34 research outputs found

    Phosphorylation Regulates SIRT1 Function

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    BACKGROUND: SIR2 is an NAD(+)-dependent deacetylase [1]-[3] implicated in the regulation of lifespan in species as diverse as yeast [4], worms [5], and flies [6]. We previously reported that the level of SIRT1, the mammalian homologue of SIR2 [7], [8], is coupled to the level of mitotic activity in cells both in vitro and in vivo[9]. Cells from long-lived mice maintained SIRT1 levels of young mice in tissues that undergo continuous cell replacement by proliferating stem cells. Changes in SIRT1 protein level were not associated with changes in mRNA level, suggesting that SIRT1 could be regulated post-transcriptionally. However, other than a recent report on sumoylation [10] and identification of SIRT1 as a nuclear phospho-protein by mass spectrometry [11], post-translational modifications of this important protein have not been reported. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We identified 13 residues in SIRT1 that are phosphorylated in vivo using mass spectrometry. Dephosphorylation by phosphatases in vitro resulted in decreased NAD(+)-dependent deacetylase activity. We identified cyclinB/Cdk1 as a cell cycle-dependent kinase that forms a complex with and phosphorylates SIRT1. Mutation of two residues phosphorylated by Cyclin B/Cdk1 (threonine 530 and serine 540) disturbs normal cell cycle progression and fails to rescue proliferation defects in SIRT1-deficient cells [12], [13]. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Pharmacological manipulation of SIRT1 activity is currently being tested as a means of extending lifespan in mammals. Treatment of obese mice with resveratrol, a pharmacological activator of SIRT1, modestly but significantly improved longevity and, perhaps more importantly, offered some protection against the development of type 2 diabetes mellitus and metabolic syndrome [14]-[16]. Understanding the endogenous mechanisms that regulate the level and activity of SIRT1, therefore, has obvious relevance to human health and disease. Our results identify phosphorylation by cell cycle dependent kinases as a major mechanism controlling the level and function of this sirtuin and complement recent reports of factors that inhibit [17], [18] and activate [19] SIRT1 by protein-protein interactions

    Molecular genetics of childhood rhabdomyosarcoma

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    Rhabdomyosarcoma is a class of malignant neoplasms composed of cells histologically resembling fetal striated muscle. It is the most common soft tissue tumor of children, adolescents, and young adults. In this Thesis, I demonstrate that the rhabdomyosarcoma tumor class is delimited in molecular genetic terms by the expression of the MyoD gene, and that loss of alleles on chromosome 11 distinguishes between the embryonal and alveolar subtypes. The elucidation of this genotypic distinction resolved the paradox between phenotypic variation and an apparent histogenetic relatedness between and among rhabodmyosarcomas. It also allowed for the construction of a two-tiered scheme for the unequivocal differential diagnosis of rhabdomyosarcoma and its subtypes. MyoD is syntenic to but distinct from Rd, a locus consistently involved in the etiology of the embryonal subtype. Abnormal segregation of alleles on chromosome 11p in both familial and sporadic embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma results in retention of only paternal alleles in tumors and supports a model of tumorigenesis involving unlinked modifier loci which inactivate Rd, perhaps by genome imprinting. Uniform loss of heterozygosity at loci on chromosome 11 in phenotypic variants of embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma that show simultaneous differentiation into another neoplastic tissue type implies that mutation at Rd is one of the earliest somatic events

    Visualization of the Dynamics of Gene Expression in the Living Mouse

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    Reporter genes can monitor the status and activity of recombinant genomes in a diverse array of organisms, from bacteria and yeast to plants and animals. We have combined luciferase reporter genes with a conditional gene expression system based on regulatory elements from the lac Operon of Escherichia coli to visualize the dynamics of gene expression in realtime in the living mouse. Using this technology, we have determined the rate of gene induction and repression, the level of target gene activity in response to different doses of inducer, and the schedule of induction during early embryogenesis of both the endogenous and the experimentally manipulated programs of mammalian gene expression associated with the HD/Hdh locus. The combination of in vivo imaging and lac regulation is a powerful tool for generating conditional transgenic mice that can be screened rapidly for optimal regulation and expression patterns, and for monitoring the induction and repression of regulated genes noninvasively in the living animal

    Visualization of the Dynamics of Gene Expression in the Living Mouse

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    Ξ”40p53 controls the switch from pluripotency to differentiation by regulating IGF signaling in ESCs

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    Ξ”40p53 is a transactivation-deficient isoform of the tumor suppressor p53. We discovered that Ξ”40p53, in addition to being highly expressed in embryonic stem cells (ESCs), is the major p53 isoform during early stages of embryogenesis in the mouse. By altering the dose of Ξ”40p53 in ESCs, we identified a critical role for this isoform in maintaining the ESC state. Haploinsufficiency for Ξ”40p53 causes a loss of pluripotency in ESCs and acquisition of a somatic cell cycle, while increased dosage of Ξ”40p53 prolongs pluripotency and inhibits progression to a more differentiated state. Ξ”40p53 controls the switch from pluripotent ESCs to differentiated somatic cells by controlling the activity of full-length p53 at critical targets such as Nanog and the IGF-1 receptor (IGF-1R). The IGF axis plays a central role in the switch between pluripotency and differentiation in ESCsβ€”and Ξ”40p53, by controlling the level of the IGF-1R, acts as a master regulator of this switch. We propose that this is the primary function of Ξ”40p53 in cells of the early embryo and stem cells, which are the only normal cells in which this isoform is expressed

    Visualization of the Dynamics of Gene Expression in the Living Mouse

    No full text
    Reporter genes can monitor the status and activity of recombinant genomes in a diverse array of organisms, from bacteria and yeast to plants and animals. We have combined luciferase reporter genes with a conditional gene expression system based on regulatory elements from the lac Operon of Escherichia coli to visualize the dynamics of gene expression in realtime in the living mouse. Using this technology, we have determined the rate of gene induction and repression, the level of target gene activity in response to different doses of inducer, and the schedule of induction during early embryogenesis of both the endogenous and the experimentally manipulated programs of mammalian gene expression associated with the HD/Hdh locus. The combination of in vivo imaging and lac regulation is a powerful tool for generating conditional transgenic mice that can be screened rapidly for optimal regulation and expression patterns, and for monitoring the induction and repression of regulated genes noninvasively in the living animal
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