| Literature DB >> 24877606 |
Louis Tong, Vinay Tergaonkar1.
Abstract
The RhoGTPases, with RhoA, Cdc42 and Rac being major members, are a group of key ubiquitous proteins present in all eukaryotic organisms that subserve such important functions as cell migration, adhesion and differentiation. The NFκB (nuclear factor κB) is a family of constitutive and inducible transcription factors that through their diverse target genes, play a major role in processes such as cytokine expression, stress regulation, cell division and transformation. Research over the past decade has uncovered new molecular links between the RhoGTPases and the NFκB pathway, with the RhoGTPases playing a positive or negative regulatory role on NFκB activation depending on the context. The RhoA-NFκB interaction has been shown to be important in cytokine-activated NFκB processes, such as those induced by TNFα (tumour necrosis factor α). On the other hand, Rac is important for activating the NFκB response downstream of integrin activation, such as after phagocytosis. Specific residues of Rac1 are important for triggering NFκB activation, and mutations do obliterate this response. Other upstream triggers of the RhoGTPase-NFκB interactions include the suppressive p120 catenin, with implications for skin inflammation. The networks described here are not only important areas for further research, but are also significant for discovery of targets for translational medicine.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24877606 PMCID: PMC4069681 DOI: 10.1042/BSR20140021
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biosci Rep ISSN: 0144-8463 Impact factor: 3.840
Tools in Rho protein research
| Tool | Basis and advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|
| Active RhoGTPase mutants, e.g. glutamine-to-leucine substitution at position 16 of rac (Rac1Q61L or Rac1-L61) | GTPase activity inactivated | Like all genetic active mutants, may not be physiologically relevant |
| Constitutively bound to GTP | These activating mutations not found in human tumours | |
| Dominant negative RhoGTPase mutants, e.g. serine-to-asparagine substitution at position 17 of rac (Rac1-N17) | Favour the GDP bound form of RhoGTPase, with | May not distinguish closely related rho members such as Cdc42 and Tc10 |
| Reduced affinity for GTP | ||
| Reduced availability of GEFs | ||
| Targeted to distinct subcellular compartments as the wild-type rho, rac and cdc42, ensuring some specificity | ||
| Bacterial toxins, e.g. | Cytotoxins A and B are cation-dependent UDP-glucose glucosyltransferases | Useful to screen for the involvement of Rho proteins only |
| Inactivate RhoA, Rac and Cdc42 through monoglucosylation using UDP-glucose as a co-substrate. | May not have been tested on all Rho proteins | |
| Some specificity for | ||
| Small GTPases Ras, Rab, Arf or Ran and the large heterotrimeric G-proteins and are not modified by these toxins | ||
| Some specificity for C3 for RhoA, B and C | ||
| Lovastatin | Deplete geranylgeranyl and farnesyl precursors | Probably not specific as rho inhibitor |
| Inhibit isoprenylation | Not easy to determine dosage of use | |
| Localization of Rho to membranes requires C terminal isoprenylation [ | ||
| Drug destroys the normal intracellular distribution of Rho and therefore its function [ |
Mechanisms of NFκB activation by RhoGTPases
| RhoGTPase or GEF | Type of regulation | NFκB component regulated by RhoGTPase signalling | Cell type evaluated |
|---|---|---|---|
| RhoA, Rac1, Rac2, Cdc42 and Rac1b | Positive | IκBα [ | Simian COS-7, NIH 3T3 fibroblasts, human T-cell lymphoma Jurkat, rabbit synovial fibroblasts, human cervix carcinoma HeLa, IκBα participation not specifically investigated: human vascular endothelial HUVEC, human astrocytoma cell line U-373-MG, non-transformed human colonic epithelial cell NCM460 |
| RhoA, Rac | Positive | Phosphorylation of p65, Association of p65 with NIK, Nuclear p52 processing [ | HepG2 hepatocytes |
| RhoA | Negative | IκBα (nitric oxide pathway) [ | C6 glioma |
| RhoB–F | Positive | Phosphorylation of p65 (endosomal pathway) [ | HeLa, breast cancer T47D, COS-7 |
| RhoB (fibroblasts) | Negative | IκBα [ | NIH 3T3 |
| RhoH | Negative | IκBα [ | T293, Jurkat |
| Rac1 | Negative | ?IκBα (Nod2 pathway) [ | Myelomonocytic, intestinal epithelial cells |
| Rac1 | Positive | Expression of p50/p105 [ | Colorectal DLD-2 |
| Rac1 | Positive | IKKα and β, phosphorylation of p65 [ | Macrophages |
| Rac3 | Positive | Nuclear coregulator [ | HeLa |
| Rac | Positive | Expression of p65 [ | Breast tumour cells |
| Vav1, Dbl, Ost | Positive | IκBα [ | Haematopoietic cells (erythroid, lymphoid and myeloid lineages) |
| Vav1 | ? | Nuclear coregulator [ | Jurkat, granulocytes (HL60), megakaryoblasts (UT7), bone marrow-derived mast cells (BMMC), Rat basophilic leukaemia (RBL-2H3) |
Figure 1The classical paradigm of TNFα-induced RhoGTPase-activated NFκB signalling, mediated by degradation of the IκBα of the canonical NFκB pathway is shown on the left (black arrows)
The possible link to non-canonical pathway is shown on the bottom right. RhoGTPases acting on this pathway are shown in black boxes. Grey boxes indicated regulatory elements for the RhoGTPases, while other regulatory molecules, including extracellular and intracellular molecules are shown in blue. The central regulatory point is the IκBα, but other regulatory points are also shown (see text for details). GEF, guanosine nucleotide exchange factors; GDI, guanosine-nucleotide-dissociation inhibitors. Positive regulation is shown by complete orange arrows and inhibition by broken orange arrows. PKC, protein kinase C; MAPK, mitogen-activated protein kinase; ROS, reactive oxygen species; IL, interleukin; IFN, interferon; ICAM, intercellular cell adhesion molecule; TRADD, tumour necrosis factor receptor type 1-associated DEATH domain protein; RIP, Receptor-interacting serine/threonine-protein kinase; TRAF, TNF receptor-associated factor; ROCK, Rho-associated protein kinase; BCR, B-cell receptor. *, these stimuli have been linked to p65 phosphorylation or non-canonical NFκB at least in certain scenarios.
Figure 2Biological process and diseases affected by Rho NFkB signalling
This figure shows the medical significance of the Rho NFκB signalling, the therapeutic targets shown in the top row could be useful in a variety of human diseases shown on the bottom row. IL1 [76], interleukin 1; IL8 [90], interleukin 8; ICAM1 [46], intercellular cell adhesion protein 1; COX2 [94], cyclo-oxygenase; MMP [48)], matrix metalloproteinase; TNFα [49], tumour necrosis factor α; IFNγ [48], interferon gamma; Nod2 [88], nucleotide-binding oligomerization domain-containing protein 2; HIF1α [70], hypoxia-induced factor; EMT [102], epithelial–mesenchymal transition; ROS, reactive oxygen species. Relevant diseases include skin inflammation or infection (Cellulitis) [76] Viral infections, e.g., HIV [113], Yersinia [59]; Systemic inflammation, e.g. Rheumatoid arthritis, Crohn's disease [114]; Thrombotic diseases [68]; Breast carcinoma [107]; Haematological malignancies, e.g., B-cell lymphomas [83]; Metabolic diseases, e.g., hyperlipidemia [94]; and Spinal cord injury [115].