Cell Structure and Function
Online ISSN : 1347-3700
Print ISSN : 0386-7196
ISSN-L : 0386-7196
Volume 31, Issue 2
Displaying 1-13 of 13 articles from this issue
  • Kaori Tsutsumi, Motoaki Yasuda, Takeshi Nishioka
    2006 Volume 31 Issue 2 Pages 47-52
    Published: 2006
    Released on J-STAGE: September 02, 2006
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    Radiotherapy is an effective approach to treating many types of cancer. Recent progress in radiotherapy technology, such as intensity-modulated radiation therapy (IMRT) and three-dimensional (3D) radiotherapy, allow precise energy transfer to the tumor, which has improved local control rates. However, the emergence of tolerant cells during or after radiotherapy remains problematic. In the present study, we first established a cell population from H1299, the p53-null non-small cell lung cancer cell line, by 10 Gy irradiation using 6 MV X-rays. The radio- and chemosensitivity of this cell population (referred to as H1299-IR) was determined using colony formation analyses and MTS assays. Compared with the parental cell line, the radiosensitivity of H1299-IR was apparently the same. H1299 and H1299-IR were both more radio tolerant than the A549 cell line. However, H1299-IR became significantly more sensitive to cisplatin, an antitumor agent. After exposure to 25 μg/ml cisplatin for 2 h, parental cells steadily grew during the MTS assay, whereas the sensitivity of H1299-IR cells doubled both at 24 and 48 h. Microarray analysis of over 30,000 H1299-IR genes (Agilent Technology) revealed that 12 and 15 genes were up- (>2.0) and down- (<2.0) regulated, respectively. Rad51d (homologous recombination repair protein) gene was down-regulated 2.8-fold, whereas matrix metalloproteinase 1 (collagenase-1) gene was up-regulated 4.4-fold. These results indicated that some p53-null non-small cell lung cancers could be successfully treated when X-ray radiotherapy was administered with subsequent or concurrent cisplatin chemotherapy.
  • Song Yi Ko, Hye Yoon Kang, Hyun Sil Lee, Sang Yeul Han, Seung Hwan Hon ...
    2006 Volume 31 Issue 2 Pages 53-62
    Published: 2006
    Released on J-STAGE: September 21, 2006
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    Mouse embryonic stem (mES) cells can be maintained in undifferentiated state in the presence of a cytokine, leukemia inhibitory factor (LIF). Many investigators found that STAT3 activation is important for the maintenance of pluripotency by LIF. However, the downstream pathways of STAT3 activation are still unknown. To look for STAT3-downstream target genes, we performed DD-RT PCR in the presence or absence of LIF. Through further confirmation, we finally selected 8 genes whose expressions were significantly dependent upon the presence of LIF. Among them, Jmjd1a was down-regulated after LIF withdrawal, and it was selected for further investigation. Its expression started to decrease 1 day after the removal of LIF, and disappeared on day 3. It was also shown that STAT3 could bind to the promoter region of Jmjd1a gene. These data demonstrate that Jmjd1a might be a critical signaling molecule underlying the maintenance of pluripotency in mES cells.
  • Hong Luo, Fubito Nakatsu, Akiko Furuno, Hiroko Kato, Akitsugu Yamamoto ...
    2006 Volume 31 Issue 2 Pages 63-75
    Published: 2006
    Released on J-STAGE: October 28, 2006
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    Supplementary material
    Newly synthesized membrane proteins are sorted in the trans-Golgi network (TGN) on the basis of sorting signals carried in their cytoplasmic domains and delivered to their final destinations in the secretory and endocytic pathways. Although previous studies have suggested the involvement of early endosomes in the biosynthetic pathway of transmembrane proteins, the precise trafficking routes followed by the newly synthesized plasma membrane proteins, such as transferrin receptors (TfRs), after exit from the TGN remain unclear. In this report, first, we demonstrated the advantages of photoactivating PA-GFP, a variant of the Aequorea victoria green fluorescent protein (GFP), with multiphoton laser light rather than single-photon laser light, in terms of photoactivation efficiency and spatial resolution. We then applied the multiphoton photoactivation technique to selectively photoactivate the TfR tagged with PA-GFP (PA-GFP-TfR) at the TGN, and monitored the movement of the photoactivated PA-GFP-TfR in live cells. We observed that the PA-GFP-TfR photoactivated at the TGN are transported to the Tfn+EEA1+ endosomal compartments after exiting the TGN. These data support the notion that early endosomes can serve as a sorting station for not only internalized plasma membrane proteins in the endocytic pathway but also newly synthesized membrane proteins in the post-Golgi secretory pathway.
  • Tetsuya Ishida, Tanenori Hatae, Nozomu Nishi, Nobukazu Araki
    2006 Volume 31 Issue 2 Pages 77-85
    Published: 2006
    Released on J-STAGE: October 31, 2006
    Advance online publication: October 23, 2006
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    The endolymphatic sac (ES) is believed to play an important role in maintaining homeostasis in the inner ear by the absorption and endocytosis of endolymph. Megalin is a 600-kDa multiligand endocytic receptor expressed in certain types of absorptive epithelia including kidney proximal tubules. We analyzed the immunoreactivity for megalin in rat ES by immunofluorescence, immunogold electron microscopy, and immunoblotting. With immunostaining, the luminal substances of the ES were strongly stained for megalin. Megalin was also localized in luminal macrophage-like cells and both types of epithelial cell (mitochondria-rich cells and ribosome-rich cells). In these cells, the megalin was localized in the lumen of endosomes, but was not membrane associated. This localization pattern indicates that the megalin in these cells is not a membrane receptor, but merely one of the constituents that are endocytosed from the lumen of the ES. Immunoblotting indicated that the megalin in the ES is a 210-kDa molecule lacking a cytoplasmic domain. This suggests that the megalin in the ES may be a soluble form, different from the 600-kDa membrane-bound receptor expressed in kidneys. Taken together, it is likely that the megalin in the ES lumen is a soluble component and may be endocytosed by the ES epithelial cells. Furthermore, we found that the tectorial membrane, an acellular structure in the cochlea, gave a strong megalin immunoreaction. Since the cochlea is connected to the ES, the megalin may be transported alone or with the components of the tectorial membrane from the cochlea to the ES lumen through longitudinal flow.
  • Hiroshi Sakane, Takaharu Yamamoto, Kazuma Tanaka
    2006 Volume 31 Issue 2 Pages 87-108
    Published: 2006
    Released on J-STAGE: December 12, 2006
    Advance online publication: October 23, 2006
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    Drs2p, the catalytic subunit of the Cdc50p-Drs2p putative aminophospholipid translocase, has been implicated in conjunction with the Arf1 signaling pathway in the formation of clathrin-coated vesicles (CCVs) from the TGN. Herein, we searched for Arf regulator genes whose mutations were synthetically lethal with cdc50Δ, and identified the Arf GAP gene GCS1. Most of the examined transport pathways in the Cdc50p-depleted gcs1Δ mutant were nearly normal, including endocytic transport to vacuoles, carboxypeptidase Y sorting, and the processing and secretion of invertase. In contrast, this mutant exhibited severe defects in the early endosome-to-TGN transport pathway; proteins that are transported via this pathway, such as the v-SNARE Snc1p, the t-SNARE Tlg1p, and the chitin synthase III subunit Chs3p, accumulated in TGN-independent aberrant membrane structures. We extended our analyses to clathrin adaptors, and found that Gga1p/Gga2p and AP-1 were also involved in this pathway. The Cdc50p-depleted gga1Δ gga2Δ mutant and the gcs1Δ apl2Δ (the β1 subunit of AP-1) mutant exhibited growth defects and intracellular Snc1p-containing membranes accumulated in these cells. These results suggest that Cdc50p-Drs2p plays an important role in the Arf1p-mediated formation of CCVs for the retrieval pathway from early endosomes to the TGN.
  • Satomi Nadanaka, Hiderou Yoshida, Ryuichiro Sato, Kazutoshi Mori
    2006 Volume 31 Issue 2 Pages 109-116
    Published: 2006
    Released on J-STAGE: December 12, 2006
    Advance online publication: November 17, 2006
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    Mammalian transcription factor ATF6 is constitutively synthesized as a type II transmembrane protein embedded in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). It is activated when unfolded proteins are accumulated in the ER under ER stress through a process called regulated intramembrane proteolysis (Rip), in which ATF6 is transported from the ER to the Golgi apparatus where it undergoes sequential cleavage by Site-1 and Site-2 proteases. The cytosolic transcription factor domain of ATF6 liberated from the Golgi membrane enters the nucleus where it activates transcription of ER-localized molecular chaperones and folding enzymes, leading to the maintenance of the homeostasis of the ER. Here, we analyzed M19 cells, a mutant of Chinese hamster ovary cells deficient in Site-2 protease. It was previously shown that M19 cells are defective in the induction of mRNA encoding the major ER chaperone BiP. In M19 cells, ATF6 was not converted from the membrane-bound precursor form to the cleaved and nuclear form as expected. Moreover, some of the ATF6 was constitutively relocated to the Golgi apparatus, where it was cleaved by Site-1 protease, and remained associated with the Golgi apparatus, indicating that the ER of M19 cells was constitutively stressed. Consistent with this notion, the two other ER stress response mediators, IRE1 and PERK, were also constitutively activated in M19 cells. M19 cells showed inefficient secretion of a model protein. These results suggest that Rip-mediated activation of ATF6 is important for the homeostasis of the ER in not only ER-stressed but also unstressed cells.
  • Hiderou Yoshida, Satomi Nadanaka, Ryuichiro Sato, Kazutoshi Mori
    2006 Volume 31 Issue 2 Pages 117-125
    Published: 2006
    Released on J-STAGE: December 12, 2006
    Advance online publication: November 17, 2006
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    XBP1 is a transcription factor downstream of IRE1, a transmembrane protein in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) which functions as a sensor and transducer of ER stress. XBP1 mRNA is constitutively expressed at a low level as an intron-containing precursor mRNA (unspliced mRNA), which is subject to IRE1-mediated splicing reaction upon ER stress to produce the active form of XBP1, pXBP1(S). Because the XBP1 promoter carries a perfect ER stress-response element, namely, the cis-acting element responsible for the induction of ER chaperones, and XBP1 mRNA is induced in response to ER stress with a time course similar to that of ER chaperone mRNAs, it is conjectured that transcription factor ATF6, activated immediately upon ER stress, induces the transcription of not only ER chaperone genes but also of XBP1 gene, such that pXBP1(S) produced by the splicing of an increased level of XBP1 mRNA escapes from proteasome-mediated degradation. Here, we examined this notion by determining the induction of XBP1 mRNA and pXBP1(S) in mutant Chinese hamster ovary (M19) cells deficient in Site-2 protease, which executes the last step of ER stress-induced activation of ATF6. We found that the induction of XBP1 mRNA and pXBP1(S) was greatly reduced in M19 cells as compared with wild-type cells, leading to a marked reduction in the extent of induction of XBP1-target gene. M19 cells were much more sensitive to ER stress than wild-type cells. Importantly, overexpression of XBP1 unspliced mRNA in M19 cells reversed all of these phenotypes. We concluded that ATF6-mediated induction of XBP1 mRNA is important to the production of pXBP1(S), activation of XBP1-target genes, and protection of cells from ER stress.
  • Satomi Nadanaka, Hiderou Yoshida, Kazutoshi Mori
    2006 Volume 31 Issue 2 Pages 127-134
    Published: 2006
    Released on J-STAGE: December 19, 2006
    Advance online publication: November 28, 2006
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    Mammalian transcription factor ATF6 is constitutively synthesized as a type II transmembrane protein embedded in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). Upon ER stress ATF6 is transported to the Golgi apparatus where it is cleaved to release its cytoplasmic domain. This is then translocated into the nucleus where it activates transcription of ER-localized molecular chaperones and folding enzymes to maintain the homeostasis of the ER. We recently found that, owing to the presence of intra- and intermolecular disulfide bridges, ATF6 occurs in unstressed ER in monomer, dimer and oligomer forms. Disulfide-bonded ATF6 is reduced on treatment of cells with various chemical ER stress inducers, and only the reduced monomer ATF6 reaches the Golgi apparatus. In this study, we evoked ER stress under more physiological conditions, namely, glucose starvation, and analyzed its consequence for ATF6 activation. Glucose starvation activated ATF6 and induced the ER chaperone BiP, albeit weakly. ATF6 was thus dissociated from BiP, transported to the Golgi apparatus, and cleaved. Glucose starvation enhanced the synthesis of ATF6 approximately two-fold, probably via transcriptional induction. Importantly, reduction of disulfide bridges and transport of reduced monomer occurred in response to glucose starvation. We conclude that ER stress-induced reduction of ATF6 represents a general feature of the ATF6 activation process.
  • Taisuke Kayamori, Norihito Miyake, Nao Akiyama, Momoko Aimi, Jun&rsquo ...
    2006 Volume 31 Issue 2 Pages 135-143
    Published: 2006
    Released on J-STAGE: December 29, 2006
    Advance online publication: November 17, 2006
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    The mechanical strength of sarcomere structures of skeletal muscle was studied by rupturing single myofibrils of rabbit psoas muscle by submicromanipulation techniques. Microbeads coated with α-actinin were attached to the surface of myofibrils immobilized to coverslip. By use of either optical tweezers or atomic force microscope, the attached beads were captured and detached from the myofibrils. During the detachment of the beads, the actin filaments bound specifically to the beads were peeled off from the bulk structures of myofibrils, thus rupturing the peripheral components of the myofibrils bound to the actin filaments. By analyzing the ruptures thus produced in various myofibril preparations, it was found that the sarcomere structure of myofibrils is maintained by numerous molecular components having the mechanical strength sufficient to sustain the contractile force produced by the actomyosin system. The present techniques could be applied to study the mechanical strength of cellular organelles containing actin filaments as their component.
  • Nobukazu Araki, Masao Hamasaki, Youhei Egami, Tanenori Hatae
    2006 Volume 31 Issue 2 Pages 145-157
    Published: 2006
    Released on J-STAGE: December 29, 2006
    Advance online publication: December 05, 2006
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    Supplementary material
    In the process of receptor-mediated endocytosis, the fusion of endosomes in vitro is known to be inhibited by wortmannin or LY294002; inhibitors of phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K), suggesting that the activity of PI3K is required for the fusion of early endosomes. In macropinocytosis, a process of bulk fluid-phase endocytosis, however, it remains unclear whether PI3K is required for the fusion of macropinosomes, since the macropinosome formation is inhibited by the PI3K inhibitors. In this study, we examined the effect of 3-methlyadenine (3-MA), which shows a distinct specificity to the PI3K classes from wortmannin and LY294002, on the macropinosome formation and fusion in EGF-stimulated A431 cells. Unlike wortmannin or LY294002, 3-MA did not inhibit the uptake of fluorescent dextran by macropinocytosis. However, the fusion of macropinosomes was inhibited by 3-MA. By imaging of live-cells expressing fluorescent protein-fused tandem FYVE domains, we found that PtdIns(3)P appeared on the macropinosomal membrane shortly after the closure of macropinocytic cups and remained on macropinosomes even at 60-min age. The production of PtdIns(3)P and the recruitment of EEA1 to macropinosomes were abolished by the 3-MA treatment. Therefore, it is likely that 3-MA impairs recruitment of EEA1 by inhibiting PtdIns(3)P production and resultantly blocks the fusion of macropinosomes. These results suggest that the local production of PtdIns(3)P implicates the fusion of macropinosomes via EEA1 as well as conventional early endosomes. However, the long association of PtdIns(3)P with macropinosomes may well be a cell-type specific feature of A431 cells.
  • Masanao Kyuuma, Kazu Kikuchi, Katsuhiko Kojima, Yuriko Sugawara, Marik ...
    2006 Volume 31 Issue 2 Pages 159-172
    Published: 2006
    Released on J-STAGE: January 10, 2007
    Advance online publication: December 12, 2006
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    The appropriate sorting of vesicular cargo, including cell-surface proteins, is critical for many cellular functions. Ubiquitinated cargo is targeted to endosomes and digested by lysosomal enzymes. We previously identified AMSH, a deubiquitination enzyme (DUB), to be involved in vesicular transport. Here, we purified an AMSH-binding protein, CHMP3, which is an ESCRT-III subunit. ESCRT-III functions on maturing endosomes, indicating AMSH might also play a role in MVB/late endosomes. Expression of an AMSH mutant lacking CHMP3-binding ability resulted in aberrant endosomes with accumulations of ubiquitinated cargo. Nevertheless, CHMP3-binding capability was not essential for AMSH’s in vitro DUB activity or its endosomal localization, suggesting that, in vivo, the deubiquitination of endosomal cargo is CHMP3-dependent. Ubiquitinated cargo also accumulated on endosomes when catalytically inactive AMSH was expressed or AMSH was depleted. These results suggest that both the DUB activity of AMSH and its CHMP3-binding ability are required to clear ubiquitinated cargo from endosomes.
  • Reina Hashimoto, Masamitsu Yamaguchi
    2006 Volume 31 Issue 2 Pages 173-180
    Published: 2006
    Released on J-STAGE: March 23, 2007
    Advance online publication: December 08, 2006
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    One of the proposed roles of sarcoglycan is to stabilize dystrophin glycoprotein complexes in muscle sarcolemma. Involvement in signal transduction has also been proposed and abnormalities in some sarcoglycan genes are known to be responsible for muscular dystrophy. While characterization of sarcoglycans in muscle has been performed, little is known about its functions in the non-muscle tissues in which mammalian sarcoglycans are expressed. Here, we investigated temporal and spatial expression patterns of Drosophila β-sarcoglycan (dScgβ) during development by immunohistochemistry. In addition to almost ubiquitous expression in various tissues and organs, as seen for its mammalian counterpart, anti-dScgβ staining data of embryos, eye imaginal discs, and salivary glands demonstrated cytoplasmic localization during S phase in addition to plasma membrane staining. Furthermore we found that subcellular localization of dScgβ dramatically changes during mitosis through possible association with tubulin. These observations point to a complex role of sarcoglycans in non-muscle tissues.
  • Akiko Itadani, Taro Nakamura, Chikashi Shimoda
    2006 Volume 31 Issue 2 Pages 181-195
    Published: 2006
    Released on J-STAGE: March 23, 2007
    Advance online publication: December 29, 2006
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    Myo1, a heavy chain of type I myosin of the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe, is essential for sporulation. Here we have analyzed the expression, localization and cellular function of the type I myosin light chain calmodulin, Cam2, encoded by cam2+. Transcription of cam2+ was constitutive and markedly enhanced in meiosis. The cam2 null mutant was viable and completed sporulation normally at 28°C, but formed four-spored asci poorly at 34°C. In those sporulation-defective cells, the forespore membrane was formed abnormally. A Cam2-GFP fusion protein accumulated at the cell poles in interphase cells and at the medial septation site in postmitotic cells, colocalizing with Myo1 and F-actin patches. During the mating process, a single Cam2-GFP dot was detected at the tip of the mating projection. During meiosis-I, the Cam2-GFP dots dispersed into the cell periphery and the cytoplasm. At metaphase-II, intense Cam2-GFP signals appeared near Meu14 rings which were formed at the leading edge of expanding forespore membranes. This localization of Cam2 was dependent upon Myo1; and sporulation defect of cam2Δ at 34°C was alleviated by overexpressing Myo1ΔIQ. These results suggest a close relationship between Cam2 and Myo1. In addition, both F-actin and Myo1 localized with Cam2 in the leading edge region. In summary, type I myosin and F-actin accumulate at the leading edge area of the forespore membrane and may play a pivotal role in its assembly.
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