| Literature DB >> 28836406 |
Tamar Barbakadze1,2, Galina Goloshvili1, Nana Narmania1, Elene Zhuravliova1,2, David Mikeladze1,3.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Hypoxia or exposure to excessive reactive oxygen or nitrogen species could induce S-nitrosylation of various target proteins, including GTPases of the Ras-superfamily. Under hypoxic conditions, the Ras-protein is translocated to the cytosol and interacts with the Golgi complex, endoplasmic reticulum, mitochondria. The mobility/translocation of Ras depend on the cells oxidative status. However, the importance of relocated Snitrosylated- H-Ras (NO-H-Ras) in proliferation/differentiation processes is not completely understood. We have determined the content of soluble- and membrane-bound-NO-HRas in differentiated (D) and undifferentiated (ND) rat pheochromocytoma (PC12) cells under hypoxic and normoxic conditions.Entities:
Keywords: ATP; Cell Hypoxia; H-Ras; Mitochondria; Nitric Oxide
Year: 2017 PMID: 28836406 PMCID: PMC5570409 DOI: 10.22074/cellj.2017.4546
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell J ISSN: 2228-5806 Impact factor: 2.479
Fig.1Cultured PC12 cells (Adh, ATCC® CRL1721.1™). A. Undifferentiated (ND) and B. Differentiated (D). pheochromocytoma (PC12) cells. ND PC12 cells were incubated in low serum-containing Dulbecco’s Modified Eagle Medium (DMEM) supplemented with nerve growth factor (NGF) 100 ng/ml for 5 days. The cells were examined 24 hours later, photographed, and scored for the presence of neurites. For each treatment, we counted 100 cells in each of 3 separate fields. Cells were scored positive if they contained one or more neurites >1 cell body diameter in length. The results presented are the mean ± SD of 10 independent experiments.
Fig.2Analysis of total soluble, membrane-bound H-Ras and soluble, membrane-bound nitrosylated-H-Ras (NO-H-Ras), in differentiated (D) and undifferentiated (ND) pheochromocytoma (PC12) cells under normoxic and hypoxic conditions. A. Western blot analysis of total soluble and membrane-bound H-Ras, as well as soluble and membrane-bound nitrosylate-H-Ras (NO-H-Ras), in D and ND pheochromocytoma (PC12) cells under normoxic and hypoxic conditions. For the immunoblots, 50 μg of total proteins from each fraction were loaded into each well, resolved by sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE), transferred to nitrocellulose membranes, and probed with anti-H-Ras and biotin-streptavidin HPC for NO-H- Ras. The blot is representative of three similar experiments. We normalized NO-H-Ras levels to total H-Ras for, B. Membrane- bound H-Ras, and C. Soluble-H-Ras. Significance level was set at *P<0.05 and compared with the control group.
Fig.3The action of normal H-Ras or mutated H-RasV12 (m-HRas) and normal nitrosylated H-Ras (NO-H-Ras) or mutated nitrosylated H-RasV12(m-NO-H-Ras) on oxidative metabolism of mitochondria. A. Changes in ATP synthesis and B. H2O2 generation in brain mitochondria under the action of H-Ras, NO- H-Ras and m-H-Ras, NO-m-H-Ras. Freshly isolated mitochondria were incubated either with H-Ras and NO-H-Ras, or m-H-Ras and NO-m-H-Ras. ATP production and H2O2 generation were determined. Data represented are mean ± SEM of results from four separate experiments performed in duplicate. *; P<0.05 was compared by the t test with the corresponding control.