Fusion, proliferation, angiogenesis, immune tolerance, and tissue survival are some of the critical functions involved in the physiological and pathological processes of placenta development. Strikingly, some of these properties are shared by envelope glycoproteins of retroviruses. Part of the overall retroviral world, the human retroviral heritage consists of hundred thousands of elements representing a huge amount of genetic material as compared to our 25,000 genes, whereas only a few tenths of retroviral loci still contain envelope genes exhibiting large open reading frames. Some of these envelopes, namely Syncytin-1, Syncytin-2, and ERV-3 Env, were shown to support essential functions in placenta development. First, in order to understand where these envelope genes originate and what are the critical mechanisms involved in transcription regulation and protein basic functions such as recognition of cellular receptor by viral envelopes, we will describe the retroviral life cycle and how repeated infections during species evolution led to the formation of retroviral families. We will emphasize how many envelope genes remain in our genome and in which organs they were found to be expressed. Second, Syncytin-1 will be used as a model to decipher essentially in placental context (i) the detailed modalities of transcriptional control including repressive histone marks and CpG methylation epigenetic mechanisms, involvement of tissue-specific transcription factors, and control of mRNA splicing, as well as (ii) the multiple steps required for protein maturation finally leading to a functional trimeric glycosylated protein. The extraordinary versatility of Syncytin-1 will permit to demonstrate that such proteins are likely involved in physiological processes not only in placenta but also in other organs, based on evidence of fusion/differentiation, immunomodulation, apoptosis, and proliferation properties. Third, we will describe extensively the altered behavior of the various levels of transcriptional control or of protein functions/localization/maturation displayed by Syncytins and other endogenous retroviral envelopes. We will exemplify how such altered states may contribute to human placenta pathologies, including Down syndrome, preeclampsia/hemolysis, elevated liver enzymes, and low platelets syndrome/intrauterine growth restriction, and gestational trophoblastic diseases including mole and choriocarcinoma. Similar deregulations will be respectively mentioned on this target of fetal invasion that is the endometrium, the reproductive organs that are the testis and the ovary, and in the breast nourisher of the newborn child. All these observations draw outlines of the symbiotic and conflicting mechanisms at work where the retrovirus world and the human world have converged.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/bs.pmbts.2016.12.005 | DOI Listing |
Hum Mol Genet
January 2025
Department of Human Genetics, McGill University, 3666 McTavish Street, Montreal, QC H3A 1Y2, Canada.
Many genes in the human genome encode proteins that are dosage sensitive, meaning they require protein levels within a narrow range to properly execute function. To investigate if clinically relevant variation in protein levels impacts the same downstream pathways in human disease, we generated cell models of two SETBP1 syndromes: Schinzel-Giedion Syndrome (SGS) and SETBP1 haploinsufficiency disease (SHD), where SGS is caused by too much protein, and SHD is caused by not enough SETBP1. Using patient and sex-matched healthy first-degree relatives from both SGS and SHD SETBP1 cases, we assessed how SETBP1 protein dosage affects downstream pathways in human forebrain progenitor cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Bacteriol
January 2025
Department of Microbiology, Howard Taylor Ricketts Laboratory, The University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois, USA.
Protein secretion is an essential cell process in bacteria, required for cell envelope biogenesis, export of virulence factors, and acquisition of nutrients, among other important functions. In the Sec secretion pathway, signal peptide-bearing precursors are recognized by the SecA ATPase and pushed across the membrane through a translocon channel made of the proteins SecY, SecE, and SecG. The Sec pathway has been extensively studied in the model organism , but the Sec pathways of other bacteria such as the human pathogen differ in important ways from this model.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Virus Erad
December 2024
HIV Pathogenesis Programme, The Doris Duke Medical Research Institute, Nelson R. Mandela School of Medicine, University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, South Africa.
Sub-Saharan Africa accounts for almost 70 % of people living with HIV (PLWH) worldwide, with the greatest numbers centred in South Africa where 98 % of infections are caused by subtype C (HIV-1C). However, HIV-1 subtype B (HIV-1B), prevalent in Europe and North America, has been the focus of most cure research and testing despite making up only 12 % of HIV-1 infections globally. Development of latency models for non-subtype B viruses is a necessary step to address this disproportionate focus.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe nuclear pore complex (NPC), a multisubunit complex located within the nuclear envelope, regulates RNA export and the import and export of proteins. Here we address the role of the NPC in driving thermal stress-induced 3D genome repositioning of ( ) genes in yeast. We found that two nuclear basket proteins, Mlp1 and Nup2, although dispensable for NPC integrity, are required for driving genes into coalesced chromatin clusters, consistent with their strong, heat shock-dependent recruitment to gene regulatory and coding regions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFbioRxiv
December 2024
Department of Medicine - Endocrinology, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas, USA.
The cardioprotective effects of histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitors (HDIs) are at odds with the deleterious effects of HDAC depletion. Here, we use HDAC3 as a prototype HDAC to address this contradiction. We show that adult-onset cardiac-specific depletion of HDAC3 in mice causes cardiac hypertrophy and contractile dysfunction on a high-fat diet (HFD), excluding developmental disruption as a major reason for the contradiction.
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