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Periodic table

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All others class I cytokine receptors, two subunits. IL3, IL5 and GM-CSF distinct a, common b. ... Model organism nematode (C. elegans) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Periodic table


1
Periodic table
2
Janeway 8_33
3
Hematopoietins
  • Two major types of receptors M-CSFR (CSF-1),
    SCFR (C-kit) and Flt-3 internal tyrosine
    kinases.
  • All others class I cytokine receptors, two
    subunits.
  • IL3, IL5 and GM-CSF distinct a, common b.

4
Simplified scheme of hematopoiesis
erythrocyte
T cell
Epo
IL2, IL4
B cell
megakaryocyte
pre-T
BFU
IL2, IL4
dendritic cell
IL5, IL6
IL7
IL7 IL3
macrophage
IL3, IL6, IL11, Epo, GM-CSF
M-CSF GM-CSF
pre-B
pre-B
IL3, GM-CSF, Epo
lymphoid progenitor
neutrophil
G-CSF GM-CSF
IL3, GM-CSF, IL6
CFU-GM
CSF Flt3L
CD34
IL3, IL9, IL10
mast cell
IL3, IL4, GM-CSF
pluripotent hematopoietic stem cell
IL3, IL5, GM-CSF
myeloid progenitor CFU-GEMM
true stem cell
basophil
eosinophil
5
IL6 family
  • Consists of IL6, IL11, LIF (Leukemia Inhibitory
    Factor), CNTF (Ciliary Neurotrophic Factor) and
    OSM (Oncostatin M).
  • 3 subunit receptors distinct a and TWO common b
    (gp130).

6
Periodic table
7
TNF and TNFR superfamilies, 2001
Ligand
Genbank ID
Aliases
Receptor
Genbank ID
Aliases
p55-R, CD120a, TNF-R-I p55, TNF-R,
TNFRSF1A
M75866
TNF
X02910
TNFSF2, TNFA, DIF
TNFAR, p55TNFR, TNFR60, TNFR1
CD120b, p75, TNF-R, TNF-R-II, TNFR80,
LTA
X01393
TNFSF1, TNFB, LT
TNFRSF1B
M32315
TNFR2,TNF-R75, TNFBR, p75TNFR
TNFRSF3, TNFR2-RP, CD18,
LTB
L11016
TNFSF3, TNFC, p33
LTBR
L04270
TNFR-RP, TNFCR, TNF-R-III
TNFSF4
D90224
OX-40L, gp34, TXGP1
TNFRSF4
X75962
OX40, ACT35, TXGP1L
CD40LG, IMD3, HIGM1, CD40L,
TNFSF5
X67878
TNFRSF5
X60592
p50, Bp50, CD40
hCD40L, TRAP, CD154, gp39
TNFSF6
U11821
FasL, APT1LG1
TNFRSF6
M67454
Fas, CD95, APO-1, APT1



TNFRSF6B
AF104419
DcR3
TNFSF7
L08096
CD70, CD27L, CD27LG
TNFRSF7
M63928
Tp55, S152, CD27
TNFSF8
L09753
CD30LG
TNFRSF8
M83554
Ki-1, D1S166E, CD30
TNFSF9
U03398
4-1BB-L
TNFRSF9
L12964
4-1BB, CD137, ILA
TNFSF10
U37518
TRAIL, Apo-2L, TL2
TNFRSF10A
U90875
DR4, Apo2, TRAILR-1
DR5, KILLER, TRICK2A,



TNFRSF10B
AF012628
TRAIL-R2, TRICKB



TNFRSF10C
AF012536
DcR1, TRAILR3, LIT, TRID



TNFRSF10D
AF029761
DcR2, TRUNDD, TRAILR4
TNFSF11
AF013171
TRANCE, RANKL, OPGL, ODF
TNFRSF11A
AF018253
RANK



TNFRSF11B
U94332
OPG, OCIF, TR1
DR3, TRAMP, WSL-1, LARD,
TNFSF12
AF030099
TWEAK, DR3LG, APO3L
TNFRSF12
U72763
WSL-LR,DDR3, TR3, APO-3



TNFRSF12L
?
DR3L
TNFSF13
NM_003808
APRIL
TNFRSF17A
Z29574
BCMA
TNFSF13B
AF136293
BAFF, THANK, BLYS, TALL1



TNFRSF17B ?
AF023614
TACI
TNFSF14
AF036581
LIGHT, LTg, HVEM-L
TNFRSF14
U70321
HVEM, ATAR, TR2, LIGHTR, HVEA
TNFSF15
AF039390
TL1, VEGI
TNFRSF15
-
-
TNFSF16
-
-
NGFR
M14764
TNFRSF16, p75NTR
TNFSF18
AF125303
AITRL TL6 hGITRL
TNFRSF18
AF125304
AITR, GITR
TNFSF19 ?
MMAJ1386
TNFRSF19
AF173166
?
AB040434
TROY
http//www.gene.ucl.ac.uk/users/hester/tnftop.html
8
Tumor Necrosis Factor.
  • TNFa, cachectin.
  • Class II membrane molecule (N-terminus inside),
    in most of the cases is processed by special
    protease and secreted as 17 kD molecule.
  • 230/157 aa, non-glycosylated.
  • 3D structure jelly roll, protein fold
    observed in viral capsid proteins.
  • Single gene, linked to class III region of the
    MHC.
  • Forms homotrimers which interact with high
    affinity receptors.

9
Lymphotoxin
  • Has two components, LTa and LTb and exists in at
    least 3 forms, one secreted (LTa3) and two
    membrane-bound (LTa1LTb2 and LTa2LTb1).
  • LTa and LTb - closest homologs of TNF, linked to
    the same TNF/LT locus.
  • LTb class II membrane molecule, targets the LTa
    subunit to membrane.
  • LTa3 is similar to TNF (TNFa3) and binds to the
    same 2 TNF receptor (p55 and p75), but with lower
    affinity.
  • LTa1LTb2 acts through distinct LTbR (member of
    TNF R superfamily).

10
Tumor Necrosis Factor superfamily.
  • Can signal activation, proliferation,
    differentiation, costimulation and cell death
    through the same receptors.
  • Cytotoxic for many (but not for all) transformed
    cell lines in vitro.
  • TNF, LTa, TRAIL (APO-2L) can cause necrosis of
    some (but not all) induced tumors in animal
    models.
  • Involved in regulation of expression of many
    genes critical for immune response (cytokines,
    host defense genes, adhesion molecules, etc.).
  • Show 25-30 similarity, aromatic residues
    responsible for trimer formation.

11
Tumor Necrosis Factor Receptor superfamily
  • Extracellular portions contain several
    cystein-rich domains.
  • Forms (homo) trimers which interact with ligand
    trimers through clefts.
  • Intracellular portions do not possess kinase
    domains, and are not docking tyrosine kinases in
    response to binding.
  • Transmit signal through distinct class of adaptor
    molecules (some of them also trimeric).
  • Can transmit two types of signals activation
    (proliferation, differentiation, costimulation)
    and programmed cell death (PCD).

12
TNF Receptor/Ligand structures
  • TNF, TRAIL (APO-2L) jelly-roll structure.
    TRAIL3 is stabilized by Zn ion.
  • Extracellular portions of receptors contain
    several cystein-rich domains.
  • Two complexes solved (extracellular domains of
    TNFRp55 bound to LTa) and TRAIL bound to DR5.
  • In both cases homotrimers interact with ligand
    trimers through clefts (groves).
  • Intracellular portions do not possess kinase
    domains, and are not docking tyrosine kinases in
    response to binding.
  • Transmit signal through distinct class of adaptor
    molecules (some of them also trimeric).

13
Apoptosis (programmed cell death).
  • Normal physiological process (embryonic
    development, cell renewal).
  • Associated with irreversible disruption of
    nuclear structures, chromatin and DNA changes in
    cytoplasmic organelles and cell membrane. As a
    result, fragments of dying cells are recognized
    and digested by phagocytes.
  • Necrosis is another form of cell death, is not
    associated with the orderly collapse of cellular
    structures and necrotic cells are not digested.

14
Two apoptotic pathways
  • Instructive apoptosis external signal,
    transmitted through death receptors.
  • Intrinsic (damage induced) pathway. Mediated by
    mitochondria.
  • Withdrawal of growth factor or cytokine signaling
    is sensored by mitochondria and may result in
    apoptosis by intrinsic pathway.

15
Types of apoptosis
16
Apoptosis/Evolution/Genes
  • Model organism nematode (C. elegans). Each gene
    (19, 099) and each of 959 somatic cells are
    known.
  • 3 genes involved in regulation of apoptosis
    CED-3, CED-4 pro-apoptotic CED-9
    anti-apoptotic.
  • CED-3 is a founding member of caspase family.

17
Death receptors
  • System to control/activate extrinsic pathway of
    programmed cell death (instructive apoptosis)
  • Responds to extracellular protein factors
    cytokines.
  • Involves cellular receptors belonging to TNF R
    superfamily.
  • Two most studied death receptors TNFRp55 and
    Fas (APO-1, CD95).
  • Death receptors contain in their intracellular
    part a short domain which is necessary and
    sufficient to signal apoptosis.

18
Caspases
  • Proteases with Cysteine in the active center,
    cleave after Asp.
  • Synthesized as inactive precursors.
  • Activated due to recruitment into multiprotein
    complexes.
  • Recruitment depends on homotypic protein-protein
    association with molecules containing caspase
    activation and recruitment domain (CARD).
  • At least 12 caspases in humans.
  • Regulatory (proximal) caspases (8 and 9)
  • Effector (executioner) caspases (3 and 7).

19
Some caspases
20
Caspase targets
  • Multiple targets.
  • Lamin A essential component of nuclear
    structure.
  • PARP (poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase, component of
    DNA repair system.
  • U1-70kd splicing factor.
  • DNA-PK component of DNA repair and Toll
    signaling.
  • Rb tumor suppressor, cell cycle regulator.
  • H1 histone essential for higher order chromatin
    organization.
  • CAD caspase-activated DNAse, at least partly
    responsible for DNA cleavage in apoptotic cells.

21
Initiation mechanisms (both pathways)
  • Caspase-dependent
  • Proenzyme recruitment, oligomerization,
    proximity-induced catalytic activation.

22
Caspases in instructive and intrinsic apoptotic
pathways.
  • Caspase 8 the central caspase of the
    instructive pathway
  • Caspase 9 the best studied caspase of intrinsic
    pathway.
  • Caspase 3 belongs to both pathways.
  • C. elegans gene Ced4 is a homolog of mammalian
    caspase 3.
  • The two pathways are interconnected caspase 8
    cleaves BID and affects the intrinsic pathway.
  • Knock-out of caspase 8 in mice results in early
    embryonic lethality.

23
TNF receptor/ligand 3D structutre


View A

A

A

TNFRp55

LTa
24
Death receptors/ligands
  • TNFRp55, Fas, DR3, DR4, DR5, DR6
  • TNF, LTa, Fas-L, TWEAK, TRAIL (APO-2L)

25
Death receptors, subfamily of TNF receptor
superfamily.
  • Signaling depends on receptor aggregation (may
    occur in the absence of ligands).
  • To prevent ligand-independent signaling, some
    receptors use special class of molecules,
    silencers of death domains (SODD), which
    dissociate upon ligand binding.
  • Within seconds after receptor engagement the
    death activating signaling complex (DISC) is
    formed on the intracellular portions of the
    receptors.
  • Death signal is transmitted through recruitment
    of FADD, and pro-caspase 8 (Fas, DR4-5) or TRADD,
    FADD, pro-caspase 8 (TNFRp55).
  • Activation signal is transmitted through RIP,
    MAPK3, IKK, NFkB or TRAF2, JNK and AP1.

26
Procaspase-8 processing at the DISC
CD95L
CD95
caspase-8 prodomain
C
C
x
C
p12-c-FLIPL
p10
x
C
p18
active caspase-8
procaspase-8
c-FLIPL
FADD
c-FLIPS
27
Non-receptor proteins containing DD
DD
TRADD
DD
DED
FADD
DD
Ser-Thr kinase domain
RIP
DD
CARD
RAIDD
28
Fas (Apo-1, CD95)
  • Initially erroneously described as a component of
    TNF R system.
  • Type I transmembrane protein (N-terminus
    outside), 48 kD, 319 aa.
  • Contains death domain (ca 80 aa).
  • Recruits FADD which in turn recruits pro-caspase
    8.
  • Does not activate genes.
  • Expressed on activated T and B cells and involved
    in downregulation of immune responses.
  • KO mice develop splenomegaly, lymphoproliferative
    and autoimmune disorders. Lpr mice is a leaky Fas
    KO.

29
TRAFs.
  • Associated with TNFR superfamily.
  • Initially described for TNFRp75.
  • Non-DD receptors use TRAFS (direct binding)
  • Some of DD-containing receptors also use TRAFs
    (without direct binding).

30
TNFRp55 signaling
  • Can signal both apoptosis and gene activation
  • Recruits TRADD, does not directly recruit FADD.
  • TRADD recruits FADD and promotes recruitment and
    autoactivation of procaspase 8.
  • TRADD recruits RIP and TRAFs.
  • RIP initiates kinase cascade to activate NFkB
  • Alternatively, RIP recruits RAIDD, which in turn
    recruits procaspase 2.
  • TRAF2 initiates MEK/JNK pathway to activate AP1

31
TNFRp55 signaling
TNFa3 or LTa3
TNF-RI (p55)
RIP
FADD
Death domain
Death domain
Death domain
Death domain
pro-caspase 8
CARD
TRADD
TRADD
kinase
TRAF 2
effector domain
MAP3K
caspase 8
JNK
c-Jun
caspase cascade
NF-kB activation
AP-1
Gene Activation
Apoptosis
32
TRAIL/APO-2L
  • DR3-5
  • DR3 signals as TNFRp55 (RIP, TRAF)
  • DR4-5 as FAS (FADD, casp 8), no RIP
  • FADD universal death adaptor

33
Protection from apoptosis
  • Same DD receptors can launch protective signal
  • Breaks at multiple points in the pathway (FLIP,
    IAP).
  • Decoy receptors (DcR1-2 for TRAIL DcR3 for FasL
    and LIGHT viral decoys).
  • Decoys with partial function (DcR2 can induce
    NFkB).

34
Periodic table
35
Chemokines (chemotactic cytokines)
  • Four subfamilies, overall more than 100 members.
  • Classification based on two first cysteins
  • Two large families a or CXC and b or CC.
  • Two additional types g or C and d or CX3C.
  • Receptors 7 TMD, G-protein coupled.
  • Two major receptor families CXCR1-N and CCR1-N
  • Most of chemokines interact with multiple
    receptors, and most of receptors respond to
    multiple chemokines.

36
Chemokine specificity
CXCR1 --- IL8 gtgt GCP2 gtgt NAP2, ENA78
neutrophil
CXCR2 --- GRO, NAP2, IL8, ENA78, GCP2
resting T cell
CXCR4 --- SDF1
CXCR3 --- IP10, MIG, I-TAC
CXCR5 --- BCA-1
activated T cell
CX3CR1 --- Fractalkine
CCR1 --- MIP1a, RANTES, MCP2-4
B cell
CCR2 --- MCP1-5
CCR3 --- Eotaxin1-2, RANTES, MCP2-4, MIP1a
monocyte
CCR4 --- TAPC, MDC
CCR5 --- MIP1a, MIP1b, RANTES
basophil
CCR6 --- LARC
CCR7 --- ELC, SLC
eosinophil
CCR8 --- I-309, TARC, MIP1b
37
Cytokines and cancer
Role of chemokines in metastasis
  • Chemokine receptors CXCR4 and CCR7 are highly
    expressed in human breast cancer cells
  • Ligands for these receptors CXCL12 (SDF-1a) and
    CCL21 (6Ckine) are abundantly expressed in the
    primary sites of breast cancer metastasis

Picture from L.L.Liotta, Nature 410 24-25 2001.
38
Clinical use of cytokines
  • Interferons a (Roferon, Alferon-N, Intron
    A) antiviral therapy (chronic Hepatatis B and
    C), hairy cell leukemia.
  • Interferon b (Betaseron) multiple sclerosis.
  • G-CSF (Neupogen) supportive treatment for bone
    marrow transplantation.
  • Interferon g (Actimunne) chronic
    granulomatosis.
  • Epo (Procrite) kidney disorders.
  • GM-CSF, IFN-g, IL2, TNF all toxic when applied
    systemically.

39
Cytokines in cancer therapy.
  • Interferons a (Roferon, Alferon-N, Intron
    A) hairy cell leukemia, CML.
  • G-CSF (Neupogen) supportive treatment during
    cancer chemotherapy.
  • Epo (Procrite) supporting treatment during
    cancer chemotherapy.
  • IL2, GM-CSF and others for maintaining primary
    cell cultures used for adoptive immune therapy.
  • IL2 (Proleukin) in cancer therapy (metastatic
    renal cancer).
  • TNFIFNg chemotherapy effective when applied
    locally (regional perfusion).

40
Promising clinical trials for cytokines.
  • TRAIL (APO2-L) in cancer therapy.

41
How specificity is brought about?
  • In spite of understanding some molecular details
    in cytokine signalling, the specificity in the
    activation process is NOT fully understood.

42
About specificity
  • Many promoters integrate complex multiple signals
  • Everything must be in place at the right time
    and in correct orientation

MEKK -gt ERK
JNK
Elk
AP1
MAP3K

TATA
43
Acknowledgements
  • D. Kuprash (Moscow)
  • A.Shakhov (Frederick)
  • R. Kirken (Houston)
  • I. Lavrik (Heidelberg)
  • R.Kazaryan (Moscow)
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