32 research outputs found
Nrt1 and Tna1-Independent Export of NAD+ Precursor Vitamins Promotes NAD+ Homeostasis and Allows Engineering of Vitamin Production
NAD+ is both a co-enzyme for hydride transfer enzymes and a
substrate of sirtuins and other NAD+ consuming enzymes.
NAD+ biosynthesis is required for two different regimens
that extend lifespan in yeast. NAD+ is synthesized from
tryptophan and the three vitamin precursors of NAD+: nicotinic
acid, nicotinamide and nicotinamide riboside. Supplementation of yeast cells
with NAD+ precursors increases intracellular
NAD+ levels and extends replicative lifespan. Here we show
that both nicotinamide riboside and nicotinic acid are not only vitamins but are
also exported metabolites. We found that the deletion of the nicotinamide
riboside transporter, Nrt1, leads to increased export of nicotinamide riboside.
This discovery was exploited to engineer a strain to produce high levels of
extracellular nicotinamide riboside, which was recovered in purified form. We
further demonstrate that extracellular nicotinamide is readily converted to
extracellular nicotinic acid in a manner that requires intracellular
nicotinamidase activity. Like nicotinamide riboside, export of nicotinic acid is
elevated by the deletion of the nicotinic acid transporter, Tna1. The data
indicate that NAD+ metabolism has a critical extracellular
element in the yeast system and suggest that cells regulate intracellular
NAD+ metabolism by balancing import and export of
NAD+ precursor vitamins
Repeated BCG treatment of mouse bladder selectively stimulates small GTPases and HLA antigens and inhibits single-spanning uroplakins
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Despite being a mainstay for treating superficial bladder carcinoma and a promising agent for interstitial cystitis, the precise mechanism of Bacillus Calmette-Guerin (BCG) remains poorly understood. It is particularly unclear whether BCG is capable of altering gene expression beyond its well-recognized pro-inflammatory effects and how this relates to its therapeutic efficacy. The objective of this study was to determine differentially expressed genes in the mouse bladder following repeated intravesical BCG therapy.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Mice were transurethrally instilled with BCG or pyrogen-free on days 1, 7, 14, and 21. Seven days after the last instillation, urothelia along with the submucosa was removed and amplified ds-DNA was prepared from control- and BCG-treated bladder mucosa and used to generate suppression subtractive hybridization (SSH). Plasmids from control- and BCG-specific differentially expressed clones and confirmed by Virtual Northern were then purified and the inserts were sequenced and annotated. Finally, chromatin immune precipitation combined with real-time polymerase chain reaction assay (ChIP/Q-PCR) was used to validate SSH-selected transcripts.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Repeated intravesical BCG treatment induced an up regulation of genes associated with antigen presentation (B2M, HLA-A, HLA-DQA1, HLA-DQB2, HLA-E, HLA-G, IGHG, and IGH) and representatives of two IFNγ-induced small GTPase families: the GBPs (GBP1, GBP2, and GBP5) and the p47GTPases (IIGTP1, IIGTP2, and TGTP). Genes expressed in saline-treated bladders but down-regulated by BCG included: the single-spanning uroplakins (UPK3a and UPK2), SPRR2G, GSTM5, and RSP 19.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Here we introduced a hypothesis-generator approach to determine key genes involved in the urothelium/sumbmucosa responses to BCG therapy. Urinary bladder responds to repeated BCG treatment by up-regulating not only antigen presentation-related genes, but also GBP and p47 small GTPases, both potentially serving to mount a resistance to the replication of the <it>Mycobacterium</it>. It will be of tremendous future interest to determine whether these immune response cascades play a role in the anti-cancer effects exerted by BCG.</p