6 research outputs found

    E4F1 deficiency results in oxidative stress–mediated cell death of leukemic cells

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    Deletion of E4F1 inflicts mitochondrial damage and oxidative stress on murine and human myeloid leukemia cells but not healthy macrophages

    The Hsp90 cochaperone TTT promotes cotranslational maturation of PIKKs prior to complex assembly

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    International audiencePhosphatidylinositol 3-kinase-related kinases (PIKKs) are a family of kinases that control fundamentalprocesses, including cell growth, DNA damage repair, and gene expression. Although their regulation andactivities are well characterized, little is known about how PIKKs fold and assemble into active complexes.Previous work has identified a heat shock protein 90 (Hsp90) cochaperone, the TTT complex, that specificallystabilizes PIKKs. Here, we describe a mechanism by which TTT promotes their de novo maturation in fissionyeast. We show that TTT recognizes newly synthesized PIKKs during translation. Although PIKKs form multimericcomplexes, we find that they do not engage in cotranslational assembly with their partners. Rather, ourfindings suggest a model by which TTT protects nascent PIKK polypeptides from misfolding and degradationbecause PIKKs acquire their native state after translation is terminated. Thus, PIKK maturation and assemblyare temporally segregated, suggesting that the biogenesis of large complexes requires both dedicated chaperonesand cotranslational interactions between subunits

    Heterogeneity in sarcoma cell lines reveals enhanced motility of tetraploid versus diploid cells

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    International audienceSoft tissue sarcomas with complex genomics are very heterogeneous tumors lacking simple prognosis markers or targeted therapies. Overexpression of a subset of mitotic genes from a signature called CINSARC is of bad prognosis, but the significance of this signature remains elusive. Here we precisely measure the cell cycle and mitosis duration of sarcoma cell lines and we found that the mitotic gene products overexpression does not reflect variation in the time spent during mitosis or G2/M. We also found that the CINSARC cell lines, we studied, are composed of a mixture of aneuploid, diploid, and tetraploid cells that are highly motile in vitro. After sorting diploid and tetraploid cells, we showed that the tetraploid cell clones do not possess a proliferative advantage, but are strikingly more motile and invasive than their diploid counterparts. This is correlated with higher levels of mitotic proteins overexpression. Owing that mitotic proteins are almost systematically degraded at the end of mitosis, we propose that it is the abnormal activity of the mitotic proteins during interphase that boosts the sarcoma cells migratory properties by affecting their cytoskeleton. To test this hypothesis, we designed a screen for mitotic or cytoskeleton protein inhibitors affecting the sarcoma cell migration potential independently of cytotoxic activities. We found that inhibition of several mitotic kinases drastically impairs the CINSARC cell invasive and migratory properties. This finding could provide a handle by which to selectively inhibit the most invasive cells

    Transcription factor E4F1 is essential for epidermal stem cell maintenance and skin homeostasis

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    A growing body of evidence suggests that the multifunctional protein E4F1 is involved in signaling pathways that play essential roles during normal development and tumorigenesis. We generated E4F1 conditional knockout mice to address E4F1 functions in vivo in newborn and adult skin. E4F1 inactivation in the entire skin or in the basal compartment of the epidermis induces skin homeostasis defects, as evidenced by transient hyperplasia in the interfollicular epithelium and alteration of keratinocyte differentiation, followed by loss of cellularity in the epidermis and severe skin ulcerations. E4F1 depletion alters clonogenic activity of epidermal stem cells (ESCs) ex vivo and ends in exhaustion of the ESC pool in vivo, indicating that the lesions observed in the E4F1 mutant skin result, at least in part, from cell-autonomous alterations in ESC maintenance. The clonogenic potential of E4F1 KO ESCs is rescued by Bmi1 overexpression or by Ink4a/Arf or p53 depletion. Skin phenotype of E4F1 KO mice is also delayed in animals with Ink4a/Arf and E4F1 compound gene deficiencies. Our data identify a regulatory axis essential for ESC-dependent skin homeostasis implicating E4F1 and the Bmi1–Arf–p53 pathway
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