19 research outputs found
A Tradeoff Drives the Evolution of Reduced Metal Resistance in Natural Populations of Yeast
Various types of genetic modification and selective forces have been implicated
in the process of adaptation to novel or adverse environments. However, the
underlying molecular mechanisms are not well understood in most natural
populations. Here we report that a set of yeast strains collected from Evolution
Canyon (EC), Israel, exhibit an extremely high tolerance to the heavy metal
cadmium. We found that cadmium resistance is primarily caused by an enhanced
function of a metal efflux pump, PCA1. Molecular analyses
demonstrate that this enhancement can be largely attributed to mutations in the
promoter sequence, while mutations in the coding region have a minor effect.
Reconstruction experiments show that three single nucleotide substitutions in
the PCA1 promoter quantitatively increase its activity and thus
enhance the cells' cadmium resistance. Comparison among different yeast
species shows that the critical nucleotides found in EC strains are conserved
and functionally important for cadmium resistance in other species, suggesting
that they represent an ancestral type. However, these nucleotides had diverged
in most Saccharomyces cerevisiae populations, which gave cells
growth advantages under conditions where cadmium is low or absent. Our results
provide a rare example of a selective sweep in yeast populations driven by a
tradeoff in metal resistance
Dysregulation of Macrophage-Secreted Cathepsin B Contributes to HIV-1-Linked Neuronal Apoptosis
Chronic HIV infection leads to the development of cognitive impairments, designated as HIV-associated neurocognitive disorders (HAND). The secretion of soluble neurotoxic factors by HIV-infected macrophages plays a central role in the neuronal dysfunction and cell death associated with HAND. One potentially neurotoxic protein secreted by HIV-1 infected macrophages is cathepsin B. To explore the potential role of cathepsin B in neuronal cell death after HIV infection, we cultured HIV-1ADA infected human monocyte-derived macrophages (MDM) and assayed them for expression and activity of cathepsin B and its inhibitors, cystatins B and C. The neurotoxic activity of the secreted cathepsin B was determined by incubating cells from the neuronal cell line SK-N-SH with MDM conditioned media (MCM) from HIV-1 infected cultures. We found that HIV-1 infected MDM secreted significantly higher levels of cathepsin B than did uninfected cells. Moreover, the activity of secreted cathepsin B was significantly increased in HIV-infected MDM at the peak of viral production. Incubation of neuronal cells with supernatants from HIV-infected MDM resulted in a significant increase in the numbers of apoptotic neurons, and this increase was reversed by the addition of either the cathepsin B inhibitor CA-074 or a monoclonal antibody to cathepsin B. In situ proximity ligation assays indicated that the increased neurotoxic activity of the cathepsin B secreted by HIV-infected MDM resulted from decreased interactions between the enzyme and its inhibitors, cystatins B and C. Furthermore, preliminary in vivo studies of human post-mortem brain tissue suggested an upregulation of cathepsin B immunoreactivity in the hippocampus and basal ganglia in individuals with HAND. Our results demonstrate that HIV-1 infection upregulates cathepsin B in macrophages, increases cathepsin B activity, and reduces cystatin-cathepsin interactions, contributing to neuronal apoptosis. These findings provide new evidence for the role of cathepsin B in neuronal cell death induced by HIV-infected macrophages
Molecular biology of the blood-brain and the blood-cerebrospinal fluid barriers: similarities and differences
Efficient processing of information by the central nervous system (CNS) represents an important evolutionary advantage. Thus, homeostatic mechanisms have developed that provide appropriate circumstances for neuronal signaling, including a highly controlled and stable microenvironment. To provide such a milieu for neurons, extracellular fluids of the CNS are separated from the changeable environment of blood at three major interfaces: at the brain capillaries by the blood-brain barrier (BBB), which is localized at the level of the endothelial cells and separates brain interstitial fluid (ISF) from blood; at the epithelial layer of four choroid plexuses, the blood-cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) barrier (BCSFB), which separates CSF from the CP ISF, and at the arachnoid barrier. The two barriers that represent the largest interface between blood and brain extracellular fluids, the BBB and the BCSFB, prevent the free paracellular diffusion of polar molecules by complex morphological features, including tight junctions (TJs) that interconnect the endothelial and epithelial cells, respectively. The first part of this review focuses on the molecular biology of TJs and adherens junctions in the brain capillary endothelial cells and in the CP epithelial cells. However, normal function of the CNS depends on a constant supply of essential molecules, like glucose and amino acids from the blood, exchange of electrolytes between brain extracellular fluids and blood, as well as on efficient removal of metabolic waste products and excess neurotransmitters from the brain ISF. Therefore, a number of specific transport proteins are expressed in brain capillary endothelial cells and CP epithelial cells that provide transport of nutrients and ions into the CNS and removal of waste products and ions from the CSF. The second part of this review concentrates on the molecular biology of various solute carrier (SLC) transport proteins at those two barriers and underlines differences in their expression between the two barriers. Also, many blood-borne molecules and xenobiotics can diffuse into brain ISF and then into neuronal membranes due to their physicochemical properties. Entry of these compounds could be detrimental for neural transmission and signalling. Thus, BBB and BCSFB express transport proteins that actively restrict entry of lipophilic and amphipathic substances from blood and/or remove those molecules from the brain extracellular fluids. The third part of this review concentrates on the molecular biology of ATP-binding cassette (ABC)-transporters and those SLC transporters that are involved in efflux transport of xenobiotics, their expression at the BBB and BCSFB and differences in expression in the two major blood-brain interfaces. In addition, transport and diffusion of ions by the BBB and CP epithelium are involved in the formation of fluid, the ISF and CSF, respectively, so the last part of this review discusses molecular biology of ion transporters/exchangers and ion channels in the brain endothelial and CP epithelial cells
Neuropathological hallmarks of fetal hydrocephalus linked to CCDC88C pathogenic variants
Monitoring of brain interstitial total tau and beta amyloid proteins by microdialysis in patients with traumatic brain injury
Functionality and Robustness of Injured Connectomic Dynamics in C. elegans: Linking Behavioral Deficits to Neural Circuit Damage
Edible Ectomycorrhizal Mushroom Molecular Response to Heavy Metals
Heavy metal pollution poses a significant threat to the environment, public, and soil health. Ectomycorrhizal fungi are thought to enhance mineral nutrition of their host plants and to confer increased tolerance toward toxic metals. The responses of mycorrhizal fungi to toxic metal cations are diverse and may consist of a reduced uptake of metals by extracellular or intracellular chelation or increased efflux out of the cell or into sequestering compartments.
Rhizosphere chemistry is critical to understanding the interactions of mycorrhizae with polluted soils. This, linked to the fact that mycorrhizal diversity is normally high, even on highly contaminated sites, suggests that this diversity may have a significant role in colonization of contaminated sites by ectomycorrhizal fungi. However, the molecular mechanisms underlying the response of ectomycorrhizal fungi to heavy metals in general remain poorly understood, although the recent Tuber melanosporum Vittad. genome sequencing and transcriptome analyses have obtained a global view of metal homeostasis-related genes and pathways in this fungus. The focus of this review is to describe and discuss the tolerance of the ectomycorrhizal fungi, in particular the edible ones, under heavy metal stress conditions
