학술논문

TP53 status regulates ACSL5-induced expression of mitochondrial mortalin in enterocytes and colorectal adenocarcinomas
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Cell and Tissue Research. July 1, 2014, Vol. 357 Issue 1, p267, 12 p.
Subject
Tumor proteins -- Analysis
Colorectal cancer -- Analysis
Fatty acids -- Analysis
Protein biosynthesis -- Analysis
Genetic engineering -- Analysis
Ligases -- Analysis
RNA -- Analysis
Apoptosis -- Analysis
Mitochondrial DNA -- Analysis
Language
English
ISSN
0302-766X
Abstract
Acyl-CoA synthetase 5 (ACSL5), a mitochondrially localized enzyme, catalyzes the synthesis of long-chain fatty acid thioesters and is physiologically involved in pro-apoptotic sensing of enterocytes. The aim of the present study is to identify an ACSL5-dependent regulation of mitochondrially expressed proteins and the characterization of related pathways in normal and diseased human intestinal mucosa. Proteomics of isolated mitochondria from ACSL5 transfectants and CaCo2 controls were performed. ACSL5-dependent protein synthesis was verified with quantitative reverse transcription plus the polymerase chain reaction, Western blotting, short-interfering RNA-mediated gene silencing and additional cell culture experiments. Lipid changes were analyzed with tandem mass spectrometry. ACSL5-related pathways were characterized in normal mucosa and sporadic adenocarcinomas of the human intestine. In CaCo2 cells transfected with ACSL5, mortalin (HSPA9) was about two-fold increased in mitochondria, whereas cytoplasmic mortalin levels were unchanged. Disturbance of acyl-CoA/sphingolipid metabolism, induced by ACSL5 overexpression, was characterized as crucial. ACSL5-related overexpression of mitochondrial mortalin was found in HEK293 and Lovo (wild-type TP53 [tumor protein p53]) and CaCo2 (p53-negative; TP53 mutated) cells but not in Colo320DM cells (mutated TP53). In normal human intestinal mucosa, an increasing gradient of both ACSL5 and mortalin from bottom to top was observed, whereas p53 (wild-type TP53) decreased. In sporadic intestinal adenocarcinomas with strong p53 immunostaining (mutated TP53), ACSL5-related mortalin expression was heterogeneous. ACSL5-induced mitochondrial mortalin expression is assumed to be a stress response to ACSL5-related changes in lipid metabolism and is regulated by the TP53 status. Uncoupling of ACSL5 and mitochondrial mortalin by mutated TP53 could be important in colorectal carcinogenesis. Keywords ACSL5 * Colorectal adenocarcinoma * Intestine * Mortalin
Introduction In human intestinal mucosa, the continuous renewal of surface-lining epithelia is regulated by several molecular pathways including Wnt and Notch signals for the maintenance of epithelial progenitor proliferation and [...]