32 research outputs found

    Multiple RSV strains infecting HEp-2 and A549 cells reveal cell line-dependent differences in resistance to RSV infection

    Get PDF
    Background: Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is the major viral driver of a global pediatric respiratory disease burden disproportionately borne by the poor1. Thus, RSV, like SARS-CoV-2, combines with congenital and environmental and host-history-dependent factors to create a spectrum of disease with greatest severity most frequently occurring in those least able to procure treatment. Methods: Here we apply whole genome sequencing and a suite of other molecular biological techniques to survey host-virus dynamics in infections of two distinct cell lines (HEp2 and A549) with four strains representative of known RSV genetic diversity. Results: We observed non-gradient patterns of RSV gene expression and a single major difference in transcriptional readthrough correlating with a deep split in the RSV phylogenetic tree. We also observed increased viral replication in HEp2 cells along with a pro-inflammatory host-response; and decreased viral replication in A549 cells with a more potent antiviral response in host gene expression and levels of secreted cytokines. Conclusions: Our findings suggest HEp2 and A549 cell lines can be used as complementary models of host response leading to more or less severe RSV disease. In vitro perturbations inspired by actual environmental and host-history-dependent factors associated with greater disease can be tested for their ability to shift the antiviral response of A549 cells to the more pro-inflammatory response of HEp2 cells. Such studies would help illuminate the tragic costs of poverty and suggest public health-level interventions to reduce the global disease burden from RSV and other respiratory viruses

    Whole-Genome Cartography of Estrogen Receptor Ī± Binding Sites

    Get PDF
    Using a chromatin immunoprecipitation-paired end diTag cloning and sequencing strategy, we mapped estrogen receptor Ī± (ERĪ±) binding sites in MCF-7 breast cancer cells. We identified 1,234 high confidence binding clusters of which 94% are projected to be bona fide ERĪ± binding regions. Only 5% of the mapped estrogen receptor binding sites are located within 5 kb upstream of the transcriptional start sites of adjacent genes, regions containing the proximal promoters, whereas vast majority of the sites are mapped to intronic or distal locations (>5 kb from 5ā€² and 3ā€² ends of adjacent transcript), suggesting transcriptional regulatory mechanisms over significant physical distances. Of all the identified sites, 71% harbored putative full estrogen response elements (EREs), 25% bore ERE half sites, and only 4% had no recognizable ERE sequences. Genes in the vicinity of ERĪ± binding sites were enriched for regulation by estradiol in MCF-7 cells, and their expression profiles in patient samples segregate ERĪ±-positive from ERĪ±-negative breast tumors. The expression dynamics of the genes adjacent to ERĪ± binding sites suggest a direct induction of gene expression through binding to ERE-like sequences, whereas transcriptional repression by ERĪ± appears to be through indirect mechanisms. Our analysis also indicates a number of candidate transcription factor binding sites adjacent to occupied EREs at frequencies much greater than by chance, including the previously reported FOXA1 sites, and demonstrate the potential involvement of one such putative adjacent factor, Sp1, in the global regulation of ERĪ± target genes. Unexpectedly, we found that only 22%ā€“24% of the bona fide human ERĪ± binding sites were overlapping conserved regions in whole genome vertebrate alignments, which suggest limited conservation of functional binding sites. Taken together, this genome-scale analysis suggests complex but definable rules governing ERĪ± binding and gene regulation

    Estrogen Receptor Alpha Represses Transcription of Early Target Genes via p300 and CtBP1ā–æ

    No full text
    The regulation of gene expression by nuclear receptors controls the phenotypic properties and diverse biologies of target cells. In breast cancer cells, estrogen receptor alpha (ERĪ±) is a master regulator of transcriptional stimulation and repression, yet the mechanisms by which agonist-bound ERĪ± elicits repression are poorly understood. We analyzed early estrogen-repressed genes and found that ERĪ± is recruited to ERĪ± binding sites of these genes, albeit more transiently and less efficiently than for estrogen-stimulated genes. Of multiple cofactors studied, only p300 was recruited to ERĪ± binding sites of repressed genes, and its knockdown prevented estrogen-mediated gene repression. Because p300 is involved in transcription initiation, we tested whether ERĪ± might be trying to stimulate transcription at repressed genes, with ultimately failure and a shift to a repressive program. We found that estrogen increases transcription in a rapid but transient manner at early estrogen-repressed genes but that this is followed by recruitment of the corepressor CtBP1, a p300-interacting partner that plays an essential role in the repressive process. Thus, at early estrogen-repressed genes, ERĪ± initiates transient stimulation of transcription but fails to maintain the transcriptional process observed at estrogen-stimulated genes; rather, it uses p300 to recruit CtBP1-containing complexes, eliciting chromatin modifications that lead to transcriptional repression

    Imaging-Based Screening of Deubiquitinating Proteases Identifies Otubain-1 as a Stabilizer of c-MYC

    No full text
    The ubiquitinā€“proteasome pathway precisely controls the turnover of transcription factors in the nucleus, playing an important role in maintaining appropriate quantities of these regulatory proteins. The transcription factor c-MYC is essential for normal development and is a critical cancer driver. Despite being highly expressed in several tissues and malignancies, the c-MYC protein is also continuously targeted by the ubiquitinā€“proteasome pathway, which can either facilitate or inhibit c-MYC degradation. Deubiquitinating proteases can remove ubiquitin chains from target proteins and rescue them from proteasomal digestion. This study sought to determine novel elements of the ubiquitinā€“proteasome pathway that regulate c-MYC levels. We performed an overexpression screen with 41 human proteases to identify which deubiquitinases stabilize c-MYC. We discovered that the highly expressed Otubain-1 (OTUB1) protease increases c-MYC protein levels. Confirming its role in enhancing c-MYC activity, we found that elevated OTUB1 correlates with inferior clinical outcomes in the c-MYC-dependent cancer multiple myeloma, and overexpression of OTUB1 accelerates the growth of myeloma cells. In summary, our study identifies OTUB1 as a novel amplifier of the proto-oncogene c-MYC

    Genomic Collaboration of Estrogen Receptor Ī± and Extracellular Signal-Regulated Kinase 2 in Regulating Gene and Proliferation Programs ā–æ

    No full text
    The nuclear hormone receptor, estrogen receptor Ī± (ERĪ±), and mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKs) play key roles in hormone-dependent cancers, and yet their interplay and the integration of their signaling inputs remain poorly understood. In these studies, we document that estrogen-occupied ERĪ± activates and interacts with extracellular signal-regulated kinase 2 (ERK2), a downstream effector in the MAPK pathway, resulting in ERK2 and ERĪ± colocalization at chromatin binding sites across the genome of breast cancer cells. This genomic colocalization, predominantly at conserved distal enhancer sites, requires the activation of both ERĪ± and ERK2 and enables ERK2 modulation of estrogen-dependent gene expression and proliferation programs. The ERK2 substrate CREB1 was also activated and recruited to ERK2-bound chromatin following estrogen treatment and found to cooperate with ERĪ±/ERK2 in regulating gene transcription and cell cycle progression. Our study reveals a novel paradigm with convergence of ERK2 and ERĪ± at the chromatin level that positions this kinase to support nuclear receptor activities in crucial and direct ways, a mode of collaboration likely to underlie MAPK regulation of gene expression by other nuclear receptors as well

    Tributyltin chloride (TBT) induces RXRA down-regulation and lipid accumulation in human liver cells.

    No full text
    A subset of environmental chemicals acts as "obesogens" as they increase adipose mass and lipid content in livers of treated rodents. One of the most studied class of obesogens are the tin-containing chemicals that have as a central moiety tributyltin (TBT), which bind and activate two nuclear hormone receptors, Peroxisome Proliferator Activated Receptor Gamma (PPARG) and Retinoid X Receptor Alpha (RXRA), at nanomolar concentrations. Here, we have tested whether TBT chloride at such concentrations may affect the neutral lipid level in two cell line models of human liver. Indeed, using high content image analysis (HCA), TBT significantly increased neutral lipid content in a time- and concentration-dependent manner. Consistent with the observed increased lipid accumulation, RNA fluorescence in situ hybridization (RNA FISH) and RT-qPCR experiments revealed that TBT enhanced the steady-state mRNA levels of two key genes for de novo lipogenesis, the transcription factor SREBF1 and its downstream enzymatic target, FASN. Importantly, pre-treatment of cells with 2-deoxy-D-glucose reduced TBT-mediated lipid accumulation, thereby suggesting a role for active glycolysis during the process of lipid accumulation. As other RXRA binding ligands can promote RXRA protein turnover via the 26S proteasome, TBT was tested for such an effect in the two liver cell lines. We found that TBT, in a time- and dose-dependent manner, significantly reduced steady-state RXRA levels in a proteasome-dependent manner. While TBT promotes both RXRA protein turnover and lipid accumulation, we found no correlation between these two events at the single cell level, thereby suggesting an additional mechanism may be involved in TBT promotion of lipid accumulation, such as glycolysis

    Characterizing properties of non-estrogenic substituted bisphenol analogs using high throughput microscopy and image analysis

    No full text
    <div><p>Animal studies have linked the estrogenic properties of bisphenol A (BPA) to adverse effects on the endocrine system. Because of concerns for similar effects in humans, there is a desire to replace BPA in consumer products, and a search for BPA replacements that lack endocrine-disrupting bioactivity is ongoing. We used multiple cell-based models, including an established multi-parametric, high throughput microscopy-based platform that incorporates engineered HeLa cell lines with visible ERĪ±- or ERĪ²-regulated transcription loci, to discriminate the estrogen-like and androgen-like properties of previously uncharacterized substituted bisphenol derivatives and hydroquinone. As expected, BPA induced 70ā€“80% of the estrogen-like activity via ERĪ± and ERĪ² compared to E2 in the HeLa prolactin array cell line. 2,2ā€™ BPA, Bisguaiacol F, CHDM 4-hydroxybuyl acrylate, hydroquinone, and TM modified variants of BPF showed very limited estrogen-like or androgen-like activity (< 10% of that observed with the control compounds). Interestingly, TM-BFP and CHDM 4-hydroxybuyl acrylate, but not their derivatives, demonstrated evidence of anti-estrogenic and anti-androgenic activity. Our findings indicate that Bisguaiacol F, TM-BFP-ER and TM-BPF-DGE demonstrate low potential for affecting estrogenic or androgenic endocrine activity. This suggest that the tested compounds could be suitable commercially viable alternatives to BPA.</p></div

    Clustering analysis of investigational chemical compounds and previously studied bisphenol analogs activity across multiple <i>in vitro</i> assays.

    No full text
    <p>Data in each assay row were range normalized before clustering analysis. Clustering was performed using Euclidean distance for both the compounds and the assays.</p

    Chemical compound effect on an integrated ARE-containing probasin-mCherry-NLS reporter in the AR responsive LNCaP cell line.

    No full text
    <p>The nuclear accumulation of mCherry fluorescent protein in 2PB-mCherry-NLS:LNCaP cells treated with indicated compounds either alone at concentrations from 50 pM to 5 Ī¼M (A) or at 5Ī¼M with DHT at ranging from 0.1 nM to 30 nM (B) for 48 hours. Compounds that induced either a significant androgen-like or anti-androgen-like response in the presence of DHT are indicated. All data represent mean of 3 experiments Ā± standard deviation.</p
    corecore