scholarly journals Dominant negative effect of cytoplasmic actin isoproteins on cardiomyocyte cytoarchitecture and function.

1995 ◽  
Vol 131 (6) ◽  
pp. 1759-1773 ◽  
Author(s):  
P von Arx ◽  
S Bantle ◽  
T Soldati ◽  
J C Perriard

The intracompartmental sorting and functional consequences of ectopic expression of the six vertebrate actin isoforms was investigated in different types of cultured cells. In transfected fibroblasts all isoactin species associated with the endogenous microfilament cytoskeleton, even though cytoplasmic actins also showed partial localization to peripheral submembranous sites. Functional and structural studies were performed in neonatal and adult rat cardiomyocytes. All the muscle isoactin constructs sorted preferentially to sarcomeric sites and, to a lesser extent, also to stress-fiber-like structures. The expression of muscle actins did not interfere with cell contractility, and did not disturb the localization of endogenous sarcomeric proteins. In sharp contrast, ectopic expression of the two cytoplasmic actin isoforms resulted in rapid cessation of cellular contractions and induced severe morphological alterations characterized by an exceptional outgrowth of filopodia and cell flattening. Quantitative analysis in neonatal cardiomyocytes indicated that the levels of accumulation of the different isoactins are very similar and cannot be responsible for the observed isoproteins-specific effects. Structural analysis revealed a remodeling of the cytoarchitecture including a specific alteration of sarcomeric organization; proteins constituting the sarcomeric thin filaments relocated to nonmyofibrillar sites while thick filaments and titin remained unaffected. Experiments with chimeric proteins strongly suggest that isoform specific residues in the carboxy-terminal portion of the cytoplasmic actins are responsible for the dominant negative effects on function and morphology.

2021 ◽  
Vol 154 (9) ◽  
Author(s):  
Xue-Xin Fan ◽  
Zihao Liu ◽  
Hua Yu ◽  
Xinyi Huang ◽  
Chen Song ◽  
...  

Although it is well known that ion channels conduct ions across biomembranes, whether ions are conducted by some non-membrane proteins is not known because of the lack of a detection method. Calsequestrin-2 (CSQ2) is a sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) Ca2+-binding protein suppling Ca2+ for the ryanodine receptor Ca2+ release during the excitation–contraction coupling in cardiomyocytes. CSQ2 mutations, even in some heterozygous occasions, causes catecholaminergic polymorphic ventricular tachycardia (CPVT2), suggesting that CSQ2 may function beyond a Ca2+ buffer. Here, we identify a non-transmembrane channel in Ca2+-enriched CSQ2 dimers, which facilitates fast Ca2+ mobilization. Using crystallography, we solved the high-resolution structure of Ca2+-bound CSQ2 and discovered that the negatively charged residues at the dimer interface encompassed a tubular channel-like structure, dubbed “tunnel,” in which ∼15 Ca2+ ions aligned across the ∼5 nm tunnel path. To determine the potential tunnel conductance, we developed a graphene-based nanoelectronic technology to connect a CSQ2 dimer into a nanocircuit. In the Tyrode solution containing 1 mM Ca2+, a CSQ2 dimer exhibited a conductance one order of magnitude higher than the background level. This conductance was Ca2+ dependent, and was largely suppressed by the single-residue mutation D309N at the bottleneck region of the tunnel path, indicating that the tunnel conducted Ca2+ fluxes. When the D309N mutant CSQ2 was expressed in wild-type rat cardiomyocytes by adenoviral vectors, isoproterenol treatment induced chaotic Ca2+ waves, delayed after-depolarizations and trigged activities resembling those occurring in CPVT2 models. This dominant negative effect of CSQ2 mutation agreed well with our structural observation that CSQ2 tunnels were interconnected to form a tunnel network. Taken together, these results revealed that CSQ2 builds a nano-highway network for energy-efficient Ca2+ mobilization in the SR. Factors that block the Ca2+ highway may lead to arrhythmogenesis.


2016 ◽  
Vol 311 (2) ◽  
pp. F343-F351 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peijian He ◽  
Luqing Zhao ◽  
Yi Ran No ◽  
Serhan Karvar ◽  
C. Chris Yun

Na+/H+ exchanger (NHE)3, a major Na+ transporter in the luminal membrane of the proximal tubule, is subject to ANG II regulation in renal Na+/fluid absorption and blood pressure control. We have previously shown that inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate receptor-binding protein released with inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate (IRBIT) mediates ANG II-induced exocytosis of NHE3 in cultured proximal tubule epithelial cells. In searching for scaffold protein(s) that coordinates with IRBIT in NHE3 trafficking, we found that NHE regulatory factor (NHERF)1, NHE3, and IRBIT proteins were coexpressed in the same macrocomplexes and that loss of ANG II type 1 receptors decreased their expression in the renal brush-border membrane. We found that NHERF1 was required for ANG II-mediated forward trafficking and activation of NHE3 in cultured cells. ANG II induced a concomitant increase of NHERF1 interactions with NHE3 and IRBIT, which were abolished when the NHERF1 PDZ1 domain was removed. Overexpression of a yellow fluorescent protein-NHERF1 construct that lacks PDZ1, but not PDZ2, failed to exaggerate the ANG II-dependent increase of NHE3 expression in the apical membrane. Moreover, exogenous expression of PDZ1 exerted a dominant negative effect on NHE3 activation by ANG II. We further demonstrated that IRBIT was indispensable for the ANG II-provoked increase in NHERF1-NHE3 interactions and that phosphorylation of IRBIT at Ser68 was necessary for the assembly of the NHEF1-IRBIT-NHE3 complex. Taken together, our findings suggest that NHERF1 mediates ANG II-induced activation of renal NHE3, which requires coordination between IRBIT and the NHERF1 PDZ1 domain in binding and transporting NHE3.


2003 ◽  
Vol 285 (5) ◽  
pp. C1150-C1160 ◽  
Author(s):  
Federica Sotgia ◽  
Scott E. Woodman ◽  
Gloria Bonuccelli ◽  
Franco Capozza ◽  
Carlo Minetti ◽  
...  

Four different phenotypes have been associated with CAV3 mutations: limb girdle muscular dystrophy-1C (LGMD-1C), rippling muscle disease (RMD), and distal myopathy (DM), as well as idiopathic and familial hyperCKemia (HCK). Detailed molecular characterization of two caveolin-3 mutations (P104L and ΔTFT), associated with LGMD-1C, shows them to impart a dominant-negative effect on wild-type caveolin-3, rendering it dysfunctional through sequestration in the Golgi complex. Interestingly, substitution of glutamine for arginine at amino acid position 26 (R26Q) of caveolin-3 is associated not only with RMD but also with DM and HCK. However, the phenotypic behavior of the caveolin-3 R26Q mutation has never been evaluated in cultured cells. Thus we characterized the cellular and molecular properties of the R26Q mutant protein to better understand how this mutation can manifest as such distinct disease phenotypes. Here, we show that the caveolin-3 R26Q mutant is mostly retained at the level of the Golgi complex. The caveolin-3 R26Q mutant formed oligomers of a much larger size than wild-type caveolin-3 and was excluded from caveolae-enriched membranes. However, caveolin-3 R26Q did not behave in a dominant-negative fashion when coexpressed with wild-type caveolin-3. Thus the R26Q mutation behaves differently from other caveolin-3 mutations (P104L and ΔTFT) that have been previously characterized. These data provide a possible explanation for the scope of the various disease phenotypes associated with the caveolin-3 R26Q mutation. We propose a haploinsufficiency model in which reduced levels of wild-type caveolin-3, although not rendered dysfunctional due to the caveolin-3 R26Q mutant protein, are insufficient for normal muscle cell function.


2020 ◽  
Vol 41 (Supplement_2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Y Yamamoto ◽  
T Makiyama ◽  
Y Wuriyanghai ◽  
H Kohjitani ◽  
J Gao ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Calmodulin (CaM) is a ubiquitous Ca2+ sensor molecule encoded by three distinct calmodulin genes, CALM1–3, and has an important role for cardiac ion channel function. Recently, heterozygous missense mutations in CALM genes were reported to cause a new category of life-threatening genetic arrhythmias such as long-QT syndrome (LQTS) and catecholaminergic polymorphic ventricular tachycardia (CPVT), which is called as “calmodulinopathy”. The patients with calmodulinopathy show poor prognosis and there is no effective treatment for them. Purpose Considering the dominant-negative effect of mutant calmodulin proteins produced by heterozygous missense mutations in CALMs, we aimed to prove the concept of antisense-based therapy to treat calmodulinopathy using human iPS cell-derived cardiomyocyte (hiPSC-CM) model. Methods We designed multiple locked nucleic acid (LNA) gapmer-antisense oligonucleotides (ASOs) targeting CALM2 and analyzed the silencing efficiency and toxicity in cultured cells to select the most potent ASO. Using CMs differentiated from hiPSCs which were generated form a 12-year-old boy with LQTS carrying a heterozygous CALM2-N98S mutation, CALM2 expression and action potentials (APs) were analyzed to evaluate the efficacy of ASOs. Results We identified several ASOs which reduced CALM2 expression without affecting cell viability in human cultured cells (HepG2) (ASO 50 nM, n=2; Figure 1A). Considering further experiments in vivo mouse model, we investigated the CALM2 silencing activity in mouse cultured cells (3T3-L1) without transfection (free-uptake) (ASO 1 μM, n=2; †ASOs have homologous sequence between human and mouse; Figure B). After free-uptake CALM2 silencing analysis in 3T3-L1 cells, we identified that ASO #2 has the most potent CALM2 silencing activity and low cytotoxicity (Figure 1B). ASO #2 effectively reduced CALM2 expression even in hiPSC-CMs (ASO(−): n=3, lipofection: n=4, free-uptake: n=3; P<0.05; Figure 1C). In action potential recordings, we demonstrated that ASO #2 ameliorated prolonged AP durations (APD90) in N98S-hiPSC-CMs at 0.5 Hz pacing (ASO(−): 666±123 ms (n=7), lipofection: 329±21 ms (n=8), free-uptake: 388±34 ms (n=12); P<0.05; Figure 1D). Conclusion Our results using patient-derived hiPSC-CM model suggest that ASO-based therapy might be a promising strategy for the treatment of calmodulinopathy. Figure 1 Funding Acknowledgement Type of funding source: Private company. Main funding source(s): Nissan Chemical Corporation


Development ◽  
1996 ◽  
Vol 122 (9) ◽  
pp. 2709-2718 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. Miskiewicz ◽  
D. Morrissey ◽  
Y. Lan ◽  
L. Raj ◽  
S. Kessler ◽  
...  

Drosophila paired, a homolog of mammalian Pax-3, is key to the coordinated regulation of segment-polarity genes during embryogenesis. The paired gene and its homologs are unusual in encoding proteins with two DNA-binding domains, a paired domain and a homeodomain. We are using an in vivo assay to dissect the functions of the domains of this type of molecule. In particular, we are interested in determining whether one or both DNA-binding activities are required for individual in vivo functions of Paired. We constructed point mutants in each domain designed to disrupt DNA binding and tested the mutants with ectopic expression assays in Drosophila embryos. Mutations in either domain abolished the normal regulation of the target genes engrailed, hedgehog, gooseberry and even-skipped, suggesting that these in vivo functions of Paired require DNA binding through both domains rather than either domain alone. However, when the two mutant proteins were placed in the same embryo, Paired function was restored, indicating that the two DNA-binding activities need not be present in the same molecule. Quantitation of this effect shows that the paired domain mutant has a dominant-negative effect consistent with the observations that Paired protein can bind DNA as a dimer.


Development ◽  
1995 ◽  
Vol 121 (3) ◽  
pp. 755-765 ◽  
Author(s):  
S.B. Pierce ◽  
D. Kimelman

Dorsal axis formation in the Xenopus embryo can be induced by the ectopic expression of several Wnt family members. In Drosophila, the protein encoded by the Wnt family gene, wingless, signals through a pathway that antagonizes the effects of the serine/threonine kinase zeste-white 3/shaggy. We describe the isolation and characterization of a Xenopus homolog of zeste-white 3/shaggy, Xgsk-3. A kinase-dead mutant of Xgsk-3, Xgsk-3K-->R, has a dominant negative effect and mimics the ability of Wnt to induce a secondary axis by induction of an ectopic Spemann organizer. Xgsk-3K-->R, like Wnt, induces dorsal axis formation when expressed in the deep vegetal cells, which do not contribute to the axis. These results indicate that the dorsal fate is actively repressed by Xgsk-3, which must be inactivated for dorsal axis formation to occur. Furthermore, our work suggests that the effects of Xgsk-3K-->R are mediated by an additional intercellular signal.


2008 ◽  
Vol 56 (11) ◽  
pp. 1003-1011 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert E. Seegmiller ◽  
Brandon D. Bomsta ◽  
Laura C. Bridgewater ◽  
Cindy M. Niederhauser ◽  
Carolina Montaño ◽  
...  

The disproportionate micromelia ( Dmm) mouse has a mutation in the C-propeptide coding region of the Co/2a1 gene that causes lethal dwarfism when homozygous ( Dmm/Dmm) but causes only mild dwarfism observable ∼1-week postpartum when heterozygous ( Dmm/+). The purpose of this study was 2-fold: first, to analyze and quantify morphological changes that precede the expression of mild dwarfism in Dmm/+ animals, and second, to compare morphological alterations between Dmm/+ and Dmm/Dmm fetal cartilage that may correlate with the marked skeletal differences between mild and lethal dwarfism. Light and electron transmission microscopy were used to visualize structure of chondrocytes and extracellular matrix (ECM) of fetal rib cartilage. Both Dmm/+ and Dmm/Dmm fetal rib cartilage had significantly larger chondrocytes, greater cell density, and less ECM per unit area than +/+ littermates. Quantitative RT-PCR showed a decrease in aggrecan mRNA in Dmm/+ vs +/+ cartilage. Furthermore, the cytoplasm of chondrocytes in Dmm/+ and Dmm/Dmm cartilage was occupied by significantly more distended rough endoplasmic reticulum (RER) compared with wild-type chondrocytes. Fibril diameters and packing densities of +/+ and Dmm/+ cartilage were similar, but Dmm/Dmm cartilage showed thinner, sparsely distributed fibrils. These findings support the prevailing hypothesis that a C-propeptide mutation could interrupt the normal assembly and secretion of Type II procollagen trimers, resulting in a buildup of proα1(II) chains in the RER and a reduced rate of matrix synthesis. Thus, intracellular entrapment of proα1(II) seems to be primarily responsible for the dominant-negative effect of the Dmm mutation in the expression of dwarfism.


2009 ◽  
Vol 83 (16) ◽  
pp. 8270-8275 ◽  
Author(s):  
William A. McEwan ◽  
Torsten Schaller ◽  
Laura M. Ylinen ◽  
Margaret J. Hosie ◽  
Greg J. Towers ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT TRIM5α mediates a potent retroviral restriction phenotype in diverse mammalian species. Here, we identify a TRIM5 transcript in cat cells with a truncated B30.2 capsid binding domain and ablated restrictive function which, remarkably, is conserved across the Feliformia. Cat TRIM5 displayed no restriction activity, but ectopic expression conferred a dominant negative effect against human TRIM5α. Our findings explain the absence of retroviral restriction in cat cells and suggest that disruption of the TRIM5 locus has arisen independently at least twice in the Carnivora, with implications concerning the evolution of the host and pathogen in this taxon.


Blood ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 118 (21) ◽  
pp. 4175-4175
Author(s):  
Sabine Wintterle ◽  
Dirk Heckl ◽  
Adrian Schwarzer ◽  
Guntram Buesche ◽  
Christopher Baum ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 4175 MPL signaling, induced by the binding of Thrombopoietin (THPO), regulates megakaryopoiesis and platelet development, and is essential for hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) maintenance. Murine lineage negative, Sca-1 and c-kit positive bone marrow (BM) cells (LSK cells) and human CD34 positive cells expressing MPL have long term BM reconstitution capacities. In human patients, deficiency of MPL due to inactivating mutations in the MPL gene causes severe thrombocytopenia and progressive aplastic anemia, which is lethal if not treated by BM transplantation (BMT). This rare genetic disorder is termed congenital amegakaryocytic thrombocytopenia (CAMT). With the final aim of developing gene therapy to treat CAMT, we explored the effects of ectopic Mpl expression in wild-type C57Bl/6 mice. The enforced overexpression of Mpl induced a rapid expansion of all three hematological cell lineages, resembling chronic myeloproliferative disease (CMPD) 2 months after BMT (n=25 mice). Surprisingly, mice subsequently developed life threatening pancytopenia with normal Thpo levels despite low platelet counts (167+/−52 × 103/μl). The BM showed reduced LSK cell numbers (0.01+/−0.01 % versus controls 0.05+/−0.015%, p=0.03). Non-transduced, co-transplanted BM cells could not rescue the disturbed hematopoiesis. Based on these observations, we hypothesized that the ectopic overexpression of Mpl in hematopoietic cells induces a dominant-negative effect, dysregulating the Thpo-Mpl balance. To test our hypothesis, we ectopically expressed a signaling-defective truncated dominant-negative Mpl (dnMpl) receptor, lacking the complete intracellular domain, in a BMT model in wild-type C57Bl/6 mice (n=23). Lineage negative cells were transduced with gammaretroviral vectors expressing dnMpl from the SFFV promoter in the LTRs and transplanted into lethally irradiated mice. We observed long term engraftment with 57.6+/−1.9% dnMpl positive mononuclear cells in the peripheral blood (controls 76.7+/−7.8%) after 19 weeks and severe thrombocytopenia (174 +/− 32 x103/μl) in the dnMpl expressing animals (controls 951+/−233×103/μl). After 23 weeks, we detected 15–34% dnMpl positive BM cells (controls 15–99%). To address the question of whether the BM of dnMpl treated mice contained fewer HSCs compared to control transplanted mice, we analyzed the LSK cell number and saw a ∼4.6-fold reduction (0.02+/− 0.005% versus control mice 0.07+/−0.012%; p=0.0016). As Thpo/Mpl signaling is known to induce HSC quiescence, we speculated that the loss of these signals induces HSC cycling. Cell cycle analysis of the LSK cells of dnMpl treated mice showed a transition into G1/S/G2, indicating a loss of quiescent HSCs (G0 3.5 +/−1.6% vs controls 29.8 +/−10.5%). This effect was even more pronounced in CD34 negative LSK cells (5.4+/−4.0% vs. 44.5+/−8.5%). Secondary transplantation of dnMpl BM showed severely reduced repopulation capacity with 5 out of 6 secondary recipients dying due to graft failure. In selected animals we transplanted another batch of BM after 16 weeks without preconditioning of the mice. Long term repopulation of the second graft was seen in 71–79% of dnMpl treated mice (controls 0.2–1.1%) and BM cells further engrafted in secondary recipients. To address changes in HSC gene expression, we sorted LSK cells from dnMpl BM (pool of 4–5 dnMpl mice for each sample) and also separated dnMpl positive and negative cells. Our controls were LSK cells from control transplanted mice (one per sample). RNA was analyzed on an Affymetrix Mouse Genome 430 2.0 array in triplicates. Unsupervised clustering and principle component analysis revealed that dnMpl positive and negative samples clustered, suggesting a systemic effect on HSCs. We tested more than 4000 gene sets from the MySigDB Database (Broad Institute, Cambridge, MA) for enrichment in either of the phenotypes and found a profound downregulation of gene sets containing “stemness” genes in the LSK cells of dnMpl treated mice, irrespective of cellular dnMpl expression. In summary, we show that ectopic expression of dnMpl in a subset of BM cells disturbs Thpo/Mpl-signaling inducing thrombocytopenia and a systemic loss of HSCs. Besides underlining the strict requirement for regulated Mpl expression in gene therapy for CAMT, these data create new hypotheses for the pathogenesis of aplastic anemia and the development of non-cytotoxic conditioning regimens in BMT. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


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