We have used a combination of high throughput functional genomics, computerized database mining and expression analyses to discover novel human tumor suppressor genes (TSGs). A genome-wide high throughput cDNA phenotype screen was established to identify genes that induce apoptosis or reduce cell viability. TSGs are expressed in normal tissue and frequently act by reduction of growth of transformed cells or induce apoptosis. In agreement with that and thus serving as platform validation, our pro-apoptotic hits included genes for which tumor suppressing activities were known, such as kangai1 and CD81 antigen. Additional genes that so far have been claimed as putative TSGs or associated with tumor inhibitory activities (prostate differentiation factor, hRAS-like suppressor 3, DPH2L1-like and the metastasis inhibitor Kiss1) were confirmed in their proposed TSG-like phenotype by functionally defining their growth inhibitory or pro-apoptotic function towards cancer cells. Finally, novel genes were identified for which neither association with cell growth nor with apoptosis were previously described. A subset of these genes show characteristics of TSGs because they (i) reduce the growth or induce apoptosis in tumor cells; (ii) show reduced expression in tumor vs. normal tissue; and (iii) are located on chromosomal (LOH-) loci for which cancer-associated deletions are described. The pro-apoptotic phenotype and differential expression of these genes in normal and malignant tissue make them promising target candidates for the diagnosis and therapy of various tumors.
The formation of inclusion bodies (IBs)--amorphous aggregates of misfolded insoluble protein--during recombinant protein expression, is still one of the biggest bottlenecks in protein science. We have developed and analyzed a rapid parallel approach for matrix-assisted refolding of recombinant His(6)-tagged proteins. Efficiencies of matrix-assisted refolding were screened in a 96-well format. The developed methodology allowed the efficient refolding of five different test proteins, including monomeric and oligomeric proteins. Compared to refolding in-solution, the matrix-assisted refolding strategy proved equal or better for all five proteins tested. Interestingly, specifically oligomeric proteins displayed significantly higher levels of refolding compared to refolding in-solution. Mechanistically, matrix-assisted folding seems to differ from folding in-solution, as the reaction proceeds more rapidly and shows a remarkably different concentration dependence--it allows refolding at up to 1000-fold higher protein concentration than folding in-solution.
In this study, we have investigated the protein/lipid interactions of two mitochondrial precursor proteins, apocytochrome c and pCOX IV‐DHFR, which exhibit mitochondrial import pathways with different characteristics. In‐vitro‐synthesized apocytochrome c was found to bind efficiently and specifically to liposomes composed of negatively charged phospholipids and showed a (at least partial) translocation across a lipid bilayer, as reported previously for the chemically prepared precursor protein [Rietveld, A. & de Kruijff, B. (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 6704–6707; Dumont, M. E. & Richards, F. M. (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 4147–4156]. Negatively charged liposomes were shown to efficiently compete with mitochondria for import of in‐vitro‐synthesized apocytochrome c into the organelle, suggesting an important role for negatively charged phospholipids in the initial binding of apocytochrome c to mitochondria. In contrast, the purified and in‐vitro‐synthesized precursor fusion protein pCOX IV‐DHFR, consisting of the presequence of yeast cytochrome oxidase subunit IV fused to mouse dihydrofolate reductase was unable to translocate across a pure lipid bilayer. The data indicate that the ability of apocytochrome c to spontaneously translocate across the bilayer is not shared by all mitochondrial precursor proteins. The implications of the special protein/lipid interaction of apocytochrome c for import into mitochondria will be discussed.
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