Cytochrome c (Cc) is a key protein in cell life (respiration) and cell death (apoptosis). On the one hand, it serves as a mitochondrial redox carrier, transferring electrons between the membrane-embedded complexes III and IV. On the other hand, it acts as a cytoplasmic apoptosis-triggering agent, forming the apoptosome with apoptosis protease-activating factor-1 (Apaf-1) and activating the caspase cascade. The two functions of cytochrome c are finely tuned by the phosphorylation of tyrosines and, in particular, those located at positions 48 and 97. However, the specific cytochrome c-phosphorylating kinase is still unknown. To study the structural and functional changes induced by tyrosine phosphorylation in cytochrome c, we studied the two phosphomimetic mutants Y48E and Y97E, in which each tyrosine residue is replaced by glutamate. Such substitutions alter both the physicochemical features and the function of each mutant compared with the native protein. Y97E is significantly less stable than the WT species, whereas Y48E not only exhibits lower values for the alkaline transition pK (a) and the midpoint redox potential, but it also impairs Apaf-1-mediated caspase activation. Altogether, these findings suggest that the specific phosphorylation of Tyr48 makes cytochrome c act as an anti-apoptotic switch.
Tyrosine nitration is one of the most common post-transcriptional modifications of proteins, so affecting their structure and function. Human cytochrome c, with five tyrosine residues, is an excellent case study as it is a well-known protein playing a double physiological role in different cell compartments. On one hand, it acts as electron carrier within the mitochondrial respiratory electron transport chain, and on the other hand, it serves as a cytoplasmic apoptosis-triggering agent. In a previous paper, we reported the effect of nitration on physicochemical and kinetic features of monotyrosine cytochrome c mutants. Here, we analyse the nitration-induced changes in secondary structure, thermal stability, haem environment, alkaline transition and molecular dynamics of three of such monotyrosine mutants--the so-called h-Y67, h-Y74 and h-Y97--which have four tyrosines replaced by phenylalanines and just keep the tyrosine residue giving its number to the mutant. The resulting data, along with the functional analyses of the three mutants, indicate that it is the specific nitration of solvent-exposed Tyr74 which enhances the peroxidase activity and blocks the ability of Cc to activate caspase-9, thereby preventing the apoptosis signaling pathway.
Cancer stem cells (CSC) are self-renewing tumor cells, with the ability to generate diverse differentiated tumor cell subpopulations. They differ from normal stem cells in the deregulation of the mechanisms that normally control stem cell physiology. CSCs are the origin of metastasis and highly resistant to therapy. Therefore, the understanding of the CSC origin and deregulated pathways is important for tumor control. We have included experiments , in cell lines and tumors of different origins. We have used patient-derived xenografts (PDX) and public transcriptomic databases of human tumors. MAP17 (PDZKIP1), a small cargo protein overexpressed in tumors, interacts with NUMB through the PDZ-binding domain activating the Notch pathway, leading to an increase in stem cell factors and cancer-initiating-like cells. Identical behavior was mimicked by inhibiting NUMB. Conversely, MAP17 downregulation in a tumor cell line constitutively expressing this gene led to Notch pathway inactivation and a marked reduction of stemness. In PDX models, MAP17 levels directly correlated with tumorsphere formation capability. Finally, in human colon, breast, or lung there is a strong correlation of MAP17 expression with a signature of Notch and stem cell genes. MAP17 overexpression activates Notch pathway by sequestering NUMB. High levels of MAP17 correlated with tumorsphere formation and Notch and Stem gene transcription. Its direct modification causes direct alteration of tumorsphere number and Notch and Stem pathway transcription. This defines a new mechanism of Notch pathway activation and Stem cell pool increase that may be active in a large percentage of tumors. .
NumbL, or Numb-like, is a close homologue of Numb, and is part of an evolutionary conserved protein family implicated in some important cellular processes. Numb is a protein involved in cell development, in cell adhesion and migration, in asymmetric cell division, and in targeting proteins for endocytosis and ubiquitination. NumbL exhibits some overlapping functions with Numb, but its role in tumorigenesis is not fully known. Here we showed that the downregulation of NumbL alone is sufficient to increase NICD nuclear translocation and induce Notch pathway activation. Furthermore, NumbL downregulation increases epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) and cancer stem cell (CSC)-related gene transcripts and CSC-like phenotypes, including an increase in the CSC-like pool. These data suggest that NumbL can act independently as a tumor suppressor gene. Furthermore, an absence of NumbL induces chemoresistance in tumor cells. An analysis of human tumors indicates that NumbL is downregulated in a variable percentage of human tumors, with lower levels of this gene correlated with worse prognosis in colon, breast and lung tumors. Therefore, NumbL can act as an independent tumor suppressor inhibiting the Notch pathway and regulating the cancer stem cell pool.
Post-translational nitration of tyrosine is considered to be an important step in controlling the multiple functions of cytochrome c (Cyt-c). However, the underlying structural basis and mechanism are not yet understood. In this work, human Cyt-c variants in which all but one tyrosine has been substituted by phenylalanine have been studied by resonance Raman and electrochemical methods to probe the consequences of tyrosine nitration on the heme pocket structure and the redox potential. The mutagenic modifications of the protein cause only subtle conformational changes of the protein and small negative shifts of the redox potentials which can be rationalized in terms of long-range electrostatic effects on the heme. The data indicate that the contributions of the individual tyrosines for maintaining the relatively high redox potential of Cyt-c are additive. Nitration of individual tyrosines leads to a destabilization of the axial Fe-Met80 bond which causes the substitution of the native Met ligand by a water molecule or a lysine residue for a fraction of the proteins. Electrostatic immobilization of the protein variants on electrodes coated by self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) of mercaptounadecanoic acid destabilizes the heme pocket structure of both the nitrated and non-nitrated variants. Here, the involvement of surface lysines in binding to the SAM surface prevents the replacement of the Met80 ligand by a lysine but instead a His-His coordinated species is formed. The results indicate that structural perturbations of the heme pocket of Cyt-c due to tyrosine nitration and to local electric fields are independent of each other and occur via different molecular mechanisms. The present results are consistent with the view that either tyrosine nitration or electrostatic binding to the inner mitochondrial membrane, or both events together, are responsible for the switch from the redox to the peroxidase function.
Cancer stem cells (CSC) are associated with the mechanisms of chemoresistance to different cytotoxic drugs or radiotherapy, as well as with tumor relapse and a poor prognosis. Various studies have shown that mitochondria play a central role in these processes because of the ability of this organelle to modify cell metabolism, allowing survival and avoiding apoptosis clearance of cancer cells. Thus, the whole mitochondrial cycle, from its biogenesis to its death, either by mitophagy or by apoptosis, can be targeted by different drugs to reduce mitochondrial fitness, allowing for a restored or increased sensitivity to chemotherapeutic drugs. Once mitochondrial misbalance is induced by a specific drug in any of the processes of mitochondrial metabolism, two elements are commonly boosted: an increment in reactive nitrogen/oxygen species and, subsequently, activation of the intrinsic apoptotic pathway.
Otto Warburg observed that cancer cells derived their energy from aerobic glycolysis by converting glucose to lactate. This mechanism is in opposition to the higher energy requirements of cancer cells because oxidative phosphorylation (OxPhos) produces more ATP from glucose. Warburg hypothesized that this phenomenon occurs due to the malfunction of mitochondria in cancer cells. The rediscovery of Warburg's hypothesis coincided with the discovery of mitochondrial tumor suppressor genes that may conform to Warburg's hypothesis along with the demonstrated negative impact of HIF-1 on PDH activity and the activation of HIF-1 by oncogenic signals such as activated AKT. This work summarizes the alterations in mitochondrial respiratory chain proteins that have been identified and their involvement in cancer. Also discussed is the fact that most of the mitochondrial mutations have been found in homoplasmy, indicating a positive selection during tumor evolution, thereby supporting their causal role.
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