10 research outputs found

    Phosphodiesterase 3B Is Localized in Caveolae and Smooth ER in Mouse Hepatocytes and Is Important in the Regulation of Glucose and Lipid Metabolism

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    Cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterases (PDEs) are important regulators of signal transduction processes mediated by cAMP and cGMP. One PDE family member, PDE3B, plays an important role in the regulation of a variety of metabolic processes such as lipolysis and insulin secretion. In this study, the cellular localization and the role of PDE3B in the regulation of triglyceride, cholesterol and glucose metabolism in hepatocytes were investigated. PDE3B was identified in caveolae, specific regions in the plasma membrane, and smooth endoplasmic reticulum. In caveolin-1 knock out mice, which lack caveolae, the amount of PDE3B protein and activity were reduced indicating a role of caveolin-1/caveolae in the stabilization of enzyme protein. Hepatocytes from PDE3B knock out mice displayed increased glucose, triglyceride and cholesterol levels, which was associated with increased expression of gluconeogenic and lipogenic genes/enzymes including, phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase, peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor Îł, sterol regulatory element-binding protein 1c and hydroxyl-3-methylglutaryl coenzyme A reductase. In conclusion, hepatocyte PDE3B is localized in caveolae and smooth endoplasmic reticulum and plays important roles in the regulation of glucose, triglyceride and cholesterol metabolism. Dysregulation of PDE3B could have a role in the development of fatty liver, a condition highly relevant in the context of type 2 diabetes

    Methionine sulfoxidation of the chloroplast small heat shock protein and conformational changes in the oligomer.

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    The small heat shock proteins (sHsps), which counteract heat and oxidative stress in an unknown way, belong to a protein family of sHsps and alpha-crystallins whose members form large oligomeric complexes. The chloroplast-localized sHsp, Hsp21, contains a conserved methionine-rich sequence, predicted to form an amphipatic helix with the methionines situated along one of its sides. Here, we report how methionine sulfoxidation was detected by mass spectrometry in proteolytically cleaved peptides that were produced from recombinant Arabidopsis thaliana Hsp21, which had been treated with varying concentrations of hydrogen peroxide. Sulfoxidation of the methionine residues in the conserved amphipatic helix coincided with a significant conformational change in the Hsp21 protein oligomer

    A peptide methionine sulfoxide reductase highly expressed in photosynthetic tissue in Arabidopsis thaliana can protect the chaperone-like activity of a chloroplast-localized small heat shock protein

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    The oxidation of methionine residues in proteins to methionine sulfoxides occurs frequently and protein repair by reduction of the methionine sulfoxides is mediated by an enzyme, peptide methionine sulfoxide reductase (PMSR, EC 1.8.4.6), universally present in the genomes of all so far sequenced organisms. Recently, five PMSR-like genes were identified in Arabidopsis thaliana, including one plastidic isoform, chloroplast localised plastidial peptide methionine sulfoxide reductase (pPMSR) that was chloroplast-localized and highly expressed in actively photosynthesizing tissue (Sadanandom A et al., 2000). However, no endogenous substrate to the pPMSR was identified. Here we report that a set of highly conserved methionine residues in Hsp21, a chloroplast-localized small heat shock protein, can become sulfoxidized and thereafter reduced back to methionines by this pPMSR. The pPMSR activity was evaluated using recombinantly expressed pPMSR and Hsp21 from Arabidopsis thaliana and a direct detection of methionine sulfoxides in Hsp21 by mass spectrometry. The pPMSR-catalyzed reduction of Hsp21 methionine sulfoxides occurred on a minute time-scale, was ultimately DTT-dependent and led to recovery of Hsp21 conformation and chaperone-like activity, both of which are lost upon methionine sulfoxidation (Härndahl et al., 2001). These data indicate that one important function of pPMSR may be to prevent inactivation of Hsp21 by methionine sulfoxidation, since small heat shock proteins are crucial for cellular resistance to oxidative stress

    Temperature stress and redox homeostasis: The synergistic network of redox and chaperone system in response to stress in plants

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    A remarkable number of strategies has been developed by living organisms to mitigate conflict with environmental changes. The global environment rising with ambient temperature has a wide range of effects on plant growth, and therefore activation of various molecular defenses before the appearance of heat damage. Evidence revealed key components of stress that trigger enhanced tolerance, and some determinants for plant tolerance have been identified. The interplay between heat shock proteins (HSP) and redox proteins is supposed to be vital for the survival under extreme stress conditions. Any circumstance in which cellular redox homeostasis is disrupted can lead to the generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) that are continuously generated in cells as an unavoidable consequence of aerobic life. Integrative network analysis of synthetic genetic interactions, protein-protein interactions, and functional annotations revealed many new functional processes linked to heat stress (HS) and oxidative stress (OS) tolerance, implicated upstream regulators activated by the either HS or OS, and revealed new connections between them. We present different models of acquired stress resistance to interpret the condition-specific involvement of genes. Considering the basic concepts and the recent advances, the following subsections provide an overview of calcium ion (Ca2+) and ROS interplay in abiotic signaling pathways; further we introduce several examples of chaperone and redox proteins that respond the change of cellular redox status under environmental circumstances. Thus, the involvement or contribution of redox proteins through the functional switching in conjunction with the HSP that prevent heat- and oxidative-induced protein aggregation in plants
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