1,303 research outputs found

    Clinical implications of augmenter of liver regeneration in cancer: A systematic review

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    Background/Aim: Hepatocellular carcinoma is a substantial healthcare burden with high prevalence and poor prognosiS. As such, efforts are continually made to uncover molecules relevant in cancer biology, that are exploitable as targets for therapy. The mitochondrion is the powerhouse of the cell and exhibits altered functionality in the malignant state, including aberrant regulation of apoptosis and cellular respiration. Augmenter of liver regeneration (ALR) is a multifunctional mitochondrial protein that demonstrates antioxidative and anti-apoptotic properties and plays a key role in liver regeneration. Materials and Methods: The present study systematically reviews the available literature on the role of ALR in cancer. Results: Systematic search of PubMed resulted in 12 studies discussing ALR in multiple types of cancer. More specifically, ALR appears to be up-regulated in malignant cells and tissueS. Furthermore, treatment of cells with exogenous ALR shows an anti-apoptotic effect while silencing or inhibiting ALR decreases cell and tumor survival. Conclusion: ALR clearly plays a role in cancer biology and demonstrates potential as a therapeutic target. Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is a common oncologic condition with a poor prognosis that poses as a global burden on medical care (1). Between 2002 and 2012 the mortality rate of HCC rose by 34.8% in the United States and liver cancer, with HCC estimated as 70 to 90% of cases, was considered to be the second leading cause of cancer-related deaths among males on a global scale in 2012 (2, 3). Considering the metabolic aspect of several known risk factors for HCC, such as obesity, diabetes, and non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, a common underlying feature of mitochondrial dysfunction is of growing interest in molecular oncology. The regulation of specific mitochondrial proteins is of particular interest, as these proteins demonstrate potential as therapeutic targets for HCC (4). Augmenter of liver regeneration (ALR) is one particular protein of interest that localizes in the intermembrane space of the mitochondria of humans and has a prokaryotic homolog, Erv1, sharing 42% identical amino acid residueS. ALR/Erv1 has been known to contribute to mitochondrial biogenesis and function as a sulfhydryl oxidase in mitochondrial disulfide relay systems (5). It functions to oxidize the import receptor Mia40, both of which conjunctively import small translocase inner membrane (Tim) proteins through an oxidative-folding pathway (6). In turn, cytochrome c (cyt c), which constitutes an important member of the electron transport chain, oxidizes ALR through locomotion of electrons via FAD, thus connecting this redox regulated import pathway to electron transport (5, 7). During specific unfavorable conditions, cells must reprogram to undergo apoptosis during which cyt c activates a series of activated-caspase pathways that lead to cell suicide (8). It is a trademark of cancer cells to down-regulate apoptotic mechanisms and alter mitochondrial respiratory function, resulting in uncontrolled growth and eventual metastasis of cancerous cellS. ALR manifests anti-oxidative and anti-apoptotic properties and is known to support liver regeneration in cases of hepatic injury (9). Considering these properties, early investigations have suggested a role for ALR in cancer (particularly hepatocellular) pathogenesis, growth and progression. In this study, we systematically review the literature discussing ALR in cancer. Clinical implications including oncogenesis and targeted therapy are explored

    Impaired glutamate transport in a mouse model of tau pathology in astrocytes

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    Filamentous tau inclusions in neurons and glia are neuropathological hallmarks of tauopathies. The discovery of microtubule-associated protein tau gene mutations that are pathogenic for a heterogenous group of neurodegenerative disorders, called frontotemporal dementia and parkinsonism linked to chromosome-17 (FTDP-17), directly implicate tau abnormalities in the onset/progression of disease. Although the role of tau pathology in neurons in disease pathogenesis is well accepted, the contribution of glial pathology is essentially unknown. We recently generated a transgenic (Tg) mouse model of tau pathology in astrocytes by expressing the human tau protein under the control of the glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) promoter. Both wild-type and FTDP-17 mutant GFAP/tau Tg animals manifest an age-dependent accumulation of tau inclusions in astrocytes that resembles the pathology observed in human tauopathies. Wefurther demonstrate that both strains of Tg mice manifest compromised motor function that correlates with altered expression of the glial glutamate-aspartate transporter and occurs before the development of tau pathology. Subsequently, the Tg mice manifest additional deficits in neuromuscular strength that correlates with reduced expression of glutamate transporter-1 (GLT-1) and occurs concurrent with tau inclusion pathology. Reduced GLT-1 expression was associated with a progressive decrease in sodium-dependent glutamate transport capacity. Reductions in GLT-1 expression were also observed in corticobasal degeneration, a tauopathy with prominent pathology in astrocytes. Less robust changes were observed in Alzheimer\u27s disease in which neuronal tau pathology predominates. Thus, these Tg mice recapitulate features of astrocytic pathology observed in tauopathies and implicate a role for altered astrocyte function in the pathogenesis of these disorders

    Transgenic mouse model of tau pathology in astrocytes leading to nervous system degeneration

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    Filamentous tau inclusions in neurons and glia are neuropathological hallmarks of sporadic and familial tauopathies. Because tau gene mutations are pathogenic for the autosomal dominant tauopathy frontotemporal dementia and parkinsonism linked to chromosome 17, tau abnormalities are implicated directly in the onset and/or progression of disease. Although filamentous tau aggregates are acknowledged to play roles in degenerative mechanisms resulting in neuron loss, the contributions of glial tau pathology to neurodegeneration remain essentially unexplored. To begin to elucidate the role of glial pathology in tauopathies, we generated a transgenic (Tg) mouse model of astrocytic tau pathology by expressing the human tau protein driven by the glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) promoter. Whereas endogenous tau was not detected in astrocytes of control mice, in GFAP/tau Tg mice there was robust astrocytic tau expression that was associated with a redistribution of the GFAP network. Subsequently, there was an age-dependent accumulation of tau pathology in astrocytes that was Gallyas and variably thioflavine S positive as observed in many tauopathies. The tau pathology in these Tg mice was abnormally phosphorylated, ubiquitinated, and filamentous, and the emergence of this pathology coincided with accumulation of insoluble tau protein. Furthermore, in regions with robust astrocytic tau pathology, there was mild blood-brain barrier disruption, induction of low-molecular-weight heat shock proteins, and focal neuron degeneration. Thus, these Tg mice recapitulate key features of astrocytic pathology observed in human tauopathies and demonstrate functional consequences of this pathology including neuron degeneration in the absence of neuronal tau inclusions

    Role of twin Cys-Xaa\u3csub\u3e9\u3c/sub\u3e-Cys motif cysteines in mitochondrial import of the cytochrome c oxidase biogenesis factor Cmc1

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    The Mia40 import pathway facilitates the import and oxidative folding of cysteine-rich protein substrates into the mitochondrial intermembrane space. Here we describe the in vitro and in organello oxidative folding of Cmc1, a twin CX9C-containing substrate, which contains an unpaired cysteine. In vitro, Cmc1 can be oxidized by the import receptor Mia40 alone when in excess or at a lower rate by only the sulfhydryl oxidase Erv1. However, physiological and efficient Cmc1 oxidation requires Erv1 and Mia40. Cmc1 forms a stable intermediate with Mia40 and is released from this interaction in the presence of Erv1. The three proteins are shown to form a ternary complex in mitochondria. Our results suggest that this mechanism facilitates efficient formation of multiple disulfides and prevents the formation of non-native disulfide bonds

    Evaluating Speedup in Parallel Compilers

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    Parallel programming is prevalent in every field mainly to speed up computation. Advancements in multiprocessor technology fuel this trend toward parallel programming. However, modern compilers are still largely single threaded and do not take advantage of the machine resources available to them. There has been a lot of work done on compilers that add parallel constructs to the programs they are compiling, enabling programs to exploit parallelism at run time. Auto parallelization of loops by a compiler is one such example. Researchers have done very little work towards parallelizing the compilation process itself. The research done here focuses on parallel compilers that target computation speedup by parallelizing the process of program compilation during the lexical analysis and semantic analysis phase. Parallelization brings along with it issues like synchronization, concurrency and communication overhead. In the semantic analysis phase, these issues are of particular relevance during the construction of the symbol table. Research done on a concurrent compiler developed at the University of Toronto in 1991 proposed three techniques to address the generation of the symbol table [Seshadri91]. The goal here is to implement a parallel compiler using concepts from those techniques as references. The research done here will augment the work done formerly and measure the performance speedup obtained

    Osm1 facilitates the transfer of electrons from Erv1 to fumarate in the redox-regulated import pathway in the mitochondrial intermembrane space

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    Prokaryotes have aerobic and anaerobic electron acceptors for oxidative folding of periplasmic proteins. The mitochondrial intermembrane space has an analogous pathway with the oxidoreductase Mia40 and sulfhydryl oxidase Erv1, termed the mitochondrial intermembrane space assembly (MIA) pathway. The aerobic electron acceptors include oxygen and cytochrome c, but an acceptor that can function under anaerobic conditions has not been identified. Here we show that the fumarate reductase Osm1, which facilitates electron transfer from fumarate to succinate, fills this gap as a new electron acceptor. In addition to microsomes, Osm1 localizes to the mitochondrial intermembrane space and assembles with Erv1 in a complex. In reconstitution studies with reduced Tim13, Mia40, and Erv1, the addition of Osm1 and fumarate completes the disulfide exchange pathway that results in Tim13 oxidation. From in vitro import assays, mitochondria lacking Osm1 display decreased import of MIA substrates, Cmc1 and Tim10. Comparative reconstitution assays support that the Osm1/fumarate couple accepts electrons with similar efficiency to cytochrome c and that the cell has strategies to coordinate expression of the terminal electron acceptors. Thus Osm1/ fumarate is a new electron acceptor couple in the mitochondrial intermembrane space that seems to function in both aerobic and anaerobic conditions

    Proteasome inhibition stabilizes tau inclusions in oligodendroglial cells that occur after treatment with okadaic acid

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    Tau-positive inclusions in oligodendrocytes are consistent neuropathological features of corticobasal degeneration, progressive supranuclear palsy, and frontotemporal dementias with Parkinsonism linked to chromosome 17. Here we show by immunohistochemistry that tau-positive oligodendroglial inclusion bodies also contain the small heat-shock protein (HSP) αB-crystallin but not H HSP70. To study the molecular mechanisms underlying inclusion body formation, we engineered an oligodendroglia cell line (OLN-t40) to overexpress the longest human tau isoform. Treatment of OLN-t40 cells with okadaic acid (OA), an inhibitor of protein phosphatase 2A, caused tau hyperphosphorylation and a decrease in the binding of tau to microtubules. Simultaneously, tau-positive aggregates that also stained with the amyloid-binding dye thioflavin-S as well as with antibodies to tau and αB-crystallin were detected. However, they were only transiently expressed and were degraded within 24 hr. When the proteasomal apparatus was inhibited by carbobenzoxy-L-leucyl-L-leucyl-L-leucinal (MG-132) after OA treatment, the aggregates were stabilized and were still detectable after 18 hr in the absence of OA. Incubation with MG-132 alone inhibited tau proteolysis and led to the induction of HSPs, including αB-crystallin and to its translocation to the perinuclear region, but did not induce the formation of thioflavin-S-positive aggregates. Hence, although tau hyperphosphorylation induced by protein phosphatase inhibition contributes to pathological aggregate formation, only hyperphosporylation of tau followed by proteasome inhibition leads to stable fibrillary deposits of tau similar to those observed in neurodegenerative diseases

    A small molecule inhibitor of redox-regulated protein translocation into mitochondria

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    The mitochondrial disulfide relay system of Mia40 and Erv1/ALR facilitates import of the small translocase of the inner membrane (Tim) proteins and cysteine-rich proteins. A chemical screen identified small molecules that inhibit Erv1 oxidase activity, thereby facilitating dissection of the disulfide relay system in yeast and vertebrate mitochondria. One molecule, mitochondrial protein import blockers from the Carla Koehler laboratory (MitoBloCK-6), attenuated the import of Erv1 substrates into yeast mitochondria and inhibited oxidation of Tim13 and Cmc1 in in vitro reconstitution assays. In addition, MitoBloCK-6 revealed an unexpected role for Erv1 in the carrier import pathway, namely transferring substrates from the translocase of the outer membrane complex onto the small Tim complexes. Cardiac development was impaired in MitoBloCK-6-exposed zebrafish embryos. Finally, MitoBloCK-6 induced apoptosis via cytochrome c release in human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) but not in differentiated cells, suggesting an important role for ALR in hESC homeostasis
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