Revistas
Revista:
HUMAN GENE THERAPY
ISSN:
1043-0342
Año:
2021
Vol.:
32
N°:
19 - 20
Págs.:
1242 - 1250
The efficiency of recombinant adeno-associated virus (AAV) vectors transducing host cells is very low, limiting their therapeutic potential in patients. There are several cellular pathways interacting and interfering with the journey of the AAV from the cell surface to the nucleus, opening the possibility to enhance AAV transduction by modifying these interactions. In this study, we explored the results of AAV hepatic transduction when different mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) inhibitors, rapamycin, MLN0128, RapaLink-1, were used in preconditioned juvenile and adult mice. We confirmed rapamycin as an AAV hepatic transduction enhancer in juvenile and adult mice; however, RapaLink-1, a stronger mTOR inhibitor and a clear hepatic autophagy inducer, had no positive effect. Moreover, MLN0128 reduced AAV hepatic transduction. Therefore, our results show a complex interaction between the mTOR pathway and AAV-mediated hepatic transduction and indicate that mTOR inhibition is not a straightforward strategy for improving AAV transduction. More studies are necessary to elucidate the molecular mechanisms involved in the positive and negative effects of mTOR inhibitors on AAV transduction efficiency.</p>
Revista:
JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
ISSN:
0022-2836
Año:
2020
Vol.:
432
N°:
22
Págs.:
5889 - 5901
Protein lifespan is regulated by co-translational modification by several enzymes, including methionine aminopeptidases and N-alpha-aminoterminal acetyltransferases. The NatB enzymatic complex is an N-terminal acetyltransferase constituted by two subunits, NAA20 and NAA25, whose interaction is necessary to avoid NAA20 catalytic subunit degradation. We found that deletion of the first five amino acids of hNAA20 or fusion of a peptide to its amino terminal end abolishes its interaction with hNAA25. Substitution of the second residue of hNAA20 with amino acids with small, uncharged side-chains allows NatB enzymatic complex formation. However, replacement by residues with large or charged side-chains interferes with its hNAA25 interaction, limiting functional NatB complex formation. Comparison of NAA20 eukaryotic sequences showed that the residue following the initial methionine, an amino acid with a small uncharged side-chain, has been evolutionarily conserved. We have confirmed the relevance of second amino acid characteristics of NAA20 in NatB enzymatic complex formation in Drosophila melanogaster. Moreover, we have evidenced the significance of NAA20 second residue in Saccharomyces cerevisiae using different NAA20 versions to reconstitute NatB formation in a yNAA20-KO yeast strain. The requirement in humans and in fruit flies of an amino acid with a small uncharged side-chain following the initial methionine of NAA20 suggests that methionine aminopeptidase action may be necessary for the NAA20 and NAA25 interaction. We showed that inhibition of MetAP2 expression blocked hNatB enzymatic complex formation by retaining the initial methionine of NAA20. Therefore, NatB-mediated protein N-terminal acetylation is dependent on methionine aminopeptidase, providing a regulatory mechanism for protein N-terminal maturation. (C) 2020 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Revista:
NEUROBIOLOGY OF DISEASE
ISSN:
0969-9961
Año:
2020
Vol.:
137
Págs.:
104781
Alpha-synuclein (aSyn) protein levels are sufficient to drive Parkinson's disease (PD) and other synucleinopathies. Despite the biomedical/therapeutic potential of aSyn protein regulation, little is known about mechanisms that limit/control aSyn levels. Here, we investigate the role of a post-translational modification, N-terminal acetylation, in aSyn neurotoxicity. N-terminal acetylation occurs in all aSyn molecules and has been proposed to determine its lipid binding and aggregation capacities; however, its effect in aSyn stability/neurotoxicity has not been evaluated. We generated N-terminal mutants that alter or block physiological aSyn N-terminal acetylation in wild-type or pathological mutant E46K aSyn versions and confirmed N-terminal acetylation status by mass spectrometry. By optical pulse-labeling in living primary neurons we documented a reduced half-life and accumulation of aSyn N-terminal mutants. To analyze the effect of N-terminal acetylation mutants in neuronal toxicity we took advantage of a neuronal model where aSyn toxicity was scored by longitudinal survival analysis. Salient features of aSyn neurotoxicity were previously investigated with this approach. aSyn-dependent neuronal death was recapitulated either by higher aSyn protein levels in the case of WT aSyn, or by the combined effect of protein levels and enhanced neurotoxicity conveyed by the E46K mutation. aSyn N-terminal mutations decreased E46K aSyn-dependent neuronal death both by reducing protein levels and, importantly, by reducing the intrinsic E46K aSyn toxicity, being the D2P mutant the least toxic. Together, our results illustrate that the N-terminus determines, most likely through its acetylation, aSyn protein levels and toxicity, identifying this modification as a potential therapeutic target.
Revista:
ONCOTARGET
ISSN:
1949-2553
Año:
2017
Vol.:
8
N°:
25
Págs.:
40967 - 40981
The identification of new targets for systemic therapy of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is an urgent medical need. Recently, we showed that hNatB catalyzes the N-alpha-terminal acetylation of 15% of the human proteome and that this action is necessary for proper actin cytoskeleton structure and function. In tumors, cytoskeletal changes influence motility, invasion, survival, cell growth and tumor progression, making the cytoskeleton a very attractive antitumor target. Here, we show that hNatB subunits are upregulated in in over 59% HCC tumors compared to non-tumor tissue and that this upregulation is associated with microscopic vascular invasion. We found that hNatB silencing blocks proliferation and tumor formation in HCC cell lines in association with hampered DNA synthesis and impaired progression through the S and the G2/M phases. Growth inhibition is mediated by the degradation of two hNatB substrates, tropomyosin and CDK2, which occurs when these proteins lack N-alpha-terminal acetylation. In addition, hNatB inhibition disrupts the actin cytoskeleton, focal adhesions and tight/adherens junctions, abrogating two proliferative signaling pathways, Hippo/YAP and ERK1/2. Therefore, inhibition of NatB activity represents an interesting new approach to treating HCC by blocking cell proliferation and disrupting actin cytoskeleton function.
Revista:
PLOS ONE
ISSN:
1932-6203
Año:
2016
Vol.:
11
N°:
3
Págs.:
e0152031
Development of reporter systems for in vivo examination of IFN-ß induction or signaling of type I interferon (IFN-I) pathways is of great interest in order to characterize biological responses to different inducers such as viral infections. Several reporter mice have been developed to monitor the induction of both pathways in response to different agonists. However, alternative strategies that do not require transgenic mice breeding have to date not been reported. In addition, detection of these pathways in vivo in animal species other than mice has not yet been addressed. Herein we describe a simple method based on the use of an adeno-associated viral vector (AAV8-3xIRF-ISRE-Luc) containing an IFN-ß induction and signaling-sensitive promoter sequence controlling the expression of the reporter gene luciferase. This vector is valid for monitoring IFN-I responses in vivo elicited by diverse stimuli in different organs. Intravenous administration of the vector in C57BL/6 mice and Syrian hamsters was able to detect activation of the IFN pathway in the liver upon systemic treatment with different pro-inflammatory agents and infection with Newcastle disease virus (NDV). In addition, intranasal instillation of AAV8-3xIRF-ISRE-Luc showed a rapid and transient IFN-I response in the respiratory tract of mice infected with the influenza A/PR8/34 virus lacking the NS1 protein. In comparison, this response was delayed and exacerbated in mice infected with influenza A/PR/8 wild type virus. In conclusion, the AAV8-3xIRF-ISRE-Luc vector offers the possibility of detecting IFN-I activation in response to different stimuli and in different animal models with no need for reporter transgenic animals.
Revista:
JOURNAL OF INNATE IMMUNITY
ISSN:
1662-811X
Año:
2015
Vol.:
7
N°:
5
Págs.:
466 - 481
RIG-I-like receptors (RLRs) are cellular sensor proteins that detect certain RNA species produced during viral infections. RLRs activate a signaling cascade that results in the production of IFN-ß as well as several other cytokines with antiviral and proinflammatory activities. We explored the potential of different constructs based on RLRs to induce the IFN-ß pathway and create an antiviral state in type I IFN-unresponsive models. A chimeric construct composed of RIG-I 2CARD and the first 200 amino acids of MAVS (2CARD-MAVS200) showed an enhanced ability to induce IFN-ß when compared to other stimulatory constructs. Furthermore, this human chimeric construct showed a superior ability to activate IFN-ß expression in cells from various species. This construct was found to overcome the restrictions of blocking IFN-ß induction or signaling by a number of viral IFN-antagonist proteins. Additionally, the antiviral activity of this chimera was demonstrated in influenza virus and HBV infection mouse models using adeno-associated virus (AAV) vectors as a delivery vehicle. We propose that AAV vectors expressing 2CARD-MAVS200 chimeric protein can reconstitute IFN-ß induction and recover a partial antiviral state in different models that do not respond to recombinant IFN-ß treatment.
Revista:
MOLECULAR CANCER
ISSN:
1476-4598
Año:
2015
Vol.:
14
Págs.:
210
Background: The limited efficacy of current treatments against pancreatic cancer has prompted the search of new alternatives such as virotherapy. Activation of the immune response against cancer cells is emerging as one of the main mechanisms of action of oncolytic viruses (OV). Direct oncolysis releases tumor antigens, and viral replication within the tumor microenvironment is a potent danger signal. Arming OV with immunostimulatory transgenes further enhances their therapeutic effect. However, standard virotherapy protocols do not take full advantage of OV as cancer vaccines because repeated viral administrations may polarize immune responses against strong viral antigens, and the rapid onset of neutralizing antibodies limits the efficacy of redosing. An alternative paradigm based on sequential combination of antigenically distinct OV has been recently proposed.
Methods: We have developed a protocol consisting of sequential intratumor administrations of new Adenovirus (Ad) and Newcastle Disease Virus (NDV)-based OV encoding the immunostimulatory cytokine oncostatin M (OSM). Transgene expression, toxicity and antitumor effect were evaluated using an aggressive orthotopic pancreatic cancer model in Syrian hamsters, which are sensitive to OSM and permissive for replication of both OVs.
Results: NDV-OSM was more cytolytic, whereas Ad-OSM caused higher OSM expression in vivo. Both viruses achieved only a marginal antitumor effect in monotherapy. In addition, strong secretion of OSM in serum limited the maximal tolerated dose of Ad-OSM. In contrast, moderate doses of Ad-OSM followed one week later by NDV-OSM were safe, showed a significant antitumor effect and stimulated immune responses against cancer cells. Similar efficacy was observed when the order of virus administrations was reversed.
Conclusion: Sequential administration of oncolytic Ad and NDV encoding OSM is a promising approach against pancreatic cancer.