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1.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 115(6): 1370-1375, 2018 02 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29358407

ABSTRACT

Differentiated airway epithelia produce sonic hedgehog (SHH), which is found in the thin layer of liquid covering the airway surface. Although previous studies showed that vertebrate HH signaling requires primary cilia, as airway epithelia mature, the cells lose primary cilia and produce hundreds of motile cilia. Thus, whether airway epithelia have apical receptors for SHH has remained unknown. We discovered that motile cilia on airway epithelial cells have HH signaling proteins, including patched and smoothened. These cilia also have proteins affecting cAMP-dependent signaling, including Gαi and adenylyl cyclase 5/6. Apical SHH decreases intracellular levels of cAMP, which reduces ciliary beat frequency and pH in airway surface liquid. These results suggest that apical SHH may mediate noncanonical HH signaling through motile cilia to dampen respiratory defenses at the contact point between the environment and the lung, perhaps counterbalancing processes that stimulate airway defenses.


Subject(s)
Bronchi/cytology , Epithelial Cells/metabolism , Hedgehog Proteins/metabolism , Trachea/cytology , Cells, Cultured , Cilia/metabolism , Cilia/physiology , Cyclic AMP/metabolism , Epithelial Cells/cytology , Humans , Nuclear Proteins/genetics , Nuclear Proteins/metabolism , Repressor Proteins/genetics , Repressor Proteins/metabolism , Signal Transduction , Smoothened Receptor/genetics , Smoothened Receptor/metabolism , Zinc Finger Protein Gli2/genetics , Zinc Finger Protein Gli2/metabolism
2.
Biophys J ; 105(3): 732-44, 2013 Aug 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23931321

ABSTRACT

The bacterial chaperone trigger factor (TF) is the first chaperone to be encountered by a nascent protein chain as it emerges from the ribosome exit tunnel. Experimental results suggest that TF possesses considerable conformational flexibility, and in an attempt to provide an atomic-level view of this flexibility, we have performed independent 1.5-µs molecular dynamics simulations of TF in explicit solvent using two different simulation force fields (OPLS-AA/L and AMBER ff99SB-ILDN). Both simulations indicate that TF possesses tremendous flexibility, with huge excursions from the crystallographic conformation caused by reorientations of the protein's constituent domains; both simulations also predict the formation of extensive contacts between TF's PPIase domain and the Arm 1 domain that is involved in nascent-chain binding. In the OPLS simulation, however, TF rapidly settles into a very compact conformation that persists for at least 1 µs, whereas in the AMBER simulation, it remains highly dynamic; additional simulations in which the two force fields were swapped suggest that these differences are at least partly attributable to sampling issues. The simulation results provide potential rationalizations of a number of experimental observations regarding TF's conformational behavior and have implications for using simulations to model TF's function on translating ribosomes.


Subject(s)
Escherichia coli Proteins/chemistry , Molecular Dynamics Simulation , Peptidylprolyl Isomerase/chemistry , Amino Acid Sequence , Escherichia coli Proteins/metabolism , Molecular Sequence Data , Peptidylprolyl Isomerase/metabolism , Protein Binding , Protein Structure, Tertiary
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