Gangliosides function as modulators of several cell growth related receptors. It was shown for caveolin-rich adipocytes, that GM3 ganglioside binds to insulin receptor (IR), dissociates its complex with caveolin, and thus lowers IR autophosphorylation following insulin treatment. We extended those studies into human hepatocyte-derived HepG2 cells, characterized by a high level of IR but low of caveolin. To lower the glycosphingolipid content, estimated by GM3 concentration, two glucosylceramide synthase inhibitors d-threo-1-pheny-2-decanoylamino-3-morpholino-1-propanol (d-PDMP) and d-threo-1-(3,4,-ethylenedioxy)phenyl-2-palmitoylamino-3-pyrrolidino-1-propanol (d-EtDO-P4) were used. d-PDMP at 40 µM or d-EtDO-P4 at 1 µM concentrations in culture medium decreased the GM3 content to 22.3% (17.8-26.1%) and 18.1% (13.7-24.4%), respectively, of the control value. The reduction of GM3 obtained with d-PDMP was accompanied by a 185.1% (153.5-423.8%) significant increase in the level of IR autophosphorylation following cell stimulation with 100 nM insulin. The effect of d-EtDO-P4 on IR autophosphorylation was smaller amounting to an increase by 134.8% (111.3-167.8%) of the control level and statistically non-significant. The effects of d-PDMP and d-EtDO-P4 could also be detected at the level of Akt1 kinase. In cells grown in the presence of d-PDMP the level of phosphorylated Akt1 was 286.0% (151.4%-621.1%) of that in the control. In this case the effect of d-EtDO-P4 was similar: 223.0% (181.4-315.4%) significant increase in phosphorylated Akt1. We assume that glycosphingolipid depletion in HepG2 cells may affect not only IR autophosphorylation but also, independently, the phosphorylation of Akt1, by modifying the membrane microenvironment of this kinase.
Abstract:We hypothesized that, due to a cross-talk between cytoplasmic O2 − -sources and intraluminally expressed xanthine oxidase (XO), intraluminal O2 − is instrumental in mediating intraluminal (endothelial dysfunction) and cytosolic (p38 and ERK1/2 MAPKs phosphorylation) manifestations of vascular oxidative stress induced by endothelin-1 (ET-1) and angiotensin II (AT-II). Isolated guinea-pig hearts were subjected to 10-min agonist perfusion causing a burst of an intraluminal O2 − . ET-1 antagonist, tezosentan, attenuated AT-II-mediated O2 − , indicating its partial ET-1 mediation. ET-1 and Ang-T (AT-II + tezosentan) triggered intraluminal O2 − , endothelial dysfunction, MAPKs and p47phox phosphorylation, and NADPH oxidase (Nox) and XO activation. These effects were: (i) prevented by blocking PKC (chelerythrine), Nox (apocynin), mitochondrial ATP-dependent K + channel (5-HD), complex II (TTFA), and XO (allopurinol); (ii) mimicked by the activation of Nox (NADH); and mitochondria (diazoxide, 3-NPA) and (iii) the effects by NADH were prevented by 5-HD, TTFA and chelerythrine, and those by diazoxide and 3-NPA by apocynin and chelerythrine, suggesting that the agonists coactivate Nox and mitochondria, which further amplify their activity via PKC. The effects by ET-1, Ang-T, NADH, diazoxide, and 3-NPA were opposed by blocking intraluminal O2 − (SOD) and XO, and were mimicked by XO activation (hypoxanthine). Apocynin, TTFA, chelerythrine, and SOD opposed the effects by hypoxanthine. In conclusion, oxidative stress by agonists involves
The human SUV3 helicase (SUV3, hSUV3, SUPV3L1) is a DNA/RNA unwinding enzyme belonging to the class of DexH-box helicases. It localizes predominantly in the mitochondria, where it forms an RNA-degrading complex called mitochondrial degradosome with exonuclease PNP (polynucleotide phosphorylase). Association of this complex with the polyA polymerase can modulate mitochondrial polyA tails. Silencing of the SUV3 gene was shown to inhibit the cell cycle and to induce apoptosis in human cell lines. However, since small amounts of the SUV3 helicase were found in the cell nuclei, it was not clear whether the observed phenotypes of SUV3 depletion were of mitochondrial or nuclear origin. In order to answer this question we have designed gene constructs able to inhibit the SUV3 activity exclusively in the cell nuclei. The results indicate that the observed growth rate impairment upon SUV3 depletion is due to its nuclear function(s). Unexpectedly, overexpression of the nuclear-targeted wild-type copies of the SUV3 gene resulted in a higher growth rate. In addition, we demonstrate that the SUV3 helicase can be found in the HeLa cell nucleoli, but it is not detectable in the DNA-repair foci. Our results indicate that the nucleolar-associated human SUV3 protein is an important factor in regulation of the cell cycle.
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