Calcineurin plays a pivotal role in the T cell receptor (TCR)-mediated signal transduction pathway and serves as a common target for the immunosuppressants FK506 and cyclosporin A. We report the identification of a novel endogenous calcineurin binding protein named Cabin 1 that inhibits calcineurin-mediated signal transduction. The interaction between Cabin 1 and calcineurin is dependent on PKC activation. Overexpression of Cabin 1 or its N-terminal truncation mutants inhibits the transcriptional activation of calcineurin-responsive elements in the interleukin-2 promoter and blocks dephosphorylation of NF-AT upon T cell activation. These results suggest a negative regulatory role for Cabin 1 in calcineurin signaling and provide a possible mechanism of feedback inhibition of TCR signaling through cross-talk between protein kinases and calcineurin.
Matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) participate in extracellular matrix remodeling and degradation and have been implicated in playing important roles during organ development and pathological processes. Although it has been hypothesized for > 30 years that collagenase activities are responsible for collagen degradation during tadpole tail resorption, none of the previously cloned amphibian MMPs have been biochemically demonstrated to be collagenases. Here, we report a novel matrix metalloproteinase gene from metamorphosing Xenopus laevis tadpoles. In vitro biochemical studies demonstrate that this Xenopus enzyme is an interstitial collagenase and has an essentially identical enzymatic activity toward a collagen substrate as the human interstitial collagenase. Sequence comparison of this enzyme to other known MMPs suggests that the Xenopus collagenase is not a homologue of any known collagenases but instead represents a novel collagenase, Xenopus collagenase-4 (xCol4, MMP-18). Interestingly, during development, xCol4 is highly expressed only transiently in whole animals, at approximately the time when tadpole feeding begins, suggesting a role during the maturation of the digestive tract. More importantly, during metamorphosis, xCol4 is regulated in a tissue-dependent manner. High levels of its mRNA are present as the tadpole tail resorbs. Similarly, its expression is elevated during hindlimb morphogenesis and intestinal remodeling. In addition, when premetamorphic tadpoles are treated with thyroid hormone, the causative agent of metamorphosis, xCol4 expression is induced in the tail. These results suggest that xCol4 may facilitate larval tissue degeneration and adult organogenesis during amphibian metamorphosis.
Amphibian metamorphosis is a post-embryonic process that systematically transforms different tissues in a tadpole. Thyroid hormone plays a causative role in this complex process by inducing a cascade of gene regulation. While natural metamorphosis does not occur until endogenous thyroid hormone has been synthesized, tadpoles are competent to respond to exogenous thyroid hormone shortly after hatching. In addition, even though the metamorphic transitions of individual organs are all controlled by thyroid hormone, each occurs at distinct developmental stages. Recent molecular studies suggest that this competence of premetamorphic tadpoles to respond to the hormone and the developmental stage-dependent regulation of tissue-specific transformations are determined in part by the levels of thyroid hormone receptors and the concentrations of cellular free thyroid hormone. In addition, at least two genes, encoding a cytosolic thyroid hormone binding protein and a 5-deiodinase, respectively, are likely to be critical players in regulating cellular free thyroid hormone concentrations. This review discusses how all of these molecular components coordinate to induce amphibian metamorphosis in a correct spatial and temporal manner. These studies provide us with general clues as to how and why tissues become competent to respond to hormonal signals.
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