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The TERE1 protein interacts with mitochondrial TBL2: Regulation of trans-membrane potential, ROS/RNS and SXR target genes

Authors :
S. Bruce Malkowicz
Li-Ping Wang
Yongmu Zheng
Frank J. RauscherIII
Michael L. Nickerson
Howard S. Kruth
William J. Fredericks
Robert J. Lee
Nathaniel J. Fredericks
Huiyi Wang
Hankun Yin
Terry McGarvey
Wayland Hsiao
Jayne S. Weiss
Source :
Journal of Cellular Biochemistry. 114:2170-2187
Publication Year :
2013
Publisher :
Wiley, 2013.

Abstract

We originally discovered TERE1 as a potential tumor suppressor protein based upon reduced expression in bladder and prostate cancer specimens and growth inhibition of tumor cell lines/xenografts upon ectopic expression. Analysis of TERE1 (aka UBIAD1) has shown it is a prenyltransferase enzyme in the natural bio-synthetic pathways for both vitamin K-2 and COQ10 production and exhibits multiple subcellular localizations including mitochondria, endoplasmic reticulum, and golgi. Vitamin K-2 is involved in mitochondrial electron transport, SXR nuclear hormone receptor signaling and redox cycling: together these functions may form the basis for tumor suppressor function. To gain further insight into mechanisms of growth suppression and enzymatic regulation of TERE1 we isolated TERE1 associated proteins and identified the WD40 repeat, mitochondrial protein TBL2. We examined whether disease specific mutations in TERE1 affected interactions with TBL2 and the role of each protein in altering mitochondrial function, ROS/RNS production and SXR target gene regulation. Biochemical binding assays demonstrated a direct, high affinity interaction between TERE1 and TBL2 proteins; TERE1 was localized to both mitochondrial and non-mitochondrial membranes whereas TBL2 was predominantly mitochondrial; multiple independent single amino acid substitutions in TERE1 which cause a human hereditary corneal disease reduced binding to TBL2 strongly suggesting the relevance of this interaction. Ectopic TERE1 expression elevated mitochondrial trans-membrane potential, oxidative stress, NO production, and activated SXR targets. A TERE1-TBL2 complex likely functions in oxidative/nitrosative stress, lipid metabolism, and SXR signaling pathways in its role as a tumor suppressor.

Details

ISSN :
07302312
Volume :
114
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Cellular Biochemistry
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........e5e8ac1245d3e2b7df0c000553a1ec1c