Established in 2020 Wednesday, April 17, 2024


Researchers identify protein complex critical in helping control cell death
Zhigao Wang, PhD, associate professor of cardiovascular sciences, in his laboratory at the USF Health Heart Institute, University of South Florida. Images on the monitor depict two types of cell death: apoptosis (left) and necroptosis. Image: USF Health/University of South Florida.



TAMPA, FL.- Cell death plays an important role in normal human development and health but requires tightly orchestrated balance to avert disease. Too much can trigger a massive inflammatory immune response that damages tissues and organs. Not enough can interfere with the body's ability to fight infection or lead to cancer.

Zhigao Wang, Ph.D., associate professor of cardiovascular sciences at the University of South Florida Health Morsani College of Medicine, studies the complex molecular processes underlying necroptosis, which combines characteristics of apoptosis (regulated or programmed cell death) and necrosis (unregulated cell death).

During necroptosis dying cells rupture and release their contents. This sends out alarm signals to the immune system, triggering immune cells to fight infection or limit injury. Excessive necroptosis can be a problem in some diseases like stroke or heart attack, when cells die from inadequate blood supply, or in severe COVID-19, when an extreme response to infection causes organ damage or even death.

A new preclinical study by Dr. Wang and colleagues at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center identifies a protein complex critical for regulating apoptosis and necroptosis—known as protein phosphatase 1 regulatory subunit 3G/protein phosphatase 1 gamma (PPP1R3G/PP1γ, or PPP1R3G complex). The researchers' findings suggest that an inhibitor targeting this protein complex may help reduce or prevent excessive necroptosis.

The study was published in Nature Communications.




"Cell death is very complicated process, which requires layers upon layers of brakes to prevent too many cells from dying," said study principal investigator Dr. Wang, a member of the USF Health Heart Institute. "If you want to protect cells from excessive death, then the protein complex we identified in this study is one of many steps you must control."

Dr. Wang and colleagues conducted experiments using human cells and a mouse model mimicking the cytokine storm seen in some patients with severe COVID-19 infection. They applied CRISPR genome-wide screening to analyze how cell function, in particular cell death, changes when one gene is knocked out (inactivated).

Receptor-interacting protein kinase (RIPK1) plays a critical role in regulating inflammation and cell death. Many sites on this protein are modified when a phosphate is added (a process known as phosphorylation) to suppress RIPK1's cell death-promoting enzyme activity. How the phosphate is removed from RIPK1 sites (dephosphorylation) to restore cell death is poorly understood. Dr. Wang and colleagues discovered that PPP1R3G recruits phosphatase 1 gamma (PP1γ) to directly remove the inhibitory RIPK1 phosphorylations blocking RIPK1's enzyme activity and cell death, thereby promoting apoptosis and necroptosis.

Dr. Wang uses the analogy of a car brake help explain what's happening with the balance of cell survival and death in this study: RIPK1 is the engine that drives the cell death machine (the car). Phosphorylation applies the brake (stops the car) to prevent cells from dying. The car (cell death machinery) can only move forward if RIPK1 dephosphorylation is turned on by the PPP1R3G protein complex, which releases the brake.

"In this case, phosphorylation inhibits the cell death function of protein RIPK1, so more cells survive," he said. "Dephosphorylation takes away the inhibition, allowing RIPK1 to activate its cell death function."

The researchers showed that a specific protein-protein interaction—that is, PPP1R3G binding to PP1γ—activates RIPK1 and cell death. Furthermore, using a mouse model for "cytokine storm" in humans, they discovered knockout mice deficient in Ppp1r3g were protected against tumor necrosis factor-induced systemic inflammatory response syndrome. These knockout mice had significantly less tissue damage and a much better survival rate than wildtype mice with the same TNF-induced inflammatory syndrome and all their genes intact.

Overall, the study suggests that inhibitors blocking the PPP1R3G/PP1γ pathway can help prevent or reduce deaths and severe damage from inflammation-associated diseases, including heart disease, autoimmune disorders and COVID-19, Dr. Wang said. His laboratory is working with Jianfeng Cai, Ph.D., a professor in the USF Department of Chemistry, to screen and identify peptide compounds that most efficiently inhibit the PPP1R3G protein complex. They hope to pinpoint promising drug candidates that may stop the massive destruction of cardiac muscle cells caused by heart attacks.







Today's News

February 20, 2022

New armless abelisaur dinosaur species discovered in Argentina

Unexpected fish and squid found in the Central Arctic Ocean

Scientists map entire human gut at single cell resolution

Researchers identify protein complex critical in helping control cell death

Emerald ash borer can survive polar vortex

Starting antiretroviral therapy early is essential to battling not one, but two killers

Ten-year study results find patient outcomes similar for two CABG procedures

Researchers develop robust strategy for sifting through large-scale genetic data to better understand heart problems

DNA design brings predictability to polymer gels

Understanding the mystery of why particles cluster in turbulent flows

Larvicidal flavonoids inhibit key enzyme in yellow fever mosquitoes

New insights into the formation of brown dwarfs

Sound provides new insight into the lives of blue whales

Using deep imaging for higher resolution

Easy aluminum nanoparticles for rapid, efficient hydrogen generation from water

Summit study spins up new insights into correlated electron systems

Self-healing materials for robotics made from 'jelly' and salt

New study advances knowledge of the battle between viruses and human cells



 


Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez



Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the ResearchNews newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful