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Publication
Journal: Transboundary and Emerging Diseases
September/3/2017
Abstract
African swine fever (ASF) is an important emerging transboundary animal disease (TAD), which currently has an impact on many countries in Africa, Eastern Europe, the Caucasus and the Russian Federation. The current situation in Europe shows the ability of the virus to rapidly spread, which stands to threaten the global swine industry. At present, there is no viable vaccine to minimize spread of the disease and stamping out is the main source of control. In February 2011, Ethiopia had reported its first suspected outbreaks of ASF. Genomic analyses of the collected ASF virus (ASFV) strains were undertaken using 23 tissue samples collected from domestic swine in Ethiopia from 2011 to 2014. The analysis of Ethiopian ASFVs partial p72 gene sequence showed the identification of a new genotype, genotype XXIII, that shares a common ancestor with genotypes IX and X, which comprise isolates circulating in Eastern African countries and the Republic of Congo. Analysis of the p54 gene also followed the p72 pattern and the deduced amino acid sequence of the central variable region (CVR) of the B602L gene showed novel tetramer repeats not previously characterized.
Publication
Journal: Current Biology
September/12/2005
Abstract
BACKGROUND
The Aurora kinases control multiple aspects of mitosis, among them centrosome maturation, spindle assembly, chromosome segregation, and cytokinesis. Aurora activity is regulated in part by a subset of Aurora substrates that, once phosphorylated, can enhance Aurora kinase activity. Aurora A substrate activators include TPX2 and Ajuba, whereas the only known Aurora B substrate activator is the chromosomal passenger INCENP.
RESULTS
We report that the C. elegans Tousled kinase TLK-1 is a second substrate activator of the Aurora B kinase AIR-2. Tousled kinase (Tlk) expression and activity have been linked to ongoing DNA replication, and Tlk can phosphorylate the chromatin assembly factor Asf. Here, we show that TLK-1 is phosphorylated by AIR-2 during prophase/prometaphase and that phosphorylation increases TLK-1 kinase activity in vitro. Phosphorylated TLK-1 increases AIR-2 kinase activity in a manner that is independent of TLK-1 kinase activity but depends on the presence of ICP-1/INCENP. In vivo, TLK-1 and AIR-2 cooperate to ensure proper mitotic chromosome segregation.
CONCLUSIONS
The C. elegans Tousled kinase TLK-1 is a substrate and activator of the Aurora B kinase AIR-2. These results suggest that Tousled kinases have a previously unrecognized role in mitosis and that Aurora B associates with discrete regulatory complexes that may impart distinct substrate specificities and functions to the Aurora B kinase.
Publication
Journal: Molecular Carcinogenesis
January/10/2005
Abstract
Pre-mRNA processing is an important mechanism for globally modifying cellular protein composition during tumorigenesis. To understand this process during lung cancer, expression of two key pre-mRNA alternative splicing factors was compared in a mouse model of early lung carcinogenesis and during regenerative growth following reversible lung injury. Heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein (hnRNP) A1 and alternative splicing factor/splicing factor 2 (ASF/SF2) act antagonistically to modulate splice site selection. Both hnRNP A1 and ASF/SF2 contents rose in adenomas and during injury-induced hyperplasia compared to control lungs, as measured by immunoblotting. While both proteins increased similarly during compensatory hyperplasia, hnRNP A1 increased to a much greater extent than ASF/SF2 in tumors, resulting in a 6-fold increase of the hnRNP A1 to ASF/SF2 ratio. Immunohistochemical analysis showed that hnRNP A1 localized exclusively within tumor nuclei, while ASF/SF2 appeared in cytoplasm and/or nuclei, depending on the growth pattern of the tumor cells. We also demonstrated cancer-associated changes in the pre-mRNA alternative splicing of CD44, a membrane glycoprotein involved in cell-cell and cell-extracellular matrix interactions. hnRNP A1 and ASF/SF2 expression is thus differentially altered in neoplastic lung cells by mechanisms that do not strictly arise from increased cell division. These changes are influenced by tumor histology and may be associated with production of variant CD44 mRNA isoforms.
Publication
Journal: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
May/23/1996
Abstract
The fact that animal introns are not spliced out in plants suggests that recognition of pre-mRNA splice sites differs between the two kingdoms. In plants, little is known about proteins required for splicing, as no plant in vitro splicing system is available. Several essential splicing factors from animals, such as SF2/ASF and SC-35, belong to a family of highly conserved proteins consisting of one or two RNA binding domain(s) (RRM) and a C-terminal Ser/Arg-rich (SR or RS) domain. These animal SR proteins are required for splice site recognition and spliceosome assembly. We have screened for similar proteins in plants by using monoclonal antibodies specific for a phosphoserine epitope of the SR proteins (mAb1O4) or for SF2/ASF. These experiments demonstrate that plants do possess SR proteins, including SF2/ASF-like proteins. Similar to the animal SR proteins, this group of proteins can be isolated by two salt precipitations. However, compared to the animal SR proteins, which are highly conserved in size and number, SR proteins from Arabidopsis, carrot, and tobacco exhibit a complex pattern of intra- and interspecific variants. These plant SR proteins are able to complement inactive HeLa cell cytoplasmic S1OO extracts that are deficient in SR proteins, yielding functional splicing extracts. In addition, plant SR proteins were active in a heterologous alternative splicing assay. Thus, these plant SR proteins are authentic plant splicing factors.
Publication
Journal: Journal of Virology
October/20/2004
Abstract
Pre-mRNA splicing occurs in the spliceosome, which is composed of small ribonucleoprotein particles (snRNPs) and many non-snRNP components. SR proteins, so called because of their C-terminal arginine- and serine-rich domains (RS domains), are essential members of this class. Recruitment of snRNPs to 5' and 3' splice sites is mediated and promoted by SR proteins. SR proteins also bridge splicing factors across exons to help to define these units and have a central role in alternative and enhancer-dependent splicing. Here, we show that the SR protein SF2/ASF is part of a complex that forms upon the 79-nucleotide negative regulatory element (NRE) that is thought to be pivotal in posttranscriptional regulation of late gene expression in human papillomavirus type 16 (HPV-16). However, the NRE does not contain any active splice sites, is located in the viral late 3' untranslated region, and regulates RNA-processing events other than splicing. The level of expression and extent of phosphorylation of SF2/ASF are upregulated with epithelial differentiation, as is subcellular distribution, specifically in HPV-16-infected epithelial cells, and expression levels are controlled, at least in part, by the virus transcription regulator E2.
Publication
Journal: Nucleic Acids Research
April/13/1997
Abstract
The prp4 gene of Schizosaccharomyces pombe encodes a protein kinase. A physiological substrate is not yet known. A mutational analysis of prp4 revealed that the protein consists of a short N-terminal domain, containing several essential motifs, which is followed by the kinase catalytic domain comprising the C-terminus of the protein. Overexpression of N-terminal mutations disturbs mitosis and produces elongated cells, Using a PCR approach, we isolated a putative homologue of Prp4 from human and mouse cells. The mammalian kinase domain is 53% identical to the kinase domain of Prp4. The short N-terminal domains share <20% identical amino acids, but contain conserved motifs. A fusion protein consisting of the N-terminal region from S. pombe followed by the mammalian kinase domain complements a temperature-sensitive prp4 mutation of S. pombe. Prp4 and the recombinant yeast/mouse protein kinase phosphorylate the human SR splicing factor ASF/SF2 in vitro in its RS domain.
Publication
Journal: Human Molecular Genetics
October/19/2005
Abstract
We have discovered a new exon of the homeodomain-interacting kinase HipK3 that incorporates a premature stop codon and is included only in the human testis. To investigate this, we tested the effects of transfecting cells with green fluorescent protein fusions of RNA-binding proteins implicated in spermatogenesis using a novel assay based on multi-fraction fluorescence-activated cell sorting (MF-FACS). This allows the effect of a controlled titration of any splicing factor on the splicing of endogenous genes to be studied in vivo. We found that Tra2beta recapitulates testis-specific splicing of endogenous HipK3 in a concentration-dependent manner and binds specifically to a long purine-rich sequence in the novel exon. This sequence was also specifically bound by hnRNP A1, hnRNP H, ASF/SF2 and SRp40, but not by 9G8. Consistent with these observations, in vitro studies showed that this sequence shifts splicing to a downstream 5' splice site within a heterologous pre-mRNA substrate in the presence of Tra2beta, ASF/SF2 and SRp40, whereas hnRNP A1 specifically inhibits this choice. By mutating the purine-rich sequence in the context of the HipK3 gene, we also show that it is the major determinant of Tra2beta- and hnRNP A1-mediated regulation. Tra2 is essential for sex determination and spermatogenesis in flies, and Tra2beta protein was most highly expressed in testis out of six mouse tissues, whereas hnRNP A1 is down-regulated during germ cell development. Therefore, our data imply an evolutionarily conserved role for Tra2 proteins in spermatogenesis and suggest that an elevated concentration of Tra2beta may convert it into a tissue-specific splicing factor.
Publication
Journal: EMBO Journal
December/15/1996
Abstract
We show that a cellular nuclear protein, the SR splicing factor SF2/ASF, controls the level of production of an essential influenza virus protein, the M2 ion channel protein. The M2 mRNA that encodes the ion channel protein is produced by alternative splicing of another viral mRNA, M1 mRNA. The production of M2 mRNA is controlled in two ways. First, a distal (stronger) 5' splice site in M1 mRNA is blocked by the complex of viral polymerase proteins synthesized during infection, allowing the cellular splicing machinery to switch to the proximal (weaker) M2 5' splice site. Second, utilization of the weak M2 5' splice site requires its activation by the cellular SF2/ASF protein. This activation is mediated by the binding of the SF2/ASF protein to a purine-rich splicing enhancer sequence that is located in the 3' exon of M1 mRNA. We demonstrate that activation of the M2 5' splice site is controlled by the SF2/ASF protein in vivo during influenza virus infection. Utilizing four cell lines that differ in their levels of production of the SF2/ASF protein, we show that during virus infection of these cell lines both M2 mRNA and the M2 ion channel protein are produced in amounts that are proportional to the different expression levels of the SF2/ASF protein.
Publication
Journal: Molecular and Cellular Biology
July/2/2003
Abstract
SR proteins constitute a family of splicing factors that play key roles in both constitutive and regulated splicing in metazoan organisms. The proteins are extensively phosphorylated, and kinases capable of phosphorylating them have been identified. However, little is known about how these kinases function, for example, whether they target specific SR proteins or whether the kinases themselves are regulated. Here we describe properties of one such kinase, Clk/Sty, the founding member of the Clk/Sty family of dual-specificity kinases. Clk/Sty is autophosphorylated on both Ser/Thr and Thr residues, and using both direct kinase assays and SR protein-dependent splicing assays, we have analyzed the effects of each type of modification. We find not only that the pattern of phosphorylation on a specific SR protein substrate, ASF/SF2, is modulated by autophosphorylation but also that the ability of Clk/Sty to recognize different SR proteins is influenced by the extent and nature of autophosphorylation. Strikingly, phosphorylation of ASF/SF2 is sensitive to changes in Tyr, but not Ser/Thr, autophosphorylation while that of SC35 displays the opposite pattern. In contrast, phosphorylation of a third SR protein, SRp40, is unaffected by autophosphorylation. We also present biochemical data indicating that as expected for a factor directly involved in splicing control (but in contrast to recent reports), Clk/Sty is found in the nucleus of several different cell types.
Publication
Journal: Journal of Clinical Investigation
September/15/2015
Abstract
Increasing evidence indicates that the gut microbiota can be altered to ameliorate or prevent disease states, and engineering the gut microbiota to therapeutically modulate host metabolism is an emerging goal of microbiome research. In the intestine, bacterial urease converts host-derived urea to ammonia and carbon dioxide, contributing to hyperammonemia-associated neurotoxicity and encephalopathy in patients with liver disease. Here, we engineered murine gut microbiota to reduce urease activity. Animals were depleted of their preexisting gut microbiota and then inoculated with altered Schaedler flora (ASF), a defined consortium of 8 bacteria with minimal urease gene content. This protocol resulted in establishment of a persistent new community that promoted a long-term reduction in fecal urease activity and ammonia production. Moreover, in a murine model of hepatic injury, ASF transplantation was associated with decreased morbidity and mortality. These results provide proof of concept that inoculation of a prepared host with a defined gut microbiota can lead to durable metabolic changes with therapeutic utility.
Publication
Journal: Virology
January/17/1994
Abstract
The role of anti-viral antibodies in homologous protective immunity to a virulent African swine fever virus (ASFV) strain E75 was examined by passive transfer experiments in swine. Eighty-five percent of animals (n = 14) that received anti-ASFV immunoglobulin (Ig) survived challenge infection, while 100% mortality was observed in control group animals (n = 28) that received anti-pseudorabies virus Ig, normal swine Ig, or phosphate-buffered saline. With the exception of a significantly delayed and transient fever response, anti-ASFV Ig group animals remained clinically normal following challenge, whereas control group animals presented with clinical ASF on Day 4 postchallenge. Additionally a significant 3 day delay in onset of viremia and a 10,000-fold reduction in both mean and maximum virus titers were observed for animals given anti-ASFV Ig. These results indicate that anti-ASFV Ig alone will protect swine from lethal infection with virulent ASFV. Further, they support the view that the antibody-mediated protective effect is an early event that effectively delays disease onset.
Publication
Journal: Virology
May/26/1998
Abstract
The nature of the initial interactions of African swine fever (ASF) virus with target cells is only partially known, and to date only the ASF virus protein p12 has been identified as a viral attachment protein. More recently, antibodies to viral proteins p54 and p30 have been shown to neutralize the virus, inhibiting virus binding and internalization, respectively. Therefore, we investigated the role of these proteins in the receptor-mediated ASF virus endocytosis in swine macrophages, the natural host cells. Proteins p54 and p30, released from ASF virus particles after treatment of virions with a nonionic detergent, bound to virus-sensitive alveolar pig macrophages. Binding of these proteins was found to be specifically inhibited by neutralizing antibodies obtained from a convalescent pig or from pigs immunized with recombinant p54 or p30 proteins. The baculovirus-expressed proteins p54 and p30 retained the same biological properties as the viral proteins, since they also bound specifically to these cells, and their binding was equally inhibited by neutralizing antibodies. Binding of 35S-labeled recombinant p54 and p30 proteins to macrophages was specifically competed by an excess of unlabeled p54 and p30, respectively. However, cross-binding inhibition was not observed, suggesting the existence of two different saturable binding sites for these proteins in the susceptible cells. In addition, protein p54 blocked the specific binding of virus particles to the macrophage, while protein p30 blocked virus internalization. Both proteins independently prevented virus infection and in a dose-dependent manner, suggesting that binding interactions mediated by both proteins are necessary to give rise to a productive infection. The relevance of blockade of virus-cell interactions mediated by p54 and p30 in the protective immune response against ASF virus was then investigated. Immunization of pigs with either recombinant p54 or p30 proteins induced neutralizing antibodies which, as expected, inhibited virus attachment or internalization, respectively. However, immunized pigs were not protected against lethal infection and the disease course was not modified in these animals. In contrast, immunization with a combination of p54 and p30 proteins simultaneously stimulated both virus neutralizing mechanisms and modified drastically the disease course, rendering a variable degree of protection ranging from a delay in the onset of the disease to complete protection against virus infection. In conclusion, the above results strongly suggest that proteins p54 and p30 mediate specific interactions between ASF virus and cellular receptors and that simultaneous interference with these two interactions has a complementary effect in antibody-mediated protection.
Publication
Journal: Journal of Experimental Medicine
December/28/1978
Abstract
Supernates of tetanus toxoid (TT) antigen-stimulated human T cells were studied for the presence of an antigen-specific T-cell helper factor (ASF). Supernates were circulated over an immunosorbent column consisting of insolubilized TT antigen. The material which bound to the column was eluted with 3 M NaCNS and was shown to contain a factor which in the presence of TT-induced specific IgG anti-TT antibody synthesis in autologous B cells without causing readily detectable proliferation. ASF activity was partially inhibited by antisera directed against the B-cell alloantigens of the ASF donor. Immunosorbent columns containing such antisera removed ASF activity. Immunosorbent columns containing antisera to human immunoglobulin heavy chain determinants did not remove ASF activity; whereas immunosorbent columns containing rabbit idiotypic antiserum directed against anti-TT antibodies completely removed ASF activity. ASF was destroyed by treatment with proteolytic enzymes; its molecular weight was estimated by Sephadex G-100 gel column chromatography to be between 25,000 and 75,000 daltons.
Publication
Journal: Spine
March/8/2006
Abstract
METHODS
Analysis of radiographic outcomes following surgical correction of scoliosis.
OBJECTIVE
To compare the curve correction and derotation following anterior spinal fusion (ASF) versus posterior spinal fusion (PSF) with thoracic pedicle screws.
BACKGROUND
The benefits of ASF in adolescent idiopathic scoliosis include saving distal fusion levels and historically greater correction and derotation compared with PSF. However, comparative studies between ASF and PSF have generally consisted only of posterior hook instrumentation or hybrid constructs, with no direct comparisons between anterior fusion and thoracic pedicle screw (TPS) series.
METHODS
We performed a retrospective review of the radiographic and medical records of 40 patients (two curve-matched groups) with Lenke Type I main thoracic adolescent idiopathic scoliosis. There were 20 patients who underwent open ASF with single-rod instrumentation with a mean age at surgery of 15 years + 6 months (range, 12-20 years) and 20 patients who underwent PSF with TPS constructs with a mean age at surgery of 13 + 6 (range, 12-15). Radiographic follow-up averaged 44.1 month (24-80) for the ASF group and 55.1 month (25-83) for the PSF/TPS group. We evaluated the sagittal alignment, Cobb angles, rib hump deformity (RH), apical rib spread difference (ARSD), and apical vertebral body-rib ratio (AVB-R), measures of rotation and thoracic torsion, between both groups.
RESULTS
Before surgery, the main thoracic curve was 55.1 degrees (range, 47-66 degrees) for the ASF group and 52.5 degrees (range, 46-68 degrees ) for the PSF/TPS group (P = 0.16). Additionally, there was no difference in the pelvic tilt curves, thoracic kyphosis, lumbar lordosis, RH, or ARSD. However, there was a slightly greater preoperative thoracolumbar-lumbar (TL/L) curve (34.6 degrees versus 29.5 degrees , P = 0.04) and AVB-R (1.75 versus 1.5, P = 0.003) in the ASF group. After surgery, an average of 6.5 levels (range, 6-8) were fused in the ASF group, compared with 7.7 levels (range, 5-12) in the PSF/TPS group (P = 0.001) or 1.2 additional levels for PSF/TPS. At final postoperative follow-up, spontaneous pelvic tilt curve correction was greater in the ASF group (47% versus 35%), although this difference did not reach statistical significance (P = 0.07). For the main thoracic and TL/L curves, there was greater correction in the PSF/TPS group (62% versus 52%, P = 0.009; and 56% versus 41%, P = 0.03), respectively. Additionally, the PSF/TPS group demonstrated significantly greater RH correction (51% versus 26%, P = 0.005) and AVB-R ratio improvement (73% versus 32%, P < 0.0001). We also noted a trend towards increased correction of the ARSD in the PSF/TPS group (58% versus 32%, P = 0.07). Further, the postoperative thoracic kyphosis decreased 4.4 degrees in the PSF/TPS group (postop avg. 25.0 degrees ) and increased 5.7 degrees (average, 30.6 degrees ) in the ASF group (P = 0.04).
CONCLUSIONS
In this curve-matched cohort of Lenke Type I curves, PSF with TPS provided superior instrumented correction of main thoracic curves and spontaneous correction of TL/L curves. Perhaps more importantly, PSF/TPS demonstrated improved correction of thoracic torsion and rotation as compared with ASF in terms of RH (P = 0.005) and AVB-R ratio (P= 0.0001), with only one additional spinal segment fused on average.
Publication
Journal: Molecular Psychiatry
December/11/2005
Abstract
Long-lasting alternative splicing of neuronal acetylcholinesterase (AChE) pre-mRNA occurs during neuronal development and following stress, altering synaptic properties. To explore the corresponding molecular events, we sought to identify mRNAs encoding for abundant splicing factors in the prefrontal cortex (PFC) following stress. Here we show elevated levels of the splicing factor SC35 in stressed as compared with naïve mice. In cotransfections of COS-1 and HEK293 cells with an AChE minigene allowing 3' splice variations, SC35 facilitated a shift from the primary AChE-S to the stress-induced AChE-R variant, while ASF/SF2 caused the opposite effect. Transfection with chimeric constructs comprising of SC35 and ASF/SF2 RRM/RS domains identified the SC35 RRM as responsible for AChE mRNA's alternative splicing. In poststress PFC neurons, increased SC35 mRNA and protein levels coincided with selective increase in AChE-R mRNA. In the developing mouse embryo, cortical progenitor cells in the ventricular zone displayed transient SC35 elevation concomitant with dominance of AChE-R over AChE-S mRNA. Finally, transgenic mice overexpressing human AChE-R, but not those overexpressing AChE-S, showed significant elevation in neuronal SC35 levels, suggesting a reciprocal reinforcement process. Together, these findings point to an interactive relationship of SC35 with cholinergic signals in the long-lasting consequences of stress on nervous system plasticity and development.
Publication
Journal: Biomaterials
June/24/2014
Abstract
Cells sense their physical microenvironment and transduce these signals through actin-nuclear links to regulate nuclear functions including gene expression. However, the spatio-temporal coupling between perinuclear actin and nucleus and their functional importance are still unclear. Using micropatterned substrates to control cell geometry, we show that perinuclear actin organization at the apical plane remodels from mesh-like structure to stress fibers. The formation of these apical stress fibers (ASFs) correlated with significant reduction in nuclear height and was found to exert an active compressive load on the nucleus via direct contact with mature focal adhesion sites. Interestingly, the dynamic nature of ASFs was found to transduce forces to chromatin assembly. In addition, geometric perturbations or using pharmacological drugs to inhibit actomyosin contractility of ASFs resulted in nuclear instability. Taken together, our work provides direct evidence of physical links between the nucleus and focal adhesion sites via ASFs, which modulate nuclear homeostatic balance and internal chromatin structure. We suggest that such direct links may underlie nuclear mechanotransduction to regulate genomic programs.
Publication
Journal: Genes and Development
April/14/1999
Abstract
Specific recognition of splice sites within metazoan mRNA precursors (pre-mRNAs) is a potential stage for gene regulation by alternative splicing. Splicing factors of the SR protein family play a major role in this regulation, as they are required for early recognition of splice sites during spliceosome assembly. Here, we describe the characterization of RSF1, a splicing repressor isolated from Drosophila, that functionally antagonizes SR proteins. Like the latter, RSF1 comprises an amino-terminal RRM-type RNA-binding domain, whereas its carboxy-terminal part is enriched in glycine (G), arginine (R), and serine (S) residues (GRS domain). RSF1 induces a dose-sensitive inhibition of splicing for several reporter pre-mRNAs, an inhibition that occurs at the level of early splicing complexes formation. RSF1 interacts, through its GRS domain, with the RS domain of the SR protein SF2/ASF and prevents the latter from cooperating with the U1 small nuclear ribonucleoprotein particle (U1 snRNP) in binding pre-mRNA. Furthermore, overproduction of RSF 1 in the fly rescues several developmental defects caused by overexpression of the splicing activator SR protein B52/ SRp55. Therefore, RSF1 may correspond to the prototypical member of a novel family of general splicing repressors that selectively antagonize the effect of SR proteins on 5' splice-site recognition.
Publication
Journal: Nucleic Acids Research
June/18/2013
Abstract
The H1 linker histones are abundant chromatin-associated DNA-binding proteins. Recent evidence suggests that linker histones also may function through protein-protein interactions. To gain a better understanding of the scope of linker histone involvement in protein-protein interactions, we used a proteomics approach to identify H1-binding proteins in human nuclear extracts. Full-length H1.0 and H1.0 lacking its C-terminal domain (CTD) were used for protein pull-downs. A total of 107 candidate H1.0 binding proteins were identified by LC-MS/MS. About one-third of the H1.0-dependent interactions were mediated by the CTD, and two-thirds by the N-terminal domain-globular domain fragment. Many of the proteins pulled down by H1.0 were core splicing factors. Another group of H1-binding proteins functions in rRNA biogenesis. H1.0 also pulled down numerous ribosomal proteins and proteins involved in cellular transport. Strikingly, nearly all of the H1.0-binding proteins are found in the nucleolus. Quantitative biophysical studies with recombinant proteins confirmed that H1.0 directly binds to FACT and the splicing factors SF2/ASF and U2AF65. Our results demonstrate that H1.0 interacts with an extensive network of proteins that function in RNA metabolism in the nucleolus, and suggest that a new paradigm for linker histone action is in order.
Publication
Journal: Molecular and Cellular Biology
June/23/2002
Abstract
Several intron elements influence exon 7B skipping in the mammalian hnRNP A1 pre-mRNA. We have shown previously that the 38-nucleotide CE9 element located in the intron separating alternative exon 7B from exon 8 can repress the use of a downstream 3' splice site. The ability of CE9 to act on heterologous substrates, combined with the results of competition and gel shift assays, indicates that the activity of CE9 is mediated by a trans-acting factor. UV cross-linking analysis revealed the specific association of a 25-kDa nuclear protein with CE9. Using RNA affinity chromatography, we isolated a 25-kDa protein that binds to CE9 RNA. This protein corresponds to SRp30c. Consistent with a role for SRp30c in the activity of CE9, recombinant SRp30c interacts specifically with CE9 and can promote splicing repression in vitro in a CE9-dependent manner. The closest homologue of SRp30c, ASF/SF2, does not bind to CE9 and does not repress splicing even when the intronic SRp30c binding sites are replaced with high-affinity ASF/SF2 binding sites. Only the first 7 nucleotides of CE9 are sufficient for binding to SRp30c, and mutations that abolish binding also prevent repression. Our results indicate that SRp30c can function as a repressor of 3' splice site utilization and suggest that the SRp30c-CE9 interaction may contribute to the control of hnRNP A1 alternative splicing.
Publication
Journal: Veterinary Microbiology
May/26/2014
Abstract
Since African swine fever (ASF) was re-introduced into Eastern Europe in April 2007, the disease has spread through five countries, drastically changing the European ASF situation. This re-introduction has significant implications for the affected countries, and it puts the European Union (EU) at serious risk of ASF introduction. Numerous factors are complicating the control of ASF in the Russian Federation and neighboring areas, particularly the absence of a coordinated control program, the abundance of backyard pig units with low or no biosecurity and the traditional use of swill feeding. All these risk factors are driven in turn by socio-economic, political and cultural factors. Moreover, the lack of clear information regarding the current situation of ASF in the Trans-Caucasus countries such as Armenia and Georgia may be increasing the risk of ASF spread into neighboring areas. The ASF situation in Eastern Europe poses a constant risk of ASF entry into the EU, especially via routes that are difficult to control, such as wild boar movements, illegal movement of animals and animal products and movements of contaminated vehicles or other fomites. This paper reviews and discusses current ASF epidemiology in Eastern Europe, the factors that may contribute to disease endemicity in the area, the current challenges for disease control, and the risk of introduction into the EU.
Publication
Journal: BMC Cancer
February/2/2011
Abstract
BACKGROUND
Heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoproteins (hnRNPs) of the A/B type (hnRNP A1, A2/B1, A3) are highly related multifunctional proteins participating in alternative splicing by antagonising other splicing factors, notably ASF/SF2. The altered expression pattern of hnRNP A2/B1 and/or splicing variant B1 alone in human lung cancer and their potential to serve as molecular markers for early diagnosis remain issues of intense investigation. The main objective of the present study was to use paired tumour/non-tumour biopsies from patients with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) to investigate the expression profiles of hnRNP A1, A2/B1 and A3 in conjunction with ASF/SF2.
METHODS
We combined western blotting of tissue homogenates with immunohistochemical examination of fixed tissue sections and quantification of mRNA expression levels in tumour versus adjacent normal-looking areas of the lung in the same patient.
RESULTS
Our study, in addition to clear evidence of mostly uncoupled deregulation of hnRNPs A/B, has revealed hnRNP A1 to be the most deregulated protein with a high frequency of over-expression (76%), followed by A3 (52%) and A2/B1 (43%). Moreover, direct comparison of protein/mRNA levels showed a lack of correlation in the case of hnRNP A1 (as well as of ASF/SF2), but not of A2/B1, suggesting that different mechanisms underlie their deregulation.
CONCLUSIONS
Our results provide strong evidence for the up-regulation of hnRNP A/B in NSCLC, and they support the existence of distinct mechanisms responsible for their deregulated expression.
Publication
Journal: Journal of Nutrition
January/8/2004
Abstract
Animal source foods (ASF) can provide micronutrients in greater amounts and more bioavailable forms compared to plant source foods, but their intake is low in many poor populations. However, the impact of ASF on micronutrient status of undernourished populations has not been assessed. Supplemental meat (60-85 g/d), milk (200-250 mL/d) or energy (isocaloric with the meat and milk, 240-300 kcal/d) were randomly assigned to 555 undernourished school children aged 5-14 y in a rural malaria-endemic area of Kenya, at one school meal daily for one school year. Blood and stool samples were collected at baseline and after 1 y to assess stool parasites, malaria, hemoglobin, serum or plasma C-reactive protein, ferritin, iron, zinc, copper, vitamin B-12, folate and retinol, and erythrocyte riboflavin. At baseline, there was a high prevalence of micronutrient deficiencies (iron, zinc, vitamins A and B-12 and riboflavin), yet plasma ferritin was low in few children, and none had low serum copper. At the end of the year of supplementation, plasma vitamin B-12 concentrations were significantly increased in children fed the Meat or Milk meal; prevalence of severe plus moderate deficiency fell from 80.7% at baseline to 64.1% in the Meat group and from 71.6 to 45.1% in the Milk group, respectively. No significant improvement was observed in the status of other micronutrients compared to the Energy and Control groups, although malaria and other infections may have obscured effects. Supplementation with small amounts of meat or milk reduced the high prevalence of vitamin B-12 deficiency in these children.
Publication
Journal: Journal of Biological Chemistry
September/19/2001
Abstract
Prp4 is a protein kinase of Schizosaccharomyces pombe identified through its role in pre-mRNA splicing, and belongs to a kinase family including mammalian serine/arginine-rich protein-specific kinases and Clks, whose substrates are serine/arginine-rich proteins. We cloned human PRP4 (hPRP4) full-length cDNA and the antiserum raised against a partial peptide of hPRP4 recognized 170-kDa polypeptide in HeLa S3 cell extracts. Northern blot analysis revealed that hPRP4 mRNA was ubiquitously expressed in multiple tissues. The extended NH(2)-terminal region of hPRP4 contains an arginine/serine-rich domain and putative nuclear localization signals. hPRP4 phosphorylated and interacted with SF2/ASF, one of the essential splicing factors. Indirect immunofluorescence analysis revealed that endogenous hPRP4 was distributed in a nuclear speckled pattern and colocalized with SF2/ASF in HeLa S3 cells. Furthermore, hPRP4 interacted directly with Clk1 on its COOH terminus, and the arginine/serine-rich domain of hPRP4 was phosphorylated by Clk1 in vitro. Overexpression of Clk1 caused redistribution of hPRP4, from the speckled to the diffuse pattern in nucleoplasm, whereas inactive mutant of Clk1 caused no change of hPRP4 localization. These findings suggest that the NH(2)-terminal region of hPRP4 may play regulatory roles under an unidentified signal transduction pathway through Clk1.
Publication
Journal: Onderstepoort Journal of Veterinary Research
March/4/1986
Abstract
The known distribution of African swine fever (ASF) virus in Africa is reviewed in relation to the distributions of its free-living hosts as are the infection rates of these species in different localities in southern Africa. Mechanisms by which ASF virus is maintained in its sylvatic state and ways in which the infection may enter domestic pig populations are discussed.
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