Literature DB >> 20536394

Nuclear cysteine cathepsin variants in thyroid carcinoma cells.

Sofia Tedelind1, Kseniia Poliakova, Amanda Valeta, Ruth Hunegnaw, Eyoel Lemma Yemanaberhan, Nils-Erik Heldin, Junichi Kurebayashi, Ekkehard Weber, Nataša Kopitar-Jerala, Boris Turk, Matthew Bogyo, Klaudia Brix.   

Abstract

The cysteine peptidase cathepsin B is important in thyroid physiology by being involved in thyroid prohormone processing initiated in the follicular lumen and completed in endo-lysosomal compartments. However, cathepsin B has also been localized to the extrafollicular space and is therefore suggested to promote invasiveness and metastasis in thyroid carcinomas through, e.g., ECM degradation. In this study, immunofluorescence and biochemical data from subcellular fractionation revealed that cathepsin B, in its single- and two-chain forms, is localized to endo-lysosomes in the papillary thyroid carcinoma cell line KTC-1 and in the anaplastic thyroid carcinoma cell lines HTh7 and HTh74. This distribution is not affected by thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) incubation of HTh74, the only cell line that expresses a functional TSH-receptor. Immunofluorescence data disclosed an additional nuclear localization of cathepsin B immunoreactivity. This was supported by biochemical data showing a proteolytically active variant slightly smaller than the cathepsin B proform in nuclear fractions. We also demonstrate that immunoreactions specific for cathepsin V, but not cathepsin L, are localized to the nucleus in HTh74 in peri-nucleolar patterns. As deduced from co-localization studies and in vitro degradation assays, we suggest that nuclear variants of cathepsins are involved in the development of thyroid malignancies through modification of DNA-associated proteins.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20536394      PMCID: PMC3518386          DOI: 10.1515/BC.2010.109

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biol Chem        ISSN: 1431-6730            Impact factor:   3.915


  59 in total

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6.  Anti-cathepsin L monoclonal antibodies that distinguish cathepsin L from cathepsin V.

Authors:  N Kopitar-Jerala; T Bevec; D Barlic-Maganja; F Gubensek; V Turk
Journal:  Biol Chem       Date:  2001-05       Impact factor: 3.915

Review 7.  Towards specific functions of lysosomal cysteine peptidases: phenotypes of mice deficient for cathepsin B or cathepsin L.

Authors:  T Reinheckel; J Deussing; W Roth; C Peters
Journal:  Biol Chem       Date:  2001-05       Impact factor: 3.915

Review 8.  Cysteine proteinases mediate extracellular prohormone processing in the thyroid.

Authors:  K Brix; M Linke; C Tepel; V Herzog
Journal:  Biol Chem       Date:  2001-05       Impact factor: 3.915

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Journal:  Cancer Cell       Date:  2004-05       Impact factor: 31.743

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  22 in total

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2.  Central and overlapping role of Cathepsin B and inflammasome adaptor ASC in antigen presenting function of human dendritic cells.

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7.  Structural basis for the recognition and cleavage of histone H3 by cathepsin L.

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8.  Cathepsin B trafficking in thyroid carcinoma cells.

Authors:  Sofia Tedelind; Silvia Jordans; Henrike Resemann; Galia Blum; Matthew Bogyo; Dagmar Führer; Klaudia Brix
Journal:  Thyroid Res       Date:  2011-08-03

Review 9.  The role of cysteine proteinases and their inhibitors in the host-pathogen cross talk.

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