microscopy. Mitochondria were visualized along intercellular actin bridges, structurally resembling tumor microtubes. Blocking actin polymerization or knocking down GAP43 (previously linked to microtube formation) decreased mitochondria transfer from astrocytes to GBM in vitro. Functionally, sorted mito-mCherry+ patient-derived GSCs displayed higher mitochondrial respiration, metabolomic reprogramming and proliferation-promoting phospho-signaling. Mito-mCherry+ GBM cells were more likely to be in the proliferative G2/M phases of the cell cycle, and when sorted from co-cultures had high self-renewal (in vitro) and tumor-initiating capacity (in vivo xenograft mouse model). In ongoing work, we are investigating the role of retrograde GBM to astrocyte transfer of mitochondria by dual-color labeling of the organelle, as well as further delineating the protein machinery involved in this fundamental protumorigenic process, with the goal of identifying novel therapeutic targets
GAP43-dependent mitochondria transfer from astrocytes enhances glioblastoma tumorigenicity
The transfer of intact mitochondria between heterogeneous cell types has been confirmed in various settings, including cancer. However, the functional implications of mitochondria transfer on tumor biology are poorly understood. Here we show that mitochondria transfer is a prevalent phenomenon in glioblastoma (GBM), the most frequent and malignant primary brain tumor. We identified horizontal mitochondria transfer from astrocytes as a mechanism that enhances tumorigenesis in GBM. This transfer is dependent on network-forming intercellular connections between GBM cells and astrocytes, which are facilitated by growth-associated protein 43 (GAP43), a protein involved in neuron axon regeneration and astrocyte reactivity. The acquisition of astrocyte mitochondria drives an increase in mitochondrial respiration and upregulation of metabolic pathways linked to proliferation and tumorigenicity. Functionally, uptake of astrocyte mitochondria promotes cell cycle progression to proliferative G2/M phases and enhances self-renewal and tumorigenicity of GBM. Collectively, our findings reveal a host-tumor interaction that drives proliferation and self-renewal of cancer cells, providing opportunities for therapeutic development