| Literature DB >> 27583190 |
Pedro J Salas1, Radia Forteza1, Anastasia Mashukova2.
Abstract
As multicellular organisms evolved a family of cytoskeletal proteins, the keratins (types I and II) expressed in epithelial cells diversified in more than 20 genes in vertebrates. There is no question that keratin filaments confer mechanical stiffness to cells. However, such a number of genes can hardly be explained by evolutionary advantages in mechanical features. The use of transgenic mouse models has revealed unexpected functional relationships between keratin intermediate filaments and intracellular signaling. Accordingly, loss of keratins or mutations in keratins that cause or predispose to human diseases, result in increased sensitivity to apoptosis, regulation of innate immunity, permeabilization of tight junctions, and mistargeting of apical proteins in different epithelia. Precise mechanistic explanations for these phenomena are still lacking. However, immobilization of membrane or cytoplasmic proteins, including chaperones, on intermediate filaments ("scaffolding") appear as common molecular mechanisms and may explain the need for so many different keratin genes in vertebrates.Entities:
Keywords: 14-3-3; Akt; Hsp40; Hsp70; NF-kB; apoptosis; atypical PKC; cell signaling; cytokines; inflammation; innate immunity; tight junction
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27583190 PMCID: PMC4993576 DOI: 10.1080/21688370.2016.1178368
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Tissue Barriers ISSN: 2168-8362
Keratin expression in tissues described in this review.
| Epithelium | Cell type | Type I | Type II | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Simple | Hepatocytes | K18 | K8 | |
| Intestine crypt | K18 K19 K20 K23 | K8 K7 | ||
| Intestine villus | K18 K19 K20 | K8 | ||
| Pancreatic ducts | K18 K19 | K4 K8 K7 | ||
| Stratified | Epidermis basal | K14 K15 K17 | K5 K6 | |
| Epidermis suprabasal / spinous | K16 K10 | K6 K1 K2 | ||
| Mammary gland duct | K14 K17 K18 K19 | K5 K7 K8 |
Note.
Epidermis spinous/granular
Examples of effects of changes in keratin expression or keratin mutations on signaling pathways.
| Affected keratin(s) | Effects | Ref. |
|---|---|---|
| K19 knockdown | Enhanced Akt signaling (decreased PTEN) | |
| K19 knockdown | Destabilization of HER2 / decreased ERK | |
| K5 and 14 mutations | Epidermolysis bullosa simplex (EBS) rescued by ERK inhibition | |
| K17 overexpression | Activates Akt signaling in Ewing sarcoma | |
| K17 overexpression | Activation of transcriptional regulator AIRE | |
| K17 knockdown | Decreased pTyr-23 annexin A2 | |
| K14 knockdown (and decreased partner K5) | Decreased pAkt and enhanced Notch1 | |
| K14 overexpression | Increased JNK-MAPK signals | |
| K8/K18 or K8/K19 overexpression | Raf-1 is released from 14-3-3 by stress | |
| K8 null hepatocytes | Fas-activated apoptosis mediated by DEDD | |
| K8 null hepatocytes | Inactive p38 MAPK, p44/42 MAPK and JNK1/2 are released from IF upon activation during apoptosis | |
| K8 knockdown | Increased PI3K/Akt activation | |
| K8 knockdown | Protein kinase C, cell adhesion and migration | |
| K8 null mouse and K8 knockdown | Post-translational downregulation of aPKC via Hsp/Hsc70 | |
| K18 knockdown | MacroD1 (LRP16) retention in the cytoplasm | |
| K17 knockout | Increased TNFR – NF-kB activity through TRADD | |
| Global type I or II keratin knockout: rescue by expression of K6/K17 or K5/K14 | Increased PKCα activity, desmosome destabilization | |
| Global type II keratin knockout | GLUT1 – 3 mislocalization, AMPK and mTOR activation | |
| Global type II keratin knockout | Increased EGFR and PKCα-dependent Erk1/2 signaling | |
| Global type II keratin knockout | Rack1-keratin interactions modulate PKC-α signaling |
Note. Bolded protein names indicate evidence for binding to keratin IF (scaffolding). Knockdown refers to RNAi manipulation in cell lines. Overexpression indicates vector-mediated transcription in cell lines.
Examples of effects of keratin loss or keratin mutations on inflammatory mechanisms.
| Affected keratin(s) | Effects | Ref. |
|---|---|---|
| K16 knockout | Regulates innate immunity in response to epithelial barrier opening | |
| R156H K10 overexpression | Activation of p38, secretion of TNFα and RANTES | |
| K17 knockout | Polarizes immune response, Th2 cytokine profile | |
| K5 knockout | Transcriptional upregulation of pro-inflammatory cytokines IL-6 and IL-1β | |
| K8 knockout | Th2 chronic intestinal inflammation | |
| K8 / 18 mutations | Intestinal cell barrier function | |
| K8 / 18 knockdown | Activates NF-kB in cancer cells | |
| K10 expression in basal layer of epidermis | Decreased NF-kB activity |
Figure 1.Polarity of IF in simple epithelia. A, B Frozen sections of formaldehyde-fixed liver (A) and small intestine epithelium (B) stained with anti-K8 antibody (red) and DAPI (light blue). Bar, 20 µm.
Figure 2.Polarized scaffolding of Hsp/Hsc70 in simple epithelia. Frozen sections of villus enterocytes from K8-null or heterozygous littermates were immunostained for K8 (red channel) or Hsp/Hsc70 (green channel). The arrow points at the apical concentration of the chaperone which is strictly dependent on the expression of keratin IF. Modified from. Bar, 20 µm.