High-throughput screening of a small-molecule library identified a 5-triazolo-2-arylpyridazinone as a novel inhibitor of the important glycolytic enzyme 6-phosphofructo-2-kinase/2,6-bisphosphatase 3 (PFKFB3). Such inhibitors are of interest due to PFKFB3's control of the important glycolytic pathway used by cancer cells to generate ATP. A series of analogues was synthesized to study structure-activity relationships key to enzyme inhibition.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTwo important lines of research have enhanced our understanding of the molecular role of nutrition in influencing behavior. First, exposure to an adverse environment during early life can influence the long-term behavior of the offspring. Second, regulation of the nervous system development and functioning appears to involve epigenetic mechanisms that require a continuous supply of methyl group donors in food.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Nutrigenet Nutrigenomics
March 2012
Background/aims: Early-life methyl-donor deficiency is implicated in growth restriction and later-life development of type 2 diabetes mellitus. We ascertained whether dietary methyl-donor deficiency in the mother during pregnancy or during postweaning growth in the rat would impair glucose homeostasis, insulin secretion and pancreatic endocrine development in young adults.
Methods: Effects of maternal methyl deficiency (90% deficiency in methionine, folate and choline) were compared with those of postweaning methyl deficiency and with control diets for effects on growth, impaired glucose tolerance, insulin secretion and pancreas development in offspring.
Calcium (Ca(2+)) influx through the plasma membrane store-operated Ca(2+) channel ORAI1 is controlled by Ca(2+) sensors of the stromal interaction molecule (STIM) family. STIM1 responds to endoplasmic reticulum (ER) Ca(2+) store depletion by redistributing and activating ORAI1 from regions of the ER juxtaposed to the plasma membrane. Unlike STIM1, STIM2 can regulate ORAI1 in a store-dependent and store-independent manner, but the mechanism by which this is achieved is unknown.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe stromal interaction molecules STIM1 and STIM2 are endoplasmic reticulum Ca(2+) sensors, serving to detect changes in receptor-mediated ER Ca(2+) store depletion and to relay this information to plasma membrane localized proteins, including the store-operated Ca(2+) channels of the ORAI family. The resulting Ca(2+) influx sustains the high cytosolic Ca(2+) levels required for activation of many intracellular signal transducers such as the NFAT family of transcription factors. Models of STIM protein deficiency in mice, Drosophila melanogaster and Caenorhabditis elegans, in addition to the phenotype of patients bearing mutations in STIM1 have provided great insight into the role of these proteins in cell physiology and pathology.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCa(2+) plays a complex role in the differentiation of committed pre-adipocytes into mature, fat laden adipocytes. Stim1 is a single pass transmembrane protein that has an essential role in regulating the influx of Ca(2+) ions through specific plasma membrane store-operated Ca(2+) channels. Stim1 is a sensor of endoplasmic reticulum Ca(2+) store content and when these stores are depleted ER-localized Stim1 interacts with molecular components of store-operated Ca(2+) channels in the plasma membrane to activate these channels and induce Ca(2+) influx.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHuman and murine STIM1 were originally discovered as candidate growth regulators in tumours and in the bone marrow stroma, and the structurally related vertebrate family members, STIM2 and the Drosophila homologue D-Stim, were subsequently identified. STIM proteins are ubiquitously expressed type I single-pass transmembrane proteins which have a unique combination of structural motifs within their polypeptide sequences. The extracellular regions contain an N-terminal unpaired EF-hand Ca(2+) binding motif adjacent to an unconventional glycosylated SAM domain, while the cytoplasmic regions contain alpha-helical coiled-coil domains within a region having homology to ERM domains adjacent to the transmembrane region, and phosphorylated proline-rich domains near the C-terminus.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn all cells Ca2+ signals are key to controlling a spectrum of cellular responses. Ca2+ signals activated by phospholipase C-coupled receptors have two components-rapid Ca2+ release from ER stores followed by slower Ca2+ entry from outside the cell. The coupling process between ER and PM to mediate this "store-operated" Ca2+ entry process has remained a molecular and mechanistic mystery.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe coupling mechanism between endoplasmic reticulum (ER) Ca(2+) stores and plasma membrane (PM) store-operated channels (SOCs) remains elusive [1-3]. STIM1 was shown to play a crucial role in this coupling process [4-7]; however, the role of the closely related STIM2 protein remains undetermined. We reveal that STIM2 is a powerful SOC inhibitor when expressed in HEK293, PC12, A7r5, and Jurkat T cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Natl Acad Sci U S A
March 2006
Receptor-induced Ca(2+) signals are key to the function of all cells and involve release of Ca(2+) from endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stores, triggering Ca(2+) entry through plasma membrane (PM) "store-operated channels" (SOCs). The identity of SOCs and their coupling to store depletion remain molecular and mechanistic mysteries. The single transmembrane-spanning Ca(2+)-binding protein, STIM1, is necessary in this coupling process and is proposed to function as an ER Ca(2+) sensor to provide the trigger for SOC activation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiochim Biophys Acta
April 2002
Stromal interaction molecule 1 (STIM1) is a cell surface transmembrane glycoprotein implicated in tumour growth control and stromal-haematopoietic cell interactions. A single sterile alpha motif (SAM) protein-protein interaction domain is modelled within its extracellular region, a subcellular localisation not previously described for other SAM domain-containing proteins. We have defined the transmembrane topology of STIM1 by determining the sites of N-linked glycosylation.
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