| Literature DB >> 32544191 |
Maximilian Kramer-Drauberg1, Ju-Ling Liu1, David Desjardins1, Ying Wang1, Robyn Branicky1, Siegfried Hekimi1.
Abstract
Reactive oxygen species (ROS) are signalling molecules whose study in intact organisms has been hampered by their potential toxicity. This has prevented a full understanding of their role in organismal processes such as development, aging and disease. In Caenorhabditis elegans, the development of the vulva is regulated by a signalling cascade that includes LET-60ras (homologue of mammalian Ras), MPK-1 (ERK1/2) and LIN-1 (an ETS transcription factor). We show that both mitochondrial and cytoplasmic ROS act on a gain-of-function (gf) mutant of the LET-60ras protein through a redox-sensitive cysteine (C118) previously identified in mammals. We show that the prooxidant paraquat as well as isp-1, nuo-6 and sod-2 mutants, which increase mitochondrial ROS, inhibit the activity of LET-60rasgf on vulval development. In contrast, the antioxidant NAC and loss of sod-1, both of which decrease cytoplasmic H202, enhance the activity of LET-60rasgf. CRISPR replacement of C118 with a non-oxidizable serine (C118S) stimulates LET-60rasgf activity, whereas replacement of C118 with aspartate (C118D), which mimics a strongly oxidised cysteine, inhibits LET-60rasgf. These data strongly suggest that C118 is oxidized by cytoplasmic H202 generated from dismutation of mitochondrial and/or cytoplasmic superoxide, and that this oxidation inhibits LET-60ras. This contrasts with results in cultured mammalian cells where it is mostly nitric oxide, which is not found in worms, that oxidizes C118 and activates Ras. Interestingly, PQ, NAC and the C118S mutation do not act on the phosphorylation of MPK-1, suggesting that oxidation of LET-60ras acts on an as yet uncharacterized MPK-1-independent pathway. We also show that elevated cytoplasmic superoxide promotes vulva formation independently of C118 of LET-60ras and downstream of LIN-1. Finally, we uncover a role for the NADPH oxidases (BLI-3 and DUOX-2) and their redox-sensitive activator CED-10rac in stimulating vulva development. Thus, there are at least three genetically separable pathways by which ROS regulates vulval development.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32544191 PMCID: PMC7319342 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1008838
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Genet ISSN: 1553-7390 Impact factor: 5.917
Fig 1The multivulva phenotype of let-60rasgf is sensitive to ROS.
let-60ras(n1046gf) is denoted in the figure as let-60gf. A The genetic pathway by which LET-60ras promotes vulval development. C. elegans gene names are in lowercase italics, and the corresponding mammalian protein homologues are in uppercase. The pathway depicts the genetic epistatic relationships between the genes rather than the biochemical interactions of the proteins. Gain-of-function mutations that activate LET-60ras or loss-of-function mutations in lin-1 lead to the development of multiple vulvas. B Space-filling model of human K-Ras bound to GTP, showing the residue (G13) that is mutated in let-60rasgf, and the redox-sensitive cysteine (C118). The structure (PDB ID: 3GFT) was derived using Pymol. C Sample images from mutants scored in D (asterisks denote the vulvas and arrowheads the pseudovulvas). The scale bar represents 50 μm. D Number of vulvas of the wild type and the let-60rasgf mutant after treatment with PQ and NAC. ***P = 0.0001 compared to let-60rasgf.
Fig 3The effects of altered oxidation by PQ and NAC and the C118S mutation are not mediated via MPK-1 or by altered protein stability whereas the let-60rasgf-C118D double mutation affects both.
A A representative Western blot for phosphorylated MPK-1a (pMPK-1a), total MPK-1a and Histone H3 as a loading control. Unprocessed original scans of blots and additional analyses are shown in S4 Fig. B The mean ratio of phosphorylated MPK-1a (pMPK-1a) to total MPK-1a ± SEM of three different Western blots. C A representative Western blot for phosphorylated MPK-1a (pMPK-1a), total MPK-1a and Histone H3 as a loading control. Unprocessed original scans of blots and additional analyses are shown in S5 Fig. D The mean ratio of phosphorylated MPK-1a (pMPK-1a) to total MPK-1a ± SEM of three different Western blots. E A representative Western blot for LET-60 with Tubulin as a loading control. Unprocessed original scans of blots are shown in S6A Fig. F The mean band intensity ± SEM of three different Western blots normalised to band intensities in the wild type. G A representative Western blot for LET-60 with Histone H3 as a loading control. Unprocessed original scans of blots are shown in S6B Fig. H The mean band intensity ± SEM of three different Western blots normalised to band intensities in the wild type. Molecular weight markers are shown for E and G as different loading controls were used for these blots. All bars are compared to the wild-type control bar or as indicated. **P<0.01, ***P<0.001.