104 research outputs found

    Arabidopsis protein phosphatase DBP1 nucleates a protein network with a role in regulating plant defense

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    Arabidopsis thaliana DBP1 belongs to the plant-specific family of DNA-binding protein phosphatases. Although recently identified as a novel host factor mediating susceptibility to potyvirus, little is known about DBP1 targets and partners and the molecular mechanisms underlying its function. Analyzing changes in the phosphoproteome of a loss-of-function dbp1 mutant enabled the identification of 14-3-3l isoform (GRF6), a previously reported DBP1 interactor, and MAP kinase (MAPK) MPK11 as components of a small protein network nucleated by DBP1, in which GRF6 stability is modulated by MPK11 through phosphorylation, while DBP1 in turn negatively regulates MPK11 activity. Interestingly, grf6 and mpk11 loss-offunction mutants showed altered response to infection by the potyvirus Plum pox virus (PPV), and the described molecular mechanism controlling GRF6 stability was recapitulated upon PPV infection. These results not only contribute to a better knowledge of the biology of DBP factors, but also of MAPK signalling in plants, with the identification of GRF6 as a likely MPK11 substrate and of DBP1 as a protein phosphatase regulating MPK11 activity, and unveils the implication of this protein module in the response to PPV infection in Arabidopsis.This work was supported by the Spanish MICINN (Grants BFU2009-09771, EUI2009-04009 to PV), Generalitat Valenciana (Prometeo2010/020 to PV) and the German DFG (SCHE 235/15-1 to DS). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.Carrasco Jiménez, JL.; Castelló Llopis, MJ.; Naumann, K.; Lassowskat, I.; Navarrete Gomez, ML.; Scheel, D.; Vera Vera, P. (2014). Arabidopsis protein phosphatase DBP1 nucleates a protein network with a role in regulating plant defense. PLoS ONE. 9:1-10. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0090734S1109Carrasco, J. L. (2003). A novel transcription factor involved in plant defense endowed with protein phosphatase activity. The EMBO Journal, 22(13), 3376-3384. doi:10.1093/emboj/cdg323Carrasco, J. L., Ancillo, G., Castelló, M. J., & Vera, P. (2005). A Novel DNA-Binding Motif, Hallmark of a New Family of Plant Transcription Factors. Plant Physiology, 137(2), 602-606. doi:10.1104/pp.104.056002Castelló, M. J., Carrasco, J. L., & Vera, P. (2010). DNA-Binding Protein Phosphatase AtDBP1 Mediates Susceptibility to Two Potyviruses in Arabidopsis. Plant Physiology, 153(4), 1521-1525. doi:10.1104/pp.110.158923Castelló, M. J., Carrasco, J. L., Navarrete-Gómez, M., Daniel, J., Granot, D., & Vera, P. (2011). A Plant Small Polypeptide Is a Novel Component of DNA-Binding Protein Phosphatase 1-Mediated Resistance to Plum pox virus in Arabidopsis. Plant Physiology, 157(4), 2206-2215. doi:10.1104/pp.111.188953Denison, F. C., Paul, A.-L., Zupanska, A. K., & Ferl, R. J. (2011). 14-3-3 proteins in plant physiology. Seminars in Cell & Developmental Biology, 22(7), 720-727. doi:10.1016/j.semcdb.2011.08.006Carrasco, J. L., Castelló, M. J., & Vera, P. (2006). 14-3-3 Mediates Transcriptional Regulation by Modulating Nucleocytoplasmic Shuttling of Tobacco DNA-binding Protein Phosphatase-1. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 281(32), 22875-22881. doi:10.1074/jbc.m512611200Colcombet, J., & Hirt, H. (2008). ArabidopsisMAPKs: a complex signalling network involved in multiple biological processes. Biochemical Journal, 413(2), 217-226. doi:10.1042/bj20080625Kiegerl, S., Cardinale, F., Siligan, C., Gross, A., Baudouin, E., Liwosz, A., … Meskiene, I. (2000). SIMKK, a Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinase (MAPK) Kinase, Is a Specific Activator of the Salt Stress–Induced MAPK, SIMK. The Plant Cell, 12(11), 2247-2258. doi:10.1105/tpc.12.11.2247CAMPS, M., NICHOLS, A., & ARKINSTALL, S. (2000). Dual specificity phosphatases: a gene family for control of MAP kinase function. The FASEB Journal, 14(1), 6-16. doi:10.1096/fasebj.14.1.6Bethke, G., Pecher, P., Eschen-Lippold, L., Tsuda, K., Katagiri, F., Glazebrook, J., … Lee, J. (2012). Activation of the Arabidopsis thaliana Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinase MPK11 by the Flagellin-Derived Elicitor Peptide, flg22. Molecular Plant-Microbe Interactions, 25(4), 471-480. doi:10.1094/mpmi-11-11-0281Wolschin, F., Wienkoop, S., & Weckwerth, W. (2005). Enrichment of phosphorylated proteins and peptides from complex mixtures using metal oxide/hydroxide affinity chromatography (MOAC). PROTEOMICS, 5(17), 4389-4397. doi:10.1002/pmic.200402049Petersen, M., Brodersen, P., Naested, H., Andreasson, E., Lindhart, U., Johansen, B., … Mundy, J. (2000). Arabidopsis MAP Kinase 4 Negatively Regulates Systemic Acquired Resistance. Cell, 103(7), 1111-1120. doi:10.1016/s0092-8674(00)00213-0Asai, T., Tena, G., Plotnikova, J., Willmann, M. R., Chiu, W.-L., Gomez-Gomez, L., … Sheen, J. (2002). MAP kinase signalling cascade in Arabidopsis innate immunity. Nature, 415(6875), 977-983. doi:10.1038/415977aKosetsu, K., Matsunaga, S., Nakagami, H., Colcombet, J., Sasabe, M., Soyano, T., … Machida, Y. (2010). The MAP Kinase MPK4 Is Required for Cytokinesis in Arabidopsis thaliana. The Plant Cell, 22(11), 3778-3790. doi:10.1105/tpc.110.077164Koroleva, O. A., Tomlinson, M. L., Leader, D., Shaw, P., & Doonan, J. H. (2004). High-throughput protein localization in Arabidopsis using Agrobacterium-mediated transient expression of GFP-ORF fusions. The Plant Journal, 41(1), 162-174. doi:10.1111/j.1365-313x.2004.02281.xVierstra, R. D. (2009). The ubiquitin–26S proteasome system at the nexus of plant biology. Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology, 10(6), 385-397. doi:10.1038/nrm2688Gökirmak, T., Paul, A.-L., & Ferl, R. J. (2010). Plant phosphopeptide-binding proteins as signaling mediators. Current Opinion in Plant Biology, 13(5), 527-532. doi:10.1016/j.pbi.2010.06.001Keyse, S. M. (2000). Protein phosphatases and the regulation of mitogen-activated protein kinase signalling. Current Opinion in Cell Biology, 12(2), 186-192. doi:10.1016/s0955-0674(99)00075-7Gupta, R., & Luan, S. (2003). Redox Control of Protein Tyrosine Phosphatases and Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinases in Plants. Plant Physiology, 132(3), 1149-1152. doi:10.1104/pp.103.020792Katou, S., Karita, E., Yamakawa, H., Seo, S., Mitsuhara, I., Kuchitsu, K., & Ohashi, Y. (2005). Catalytic Activation of the Plant MAPK Phosphatase NtMKP1 by Its Physiological Substrate Salicylic Acid-induced Protein Kinase but Not by Calmodulins. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 280(47), 39569-39581. doi:10.1074/jbc.m508115200Schweighofer, A., Kazanaviciute, V., Scheikl, E., Teige, M., Doczi, R., Hirt, H., … Meskiene, I. (2007). The PP2C-Type Phosphatase AP2C1, Which Negatively Regulates MPK4 and MPK6, Modulates Innate Immunity, Jasmonic Acid, and Ethylene Levels in Arabidopsis. The Plant Cell, 19(7), 2213-2224. doi:10.1105/tpc.106.049585Ulm, R. (2001). Mitogen-activated protein kinase phosphatase is required for genotoxic stress relief in Arabidopsis. Genes & Development, 15(6), 699-709. doi:10.1101/gad.192601Yamakawa, H., Katou, S., Seo, S., Mitsuhara, I., Kamada, H., & Ohashi, Y. (2003). Plant MAPK Phosphatase Interacts with Calmodulins. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 279(2), 928-936. doi:10.1074/jbc.m310277200Popescu, S. C., Popescu, G. V., Bachan, S., Zhang, Z., Gerstein, M., Snyder, M., & Dinesh-Kumar, S. P. (2008). MAPK target networks in Arabidopsis thaliana revealed using functional protein microarrays. Genes & Development, 23(1), 80-92. doi:10.1101/gad.1740009Sato, T., Maekawa, S., Yasuda, S., Domeki, Y., Sueyoshi, K., Fujiwara, M., … Yamaguchi, J. (2011). Identification of 14-3-3 proteins as a target of ATL31 ubiquitin ligase, a regulator of the C/N response in Arabidopsis. The Plant Journal, 68(1), 137-146. doi:10.1111/j.1365-313x.2011.04673.xHunter, T. (2007). The Age of Crosstalk: Phosphorylation, Ubiquitination, and Beyond. Molecular Cell, 28(5), 730-738. doi:10.1016/j.molcel.2007.11.01

    Combined mRNA expression levels of members of the urokinase plasminogen activator (uPA) system correlate with disease-associated survival of soft-tissue sarcoma patients

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Members of the urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA) system are up-regulated in various solid malignant tumors. High antigen levels of uPA, its inhibitor PAI-1 and its receptor uPAR have recently been shown to be associated with poor prognosis in soft-tissue sarcoma (STS) patients. However, the mRNA expression of uPA system components has not yet been comprehensively investigated in STS patients.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>The mRNA expression level of uPA, PAI-1, uPAR and an uPAR splice variant, uPAR-del4/5, was analyzed in tumor tissue from 78 STS patients by quantitative PCR.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Elevated mRNA expression levels of PAI-1 and uPAR-del4/5 were significantly associated with clinical parameters such as histological subtype (<it>P </it>= 0.037 and <it>P </it>< 0.001, respectively) and higher tumor grade (<it>P </it>= 0.017 and <it>P </it>= 0.003, respectively). In addition, high uPAR-del4/5 mRNA values were significantly related to higher tumor stage of STS patients (<it>P </it>= 0.031). On the other hand, mRNA expression of uPA system components was not significantly associated with patients' survival. However, in STS patients with complete tumor resection (R0), high PAI-1 and uPAR-del4/5 mRNA levels were associated with a distinctly increased risk of tumor-related death (RR = 6.55, <it>P </it>= 0.054 and RR = 6.00, <it>P </it>= 0.088, respectively). Strikingly, R0 patients with both high PAI-1 and uPAR-del4/5 mRNA expression levels showed a significant, 19-fold increased risk of tumor-related death (<it>P </it>= 0.044) compared to the low expression group.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Our results suggest that PAI-1 and uPAR-del4/5 mRNA levels may add prognostic information in STS patients with R0 status and distinguish a subgroup of R0 patients with low PAI-1 and/or low uPAR-del4/5 values who have a better outcome compared to patients with high marker levels.</p

    Pure-quartic solitons

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    Temporal optical solitons have been the subject of intense research due to their intriguing physics and applications in ultrafast optics and supercontinuum generation. Conventional bright optical solitons result from the interaction of anomalous group-velocity dispersion and self-phase modulation. Here we experimentally demonstrate a class of bright soliton arising purely from the interaction of negative fourth-order dispersion and self-phase modulation, which can occur even for normal group-velocity dispersion. We provide experimental and numerical evidence of shape-preserving propagation and flat temporal phase for the fundamental pure-quartic soliton and periodically modulated propagation for the higher-order pure-quartic solitons. We derive the approximate shape of the fundamental pure-quartic soliton and discover that is surprisingly Gaussian, exhibiting excellent agreement with our experimental observations. Our discovery, enabled by precise dispersion engineering, could find applications in communications, frequency combs and ultrafast lasers

    Enhancing organisational competitiveness via social media - a strategy as practice perspective

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    The affordances, popularity and pervasive use of social media platforms such as Facebook, Twitter and Instagram have made these platforms attractive to organisations for enhancing their competitiveness and creating business value. Despite this apparent significance of social media for businesses, they are struggling with the development of a social media strategy as well as understanding the implications of social media on practice within their organisations. This paper explores how social media has become a tool for competitiveness and its influence on organisational strategy and practice. Using the 'strategy as practice' lens and guided by the interpretivist philosophy, this paper uses the empirical case of a telecom organisation in Tanzania. The findings show that social media is influencing competitiveness through imitation and product development. Also, the findings indicate how social media affects the practices within an organisation, consequently making the social media strategy an emergent phenomenon

    An integrated ontology resource to explore and study host-virus relationships.

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    Our growing knowledge of viruses reveals how these pathogens manage to evade innate host defenses. A global scheme emerges in which many viruses usurp key cellular defense mechanisms and often inhibit the same components of antiviral signaling. To accurately describe these processes, we have generated a comprehensive dictionary for eukaryotic host-virus interactions. This controlled vocabulary has been detailed in 57 ViralZone resource web pages which contain a global description of all molecular processes. In order to annotate viral gene products with this vocabulary, an ontology has been built in a hierarchy of UniProt Knowledgebase (UniProtKB) keyword terms and corresponding Gene Ontology (GO) terms have been developed in parallel. The results are 65 UniProtKB keywords related to 57 GO terms, which have been used in 14,390 manual annotations; 908,723 automatic annotations and propagated to an estimation of 922,941 GO annotations. ViralZone pages, UniProtKB keywords and GO terms provide complementary tools to users, and the three resources have been linked to each other through host-virus vocabulary

    Elevated Expression of Stromal Palladin Predicts Poor Clinical Outcome in Renal Cell Carcinoma

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    The role that stromal renal cell carcinoma (RCC) plays in support of tumor progression is unclear. Here we sought to determine the predictive value on patient survival of several markers of stromal activation and the feasibility of a fibroblast-derived extracellular matrix (ECM) based three-dimensional (3D) culture stemming from clinical specimens to recapitulate stromal behavior in vitro. The clinical relevance of selected stromal markers was assessed using a well annotated tumor microarray where stromal-marker levels of expression were evaluated and compared to patient outcomes. Also, an in vitro 3D system derived from fibroblasts harvested from patient matched normal kidney, primary RCC and metastatic tumors was employed to evaluate levels and localizations of known stromal markers such as the actin binding proteins palladin, alpha-smooth muscle actin (α-SMA), fibronectin and its spliced form EDA. Results suggested that RCCs exhibiting high levels of stromal palladin correlate with a poor prognosis, as demonstrated by overall survival time. Conversely, cases of RCCs where stroma presents low levels of palladin expression indicate increased survival times and, hence, better outcomes. Fibroblast-derived 3D cultures, which facilitate the categorization of stromal RCCs into discrete progressive stromal stages, also show increased levels of expression and stress fiber localization of α-SMA and palladin, as well as topographical organization of fibronectin and its splice variant EDA. These observations are concordant with expression levels of these markers in vivo. The study proposes that palladin constitutes a useful marker of poor prognosis in non-metastatic RCCs, while in vitro 3D cultures accurately represent the specific patient's tumor-associated stromal compartment. Our observations support the belief that stromal palladin assessments have clinical relevance thus validating the use of these 3D cultures to study both progressive RCC-associated stroma and stroma-dependent mechanisms affecting tumorigenesis. The clinical value of assessing RCC stromal activation merits further study

    Inhibitor of apoptosis proteins, NAIP, cIAP1 and cIAP2 expression during macrophage differentiation and M1/M2 polarization

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    Monocytes and macrophages constitute the first line of defense of the immune system against external pathogens. Macrophages have a highly plastic phenotype depending on environmental conditions; the extremes of this phenotypic spectrum are a pro-inflammatory defensive role (M1 phenotype) and an anti-inflammatory tissue-repair one (M2 phenotype). The Inhibitor of Apoptosis (IAP) proteins have important roles in the regulation of several cellular processes, including innate and adaptive immunity. In this study we have analyzed the differential expression of the IAPs, NAIP, cIAP1 and cIAP2, during macrophage differentiation and polarization into M1 or M2. In polarized THP-1 cells and primary human macrophages, NAIP is abundantly expressed in M2 macrophages, while cIAP1 and cIAP2 show an inverse pattern of expression in polarized macrophages, with elevated expression levels of cIAP1 in M2 and cIAP2 preferentially expressed in M1. Interestingly, treatment with the IAP antagonist SMC-LCL161, induced the upregulation of NAIP in M2, the downregulation of cIAP1 in M1 and M2 and an induction of cIAP2 in M1 macrophages.This work was supported by Universidad de Granada, Plan Propio 2015;#P3B: FAM, VMC (http://investigacion.ugr.es/pages/planpropio/2015/ resoluciones/p3b_def_28072015); Universidad de Granada CEI BioTic;#CAEP2-84: VMC (http:// biotic.ugr.es/pages/resolucionprovisional enseaanzapractica22demayo/!); and Canadian nstitutes of Health Research;#231421, #318176, #361847: STB, ECL, RK (http://www.cihr-irsc.gc. ca/e/193.html). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript

    Exact analysis of summary statistics for continuous-time discrete-state Markov processes on networks using graph-automorphism lumping

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    We propose a unified framework to represent a wide range of continuous-time discrete-state Markov processes on networks, and show how many network dynamics models in the literature can be represented in this unified framework. We show how a particular sub-set of these models, referred to here as single-vertex-transition (SVT) processes, lead to the analysis of quasi-birth-and-death (QBD) processes in the theory of continuous-time Markov chains. We illustrate how to analyse a number of summary statistics for these processes, such as absorption probabilities and first-passage times. We extend the graph-automorphism lumping approach [Kiss, Miller, Simon, Mathematics of Epidemics on Networks, 2017; Simon, Taylor, Kiss, J. Math. Bio. 62(4), 2011], by providing a matrix-oriented representation of this technique, and show how it can be applied to a very wide range of dynamical processes on networks. This approach can be used not only to solve the master equation of the system, but also to analyse the summary statistics of interest. We also show the interplay between the graph-automorphism lumping approach and the QBD structures when dealing with SVT processes. Finally, we illustrate our theoretical results with examples from the areas of opinion dynamics and mathematical epidemiology

    Social times, reproduction and social inequality at work : contrasts and comparative perspectives between countries

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    Production of INCASI Project H2020-MSCA-RISE-2015 GA 691004If the focus is placed specifically on the problem of work and family, the daily life of people and their use of time are a main problem. This time is expressed in both freely available time, which is related to activities, and time of the productive and reproductive sphere. This chapter considers work in a broad sense and takes into account the sexual division of labour. Specifically, this chapter will explore transformations in time use and social inequality in unpaid work. For this purpose, a comparative analysis of time-use surveys will be used, analysing the time spent, and the time dedicated to household chores in Chile, Argentina, Uruguay and Spain. From an analytical viewpoint, the analysis will place social reproduction at the centre of the socio-economic system, showing that the economic crisis has affected women and men differently, and that in both Europe and Latin America the family pattern is being replaced by a dominant family model of a male provider and a double presence of women. The large-scale incorporation of women into the labour market has emphasised the role that women assume in the domestic sphere perpetuating gender segregation in employment and in domestic and care work
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