Journal of Biomedical Science | |
System in biology leading to cell pathology: stable protein-protein interactions after covalent modifications by small molecules or in transgenic cells | |
Research | |
Halina Z Malina1  | |
[1] MalinaLab-Axanton, Tiefenaustr.110, CH-3004, Bern, Switzerland; | |
关键词: Covalent Modification; Primary Cell Culture; Covalent Interaction; Posttranscriptional Modification; Xanthurenic Acid; | |
DOI : 10.1186/1423-0127-18-7 | |
received in 2010-07-16, accepted in 2011-01-19, 发布年份 2011 | |
来源: Springer | |
【 摘 要 】
BackgroundThe physiological processes in the cell are regulated by reversible, electrostatic protein-protein interactions. Apoptosis is such a regulated process, which is critically important in tissue homeostasis and development and leads to complete disintegration of the cell. Pathological apoptosis, a process similar to apoptosis, is associated with aging and infection. The current study shows that pathological apoptosis is a process caused by the covalent interactions between the signaling proteins, and a characteristic of this pathological network is the covalent binding of calmodulin to regulatory sequences.ResultsSmall molecules able to bind covalently to the amino group of lysine, histidine, arginine, or glutamine modify the regulatory sequences of the proteins. The present study analyzed the interaction of calmodulin with the BH3 sequence of Bax, and the calmodulin-binding sequence of myristoylated alanine-rich C-kinase substrate in the presence of xanthurenic acid in primary retinal epithelium cell cultures and murine epithelial fibroblast cell lines transformed with SV40 (wild type [WT], Bid knockout [Bid-/-], and Bax-/-/Bak-/- double knockout [DKO]). Cell death was observed to be associated with the covalent binding of calmodulin, in parallel, to the regulatory sequences of proteins. Xanthurenic acid is known to activate caspase-3 in primary cell cultures, and the results showed that this activation is also observed in WT and Bid-/- cells, but not in DKO cells. However, DKO cells were not protected against death, but high rates of cell death occurred by detachment.ConclusionsThe results showed that small molecules modify the basic amino acids in the regulatory sequences of proteins leading to covalent interactions between the modified sequences (e.g., calmodulin to calmodulin-binding sites). The formation of these polymers (aggregates) leads to an unregulated and, consequently, pathological protein network. The results suggest a mechanism for the involvement of small molecules in disease development. In the knockout cells, incorrect interactions between proteins were observed without the protein modification by small molecules, indicating the abnormality of the protein network in the transgenic system. The irreversible protein-protein interactions lead to protein aggregation and cell degeneration, which are observed in all aging-associated diseases.
【 授权许可】
CC BY
© Malina; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. 2011
【 预 览 】
Files | Size | Format | View |
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RO202311107602401ZK.pdf | 1274KB | download |
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