Nisin ZP, a Bacteriocin and Food Preservative, Inhibits Head and Neck Cancer Tumorigenesis and Prolongs Survival. Kamarajan, P; Hayami, T; Matte, B; Liu, Y; Danciu, T; Ramamoorthy, A; Worden, F; Kapila, S; Kapila, Y PloS one
10
e0131008
2015
Pokaż streszczenie
The use of small antimicrobial peptides or bacteriocins, like nisin, to treat cancer is a new approach that holds great promise. Nisin exemplifies this new approach because it has been used safely in humans for many years as a food preservative, and recent laboratory studies support its anti-tumor potential in head and neck cancer. Previously, we showed that nisin (2.5%, low content) has antitumor potential in head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) in vitro and in vivo. The current studies explored a naturally occurring variant of nisin (nisin ZP; 95%, high content) for its antitumor effects in vitro and in vivo. Nisin ZP induced the greatest level of apoptosis in HNSCC cells compared to low content nisin. HNSCC cells treated with increasing concentrations of nisin ZP exhibited increasing levels of apoptosis and decreasing levels of cell proliferation, clonogenic capacity, and sphere formation. Nisin ZP induced apoptosis through a calpain-dependent pathway in HNSCC cells but not in human oral keratinocytes. Nisin ZP also induced apoptosis dose-dependently in human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC) with concomitant decreases in vascular sprout formation in vitro and reduced intratumoral microvessel density in vivo. Nisin ZP reduced tumorigenesis in vivo and long-term treatment with nisin ZP extended survival. In addition, nisin treated mice exhibited normal organ histology with no evidence of inflammation, fibrosis or necrosis. In summary, nisin ZP exhibits greater antitumor effects than low content nisin, and thus has the potential to serve as a novel therapeutic for HNSCC. | 26132406
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Alteration of the nuclear pore complex in Ca(2+)-mediated cell death. Bano, D; Dinsdale, D; Cabrera-Socorro, A; Maida, S; Lambacher, N; McColl, B; Ferrando-May, E; Hengartner, MO; Nicotera, P Cell death and differentiation
17
119-33
2009
Pokaż streszczenie
Cell death requires coordinated intracellular signalling before disassembly of cell architecture by degradative enzymes. Although the death signalling cascades that involve the mitochondria, the ER and the plasma membrane have been extensively characterized, only a handful of studies have examined the functional and structural alterations of the nuclear pore complex (NPC) during neuronal death. Here, we show that during excitotoxic neuronal degeneration calpains redistributed across the nuclear envelope and mediated the degradation of NPC components causing altered permeability of the nuclear membrane. In primary dissociated neurons, simultaneous recording of cytosolic [Ca(2+)] and localization of fluorescent proteins showed that the onset of Ca(2+) overload signalled a progressive increase in the diffusion of small reporter molecules across the nuclear envelope. Later, calpain-mediated changes in nuclear pore permeability allowed accumulation of large proteins in the nucleus. Further, in a model of excitotoxic neuronal degeneration in Caenorhabditis elegans, we found similar nuclear changes and redistribution of fluorescent probes across the nuclear membrane in dying neurons. Our findings strongly suggest that increased leakiness of the nuclear barrier affects nucleocytoplasmic transport, alters the localization of proteins across the nuclear envelope and it is likely to be involved in Ca(2+)-dependent cell death, including ischemic neuronal demise. | 19713973
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Loss of specific chaperones involved in membrane glycoprotein biosynthesis during the maturation of human erythroid progenitor cells. Patterson, ST; Li, J; Kang, JA; Wickrema, A; Williams, DB; Reithmeier, RA The Journal of biological chemistry
284
14547-57
2009
Pokaż streszczenie
The production of erythrocytes requires the massive synthesis of red cell-specific proteins including hemoglobin, cytoskeletal proteins, as well as membrane glycoproteins glycophorin A (GPA) and anion exchanger 1 (AE1). We found that during the terminal differentiation of human CD34(+) erythroid progenitor cells in culture, key components of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) protein translocation (Sec61alpha), glycosylation (OST48), and protein folding machinery, chaperones BiP, calreticulin (CRT), and Hsp90 were maintained to allow efficient red cell glycoprotein biosynthesis. Unexpected was the loss of calnexin (CNX), an ER glycoprotein chaperone, and ERp57, a protein-disulfide isomerase, as well as a major decrease of the cytosolic chaperones, Hsc70 and Hsp70, components normally involved in membrane glycoprotein folding and quality control. AE1 can traffic to the cell surface in mouse embryonic fibroblasts completely deficient in CNX or CRT, whereas disruption of the CNX/CRT-glycoprotein interactions in human K562 cells using castanospermine did not affect the cell-surface levels of endogenous GPA or expressed AE1. These results demonstrate that CNX and ERp57 are not required for major glycoprotein biosynthesis during red cell development, in contrast to their role in glycoprotein folding and quality control in other cells. Pełny tekst artykułu | 19258325
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Estrogen administration attenuates immobilization-induced skeletal muscle atrophy in male rats. Sugiura, T; Ito, N; Goto, K; Naito, H; Yoshioka, T; Powers, SK The journal of physiological sciences : JPS
56
393-9
2005
Pokaż streszczenie
We tested the hypothesis that estrogen administration would retard immobilization-induced muscle atrophy in adult male rats. The rats were injected for 24 days with either estrogen (40 microg/kg(-1), beta-estradiol 3-benzoate in olive oil vehicle), or vehicle alone. At day 14 of estrogen treatment, the hindlimb muscles of one leg were immobilized in plantar flexion position by the use of a plaster cast. Following 10 days of immobilzation, the atrophic and the contralateral soleus muscles were both removed and analyzed to determine the level of muscle atrophy along with the measurement of the protein levels of Cu-Zn-superoxide dismutase (Cu-Zn-SOD), heat shock protein 72 (HSP72), and selected proteases. Compared to placebo animals, estrogen treatment significantly reduced (-35%) muscle atrophy. Further, estrogen significantly abridged the expression of the calcium-activated protease, calpain, in the atrophied hindlimb muscle. In contrast, estrogen treatment did not alter the protein levels of HSP72 in the immobilized soleus muscle. These results support the postulate that estrogen attenuates the rate of disuse muscle atrophy, partly because of reductions in immobilization-induced calcium-activated protease levels. | 17052385
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Subcellular localization and in vivo subunit interactions of ubiquitous mu-calpain. Gil-Parrado, S; Popp, O; Knoch, TA; Zahler, S; Bestvater, F; Felgenträger, M; Holloschi, A; Fernández-Montalván, A; Auerswald, EA; Fritz, H; Fuentes-Prior, P; Machleidt, W; Spiess, E The Journal of biological chemistry
278
16336-46
2003
Pokaż streszczenie
Ubiquitously expressed calpains are Ca(2+)-dependent, intracellular cysteine proteases comprising a large catalytic subunit (domains DI-DIV) and a noncovalently bound small regulatory subunit (domains DV and DVI). It is unclear whether Ca(2+)-induced calpain activation is followed by subunit dissociation or not. Here, we have applied advanced fluorescence microscopy techniques to study calpain subunit interactions in living cells using recombinant calpain subunits or domains fused to enhanced cyan and enhanced yellow fluorescent reporter proteins. All of the overexpressed variants of the catalytic subunit (DI-IV, DI-III, and DI-IIb) were active and Ca(2+)-dependent. The intact large subunit, but not its truncated variants, associates with the small subunit under resting and ionomycin-activated conditions. All of the variants were localized in cytoplasm and nuclei, except DI-IIb, which accumulates in the nucleus and in nucleoli as shown by microscopy and cell fractionation. Localization studies with mutated and chimeric variants indicate that nuclear targeting of the DI-IIb variant is conferred by the two N-terminal helices of DI. Only those variants that contain DIII migrated to membranes upon the addition of ionomycin, suggesting that DIII is essential for membrane targeting. We propose that intracellular localization and in particular membrane targeting of activated calpain, but not dissociation of its intact subunits, contribute to regulate its proteolytic activity in vivo. | 12591934
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Critical role for cathepsin B in mediating caspase-1-dependent interleukin-18 maturation and caspase-1-independent necrosis triggered by the microbial toxin nigericin. Hentze, H; Lin, XY; Choi, MS; Porter, AG Cell death and differentiation
10
956-68
2003
Pokaż streszczenie
The potassium ionophore nigericin induces cell death and promotes the maturation and release of IL-1beta in lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-primed monocytes and macrophages, the latter depending on caspase-1 activation by an unknown mechanism. Here, we investigate the pathway that triggers cell death and activates caspase-1. We show that without LPS priming, nigericin alone triggered caspase-1 activation and IL-18 generation in THP-1 monocytic cells. Simultaneously, nigericin induced caspase-1-independent necrotic cell death, which was blocked by the cathepsin B inhibitor CA-074-Me and other cathepsin inhibitors. Cathepsin B activation after nigericin treatment was determined biochemically and corroborated by rapid lysosomal leakage and translocation of cathepsin B to the cytoplasm. IL-18 maturation was prevented by both caspase-1 and cathepsin B inhibitors in THP-1 cells, primary mouse macrophages and human blood monocytes. Moreover, IL-18 generation was reduced in THP-1 cells stably transformed either with cystatin A (an endogenous cathepsin inhibitor) or antisense cathepsin B cDNA. Collectively, our study establishes a critical role for cathepsin B in nigericin-induced caspase-1-dependent IL-18 maturation and caspase-1-independent necrosis. | 12934070
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Myocardial calpain 2 is inhibited by monoclonal antibodies specific for the small, noncatalytic subunit. Mellgren, RL; Lane, RD Biochimica et biophysica acta
954
154-60
1987
Pokaż streszczenie
Calpains (EC 3.4.22.17) are nonlysosomal intracellular proteinases which require calcium ion for activity. The calpains are heterodimers composed of a large catalytic subunit and a small subunit which may have a regulatory function during the catalytic cycle. However, whether calpains remain in the dimeric form or dissociate upon exposure to calcium is controversial. To resolve this issue, two monoclonal antibodies which specifically recognize the small calpain subunit were prepared using bovine calpain 2 heterodimer as the antigen. Both antibodies, designated P-1 and P-2, were capable of inhibiting bovine or canine calpain 2, and partially purified human erythrocyte calpain 1. However, neither could produce full inhibition. Further studies with P-1 and bovine calpain 2 indicated that the antibody decreased the calcium requirement for the proteinase. The Km for casein was increased and the Vmax was decreased. The addition of P-1 to the assay mixture several minutes after initiation of proteolytic activity resulted in a rapid inhibition. The P-1 antibody was also capable of decreasing the ability of the protein inhibitor of calpains (calpastatin) to inhibit bovine calpain 2. These studies indicate that the small subunit remains bound to the large subunit during catalysis and may influence its activity. | 2835105
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