Epithelial cells have separate apical and basolateral plasma membrane domains with distinct compositions. After delivery to one surface, proteins can be endocytosed and then recycled, degraded or transcytosed to the opposite surface. Proper sorting into the transcytotic pathway is essential for maintaining polarity, as most proteins are endocytosed many times during their lifespan. The polymeric immunoglobulin receptor (pIgR) transcytoses polymeric IgA (pIgA) from the basolateral to the apical surface of epithelial cells and hepatocytes. However, the molecular machinery that controls polarized sorting of pIgR-pIgA and other receptors is only partially understood. The retromer is a multimeric protein complex, originally described in yeast, which mediates intracellular sorting of Vps10p, a receptor that transports vacuolar enzymes. The yeast retromer contains two sub-complexes. One includes the Vps5p and Vps17p subunits, which provide mechanical force for vesicle budding. The other is the Vps35p-Vps29p-Vps26p subcomplex, which provides cargo specificity. The mammalian retromer binds to the mannose 6-phosphate receptor, which sorts lysosomal enzymes from the trans-Golgi network to the lysosomal pathway. Here, we show a function for the mammalian Vps35-Vps29-Vps26 retromer subcomplex in promoting pIgR-pIgA transcytosis.
The retinoblastoma protein, pRb, controls entry into the S phase of the cell cycle and acts as a tumor suppressor in many tissues. Re-introduction of pRb into tumor cells lacking this protein results in growth arrest, due in part to transcriptional repression of genes required for S phase. Several studies suggest that pRb may also be involved in terminal cell cycle exit as a result of the instigation of senescence or differentiation programs. To understand better these multiple growth-inhibitory properties of pRb, a temperature-sensitive mutant of pRb has been produced. This tspRb induces G 1 arrest and morphological changes efficiently at the permissive temperature of 32.5°C, but is weakly functional at 37°C. Consistent with this, tspRb is compromised in nuclear association and E2F regulation at the non-permissive temperature, but regains these properties at 32.5°C. Serial activation and inactivation of tspRb in SAOS-2 cells does not allow proliferation, but rather leads to apoptotic cell death. Transient activation of pRb may kill tumor cells by establishing a conflict between persistent proliferation-inhibitory signals and renewed deregulation of pRb targets such as E2F, and may thus be a more potent means of eliminating these cells than through simple re-introduction of the tumor suppressor gene.
To understand the process and biological significance of metabolic stabilization of p53 during simian virus 40 (SV40)-induced cellular transformation, we analyzed cellular and viral parameters involved in this process. We demonstrate that neither large T expression as such nor the cellular phenotype (normal versus transformed) markedly influence the stability of p53 complexed to large T in SV40 abortively infected BALB/c mouse fibroblasts. In contrast, metabolic stabilization of p53 is an active cellular event, specifically induced by SV40. The ability of SV40 to induce a cellular response leading to stabilization of p53 complexed to large T is independent from the cellular phenotype and greatly varies between different cells. However, metabolic stability was conferred only to p53 in complex with large T, whereas the free p53 in these cells remained metabolically unstable. Comparative analyses of cellular transformation in various cells differing in stability of p53 complexed to large T upon abortive infection with SV40 revealed a strong correlation between the ability of SV40 to induce metabolic stabilization and its transformation efficiency. Our data suggest that metabolic stabilization and the ensuing enhanced levels of p53 are important for initiation and/or maintenance of SV40 transformation.
Metabolic stabilization of the tumor suppressor p53 is a key event in cellular transformation by simian virus 40 (SV40). Expression of the SV40 large tumor antigen (large T) is necessary but not sufficient for this process, as metabolic stabilization of p53 complexed to large T in abortively SV40-infected cells strictly depends on the cellular systems analyzed (F. Tiemann and W. Deppert, J. Virol. 68:2869-2878, 1994). Comparative analyses of various cells differing in metabolic stabilization of p53 upon abortive infection with SV40 revealed that metabolic stabilization of p53 closely correlated with expression of the SV40 small t antigen (small t) in these cells: 3T3 cells do not express small t and do not stabilize p53 upon infection with wild-type SV40. However, ectopic expression of small t in 3T3 cells provided these cells with the capacity to stabilize p53 upon SV40 infection. Conversely, precrisis mouse embryo cells express small t and mediate metabolic stabilization of p53 upon infection with wild-type SV40. Infection of these cells with an SV40 small-t deletion mutant did not lead to metabolic stabilization of p53. Small-t expression and metabolic stabilization of p53 correlated with an enhanced transformation efficiency by SV40, supporting the conclusion that at least part of the documented helper effect of small t in SV40 transformation is its ability to promote metabolic stabilization of p53 complexed to large T.
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