BTB and CNC homology 1 (BACH1) represses the expression of genes involved in the metabolism of iron, heme and reactive oxygen species. While BACH1 is rapidly degraded when it is bound to heme, it remains unclear how BACH1 degradation is regulated under other conditions. We found that FBXO22, a ubiquitin ligase previously reported to promote BACH1 degradation, polyubiquitinated BACH1 only in the presence of heme in a highly purified reconstitution assay.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe anti-prion activity of cellulose ether (CE) has been reported in rodents, but the mechanism of action is not well understood. As defects in early T-cell development have been reported in Tga20 mice which show only a slight effect of CE administration, we investigated the involvement of immune functions in the CE action. We confirmed an insertion of the prion protein transgene into the pre T-cell antigen receptor α gene of Tga20 mice, and its impaired expression in the thymus and other tissues.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Cultured cell lines infected with prions produce an abnormal isoform of the prion protein (PrP). In this study, two types of cells persistently infected with prion were treated with curcumin-related compounds. We found that the compounds behave differently in neuroblastoma neuro-2a (N2a) cells infected with different prion strains.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnti-prion effects of cellulose ether (CE) are reported in rodents, but the molecular mechanism is fully unknown. Here, we investigated the genetic background of CE effectiveness by proteomic and genetic analysis in mice. Proteomic analysis in the two mouse lines showing a dramatic difference in CE effectiveness revealed a distinct polymorphism in the glia maturation factor β gene.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTranscriptional repressor Bach1 plays an important role in antioxidant response. Bach1 function is regulated by heme binding to the four cysteine-proline (CP) motifs in Bach1, which leads to inhibition of its activity. Three of these CP motifs are located N-terminal to the bZip (basic leucine zipper) domain that is responsible for DNA binding.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHeme is one of the key factors involved in the oxidative stress response of cells. The transcriptional repressor Bach1 plays an important role in this response through its heme-binding activity. Heme inhibits the transcriptional-repressor activity of Bach1, and can occur in two binding modes: 5- and 6-coordinated binding.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFElucidation of how the differentiation of hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPCs) is reconfigured in response to the environment is critical for understanding the biology and disorder of hematopoiesis. Here we found that the transcription factors (TFs) Bach2 and Bach1 promoted erythropoiesis by regulating heme metabolism in committed erythroid cells to sustain erythroblast maturation and by reinforcing erythroid commitment at the erythro-myeloid bifurcation step. Bach TFs repressed expression of the gene encoding the transcription factor C/EBPβ, as well as that of its target genes encoding molecules important for myelopoiesis and inflammation; they achieved the latter by binding to their regulatory regions also bound by C/EBPβ.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe transcription repressor BACH1 performs mutually independent dual roles in transcription regulation and chromosome alignment during mitosis by supporting polar ejection force of mitotic spindle. We now found that the mitotic spindles became oblique relative to the adhesion surface following endogenous BACH1 depletion in HeLa cells. This spindle orientation rearrangement was rescued by re-expression of BACH1 depending on its interactions with HMMR and CRM1, both of which are required for the positioning of mitotic spindle, but independently of its DNA-binding activity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBach2 is a transcriptional repressor that plays an important role in the differentiation of T-cells and B-cells. Bach2 is functionally regulated by heme binding, and possesses five Cys-Pro Cys-Pro (CP)-motifs as the heme binding site. To reveal the molecular mechanism of heme binding by Bach2, the intrinsically disordered heme binding region (a.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPulmonary alveolar proteinosis (PAP) is a disease resulting from a dysfunction of the alveolar macrophages (AMs) where excess surfactant protein accumulates in the alveolar spaces. We previously reported that Bach2 KO mice developed PAP due to a defect in the handling of lipids by AMs. To investigate the functions of Bach1 and Bach2, which are regulated by oxidative stress, in the AMs and in lung homeostasis, we generated mice that lacked both Bach1 and Bach2 (Bach1/2 DKO mice).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe transcription factor Bach2 regulates the immune system at multiple points, including class switch recombination (CSR) in activated B cells and the function of T cells in part by restricting their terminal differentiation. However, the regulation of Bach2 expression and its activity in the immune cells are still unclear. Here, we demonstrated that Bach2 mRNA expression decreased in Pten-deficient primary B cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe restriction-modification systems use epigenetic modification to distinguish between self and nonself DNA. A modification enzyme transfers a methyl group to a base in a specific DNA sequence while its cognate restriction enzyme introduces breaks in DNA lacking this methyl group. So far, all the restriction enzymes hydrolyze phosphodiester bonds linking the monomer units of DNA.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe transcriptional repressor Bach2 regulates humoral and cellular immunity, including antibody class switching. It possesses a basic leucine zipper domain that mediates DNA binding. Heme inhibits the DNA-binding activity of Bach2 in vitro and induces the degradation of Bach2 in B cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMature lymphoid cells express the transcription repressor Bach2, which imposes regulation on humoral and cellular immunity. Here we found critical roles for Bach2 in the development of cells of the B lineage, commencing from the common lymphoid progenitor (CLP) stage, with Bach1 as an auxiliary. Overexpression of Bach2 in pre-pro-B cells deficient in the transcription factor EBF1 and single-cell analysis of CLPs revealed that Bach2 and Bach1 repressed the expression of genes important for myeloid cells ('myeloid genes').
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe connection between gene regulation and metabolism is an old issue that warrants revisiting in order to understand both normal as well as pathogenic processes in higher eukaryotes. Metabolites affect the gene expression by either binding to transcription factors or serving as donors for post-translational modification, such as that involving acetylation and methylation. The focus of this review is heme, a prosthetic group of proteins that includes hemoglobin and cytochromes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Intracellular heme plays versatile roles in a variety of physiological processes including mitochondrial respiration. Heme also induces the expression of genes such as heme oxygenase-1 (HO-1) by inactivating the transcription repressor Bach1 through direct binding. However, the source of heme for the regulation of the Bach1-HO-1 axis has been unclear.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRestriction-modification systems consist of genes that encode a restriction enzyme and a cognate methyltransferase. Thus far, it was believed that restriction enzymes are sequence-specific endonucleases that introduce double-strand breaks at specific sites by catalysing the cleavages of phosphodiester bonds. Here we report that based on the crystal structure and enzymatic activity, one of the restriction enzymes, R.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHeme binds to proteins to modulate their function, thereby functioning as a signaling molecule in a variety of biologic events. We found that heme bound to Bach2, a transcription factor essential for humoral immunity, including antibody class switch. Heme inhibited the DNA binding activity of Bach2 in vitro and reduced its half-life in B cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe BTB/POZ domain is known as a protein-protein interaction motif that mediates homodimer and higher order self-associations. Proteins containing the BTB domain exist throughout eukaryotes; however, there is little information about the mechanism that determines the oligomeric state of the BTB domain. To address this question, we have determined the X-ray structure of the mouse Bach1 BTB domain.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSeveral type II restriction-modification gene complexes can force their maintenance on their host bacteria by killing cells that have lost them in a process called postsegregational killing or genetic addiction. It is likely to proceed by dilution of the modification enzyme molecule during rounds of cell division following the gene loss, which exposes unmethylated recognition sites on the newly replicated chromosomes to lethal attack by the remaining restriction enzyme molecules. This process is in apparent contrast to the process of the classical types of postsegregational killing systems, in which built-in metabolic instability of the antitoxin allows release of the toxin for lethal action after the gene loss.
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