Department of Pathology, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2011 Feb 24;6(2):e17048. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0017048.
PINCH1, an adaptor protein containing five LIM domains, plays an important role in regulating the integrin-mediated cell adhesion, migration and epithelial-mesenchymal transition. PINCH1 is induced in the fibrotic kidney after injury, and it primarily localizes at the sites of focal adhesion. Whether it can translocate to the nucleus and directly participate in gene regulation is completely unknown.
METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Using cultured glomerular podocytes as a model system, we show that PINCH1 expression was induced by TGF-β1, a fibrogenic cytokine that promotes podocyte dysfunction. Interestingly, increased PINCH1 not only localized at the sites of focal adhesions, but also underwent nuclear translocation after TGF-β1 stimulation. This nuclear translocation of PINCH1 was apparently dependent on the putative nuclear export/localization signals (NES/NLS) at its C-terminus, as deletion or site-directed mutations abolished its nuclear shuttling. Co-immunoprecipitation and pull-down experiments revealed that PINCH1 interacted with Wilms tumor 1 protein (WT1), a nuclear transcription factor that is essential for regulating podocyte-specific gene expression in adult kidney. Interaction of PINCH1 and WT1 was mediated by the LIM1 domain of PINCH1 and C-terminal zinc-finger domain of WT1, which led to the suppression of the WT1-mediated podocalyxin expression in podocytes. PINCH1 also repressed podocalyxin gene transcription in a promoter-luciferase reporter assay.
CONCLUSION/SIGNIFICANCE: These results indicate that PINCH1 can shuttle into the nucleus from cytoplasm in podocytes, wherein it interacts with WT1 and suppresses podocyte-specific gene expression. Our studies reveal a previously unrecognized, novel function of PINCH1, in which it acts as a transcriptional regulator through controlling specific gene expression.
PINCH1 是一种含有五个 LIM 结构域的衔接蛋白,在调节整合素介导的细胞黏附、迁移和上皮-间充质转化中发挥重要作用。PINCH1 在损伤后的纤维化肾脏中被诱导,主要定位于局灶黏附部位。它是否能转位到细胞核并直接参与基因调控尚完全未知。
方法/主要发现:我们使用培养的肾小球足细胞作为模型系统,表明 PINCH1 的表达在 TGF-β1 刺激下被诱导,TGF-β1 是一种促纤维化细胞因子,可促进足细胞功能障碍。有趣的是,增加的 PINCH1 不仅定位于局灶黏附部位,而且在 TGF-β1 刺激后还发生核转位。PINCH1 的这种核转位显然依赖于其 C 末端的假定核输出/定位信号(NES/NLS),因为缺失或定点突变消除了其核穿梭。共免疫沉淀和下拉实验表明,PINCH1 与 Wilms 瘤 1 蛋白(WT1)相互作用,WT1 是一种核转录因子,对于调节成年肾脏中足细胞特异性基因表达至关重要。PINCH1 与 WT1 的相互作用由 PINCH1 的 LIM1 结构域和 WT1 的 C 末端锌指结构域介导,导致 WT1 介导的足细胞中 podocalyxin 表达受到抑制。PINCH1 还在启动子-荧光素酶报告基因检测中抑制 podocalyxin 基因转录。
结论/意义:这些结果表明,PINCH1 可以在足细胞中从细胞质转位到细胞核,在细胞核内与 WT1 相互作用并抑制足细胞特异性基因表达。我们的研究揭示了 PINCH1 的一个以前未被认识的新功能,即通过控制特定基因的表达,作为一种转录调节剂发挥作用。