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Cell-cell adhesion is an essential process during the development of multicellular organisms. It is based on various cellular junctions and ensures a tight contact between neighboring cells, enabling interactive exchanges necessary for morphological and functional differentiation and maintaining the homeostasis of healthy tissue organization. Two important types of cell-cell adhesions are the adherens junction (AJ) and the desmosome which link the actin cytoskeleton and intermediate filaments to cadherin-based adhesion sites. The core of these structures is composed of single-span transmembrane proteins of the cadherin superfamily which include, among other members, the classical cadherins, e.g. E-cadherin, as well as the desmosomal cadherins, e.g. desmoglein-3. The cytoplasmic domains of the desmosomal and classical cadherins enable interactions with proteins of the catenin family. Classical cadherins preferentially associate with β-catenin and p120-catenin, whereas desmosomal cadherins bind to γ-catenin and plakophilins. Intriguingly, γ-catenin, also known as plakoglobin, is so far the only protein known to be present both in the AJ and the desmosome.
In this study, we showed that the two homologous, membrane raft-associated proteins flotillin-1 and flotillin-2 associate with core proteins of the AJ and the desmosome in vitro and in vivo. In confluent human, non-malignant epithelial MCF10A cells and human skin cryosections, flotillin-2 colocalized with E-cadherin, desmoglein-3 and γ-catenin at cell-cell contact sites, whereas flotillin-1 showed barely any overlap with these proteins. In addition, we detected a colocalization of both flotillins with the actin-binding protein α-actinin in membrane ruffles in subconfluent and at cell-cell contact sites in confluent MCF10A cells as well as in human skin cryosections. The interaction with α-actinin was later shown to be flotillin-1 dependent by performing indirect GST pulldown experiments with purified α-actinin-1-GST in MCF10A cell lysates.
Since flotillin-2 strongly colocalized with cell-cell junctions, this suggested that flotillins might be found in complex with cell adhesion proteins. Thus, we performed coimmunoprecipitation experiments in murine skin lysates and various cell lines of epithelial origin, such as human breast cancer MCF7 cells, human keratinocyte HaCaT cells and primary mouse keratinocytes. These experiments demonstrated that flotillins, especially flotillin-2, coprecipitated with E-cadherin, desmosomal cadherins and γ-catenin in relation to the respective cell type and the maturation status of these cell-cell adhesion structures. However, since γ-catenin is so far the only protein known to be present in the AJ and the desmosome, we further assumed that the complex formation of flotillins with cell adhesion structures is mediated by γ-catenin. For this, we performed indirect GST pulldown experiments in MCF10A cell lysates with bacterially expressed, purified flotillin-1-GST, flotillin-2-GST and γ-catenin-GST and were able to verify the complex formation of adhesion proteins and flotillins in vitro. To further test if the interaction of γ-catenin and flotillins is a direct one, we used purified flotillin-1-GST or flotillin-2-GST and γ-catenin-MBP fusion proteins. Both flotillins directly interacted with γ-catenin in this in vitro assay. In addition, mapping of the interaction domains in γ-catenin by using GST fusion proteins carrying different parts of γ-catenin suggested that flotillins bind to a discontinuous γ-catenin binding domain which consists of a Major determinant around ARM domains 6-12, most likely with a major contribution of the ARM domain 7, and possibly including the NT part of γ-catenin.
To study the effect of flotillin depletion on cell-cell adhesion, we generated stable MCF10A cell lines in which flotillins were knocked down by means of lentiviral shRNAs. Staining of E-cadherin and γ-catenin in these cells showed that the localization at the cell-cell borders was significantly altered after flotillin-2 depletion, which pointed to a role for flotillin-2 in the formation of cell-cell adhesion structures in epithelial cells. Furthermore, isolation of detergent resistant membranes (DRMs) from these cells demonstrated that upon depletion of flotillin-2, a significant amount of E-cadherin and γ-catenin shifted into raft fractions. On the contrary, no change was detected in flotillin-1 knockdown cells. These observations point to a functional role of flotillin-2 in the regulation of raft association of cell-cell adhesion proteins. To gain more insight into the in vivo relevance of our findings, we next studied the function of flotillins in the skin of Flot2-/- knockout mice. Analysis of lysates prepared from the skin of one year old female animals revealed an increased expression of E-cadherin, desmoglein-1 and γ-catenin but not β-catenin, implicating that specific adhesion proteins are upregulated in flotillin-2 knockout skin.
Since flotillins are tightly associated with membrane microdomains we next studied the interaction of flotillin-2 with membrane cholesterol. Using the photoreactive cholesterol analog azocholestanol, we were able to show that flotillin-2 and cholesterol directly interacted. In addition, previous studies speculated that flotillin-2 interacts with cholesterol via two putative cholesterol recognition/interaction amino acid consensus (CRAC) motifs. Analysis of the flotillin-2 sequence revealed that flotillin-2 actually contains four putative CRAC motifs. However, using various flotillin-2 CRAC mutant GFP fusion proteins, we were able to show that none of the putative CRAC motifs is functional, which suggested that flotillin-2 interacts with membrane cholesterol, e.g., via posttranslational modifications, such as myristoylation and palmitoylation which were previously shown to be essential for membrane association of flotillin proteins.
Measuring NADPH oxidase (Nox)-derived reactive oxygen species (ROS) in living tissues and cells is a constant challenge. All probes available display limitations regarding sensitivity, specificity or demand highly specialized detection techniques. In search for a presumably easy, versatile, sensitive and specific technique, numerous studies have used NADPH-stimulated assays in membrane fractions which have been suggested to reflect Nox activity. However, we previously found an unaltered activity with these assays in triple Nox knockout mouse (Nox1-Nox2-Nox4-/-) tissue and cells compared to wild type. Moreover, the high ROS production of intact cells overexpressing Nox enzymes could not be recapitulated in NADPH-stimulated membrane assays. Thus, the signal obtained in these assays has to derive from a source other than NADPH oxidases. Using a combination of native protein electrophoresis, NADPH-stimulated assays and mass spectrometry, mitochondrial proteins and cytochrome P450 were identified as possible source of the assay signal. Cells lacking functional mitochondrial complexes, however, displayed a normal activity in NADPH-stimulated membrane assays suggesting that mitochondrial oxidoreductases are unlikely sources of the signal. Microsomes overexpressing P450 reductase, cytochromes b5 and P450 generated a NADPH-dependent signal in assays utilizing lucigenin, L-012 and dihydroethidium (DHE). Knockout of the cytochrome P450 reductase by CRISPR/Cas9 technology (POR-/-) in HEK293 cells overexpressing Nox4 or Nox5 did not interfere with ROS production in intact cells. However, POR-/- abolished the signal in NADPH-stimulated assays using membrane fractions from the very same cells. Moreover, membranes of rat smooth muscle cells treated with angiotensin II showed an increased NADPH-dependent signal with lucigenin which was abolished by the knockout of POR but not by knockout of p22phox. In conclusion: the cytochrome P450 system accounts for the majority of the signal of Nox activity chemiluminescence based assays.
Latent transforming growth factor beta binding protein 4 (LTBP4) belongs to the fibrillin/LTBP family of proteins and plays an important role as a structural component of extracellular matrix (ECM) and local regulator of TGFβ signaling. We have previously reported that Ltbp4S knock out mice (Ltbp4S −/−) develop centrilobular emphysema reminiscent of late stage COPD, which could be partially rescued by inactivating the antioxidant protein Sestrin 2 (Sesn2). More recent studies showed that Sesn2 knock out mice upregulate Pdgfrβ-controlled alveolar maintenance programs that protect against cigarette smoke induced pulmonary emphysema. Based on this, we hypothesized that the emphysema of Ltbp4S −/− mice is primarily caused by defective Pdgfrβ signaling. Here we show that LTBP4 induces Pdgfrβ signaling by inhibiting the antioxidant Nrf2/Keap1 pathway in a TGFβ-dependent manner. Overall, our data identified Ltbp4 as a major player in lung remodeling and injury repair.
The CRISPR/Cas9 prokaryotic adaptive immune system and its swift repurposing for genome editing enables modification of any prespecified genomic sequence with unprecedented accuracy and efficiency, including targeted gene repair. We used the CRISPR/Cas9 system for targeted repair of patient-specific point mutations in the Cytochrome b-245 heavy chain gene (CYBB), whose inactivation causes chronic granulomatous disease (XCGD)—a life-threatening immunodeficiency disorder characterized by the inability of neutrophils and macrophages to produce microbicidal reactive oxygen species (ROS). We show that frameshift mutations can be effectively repaired in hematopoietic cells by non-integrating lentiviral vectors carrying RNA-guided Cas9 endonucleases (RGNs). Because about 25% of most inherited blood disorders are caused by frameshift mutations, our results suggest that up to a quarter of all patients suffering from monogenic blood disorders could benefit from gene therapy employing personalized, donor template-free RGNs.
Cell–matrix adhesion and cell migration are physiologically important processes that also play a major role in cancer spreading. In cultured cells, matrix adhesion depends on integrin-containing contacts such as focal adhesions. Flotillin-1 and flotillin-2 are frequently overexpressed in cancers and are associated with poor survival. Our previous studies have revealed a role for flotillin-2 in cell–matrix adhesion and in the regulation of the actin cytoskeleton. We here show that flotillins are important for cell migration in a wound healing assay and influence the morphology and dynamics of focal adhesions. Furthermore, anchorage-independent growth in soft agar is enhanced by flotillins. In the absence of flotillins, especially flotillin-2, phosphorylation of focal adhesion kinase and extracellularly regulated kinase is diminished. Flotillins interact with α-actinin, a major regulator of focal adhesion dynamics. These findings are important for understanding the molecular mechanisms of how flotillin overexpression in cancers may affect cell migration and, especially, enhance metastasis formation.
Macrophages exposed to the Th2 cytokines interleukin (IL) IL-4 and IL-13 exhibit a distinct transcriptional response, commonly referred to as M2 polarization. Recently, IL-4-induced polarization of murine bone marrow-derived macrophages (BMDMs) has been linked to acetyl-CoA levels through the activity of the cytosolic acetyl-CoA-generating enzyme ATP-citrate lyase (ACLY). Here, we studied how ACLY regulated IL-4-stimulated gene expression in human monocyte-derived macrophages (MDMs). Although multiple ACLY inhibitors attenuated IL-4-induced target gene expression, this effect could not be recapitulated by silencing ACLY expression. Furthermore, ACLY inhibition failed to alter cellular acetyl-CoA levels and histone acetylation. We generated ACLY knockout human THP-1 macrophages using CRISPR/Cas9 technology. While these cells exhibited reduced histone acetylation levels, IL-4-induced gene expression remained intact. Strikingly, ACLY inhibitors still suppressed induction of target genes by IL-4 in ACLY knockout cells, suggesting off-target effects of these drugs. Our findings suggest that ACLY may not be the major regulator of nucleocytoplasmic acetyl-CoA and IL-4-induced polarization in human macrophages. Furthermore, caution should be warranted in interpreting the impact of pharmacological inhibition of ACLY on gene expression.
Current metabolomics approaches utilize cellular metabolite extracts, are destructive, and require high cell numbers. We introduce here an approach that enables the monitoring of cellular metabolism at lower cell numbers by observing the consumption/production of different metabolites over several kinetic data points of up to 48 hours. Our approach does not influence cellular viability, as we optimized the cellular matrix in comparison to other materials used in a variety of in‐cell NMR spectroscopy experiments. We are able to monitor real‐time metabolism of primary patient cells, which are extremely sensitive to external stress. Measurements are set up in an interleaved manner with short acquisition times (approximately 7 minutes per sample), which allows the monitoring of up to 15 patient samples simultaneously. Further, we implemented our approach for performing tracer‐based assays. Our approach will be important not only in the metabolomics fields, but also in individualized diagnostics.
Current metabolomics approaches utilize cellular metabolite extracts, are destructive, and require high cell numbers. We introduce here an approach that enables the monitoring of cellular metabolism at lower cell numbers by observing the consumption/production of different metabolites over several kinetic data points of up to 48 hours. Our approach does not influence cellular viability, as we optimized the cellular matrix in comparison to other materials used in a variety of in‐cell NMR spectroscopy experiments. We are able to monitor real‐time metabolism of primary patient cells, which are extremely sensitive to external stress. Measurements are set up in an interleaved manner with short acquisition times (approximately 7 minutes per sample), which allows the monitoring of up to 15 patient samples simultaneously. Further, we implemented our approach for performing tracer‐based assays. Our approach will be important not only in the metabolomics fields, but also in individualized diagnostics.
Systematic protein localization and protein-protein interaction studies to characterize specific protein functions are most effectively performed using tag-based assays. Ideally, protein tags are introduced into a gene of interest by homologous recombination to ensure expression from endogenous control elements. However, inefficient homologous recombination makes this approach difficult in mammalian cells. Although gene targeting efficiency by homologous recombination increased dramatically with the development of designer endonuclease systems such as CRISPR/Cas9 capable of inducing DNA double-strand breaks with unprecedented accuracy, the strategies still require synthesis or cloning of homology templates for every single gene. Recent developments have shown that endogenous protein tagging can be achieved efficiently in a homology independent manner. Hence, combinations between CRISPR/Cas9 and generic tag-donor plasmids have been used successfully for targeted gene modifications in mammalian cells. Here, we developed a tool kit comprising a CRISPR/Cas9 expression vector with several EGFP encoding plasmids that should enable tagging of almost every protein expressed in mammalian cells. By performing protein-protein interaction and subcellular localization studies of mTORC1 signal transduction pathway-related proteins expressed in HEK293T cells, we show that tagged proteins faithfully reflect the behavior of their native counterparts under physiological conditions.
Hypoxia poses a stress to cells and decreases mitochondrial respiration, in part by electron transport chain (ETC) complex reorganization. While metabolism under acute hypoxia is well characterized, alterations under chronic hypoxia largely remain unexplored. We followed oxygen consumption rates in THP-1 monocytes during acute (16 h) and chronic (72 h) hypoxia, compared to normoxia, to analyze the electron flows associated with glycolysis, glutamine, and fatty acid oxidation. Oxygen consumption under acute hypoxia predominantly demanded pyruvate, while under chronic hypoxia, fatty acid- and glutamine-oxidation dominated. Chronic hypoxia also elevated electron-transferring flavoproteins (ETF), and the knockdown of ETF–ubiquinone oxidoreductase lowered mitochondrial respiration under chronic hypoxia. Metabolomics revealed an increase in citrate under chronic hypoxia, which implied glutamine processing to α-ketoglutarate and citrate. Expression regulation of enzymes involved in this metabolic shunting corroborated this assumption. Moreover, the expression of acetyl-CoA carboxylase 1 increased, thus pointing to fatty acid synthesis under chronic hypoxia. Cells lacking complex I, which experienced a markedly impaired respiration under normoxia, also shifted their metabolism to fatty acid-dependent synthesis and usage. Taken together, we provide evidence that chronic hypoxia fuels the ETC via ETFs, increasing fatty acid production and consumption via the glutamine-citrate-fatty acid axis.