Semi-autonomous functioning of mitochondria in eukaryotic cell necessitates coordination with nucleus. Several RNA species fine-tune mitochondrial processes by synchronizing with the nuclear program, however the involved components remain enigmatic. In this study, we identify a widely conserved dually localized protein Myg1, and establish its role as a 3′-5′ RNA exonuclease. We employ mouse melanoma cells, and knockout of the Myg1 ortholog in Saccharomyces cerevisiae with complementation using human Myg1 to decipher the conserved role of Myg1 in selective RNA processing. Localization of Myg1 to nucleolus and mitochondrial matrix was studied through imaging and confirmed by sub-cellular fractionation studies. We developed Silexoseqencing , a methodology to map the RNAse trail at single-nucleotide resolution, and identified in situ cleavage by Myg1 on specific transcripts in the two organelles. In nucleolus, Myg1 processes pre-ribosomal RNA involved in ribosome assembly and alters cytoplasmic translation. In mitochondrial matrix, Myg1 processes 3′-termini of the mito-ribosomal and messenger RNAs and controls translation of mitochondrial proteins. We provide a molecular link to the possible involvement of Myg1 in chronic depigmenting disorder vitiligo. Our study identifies a key component involved in regulating spatially segregated organellar RNA processing and establishes the evolutionarily conserved ribonuclease as a coordinator of nucleo-mitochondrial crosstalk.
The 3'-5' exoribonuclease Rrp6 is a key enzyme in RNA homeostasis involved in processing and degradation of many stable RNA precursors, aberrant transcripts, and noncoding RNAs. We previously have shown that in the protozoan parasite , the 5'-external transcribed spacer fragment of pre-rRNA accumulates under serum starvation-induced growth stress. This fragment is a known target of degradation by Rrp6. Here, we computationally and biochemically characterized EhRrp6 and found that it contains the catalytically important EXO and HRDC domains and exhibits exoribonuclease activity with both unstructured and structured RNA substrates, which required the conserved DEDD-Y catalytic-site residues. It lacked the N-terminal PMC2NT domain for binding of the cofactor Rrp47, but could functionally complement the growth defect of a yeast mutant. Of note, no Rrp47 homologue was detected in Immunolocalization studies revealed that EhRrp6 is present both in the nucleus and cytosol of normal cells. However, growth stress induced its complete loss from the nuclei, reversed by proteasome inhibitors. EhRrp6-depleted cells were severely growth restricted, and EhRrp6 overexpression protected the cells against stress, suggesting that EhRrp6 functions as a stress sensor. Importantly EhRrp6 depletion reduced erythrophagocytosis, an important virulence determinant of This reduction was due to a specific decrease in transcript levels of some phagocytosis-related genes ( and ), whereas expression of other genes (, ,, and ) was unaffected. This is the first report of the role of Rrp6 in cell growth and stress responses in a protozoan parasite.
Curcumin is a potential natural remedy for preventing Helicobacter pylori-associated gastric inflammation and cancer. Here, we analyzed the effect of a phospholipid formulation of curcumin on H. pylori growth, translocation and phosphorylation of the virulence factor CagA and host protein kinase Src in vitro and in an in vivo mouse model of H. pylori infection. Growth of H. pylori was inhibited dose-dependently by curcumin in vitro. H. pylori was unable to metabolically reduce curcumin, whereas two enterobacteria, E. coli and Citrobacter rodentium, which efficiently reduced curcumin to the tetra- and hexahydro metabolites, evaded growth inhibition. Oxidative metabolism of curcumin was required for the growth inhibition of H. pylori and the translocation and phosphorylation of CagA and cSrc, since acetal- and diacetal-curcumin that do not undergo oxidative transformation were ineffective. Curcumin attenuated mRNA expression of the H. pylori virulence genes cagE and cagF in a dose-dependent manner and inhibited translocation and phosphorylation of CagA in gastric epithelial cells. H. pylori strains isolated from dietary curcumin-treated mice showed attenuated ability to induce cSrc phosphorylation and the mRNA expression of the gene encoding for IL-8, suggesting long-lasting effects of curcumin on the virulence of H. pylori. Our work provides mechanistic evidence that encourages testing of curcumin as a dietary approach to inhibit the virulence of CagA.
Lung cancer is one of the most invasive cancers affecting over a million of the population. Non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) constitutes up to 85% of all lung cancer cases, and therefore, it is essential to identify predictive biomarkers of NSCLC for therapeutic purposes. Here we use a network theoretical approach to investigate the complex behavior of the NSCLC gene-regulatory interactions. We have used eight NSCLC microarray datasets GSE19188, GSE118370, GSE10072, GSE101929, GSE7670, GSE33532, GSE31547, and GSE31210 and meta-analyzed them to find differentially expressed genes (DEGs) and further constructed a protein–protein interaction (PPI) network. We analyzed its topological properties and identified significant modules of the PPI network using cytoscape network analyzer and MCODE plug-in. From the PPI network, top ten genes of each of the six topological properties like closeness centrality, maximal clique centrality (MCC), Maximum Neighborhood Component (MNC), radiality, EPC (Edge Percolated Component) and bottleneck were considered for key regulator identification. We further compared them with top ten hub genes (those with the highest degrees) to find key regulator (KR) genes. We found that two genes, CDK1 and HSP90AA1, were common in the analysis suggesting a significant regulatory role of CDK1 and HSP90AA1 in non-small cell lung cancer. Our study using a network theoretical approach, as a summary, suggests CDK1 and HSP90AA1 as key regulator genes in complex NSCLC network.
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