scholarly journals Plasmodium condensin core subunits (SMC2/SMC4) mediate atypical mitosis and are essential for parasite proliferation and transmission

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rajan Pandey ◽  
Steven Abel ◽  
Matthew Boucher ◽  
Richard J. Wall ◽  
Mohammad Zeeshan ◽  
...  

SummaryCondensin is a multi-subunit protein complex regulating chromosome condensation and segregation during cell division. In Plasmodium spp., the causative agent of malaria, cell division is atypical and the role of condensin is unclear. Here we examine the role of SMC2 and SMC4, the core subunits of condensin, during endomitosis in schizogony and endoreduplication in male gametogenesis. During early schizogony SMC2/SMC4 localize to a distinct focus, identified as the centromeres by NDC80 fluorescence and ChIP-seq analyses, but do not form condensin I or II complexes. In mature schizonts and during male gametogenesis, there is a diffuse SMC2/SMC4 distribution on chromosomes and in the nucleus, and both condensin I and II complexes form at these stages. Knockdown of smc2 and smc4 gene expression revealed essential roles in parasite proliferation and transmission. The condensin core subunits (SMC2/SMC4) form different complexes and may have distinct functions at various stages of the parasite life cycle.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
jintao cao ◽  
SHUAI SUN ◽  
RAN LI ◽  
RUI MIN ◽  
XINGYU FAN ◽  
...  

Abstract Background The current epidemiology shows that the incidence of breast cancer is increasing year by year and tends to be younger. Triple-negative breast cancer is the most malignant of breast cancer subtypes. The application of bioinformatics in tumor research is becoming more and more extensive. This study provided research ideas and basis for exploring the potential targets of gene therapy for triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC). Methods We analyzed three gene expression profiles (GSE64790、GSE62931、GSE38959) selected from the Gene Expression Omnibus (GEO) database. The GEO2R online analysis tool was used to screen for differentially expressed genes (DEGs) between TNBC and normal tissues. Gene Ontology (GO) function and Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes (KEGG) pathway enrichment analysis were applied to identify the pathways and functional annotation of DEGs. Protein–protein interaction network of these DEGs were visualized by the Metascape gene-list analysis tool so that we could find the protein complex containing the core genes. Subsequently, we investigated the transcriptional data of the core genes in patients with breast cancer from the Oncomine database. Moreover, the online Kaplan–Meier plotter survival analysis tool was used to evaluate the prognostic value of core genes expression in TNBC patients. Finally, immunohistochemistry (IHC) was used to evaluated the expression level and subcellular localization of CCNB2 on TNBC tissues. Results A total of 66 DEGs were identified, including 33 up-regulated genes and 33 down-regulated genes. Among them, a potential protein complex containing five core genes was screened out. The high expression of these core genes was correlated to the poor prognosis of patients suffering breast cancer, especially the overexpression of CCNB2. CCNB2 protein positively expressed in the cytoplasm, and its expression in triple-negative breast cancer tissues was significantly higher than that in adjacent tissues. Conclusions CCNB2 may play a crucial role in the development of TNBC and has the potential as a prognostic biomarker of TNBC.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sarah E. Fritz ◽  
Soumya Ranganathan ◽  
J. Robert Hogg

AbstractThe nonsense-mediated mRNA decay (NMD) pathway monitors translation termination to degrade transcripts with premature stop codons and regulate thousands of human genes. Due to the major role of NMD in RNA quality control and gene expression regulation, it is important to understand how the pathway responds to changing cellular conditions. Here we show that an alternative mammalian-specific isoform of the core NMD factor UPF1, termed UPF1LL, enables condition-dependent remodeling of NMD specificity. UPF1LL associates more stably with potential NMD target mRNAs than the major UPF1SL isoform, expanding the scope of NMD to include many transcripts normally immune to the pathway. Unexpectedly, the enhanced persistence of UPF1LL on mRNAs supports induction of NMD in response to rare translation termination events. Thus, while canonical NMD is abolished by translational repression, UPF1LL activity is enhanced, providing a mechanism to rapidly rewire NMD specificity in response to cellular stress.


Molecules ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 25 (7) ◽  
pp. 1628
Author(s):  
Rodolpho Ornitz Oliveira Souza ◽  
Marcell Crispim ◽  
Ariel Mariano Silber ◽  
Flávia Silva Damasceno

Trypanosoma cruzi is the aetiologic agent of Chagas disease, which affects people in the Americas and worldwide. The parasite has a complex life cycle that alternates among mammalian hosts and insect vectors. During its life cycle, T. cruzi passes through different environments and faces nutrient shortages. It has been established that amino acids, such as proline, histidine, alanine, and glutamate, are crucial to T. cruzi survival. Recently, we described that T. cruzi can biosynthesize glutamine from glutamate and/or obtain it from the extracellular environment, and the role of glutamine in energetic metabolism and metacyclogenesis was demonstrated. In this study, we analysed the effect of glutamine analogues on the parasite life cycle. Here, we show that glutamine analogues impair cell proliferation, the developmental cycle during the infection of mammalian host cells and metacyclogenesis. Taken together, these results show that glutamine is an important metabolite for T. cruzi survival and suggest that glutamine analogues can be used as scaffolds for the development of new trypanocidal drugs. These data also reinforce the supposition that glutamine metabolism is an unexplored possible therapeutic target.


2011 ◽  
Vol 2011 ◽  
pp. 1-11 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lívia G. A. Avelar ◽  
Laila A. Nahum ◽  
Luiza F. Andrade ◽  
Guilherme Oliveira

Schistosoma mansoni, one of the causative agents of schistosomiasis, has a complex life cycle infecting over 200 million people worldwide. Such a successful and prolific parasite life cycle has been shown to be dependent on the adaptive interaction between the parasite and hosts. Tyrosine kinases (TKs) play a key role in signaling pathways as demonstrated by a large body of experimental work in eukaryotes. Furthermore, comparative genomics have allowed the identification of TK homologs and provided insights into the functional role of TKs in several biological systems. Finally, TK structural biology has provided a rational basis for obtaining selective inhibitors directed to the treatment of human diseases. This paper covers the important aspects of the phospho-tyrosine signaling network in S. mansoni, Caenorhabditis elegans, and humans, the main process of functional diversification of TKs, that is, protein-domain shuffling, and also discusses TKs as targets for the development of new anti-schistosome drugs.


Author(s):  
Marshall Scott Poole ◽  
Andrew H. Van de Ven

This chapter describes the core features of life cycle models of organizational change. These models of change are also referred to as regulated, mandated, prescribed, imposed, logically necessary, or prefigured in advance of their execution. Life-cycle models do not imply that an actor must passively comply with mandated changes; actors may be proactive individuals who adapt to their environments and make use of rules to accomplish their purposes. The strengths, challenges, and stages of life cycle models are examined, and future developments advancing life cycle models by considering the role of choice and of multiple forms of agency are advocated.


Development ◽  
1990 ◽  
Vol 110 (4) ◽  
pp. 1319-1325 ◽  
Author(s):  
A.P. Gould ◽  
R.Y. Lai ◽  
M.J. Green ◽  
R.A. White

The Polycomb (Pc) gene is required from the extended germ band stage onwards, to maintain spatially restricted patterns of homeotic gene expression. It has been thought to be involved in the ‘stable inheritance of the determined state’. In this paper, we have tested the notion that the Pc gene is required specifically during or after DNA replication to enable the stable transmission of states of gene activity. We found that arresting cell division using the string mutation or blocking DNA replication with aphidicolin failed to prevent ectopic expression of the homeotic gene Ultrabithorax in Pc mutants. Thus, even in the absence of DNA replication, Pc is required to maintain spatially restricted patterns of homeotic gene expression. The role of the Pc gene product in the stable repression of homeotic gene transcription is discussed.


Parasitology ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 136 (12) ◽  
pp. 1395-1402 ◽  
Author(s):  
KEITH VICKERMAN

SUMMARYThe man in-the-street who frequently asks the question “Why am I here?” finds even more difficulty with the question “Why are parasites here?” The public's distaste for parasites (and by implication, for parasitologists!) is therefore understandable, as maybe was the feeling of early 20th century biologists that parasites were a puzzle because they did not conform to the then widely held association between evolution and progress, let alone the reason why a benevolent Creator should have created them. In mid-century, the writer, contemplating a career in parasitology was taken aback when he found that extolled contemporary biologists disdained parasites or thought little of parasitology as an intellectual subject. These attitudes reflected a lack of appreciation of the important role of parasites in generating evolutionary novelty and speciation, also unawareness of the value of parasite life-cycle studies for formulating questions of wider significance in biology, deficiencies which were gratifyingly beginning to be remedied in the latter half of the century.


Blood ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 134 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 2473-2473
Author(s):  
Rebecca Murdaugh ◽  
Kevin Hoegenauer ◽  
Xiangguo Shi ◽  
Ayumi Kitano ◽  
Richard Chapple ◽  
...  

The adult hematopoietic system is sustained by a balance of self-renewal and differentiation in a small pool of stem and progenitor cells. This balance must be maintained to ensure a continuous supply of blood cells throughout life and prevent malignancy from arising. There are many facets of epigenetic regulation that are well known to be key components of healthy and diseased hematopoiesis, such as DNA methylation and histone post-translational modifications. However, the role of histone variant incorporation in hematopoiesis remains relatively unexplored. In this study, we explore the role of histone variant H3.3 regulation in the hematopoietic system by assessing the function of the histone H3.3 chaperone, Hira. Toward this goal, we use inducible and early developmental conditional knockout (cKO) mouse models to assess the role of Hira within the hematopoietic system. Following Hira cKO early in hematopoietic development (Vav-iCre; Hirafl/fl), we find that HSPCs are unaffected in the fetal liver but deplete quickly after homing to the bone marrow. Using polyinosinic-polycytidylic (pIpC) inducible Hira cKO mice (Mx1-Cre; Hirafl/fl), we find a similarly severe depletion of HSPCs in adult mice within 1 month after Hira loss. In contrast, differentiated cells remain largely unaffected following Hira cKO, demonstrating that Hira is especially important in the hematopoietic stem and progenitor compartment. Since Hira is known to incorporate H3.3 throughout the cell cycle and not just during S-phase like H3.1/2, we hypothesized that adult HSPCs are more dependent upon Hira to regulate histone H3 dynamics since they are slowly dividing. The loss of Hira-mediated H3.3 deposition would also be particularly detrimental to the function of these cells given its association with actively transcribed and bivalent genes. To test the role of Hira in maintaining gene expression patterns, we performed bulk RNA-seq on adult HSPCs and found that hematopoietic differentiation genes are dysregulated after Hira cKO with increased erythroid lineage and decreased lymphoid lineage gene expression. We then assessed gene expression changes in Hira cKO HSPCs in a doxycycline-inducible H2B-GFP background (Mx1-Cre; Hirafl/fl; R26-M2rtTa; TetOP-H2B-GFP) to distinguish between the gene expression changes caused by Hira loss before and after cell division. In the absence of Hira-mediated H3.3 incorporation, we expect some highly expressed genes in slowly dividing adult HSPCs to be affected by Hira loss prior to cell division due to nucleosome turnover in the wake of RNA Polymerase II. At other loci, like bivalent promoters, H3.3 would be diluted after cell division by H3.1/2 during S-phase in Hira cKO HSPCs. In support of this hypothesis, we found that increased expression of the erythroid differentiation gene Klf1 in Hira cKO MPPs after cell division (H2B-GFPLow) relative to Hira cKO MPPs before division (H2B-GFPHigh) and WT MPPs that have divided (H2B-GFPLow). The findings from both of these transcriptome analyses point toward a role of Hira in regulating HSPC differentiation genes and are supported by our in vitro and in vivo data showing increased differentiation of Hira cKO HSPCs and decreased self-renewal. In order to more fully understand the H3.3-dependent gene expression changes after Hira cKO in HSPCs, we correlated H3.3 enrichment patterns from chromatin-immunoprecipitation and sequencing (ChIP-seq) with our data from assay for transposase-accessible chromatin and sequencing (ATAC-seq). Our results demonstrate that Hira cKO HSPCs have more open chromatin and fewer H3.3 peaks, suggesting that loss of Hira-mediated H3.3 deposition increases DNA accessibility. This study identifies a novel epigenetic mechanism required for adult HSPC maintenance and elucidates a previously unappreciated regulator of normal hematopoietic homeostasis. Further understanding how Hira-mediated H3.3 regulation maintains adult HSPCs will provide greater depth to our current understanding of the epigenetic regulators essential for hematopoiesis. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


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