The specialized cholesterol/sphingolipid-rich membrane domains termed lipid rafts are highly dynamic in the cancer cells, which rapidly assemble effector molecules to form a sorting platform essential for oncogenic signaling transduction in response to extra- or intracellular stimuli. Density-based membrane flotation, subcellular fractionation, cell surface biotinylation, and co-immunoprecipitation analyses of bichalcone analog ((E)-1-(4-Hydroxy-3-((4-(4-((E)-3-(pyridin-3-yl)acryloyl)phenyl)piperazin-1-yl)methyl)phenyl)-3-(pyridin-3-yl)prop-2-en-1-one (TSWU-BR4)-treated cancer cells showed dissociation between GRP78 and p85α conferring the recruitment of PTEN to lipid raft membranes associated with p85α. Ectopic expression of GRP78 could overcome induction of lipid raft membrane-associated p85α–unphosphorylated PTEN complex formation and suppression of GRP78−PI3K−Akt−GTP-Rac1-mediated and GRP78-regulated PERK−Nrf2 antioxidant pathway and cancer cell invasion by TSWU-BR4. Using specific inducer, inhibitor, or short hairpin RNA for ASM demonstrated that induction of the lipid raft membrane localization and activation of ASM by TSWU-BR4 is responsible for perturbing homeostasis of cholesterol and ceramide levels in the lipid raft and ER membranes, leading to alteration of GRP78 membrane trafficking and subsequently inducing p85α–unphosphorylated PTEN complex formation, causing disruption of GRP78−PI3K−Akt−GTP-Rac1-mediated signal and ER membrane-associated GRP78-regulated oxidative stress balance, thus inhibiting cancer cell invasion. The involvement of the enrichment of ceramide to lipid raft membranes in inhibition of NF-κB-mediated MMP-2 expression was confirmed through attenuation of NF-κB activation using C2-ceramide, NF-κB specific inhibitors, ectopic expression of NF-κB p65, MMP-2 promoter-driven luciferase, and NF-κB-dependent reporter genes. In conclusion, localization of ASM in the lipid raft membranes by TSWU-BR4 is a key event for initiating formation of ceramide-enriched lipid raft membrane platforms, which causes delocalization of GRP78 from the lipid raft and ER membranes to the cytosol and formation of p85α–unphosphorylated PTEN complexes to attenuate the GRP78-regulated oxidative stress balance and GRP78−p85α−Akt−GTP-Rac1−NF-κB−MMP-2-mediated cancer cell invasion.
The human TAO kinase 1 (hTAOK1) is a member of the Ste20 group of kinases with the kinase domain located at the N-terminus. The rat homologue, originally named TAO1, has been demonstrated to be highly expressed in brain. In this study, the human TAO kinase 1 was transfected into human neuroblastoma SH-SY5Y cells and its biological effects on the cell morphology were observed by co-expressing the enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP). It was found that after 16 h of transfection the cells had shrunk, and finally became rounded when transfected with wild-type or mutant K57A genes encoding either the kinase domain (residues 1-376) or the full-length molecule (residues 1-1001). Thirty-four hours after transfection, cells floated and apoptotic bodies were observed after nuclear staining with DAPI. On the other hand, the cells that were transfected with the gene encoding the C-terminal regulatory region (residues 377-1001) of hTAOK1, appeared to remain unchanged. In order to know the signaling events involved in the above biological phenomena, caspase-3-like activities of the transfected cells were measured in the absence or presence of JNK inhibitor SP600125, in which caspase-3 and JNK (C-jun-N-terminal kinase) are both known to be critical components of the neuronal apoptosis. The results showed that the apoptotic cells exhibited elevated caspase-3-like activity, which could be reduced by SP600125 to some extent. It is concluded that human TAO kinase 1 induces apoptosis in SH-SY5Y cells and the kinase domain is essential, but its catalytic activity seems to be dispensable in this case.
Citrate is a key intermediate of the tricarboxylic acid cycle and acts as an allosteric signal to regulate the production of cellular ATP. An elevated cytosolic citrate concentration inhibits growth in several types of human cancer cells; however, the underlying mechanism by which citrate induces the growth arrest of cancer cells remains unclear. The results of this study showed that treatment of human pharyngeal squamous carcinoma (PSC) cells with a growth-suppressive concentration of citrate caused cell cycle arrest at the G2/M phase. A coimmunoprecipitation study demonstrated that citrate-induced cell cycle arrest in the G2/M phase was associated with stabilizing the formation of cyclin B1–phospho (p)-cyclin-dependent kinase 1 (CDK1) (Thr 161) complexes. The citrate-induced increased levels of cyclin B1 and G2/M phase arrest were suppressed by the caspase-3 inhibitor Ac-DEVD-CMK and caspase-3 cleavage of mutant p21 (D112N). Ectopic expression of the constitutively active form of protein kinase B (Akt1) could overcome the induction of p21 cleavage, cyclin B1–p-CDK1 (Thr 161) complexes, and G2/M phase arrest by citrate. p85α–phosphatase and tensin homolog deleted from chromosome 10 (PTEN) complex-mediated inactivation of Akt was required for citrate-induced G2/M phase cell cycle arrest because PTEN short hairpin RNA or a PTEN inhibitor (SF1670) blocked the suppression of Akt Ser 473 phosphorylation and the induction of cyclin B1–p-CDK1 (Thr 161) complexes and G2/M phase arrest by citrate. In conclusion, citrate induces G2/M phase arrest in PSC cells by inducing the formation of p85α–PTEN complexes to attenuate Akt-mediated signaling, thereby causing the formation of cyclin B1–p-CDK1 (Thr 161) complexes.
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