SUMMARY We studied the role of the target of rapamycin complex 2 (mTORC2) during neutrophil chemotaxis, a process that is mediated through the polarization of actin and myosin filament networks. We show that inhibition of mTORC2 activity, achieved via knock down (KD) of Rictor, severely inhibits neutrophil polarization and directed migration induced by chemoattractants, independently of Akt. Rictor KD also abolishes the ability of chemoattractants to induce cAMP production, a process mediated through the activation of the adenylyl cyclase 9 (AC9). Cells with either reduced or higher AC9 levels also exhibit specific and severe tail retraction defects that are mediated through RhoA. We further show that cAMP is excluded from extending pseudopods and remains restricted to the cell body of migrating neutrophils. We propose that the mTORC2-dependent regulation of MyoII occurs through a cAMP/RhoA signaling axis, independently of actin reorganization during neutrophil chemotaxis.
Atherosclerosis remains a major cause of death in the developed world despite the success of therapies that lower cholesterol and BP. The intermediate-conductance calcium-activated potassium channel KCa3.1 is expressed in multiple cell types implicated in atherogenesis, and pharmacological blockade of this channel inhibits VSMC and lymphocyte activation in rats and mice. We found that coronary vessels from patients with coronary artery disease expressed elevated levels of KCa3.1. In Apoe -/-mice, a genetic model of atherosclerosis, KCa3.1 expression was elevated in the VSMCs, macrophages, and T lymphocytes that infiltrated atherosclerotic lesions. Selective pharmacological blockade and gene silencing of KCa3.1 suppressed proliferation, migration, and oxidative stress of human VSMCs. Furthermore, VSMC proliferation and macrophage activation were reduced in KCa3.1 -/-mice. In vivo therapy with 2 KCa3.1 blockers, TRAM-34 and clotrimazole, significantly reduced the development of atherosclerosis in aortas of Apoe -/-mice by suppressing VSMC proliferation and migration into plaques, decreasing infiltration of plaques by macrophages and T lymphocytes, and reducing oxidative stress. Therapeutic concentrations of TRAM-34 in mice caused no discernible toxicity after repeated dosing and did not compromise the immune response to influenza virus. These data suggest that KCa3.1 blockers represent a promising therapeutic strategy for atherosclerosis.
This study examined mechanisms by which immune cells participate in the development of hypertension and renal disease in Dahl salt-sensitive (SS) rats. Increasing dietary salt from 0.4% to 4.0% NaCl significantly increased renal infiltration of T lymphocytes from 8.8 +/- 1.2 x 10(5) to 14.4 +/- 2.0 x 10(5) cells/2 kidneys, increased arterial blood pressure from 131 +/- 2 to 165 +/- 6 mmHg, increased albumin excretion rate from 17 +/- 3 to 129 +/- 20 mg/day, and resulted in renal glomerular and tubular damage. Furthermore, renal tissue ANG II was not suppressed in the kidneys of SS rats fed 4.0% NaCl. Administration of the immunosuppressive agent mycophenolate mofetil (MMF; 20 mg.kg(-1).day(-1)) prevented the infiltration of T lymphocytes and attenuated Dahl SS hypertension and renal disease. In contrast to vehicle-treated rats, Dahl SS rats administered MMF demonstrated a suppression of renal tissue ANG II from 163 +/- 26 to 88 +/- 9 pg/g of tissue when fed high salt. Finally, it was demonstrated that the T lymphocytes isolated from the kidney possess renin and angiotensin-converting enzyme activity. These data indicate that infiltrating T cells are capable of participating in the production of ANG II and are associated with increased intrarenal ANG II, hypertension, and renal disease. The suppression of T-cell infiltration decreased intrarenal ANG II and prevented Dahl SS hypertension and kidney damage. As such, infiltrating cells are capable of participating in the established phase of Dahl SS hypertension.
Abundant in milk and other dairy products, lactose is considered to have an important role in oral microbial ecology and can contribute to caries development in both adults and young children. To better understand the metabolism of lactose and galactose by Streptococcus mutans, the major etiological agent of human tooth decay, a genetic analysis of the tagatose-6-phosphate (lac) and Leloir (gal) pathways was performed in strain UA159. Deletion of each gene in the lac operon caused various alterations in expression of a P lacA -cat promoter fusion and defects in growth on either lactose (lacA, lacB, lacF, lacE, and lacG), galactose (lacA, lacB, lacD, and lacG) or both sugars (lacA, lacB, and lacG). Failure to grow in the presence of galactose or lactose by certain lac mutants appeared to arise from the accumulation of intermediates of galactose metabolism, particularly galatose-6-phosphate. The glucose-and lactose-PTS permeases, EII Man and EII Lac , respectively, were shown to be the only effective transporters of galactose in S. mutans. Furthermore, disruption of manL, encoding EIIAB Man , led to increased resistance to glucose-mediated CCR when lactose was used to induce the lac operon, but resulted in reduced lac gene expression in cells growing on galactose. Collectively, the results reveal a remarkably high degree of complexity in the regulation of lactose/galactose catabolism.Lactose, a 1,4-linked disaccharide of -D-galactose and ␣/-D-glucose, is commonly found in the dairy-rich diets of most industrialized nations. Lactose is rapidly fermented by streptococci, including the cariogenic oral bacterium Streptococcus mutans (21), as well as by a variety of industrially important lactic acid bacteria (LAB) (19). Multiple pathways have been identified in bacteria for the utilization of lactose encountered in the environment. For example, Streptococcus salivarius strain 25975 (26) secretes a -galactosidase that hydrolyzes extracellular lactose into galactose and glucose, although it is more common for lactose to be transported before cleavage (18). Most efficiently, and almost exclusively in Gram-positive bacteria, lactose is internalized by the phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP)-dependent sugar-phosphotransferase system (PTS), yielding lactose-6-phosphate (Lac-6-P) (36). The Lac-6-P is hydrolyzed to glucose and galactose-6-phosphate (Gal-6-P) by a cytoplasmic phospho--galactosidase (LacG), and the Gal-6-P can be catabolized by the tagatose-6-phosphate pathway (18) (Fig. 1). Many bacteria, including Escherichia coli, Lactococcus lactis strain 7962, and S. salivarius strain 57.I, can internalize lactose through non-PTS transporters. Intracellular lactose is cleaved by a -galactosidase enzyme and the D-galactose can directly enter the Leloir pathway ( Fig. 1) (18, 20).S. mutans has a functional lactose-specific PTS (14, 26) encoded by the lacF (EIIA) and lacE (EIIBC) genes (40). A phospho--galactosidase (lacG) and the enzymes of the tagatose-6-phosphate pathway (Fig. 1B), including the two subunits of the heteromeri...
RasC controls the spatial and temporal activity of TORC2 to regulate directional cell migration.
Many biological and physiological processes depend upon directed migration of cells, which is typically mediated by chemical or physical gradients or by signal relay. Here we show that cells can be guided in a single preferred direction based solely on local asymmetries in nano/microtopography on subcellular scales. These asymmetries can be repeated, and thereby provide directional guidance, over arbitrarily large areas. The direction and strength of the guidance is sensitive to the details of the nano/microtopography, suggesting that this phenomenon plays a context-dependent role in vivo. We demonstrate that appropriate asymmetric nano/microtopography can unidirectionally bias internal actin polymerization waves and that cells move with the same preferred direction as these waves. This phenomenon is observed both for the pseudopoddominated migration of the amoeboid Dictyostelium discoideum and for the lamellipod-driven migration of human neutrophils. The conservation of this mechanism across cell types and the asymmetric shape of many natural scaffolds suggest that actin-wave-based guidance is important in biology and physiology.cell migration | actin waves | contact guidance | Dictyostelium discoideum | neutrophils D irected cell migration is essential for many critical biological and physiological processes (1), such as embryonic development (2), wound healing (3), immune response (4), and angiogenesis (5). Guidance of cells can be achieved through external gradients in properties such as chemical concentration (6, 7), substrate rigidity (8), and adhesion (9). The total distance over which gradients can guide cells is limited by the finite dynamic range of cellular sensing [i.e., guidance by a gradient between the front and back of each cell requires that the overall signal change significantly with the cell's position (Fig. 1A)]. Cells can overcome this limitation by relaying chemotactic signals, but chemical relay of directional information requires intricate orchestration and timing of signals (7, 10, 11). Shear flow is another approach to guiding cells unidirectionally over large distances, but shear flow is an active process that requires constant fluid flow at a controlled rate and viscosity (12, 13). Surface nanotopography, such as ridges and grooves (14-17) or aligned collagen fibers (18), can act as a primitive and ubiquitous guidance cue, but the symmetric structures used in prior studies only provided bidirectional guidance.Although previous work has implicated cytoskeletal structures [in particular, the alignment of stress fibers (16)] in similar contact guidance processes, we have recently shown that nanotopography also steers the dynamics of the cell's scaffolding by biasing actin polymerization waves (17). Intracellular dynamics involving the self-assembly of actin and actin's associated proteins into 3D, traveling waves that propel a cell forward through a sustained cycle of polymerization and depolymerization have recently been found to be ubiquitous in cell migration (19)(20)(21)(22). Given ...
We previously demonstrated that mRNAs retained in the nucleus of Saccharomyces cerevisiae are subjected to a degradation system-designated DRN (degradation of mRNA in the nucleus), that is diminished in cbc1-Delta or cbc2-Delta mutants lacking components of the cap-binding complex and in rrp6-Delta mutants lacking Rrp6p, a 3' to 5' nuclear exonuclease. Two mutants, lys2-187 and lys2-121, were uncovered by screening numerous lys2 mutants for suppression by cbc1-Delta and rrp6-Delta. Both mutants were identical and contained the two base changes, one of which formed a TGA nonsense codon. LYS2 mRNAs from the lys2-187 and related mutants were rapidly degraded, and the degradation was suppressed by cbc1-Delta and rrp6-Delta. The U1A-GFP imaging procedure was used to show that the lys2-187 mRNA was partially retained in the nucleus, explaining the susceptibility to DRN. The creation of several derivatives of lys2-187 by site-directed mutagenesis revealed that the in-frame TGA by itself was not responsible for the increased susceptibility to DRN. Thus, mRNAs susceptible to DRN can be formed by a 2-bp change. Furthermore, this "retention signal" causing susceptibility to DRN is lost by altering one of the base pairs, establishing that mRNAs susceptible and unsusceptible to DRN can be attributed to a single nucleotide in the proper context.
Messenger RNAs retained in the nucleus of Saccharomyces cerevisiae are subjected to a degradation system designated DRN (Degradation of mRNA in the Nucleus) that is dependent on the nuclear mRNA cap-binding protein, Cbc1p, as well as nuclear exosome component Rrp6p, a 3' to 5' exoribonuclease. DRN has been shown to act on RNAs preferentially retained in the nucleus, such as: (1) global mRNAs in export defective nup116-Δ mutant strains at the restrictive temperature; (2) a certain class of normal mRNAs called special mRNAs (e.g. IMP3 and YLR194c mRNAs); and (3) mutant mRNAs for example, lys2-187 and cyc1-512. In this study, we further identify three novel components of DRN (Cbc2p, Upf3p and Tif4631p) by employing a genetic screen and by considering proteins/factors that interact with Cbc1p. Participation of these components in DRN was confirmed by demonstrating that null alleles of these genes resulted in stabilization of the rapid decay of global mRNAs in the export defective nup116-Δ strain and of representative special mRNAs. Depletion of Tif4632p, an isoform of Tif4631p, also exhibited a partial impairment of DRN function and is therefore also considered to play a functional role in DRN. These findings clearly establish that CBC2, UPF3, and TIF4631/32 gene products participate in DRN function.
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