| Literature DB >> 26091791 |
Ya-Ting Peng1, Ping Chen, Ruo-Yun Ouyang, Lei Song.
Abstract
Human eukaryotic prohibitin (prohibitin-1 and prohibitin-2) is a membrane protein with different cellular localizations. It is involved in multiple cellular functions, including energy metabolism, proliferation, apoptosis, and senescence. The subcellular localization of prohibitin may determine its functions. Membrane prohibitin regulate the cellular signaling of membrane transport, nuclear prohibitin control transcription activation and the cell cycle, and mitochondrial prohibitin complex stabilize the mitochondrial genome and modulate mitochondrial dynamics, mitochondrial morphology, mitochondrial biogenesis, and the mitochondrial intrinsic apoptotic pathway. Moreover, prohibitin can translocates into the nucleus or the mitochondria under apoptotic signals and the subcellular shuttling of prohibitin is necessary for apoptosis process. Apoptosis is the process of programmed cell death that is important for the maintenance of normal physiological functions. Consequently, any alteration in the content, post-transcriptional modification (i.e. phosphorylation) or the nuclear or mitochondrial translocation of prohibitin may influence cell fate. Understanding the mechanisms of the expression and regulation of prohibitin may be useful for future research. This review provides an overview of the multifaceted and essential roles played by prohibitin in the regulation of cell survival and apoptosis.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26091791 PMCID: PMC4531144 DOI: 10.1007/s10495-015-1143-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Apoptosis ISSN: 1360-8185 Impact factor: 4.677
PHB-mediated anti- and pro-apoptotic activity in vivo and in vitro studies
| Modification of members | Cell type/model | Apoptosis | Effect on mitochondria (mt) | Overall impact | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||||
| Knockdown | PHB1 | Mice (gonadotrope-specific depletion) |
| NO | Reproductive ability↓ | [ |
| PHB1 | HSC-T6 cells (Tan IIA) |
| NO | NO | [ | |
| Over-expression | PHB | Mice (cardiac-specific overexpression + MI injury) |
| mt fission ↓ | Myocardial infarction size↓Cardiac function↑ | [ |
| PHB1 | Rats (Spinal cord injury) |
| Respiration rates↑ electron transport↑ | Locomotor function↑ ER stress↓ PI3K/AKT, ERK↑ NF-κB↓ | [ | |
| PHB1 | Mice (forebrain ischemia) |
| Cytochrome c release↓ caspase-3↓ | Hippocampal function↑ | [ | |
| PHB1 | Neuronal (rotenone glutamate) |
| RC↑ | Hippocampal damage↓ | [ | |
| PHB1 | Rats (UUO) |
| NO | ECM↓ Renal tubulointerstitial fibrosis↓ | [ | |
| PHB1 | HUVEC (glyLDL) |
| Cytochrome c release↓ caspase-3 Bax/Bcl-2↓ | AKT↓ p-AKT↓ | [ | |
| PHB1 | Pancreatic β cells (ethanol) |
| Cleaved caspase-3↓ | NO | [ | |
| PHB1 | Cardiomyocytes (hypoxia) |
| Cytochrome c release↓ | Promote cell survival | [ | |
| PHB1 | Cardiomyocytes (H2O2) |
| Cytochrome c release↓ MMP↑ ATP↑ | NO | [ | |
| PHB1 | Undifferentiated GCs (STS) |
| Caspase-3, Bax, Bak↓ Bcl-2, Bcl-xl↑ | ERK↑ | [ | |
| PHB1 | Undifferentiated GCs (ceramide) |
| Cytochrome c release↓ | NO | [ | |
| Knockdown | PHB1 | Mice (injurious stimuli) |
| Caspase-3↑ MMP↓ | NO | [ |
| PHB2 | Mice (hippocampus-specific depletion) |
| Aberrant cristae morphology, RC↓ mt DNA copy number↓ | Behavioral, cognitive impairments↑ GSK3↓ ERK, JNK, AKT↑ Neurodegeneration↑ | [ | |
| PHB2 | Mice(EpSCs-specific depletion) |
| NO | Die fast | [ | |
| PHB1 | Mice (liver-specific depletion) |
| Aberrant cristae morphology, caspase-3↑ lipid peroxidation↑ | Hepatocyte proliferation↑ fibrosis↑ Liver progenitor cell expansion↑ HCC↑ | [ | |
| PHB1 | ARPE-19 cells |
| Caspase-9↑ AIF, BAK↑ Bcl-xl↓ fragmented mt↑ | NO | [ | |
| PHB2 | MEFs (intrinsic and extrinsic apoptotic stimuli) |
| Aberrant cristae morphology, caspase-3↑ L-Opa1↓ no influence on MMP, RC | Stop growing, cellular proliferation↓ | [ | |
| PHB2 | Mouse embryonic stem cells and human iPS cells |
| Aberrant cristae morphology, impaired mt dynamics, ATP↓ MMP↓ ROS↓ | NO | [ | |
| PHB1 | HUVEC (glyLDL) |
| Cytochrome c release↑ | AKT↑ | [ | |
| PHB2 | PC12 cells (H2O2) |
| NO | NO | [ | |
| PHB1 | BAECs |
| MMP↓ RC↓ | Senescence↑ Angiogenic ability↓ AKT↑ | [ | |
| PHB2 | β-cells |
| RC, mtDNA copy number↓ L-Opa1↓ fragmented mt↑ | Insulin supply↓ | [ | |
| PHB | Kit225 (cytokine deprivation) |
| MMP↓ | NO | [ | |
| PHB1 | Undifferentiated GCs (STS) |
| Aberrant cristae morphology | NO | [ | |
| PHB1 | Undifferentiated GCs (ceramide) |
| Cytochrome c release↑ | NO | [ | |
|
| ||||||
| Over-expression | PHB1 | Gastric cancer cells (BGC823) |
| Caspase-3, caspase-9↑ Bax↑ Bcl-2↓ | G1↓ G2,S phase↑ cellular proliferation↓ | [ |
| Knockdown | PHB1 | Gastric cancer cells (SGC7901) |
| NO | G1/S phase↑ cellular proliferation↓ | [ |
| PHB1 | Mice (xenograft gastric cancer) |
| Caspase-3,9↑ Bax↑ Bcl-2↓ | Transplanted tumor growth↓ | [ | |
| PHB1 | A549TR (paclitaxel) |
| Caspase-3/7↑ caspase-9↑ | Rescue paclitaxel sensitivity | [ | |
| PHB1 | Mice |
| Caspase-3/7↑ | MDR activity↑ tumor volumes↓ | [ | |
| PHB1 | Ovarian cancer cells (STS) |
| Aberrant cristae morphology | NO | [ | |
| PHB1 | HaCaT (UVB) |
| NO | NO | [ | |
| PHB1 | Hepatoma cells |
| NO | Cellular proliferation↓ | [ | |
| PHB1 | Murine non-transformed |
| NO | Cellular proliferation↑ cyclin D1↑ | [ | |
| PHB1 | HaCaT (anthralin) |
| MMP↓ | Sub-G1 phase↑G1-phase↓ | [ | |
| PHB2 | Hela cells |
| Cytochrome c release↑ | NO | [ | |
| PHB1 | Hela cells |
| mtDNA disorganization, copy number↓ | NO | [ | |
| PHB1 | Hela cells (aurilide) |
| NO | NO | [ | |
| PHB1 | Human pancreatic cancer cells |
| NO | NO | [ | |
| PHB1 | NB4-R1 cells |
| NO | NO | [ | |
| PHB1 | Human colon carcinoma cells |
| NO | NO | [ | |
| PHB1 | Human Jurkat T leukemia cells |
| NO | NO | [ | |
Abbreviations: A549TR paclitaxel-resistant lung cancer cell, ARPE-19 human retinal pigment epithelial cells, BAECs bovine aortic endothelial cells, ECM extra-cellular matrix, ER endoplasmic reticulum, EpSCs epidermal progenitor/stem cells, GCs granulosa cells, glyLDL glycated low-density lipoproteins, HCC hepatocellular carcinoma, HUVEC human umbilical vein endothelial cells, HaCaT human keratinocytes cells, Kit225 IL-2-dependent human T cell line, MDR multidrug resistance, MI myocardial ischemia, MMP mitochondrial membrane potential, MEFs mouse embryonic fibroblasts, NB4-R1 cells retinoic acid-resistant acute promyelocytic leukemia cell line, NO not observed, PC12 cell neural cell line, PARP poly ADP-ribose polymerase, RC respiratory complex, STS staurosporine, Tan IIA tanshinone IIA, UUO unilateral ureteral obstruction
Fig. 1Schematic demonstration of PHB-mediated survival or apoptosis responses in multiple cellular compartments of different cell types and molecular mechanism involved. At the outer plasma membrane, PHB1 mediates the endocytosis of a pro-apoptotic peptide in the induction of apoptosis in the adipose vasculature. At the inner plasma membrane, membrane-localized PHB1 or PHB2 associate with C-Raf and is involved in the activation of the Raf-mitogen-associated protein kinase kinase (MEK)-extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) signaling pathway, which can promote cancer cell survival. The serine/threonine-protein kinase (AKT) can phosphorylate PHB1 in the cytoplasm and promotes PHB1 mitochondrial translocation to induce bladder cancer proliferation. The anticancer agent rocaglamides mediates the pro-apoptotic action by disrupting the PHB1/C-Raf or PHB2/C-Raf interaction. However, increased membrane localization of PHB1 and the PHB1/C-Raf complex in activated hepatic stellate cells may promote Tan IIA-induced apoptosis. The ring-shaped PHB complex in mitochondria may regulate mitochondrial dynamics, mitochondrial morphology, mitochondrial genome, the electron transport chain (ETC), reactive oxygen species (ROS) homeostasis, and anti-apoptotic proteins, which further prevent mitochondria-mediated apoptosis. Nuclear PHB1 co-localizes with many transcription factors, such as p53, Rb, E2F, AIF, c-myc, and c-fos, which may influence the cell cycle and tumor growth in a coordinated manner. PHB1 can upregulate p53-mediated transcription but repress E2F activity in B cell lymphoma cells, and overexpression of PHB1 protects cells from camptothecin-induced apoptosis. In the absence of p53, both PHB1 and PHB2 can contribute to P53 inducible gene 3 (PIG3)-mediated apoptosis by increasing the transcription of PIG3
Fig. 2The effect of inhibition of nuclear export of PHB1 on cell apoptosis. In camptothecin-induced apoptosis of human breast carcinoma cells, both PHB1 and p53 undergo export from the nucleus to the cytoplasm upon receiving apoptotic signals. Nuclear export is dependent on the exportin 1 (CRM1). Inhibition of the nuclear export of PHB1 by delivery of a PHB1- nuclear export sequence (NES) peptide lacking the NES prevents camptothecin-mediated apoptosis and it didn’t affect the translocation of p53. In gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH)-induced apoptosis of mature gonadotrope cells, leptomycin (LMB) or the extracellular signal–regulated kinase 1/2 (ERK1/2) inhibitor U0126 inhibit the nuclear export of PHB1 and decrease apoptosis
Fig. 3The subcellular shuttling of PHB during cell apoptosis. During the apoptosis of gonadotrope cells induced by GnRH and apoptosis of cancer cells induced by camptothecin or TGF-β, PHB1 is exported from the nucleus to the cytoplasm or mitochondria. However, during the apoptosis of cancer cells induced by abrin or ESC-3, PHB1 translocates from the cytoplasm or mitochondria to the nucleus. During the apoptosis of cancer cells induced by estradiol or capsaicin, PHB2 translocates from the cytoplasm or mitochondria to the nucleus