122 research outputs found

    Endogenous, cholesterol-activated ATP-dependent transport in membrane vesicles from Spodoptera frugiperda cells

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    Transport proteins of the ATP-binding cassette (ABC) family are found in all kingdoms of life. In humans, several ABC efflux transporters play a role in drug disposition and excretion. Therefore, in vitro methods have been developed to characterize the substrate and inhibitor properties of drugs with respect to these transporters. In the vesicular transport assay, transport is studied using inverted membrane vesicles produced from transporter overexpressing cell lines of both mammalian and insect origin. Insect cell expression systems benefit from a higher expression compared to background, but are not as well characterized as their mammalian counterparts regarding endogenous transport. Therefore, the contribution of this transport in the assay might be underappreciated. In this study, endogenous transport in membrane vesicles from Spodoptera frugiperda -derived Sf9 cells was characterized using four typical substrates of human ABC transporters: 5(6)-carboxy-2,′7′-dichlorofluorescein (CDCF), estradiol-17β-glucuronide, estrone sulfate and N-methyl-quinidine. Significant ATP-dependent transport was observed for three of the substrates with cholesterol-loading of the vesicles, which is sometimes used to improve the activity of human transporters expressed in Sf9 cells. The highest effect of cholesterol was on CDCF transport, and this transport in the cholesterol-loaded Sf9 vesicles was time and concentration dependent with a Km of 8.06 ± 1.11 μM. The observed CDCF transport was inhibited by known inhibitors of human ABCC transporters, but not by ABCB1 and ABCG2 inhibitors verapamil and Ko143, respectively. Two candidate genes for ABCC-type transporters in the S. frugiperda genome (SfABCC2 and SfABCC3) were identified based on sequence analysis as a hypothesis to explain the observed endogenous ABCC-type transport in Sf9 vesicles. Although further studies are needed to verify the role of SfABCC2 and SfABCC3 in Sf9 vesicles, the findings of this study highlight the need to carefully characterize background transport in Sf9 derived membrane vesicles to avoid false positive substrate findings for human ABC transporters studied with this overexpression system.Transport proteins of the ATP-binding cassette (ABC) family are found in all kingdoms of life. In humans, several ABC efflux transporters play a role in drug disposition and excretion. Therefore, in vitro methods have been developed to characterize the substrate and inhibitor properties of drugs with respect to these transporters. In the vesicular transport assay, transport is studied using inverted membrane vesicles produced from transporter overexpressing cell lines of both mammalian and insect origin. Insect cell expression systems benefit from a higher expression compared to background, but are not as well characterized as their mammalian counterparts regarding endogenous transport. Therefore, the contribution of this transport in the assay might be underappreciated. In this study, endogenous transport in membrane vesicles from Spodoptera frugiperda-derived Sf9 cells was characterized using four typical substrates of human ABC transporters: 5(6)-carboxy-2,' 7'-dichlorofluorescein (CDCF), estradiol-17 beta-glucuronide, estrone sulfate and N-methyl-quinidine. Significant ATP-dependent transport was observed for three of the substrates with cholesterol-loading of the vesicles, which is sometimes used to improve the activity of human transporters expressed in Sf9 cells. The highest effect of cholesterol was on CDCF transport, and this transport in the cholesterol-loaded Sf9 vesicles was time and concentration dependent with a Km of 8.06 +/- 1.11 mu M. The observed CDCF transport was inhibited by known inhibitors of human ABCC transporters, but not by ABCB1 and ABCG2 inhibitors verapamil and Ko143, respectively. Two candidate genes for ABCC-type transporters in the S. frugiperda genome (SfABCC2 and SfABCC3) were identified based on sequence analysis as a hypothesis to explain the observed endogenous ABCC-type transport in Sf9 vesicles. Although further studies are needed to verify the role of SfABCC2 and SfABCC3 in Sf9 vesicles, the findings of this study highlight the need to carefully characterize background transport in Sf9 derived membrane vesicles to avoid false positive substrate findings for human ABC transporters studied with this overexpression system.Peer reviewe

    Elaiophylin Is a Potent Hsp90/Cdc37 Protein Interface Inhibitor with K-Ras Nanocluster Selectivity

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    The natural product elaiophylin is a macrodiolide with a broad range of biological activities. However, no direct target of elaiophylin in eukaryotes has been described so far, which hinders a systematic explanation of its astonishing activity range. We recently showed that the related conglobatin A, a protein-protein interface inhibitor of the interaction between the N-terminus of Hsp90 and its cochaperone Cdc37, blocks cancer stem cell properties by selectively inhibiting K-Ras4B but not H-Ras. Here, we elaborated that elaiophylin likewise disrupts the Hsp90/ Cdc37 interaction, without affecting the ATP-pocket of Hsp90. Similarly to conglobatin A, elaiophylin decreased expression levels of the Hsp90 client HIF1 alpha, a transcription factor with various downstream targets, including galectin-3. Galectin-3 is a nanocluster scaffold of K-Ras, which explains the K-Ras selectivity of Hsp90 inhibitors. In agreement with this K-Ras targeting and the potent effect on other Hsp90 clients, we observed with elaiophylin treatment a submicromolar IC50 for MDA-MB-231 and MIA-PaCa-2 3D spheroid formation. Finally, a strong inhibition of MDA-MB-231 cells grown in the chorioallantoic membrane (CAM) microtumor model was determined. These results suggest that several other macrodiolides may have the Hsp90/ Cdc37 interface as a target site

    Predicting the ligand-binding properties of Borrelia burgdorferi ss Bmp proteins in light of the conserved features of related Borrelia proteins

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    Bacteria of the genus Borrelia cause vector-borne infections like the most important hard tick-borne disease in the northern hemisphere, Lyme borreliosis (LB), and soft tick or louse transmitted relapsing fevers (RF), prevalent in temperate and tropical areas. Borrelia burgdorferi sensu lato (s.l.) includes several genospecies and causes LB in humans. In infected patients, Borrelia burgdorferi sensu stricto (s.s.) expresses the BmpA, BmpB, BmpC and BmpD proteins. The role of these proteins in the pathogenesis of LB remains incompletely characterized, but they are, however, closely related to Treponema pallidum PnrA (Purine nucleoside receptor A), a substrate-binding lipoprotein of the ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporter family preferentially binding purine nucleosides. Based on 3D homology modeling, the Bmp proteins share the typical fold of the substrate-binding protein family and the ligand-binding properties of BmpA, BmpB and BmpD are highly similar, whereas those of BmpC differ markedly. Nevertheless, these residues are highly conserved within the genus Borrelia and the inferred phylogenetic tree also reveals that the RF Borrelia lack BmpB proteins but has an additional Bmp protein (BmpA2) missing in LB-causing Borrelia burgdorferi s.l. Our results indicate that the Bmp proteins could bind nucleosides, although BmpC might have a different ligand-binding specificity and, therefore, a distinct function. Furthermore, the work provides a means for classifying the Bmp proteins and supports further elucidation of the roles of these proteins

    Human copper-containing amine oxidases in drug design and development

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    Two members of the copper-containing amine oxidase family are physiologically important proteins: (1) Diamine oxidase (hDAO; AOC1) with a preference for diamines is involved in degradation of histamine and (2) Vascular adhesion protein-1 (hVAP-1; AOC3) with a preference for monoamines is a multifunctional cell-surface receptor and an enzyme. hVAP-1-targeted inhibitors are designed to treat inflammatory diseases and cancer, whereas the off-target binding of the designed inhibitors to hDAO might result in adverse drug reactions. The X-ray structures for both human enzymes are solved and provide the basis for computer-aided inhibitor design, which has been reported by several research groups. Although the putative off-target effect of hDAO is less studied, computational methods could be easily utilized to avoid the binding of VAP-1-targeted inhibitors to hDAO. The choice of the model organism for preclinical testing of hVAP-1 inhibitors is not either trivial due to species-specific binding properties of designed inhibitors and different repertoire of copper-containing amine oxidase family members in mammalian species. Thus, the facts that should be considered in hVAP-1-targeted inhibitor design are discussed in light of the applied structural bioinformatics and structural biology approaches.</p

    Genetic and functional implications of an exonic TRIM55 variant in heart failure

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    Background: To tackle the missing heritability of sporadic heart failure, we screened for novel heart failure associated genetic variants in the Finnish population and functionally characterized a novel variant in vitro and in vivo. Methods and results: Heart failure-associated variants were screened in genotyping array data of the FINRISK study, consisting of 994 cases and 20,118 controls. Based on logistic regression analysis, a potentially damaging variant in TRIM55 (rs138811034), encoding an E140K variant, was selected for validations. In HL-1 cardiomyocytes, we used CRISPR/Cas9 technology to introduce the variant in the endogenous locus, and additionally TRIM55 wildtype or E140K was overexpressed from plasmid. Functional responses were profiled using whole-genome RNA sequencing, RT-PCR and Western analyses, cell viability and cell cycle assays and cell surface area measurements. In zebrafish embryos, cardiac contractility was measured using videomicroscopy after CRISPR-mediated knockout of trim55a or plasmid overexpression of TRIM55 WT or E140K. Genes related to muscle contraction and cardiac stress were highly regulated in Trim55 E140K/- cardiomyocytes. When compared to the WT/WT cells, the variant cells demonstrated reduced viability, significant hypertrophic response to isoproterenol, p21 protein overexpression and impaired cell cycle progression. In zebrafish embryos, the deletion of trim55a or overexpression of TRIM55 E140K reduced cardiac contractility as compared to embryos with wild type genotype or overexpression of WT TRIM55, respectively. Conclusions: A previously uncharacterized TRIM55 E140K variant demonstrated a number of functional implications for cardiomyocyte functions in vitro and in vivo. These findings suggest a novel role for TRIM55 polymorphism in predisposing to heart failure.Peer reviewe

    Overexpression of chloroplast NADPH-dependent thioredoxin reductase in Arabidopsis enhances leaf growth and elucidates in vivo function of reductase and thioredoxin domains

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    Plant chloroplasts have versatile thioredoxin systems including two thioredoxin reductases and multiple types of thioredoxins. Plastid-localized NADPH-dependent thioredoxin reductase (NTRC) contains both reductase (NTRd) and thioredoxin (TRXd) domains in a single polypeptide and forms homodimers. To study the action of NTRC and NTRC domains in vivo, we have complemented the ntrc knockout line of Arabidopsis with the wild type and full-length NTRC genes, in which 2-Cys motifs either in NTRd, or in TRXd were inactivated. The ntrc line was also transformed either with the truncated NTRd or TRXd alone. Overexpression of wild-type NTRC promoted plant growth by increasing leaf size and biomass yield of the rosettes. Complementation of the ntrc line with the full-length NTRC gene containing an active reductase but an inactive thioredoxin domain, or vice versa, recovered wild-type chloroplast phenotype and, partly, rosette biomass production, indicating that the NTRC domains are capable of interacting with other chloroplast thioredoxin systems. Overexpression of truncated NTRd or TRXd in ntrc background did not restore wild-type phenotype. Modelling of the 3-dimensional structure of the NTRC dimer indicates extensive interactions between the NTR domains and the TRX domains further stabilize the dimeric structure. The long linker region between the NTRd and TRXd, however, allows flexibility for the position of the TRXd in the dimer. Supplementation of the TRXd in the NTRC homodimer model by free chloroplast thioredoxins indicated that TRXf is the most likely partner to interact with NTRC. We propose that overexpression of NTRC promotes plant biomass yield both directly by stimulation of chloroplast biosynthetic and protected pathways controlled by NTRC and indirectly via free chloroplast thioredoxins. Our data indicate that overexpression of chloroplast thiol redox-regulator has a potential to increase biofuel yield in plant and algal species suitable for sustainable bioene

    Novel Small Molecule Hsp90/Cdc37 Interface Inhibitors Indirectly Target K-Ras-Signaling

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    The ATP-competitive inhibitors of Hsp90 have been tested predominantly in kinase addicted cancers; however, they have had limited success. A mechanistic connection between Hsp90 and oncogenic K-Ras is not known. Here, we show that K-Ras selectivity is enabled by the loss of the K-Ras membrane nanocluster modulator galectin-3 downstream of the Hsp90 client HIF-1α. This mechanism suggests a higher drug sensitivity in the context of KRAS mutant, HIF-1α-high and/or Gal3-high cancer cells, such as those found, in particular, in pancreatic adenocarcinoma. The low toxicity of conglobatin further indicates a beneficial on-target toxicity profile for Hsp90/Cdc37 interface inhibitors. We therefore computationally screened >7 M compounds, and identified four novel small molecules with activities of 4 μM–44 μM in vitro. All of the compounds were K-Ras selective, and potently decreased the Hsp90 client protein levels without inducing the heat shock response. Moreover, they all inhibited the 2D proliferation of breast, pancreatic, and lung cancer cell lines. The most active compounds from each scaffold, furthermore, significantly blocked 3D spheroids and the growth of K-Ras-dependent microtumors. We foresee new opportunities for improved Hsp90/Cdc37 interface inhibitors in cancer and other aging-associated diseases

    Novel Small Molecule Hsp90/Cdc37 Interface Inhibitors Indirectly Target K-Ras-Signaling

    Get PDF
    The ATP-competitive inhibitors of Hsp90 have been tested predominantly in kinase addicted cancers; however, they have had limited success. A mechanistic connection between Hsp90 and oncogenic K-Ras is not known. Here, we show that K-Ras selectivity is enabled by the loss of the K-Ras membrane nanocluster modulator galectin-3 downstream of the Hsp90 client HIF-1α. This mechanism suggests a higher drug sensitivity in the context of KRAS mutant, HIF-1α-high and/or Gal3-high cancer cells, such as those found, in particular, in pancreatic adenocarcinoma. The low toxicity of conglobatin further indicates a beneficial on-target toxicity profile for Hsp90/Cdc37 interface inhibitors. We therefore computationally screened >7 M compounds, and identified four novel small molecules with activities of 4 μM–44 μM in vitro. All of the compounds were K-Ras selective, and potently decreased the Hsp90 client protein levels without inducing the heat shock response. Moreover, they all inhibited the 2D proliferation of breast, pancreatic, and lung cancer cell lines. The most active compounds from each scaffold, furthermore, significantly blocked 3D spheroids and the growth of K-Ras-dependent microtumors. We foresee new opportunities for improved Hsp90/Cdc37 interface inhibitors in cancer and other aging-associated diseases
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