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PKM2 is essential for bladder cancer growth and maintenance

Xia, Yong; Wang, Xing; Liu, Yan; Shapiro, Ellen; Lepor, Herbert; Tang, Moon-Shong; Sun, Tung-Tien; Wu, Xue-Ru
Pyruvate kinase M2 (PKM2) has been shown to promote tumorigenesis by facilitating the Warburg effect and enhancing the activities of oncoproteins. However, this paradigm has recently been challenged by studies in which the absence of PKM2 failed to inhibit and instead accelerated tumorigenesis in mouse models. These results seem inconsistent with the fact that most human tumors overexpress PKM2. To further elucidate the role of PKM2 in tumorigenesis, we investigated the effect of PKM2 knockout in oncogenic HRAS-driven urothelial carcinoma. While PKM2 ablation in mouse urothelial cells did not affect tumor initiation, it impaired the growth and maintenance of HRAS-driven tumors. Chemical inhibition of PKM2 recapitulated these effects. Both conditions substantially reduced complex formation of PKM2 with STAT3, their nuclear translocation, and HIF1α- and VEGF-related angiogenesis. The reduction in nuclear STAT3 in the absence of PKM2 also correlated with decreased autophagy and increased apoptosis. Time-controlled, inducible PKM2 overexpression in simple urothelial hyperplasia did not trigger tumorigenesis, while overexpression of PKM2, but not PKM1, in nodular urothelial hyperplasia with angiogenesis strongly accelerated tumorigenesis. Finally, in human patients, PKM2 was overexpressed in low-grade non-muscle invasive and high-grade muscle-invasive bladder cancer. Based on these data, PKM2 is not required for tumor initiation but is essential for tumor growth and maintenance by enhancing angiogenesis and metabolic addiction. The PKM2-STAT3-HIF1α/VEGF signaling axis may play a critical role in bladder cancer and may serve as an actionable therapeutic target.
PMID: 34903602
ISSN: 1538-7445
CID: 5109682

Dominant role of CDKN2B/p15INK4B of 9p21.3 tumor suppressor hub in inhibition of cell-cycle and glycolysis

Xia, Yong; Liu, Yan; Yang, Chao; Simeone, Diane M; Sun, Tung-Tien; DeGraff, David J; Tang, Moon-Shong; Zhang, Yingkai; Wu, Xue-Ru
Human chromosome 9p21.3 is susceptible to inactivation in cell immortalization and diseases, such as cancer, coronary artery disease and type-2 diabetes. Although this locus encodes three cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK) inhibitors (p15INK4B, p14ARF and p16INK4A), our understanding of their functions and modes of action is limited to the latter two. Here, we show that in vitro p15INK4B is markedly stronger than p16INK4A in inhibiting pRb1 phosphorylation, E2F activity and cell-cycle progression. In mice, urothelial cells expressing oncogenic HRas and lacking p15INK4B, but not those expressing HRas and lacking p16INK4A, develop early-onset bladder tumors. The potency of CDKN2B/p15INK4B in tumor suppression relies on its strong binding via key N-terminal residues to and inhibition of CDK4/CDK6. p15INK4B also binds and inhibits enolase-1, a glycolytic enzyme upregulated in most cancer types. Our results highlight the dual inhibition of p15INK4B on cell proliferation, and unveil mechanisms whereby p15INK4B aberrations may underpin cancer and non-cancer conditions.
PMID: 33824349
ISSN: 2041-1723
CID: 4840932

Mitochondrial lipid droplet formation as a detoxification mechanism to sequester and degrade excessive urothelial membranes

Liao, Yi; Tham, Daniel K L; Liang, Feng-Xia; Chang, Jennifer; Wei, Yuan; Reddy, Sudhir Putty; Sall, Joseph; Ren, Sarah J; Chicote, Javier U; Arnold, Lora L; Hu, Chih-Chi Andrew; Romih, Rok; Andrade, Leonardo R; Rindler, Michael J; Cohen, Samuel M; DeSalle, Rob; Garcia-España, Antonio; Ding, Mingxiao; Wu, Xue-Ru; Sun, Tung-Tien
The apical surface of the terminally differentiated mammalian urothelial umbrella cell is mechanically stable and highly impermeable, in part due its coverage by urothelial plaques consisting of 2D-crystals of uroplakin particles. The mechanism for regulating the uroplakin/plaque level is unclear. We found that genetic ablation of the highly tissue-specific sorting nexin Snx31, which localizes to plaques lining the multivesicular bodies (MVBs) in urothelial umbrella cells, abolishes MVBs suggesting that Snx31 plays a role in stabilizing the MVB-associated plaques by allowing them to achieve a greater curvature. Strikingly, Snx31 ablation also induces a massive accumulation of uroplakin-containing mitochondria-derived lipid droplets (LDs), which mediate uroplakin degradation via autophagy/lipophagy, leading to the loss of apical and fusiform vesicle plaques. These results suggest that MVBs play an active role in suppressing the excessive/wasteful endocytic degradation of uroplakins. Failure of this suppression mechanism triggers the formation of mitochondrial LDs so that excessive uroplakin membranes can be sequestered and degraded. Since mitochondrial LD formation, which occurs at a low level in normal urothelium, can also be induced by disturbance in uroplakin polymerization due to individual uroplakin-knockout and by arsenite, a bladder carcinogen, this pathway may represent an inducible, versatile urothelial detoxification mechanism. [Media: see text] [Media: see text] [Media: see text].
PMID: 31577526
ISSN: 1939-4586
CID: 4116262

Uroplakins play conserved roles in egg fertilization and acquired additional urothelial functions during mammalian divergence

Liao, Yi; Chang, Hung-Chi; Liang, Feng-Xia; Chung, Pei-Jung; Wei, Yuan; Nguyen, Tuan-Phi; Zhou, Ge; Talebian, Sheeva; Krey, Lewis C; Deng, Fang-Ming; Wong, Tak-Wah; Chicote, Javier U; Grifo, James A; Keefe, David L; Shapiro, Ellen; Lepor, Herbert; Wu, Xue-Ru; DeSalle, Robert; Garcia-España, Antonio; Kim, Sang Yong; Sun, Tung-Tien
Uroplakin (UP) tetraspanins and their associated proteins are major mammalian urothelial differentiation products that form unique 2D-crystals of 16-nm particles ("urothelial plaques") covering the apical urothelial surface. Although uroplakins are highly expressed only in mouse urothelium and are often referred to as being urothelium-specific, they are also expressed in several nonurothelial cell types in stomach, kidney, prostate, epididymis, testis/sperms and ovary/oocytes. In oocytes, uroplakins co-localize with CD9 on cell surface and multivesicular body-derived exosomes, and the cytoplasmic tail of UPIIIa undergoes a conserved fertilization-dependent, Fyn-mediated tyrosine-phosphorylation that also occurs in Xenopus laevis eggs. Uroplakin knockout and antibody blocking reduce mouse eggs' fertilization rate in in vitro fertilization assays, and UPII/IIIa double-knockout mice have a smaller litter size. Phylogenetic analyses showed that uroplakin sequences underwent significant mammal-specific changes. These results suggest that, by mediating signal transduction and modulating membrane stability that do not require 2D-crystal formation, uroplakins can perform conserved and more ancestral fertilization functions in mouse and frog eggs. Uroplakins acquired the ability to form 2D- crystalline plaques during mammalian divergence enabling them to perform additional functions, including umbrella cell enlargement and the formation of permeability and mechanical barriers, in order to protect/modify the apical surface of the modern-day mammalian urothelium.
PMID: 30303751
ISSN: 1939-4586
CID: 3335002

The Tetraspanin-Associated Uroplakins Family (UPK2/3) Is Evolutionarily Related to PTPRQ, a Phosphotyrosine Phosphatase Receptor

Chicote, Javier U; DeSalle, Rob; Segarra, Jose; Sun, Tung-Tien; Garcia-Espana, Antonio
Uroplakins are a widespread group of vertebrate integral membrane proteins that belong to two different families: UPK1a and UPK1b belong to the large tetraspanin (TSPAN) gene family, and UPK3a, UPK3b, UPK3c, UPK3d, UPK2a and UPK2b form a family of their own, the UPK2/3 tetraspanin-associated family. In a previous study, we reported that uroplakins first appeared in vertebrates, and that uroplakin tetraspanins (UPK1a and UPK1b) should have originated by duplication of an ancestor tetraspanin gene. However, the evolutionary origin of the UPK2/3 family remains unclear. In this study, we provide evidence that the UPK2/3 family originated by gene duplication and domain loss from a protoPTPRQ-like basal deuterostome gene. PTPRQs are members of the subtype R3 tyrosine phosphatase receptor (R3 PTPR) family, which are characterized by having a unique modular composition of extracellular fibronectin (FN3) repeats, a transmembrane helix, and a single intra-cytoplasmic phosphotyrosine phophatase (PTP) domain. Our assumption of a deuterostome protoPTPRQ-like gene as an ancestor of the UPK2/3 family by gene duplication and loss of its PTP and fibronectin (FN3) domains, excluding the one closest to the transmembrane helix, is based on the following: (i) phylogenetic analyses, (ii) the existence of an identical intron/exon gene pattern between UPK2/3 and the corresponding genetic region in R3 PTPRs, (iii) the conservation of cysteine patterns and protein motifs between UPK2/3 and PTPRQ proteins and, (iv) the existence in tunicates, the closest organisms to vertebrates, of two sequences related to PTPRQ; one with the full subtype R3 modular characteristic and another without the PTP domain but with a short cytoplasmic tail with some sequence similarity to that of UPK3a. This finding will facilitate further studies on the structure and function of these important proteins with implications in human diseases.
PMCID:5242461
PMID: 28099513
ISSN: 1932-6203
CID: 2413012

Sequential and compartmentalized action of Rabs, SNAREs and MAL in the apical delivery of fusiform vesicles in urothelial umbrella cells

Wankel, Bret; Ouyang, Jiangyong; Guo, Xuemei; Hadjiolova, Krassimira; Miller, Jeremy; Liao, Yi; Tham, Daniel Kai Long; Romih, Rok; Andrade, Leonardo R; Gumper, Iwona; Simon, Jean-Pierre; Sachdeva, Rakhee; Tolmachova, Tanya; Seabra, Miguel C; Fukuda, Mitsunori; Schaeren-Wiemers, Nicole; Hong, WanJin; Sabatini, David D; Wu, Xue-Ru; Kong, Xiangpeng; Kreibich, Gert; Rindler, Michael J; Sun, Tung-Tien
Uroplakins (UPs) are major differentiation products of urothelial umbrella cells, playing important roles in forming the permeability barrier, and in the expansion/stabilization of the apical membrane. Further, UPIa serves as a uropathogenic E. coli receptor. While it is understood that UPs are delivered to the apical membrane via fusiform vesicles (FVs), the mechanisms that regulate this exocytic pathway remain poorly understood. Immuno-microscopy of normal and mutant mouse urothelia showed that the UP-delivering FVs contained Rab8/11 and Rab27b/Slac2-a, which mediate apical transport along actin filaments. Subsequently, a Rab27b/Slp2-a complex mediated FV-membrane anchorage before SNARE-mediated and MAL-facilitated apical fusion. We also showed that keratin 20 (K20), which formed a chicken-wire network 150-300 nm below the apical membrane and had hole sizes allowing FV passage, defined a subapical compartment containing FVs primed and strategically located for fusion. Finally, we showed that Rab8/11 and Rab27b function in the same pathway, that Rab27b-knockout leads to uroplakin and Slp2-a destabilization, and that Rab27b works upstream from MAL. These data support a unifying model in which UP cargoes are targeted for apical insertion via sequential interactions with Rabs and their effectors, SNAREs and MAL, and in which K20 plays a key role in regulating vesicular trafficking.
PMCID:4865319
PMID: 27009205
ISSN: 1939-4586
CID: 2052152

Proteus mirabilis fimbriae- and urease-dependent clusters assemble in an extracellular niche to initiate bladder stone formation

Schaffer, Jessica N; Norsworthy, Allison N; Sun, Tung-Tien; Pearson, Melanie M
The catheter-associated uropathogenProteus mirabilisfrequently causes urinary stones, but little has been known about the initial stages of bladder colonization and stone formation. We found thatP. mirabilisrapidly invades the bladder urothelium, but generally fails to establish an intracellular niche. Instead, it forms extracellular clusters in the bladder lumen, which form foci of mineral deposition consistent with development of urinary stones. These clusters elicit a robust neutrophil response, and we present evidence of neutrophil extracellular trap generation during experimental urinary tract infection. We identified two virulence factors required for cluster development: urease, which is required for urolithiasis, and mannose-resistantProteus-like fimbriae. The extracellular cluster formation byP. mirabilisstands in direct contrast to uropathogenicEscherichia coli, which readily formed intracellular bacterial communities but not luminal clusters or urinary stones. We propose that extracellular clusters are a key mechanism ofP. mirabilissurvival and virulence in the bladder.
PMCID:4843424
PMID: 27044107
ISSN: 1091-6490
CID: 2066032

Dual ligand/receptor interactions activate urothelial defenses against uropathogenic E. coli

Liu, Yan; Memet, Sylvie; Saban, Ricardo; Kong, Xiangpeng; Aprikian, Pavel; Sokurenko, Evgeni; Sun, Tung-Tien; Wu, Xue-Ru
During urinary tract infection (UTI), the second most common bacterial infection, dynamic interactions take place between uropathogenic E. coli (UPEC) and host urothelial cells. While significant strides have been made in the identification of the virulence factors of UPEC, our understanding of how the urothelial cells mobilize innate defenses against the invading UPEC remains rudimentary. Here we show that mouse urothelium responds to the adhesion of type 1-fimbriated UPEC by rapidly activating the canonical NF-kappaB selectively in terminally differentiated, superficial (umbrella) cells. This activation depends on a dual ligand/receptor system, one between FimH adhesin and uroplakin Ia and another between lipopolysaccharide and Toll-like receptor 4. When activated, all the nuclei (up to 11) of a multinucleated umbrella cell are affected, leading to significant amplification of proinflammatory signals. Intermediate and basal cells of the urothelium undergo NF-kappaB activation only if the umbrella cells are detached or if the UPEC persistently express type 1-fimbriae. Inhibition of NF-kappaB prevents the urothelium from clearing the intracellular bacterial communities, leading to prolonged bladder colonization by UPEC. Based on these data, we propose a model of dual ligand/receptor system in innate urothelial defenses against UPEC.
PMCID:4637824
PMID: 26549759
ISSN: 2045-2322
CID: 1834512

Anatomy and Physiology of the Urinary Tract: Relation to Host Defense and Microbial Infection

Hickling, Duane R; Sun, Tung-Tien; Wu, Xue-Ru
The urinary tract exits to a body surface area that is densely populated by a wide range of microbes. Yet, under most normal circumstances, it is typically considered sterile, i.e., devoid of microbes, a stark contrast to the gastrointestinal and upper respiratory tracts where many commensal and pathogenic microbes call home. Not surprisingly, infection of the urinary tract over a healthy person's lifetime is relatively infrequent, occurring once or twice or not at all for most people. For those who do experience an initial infection, the great majority (70% to 80%) thankfully do not go on to suffer from multiple episodes. This is a far cry from the upper respiratory tract infections, which can afflict an otherwise healthy individual countless times. The fact that urinary tract infections are hard to elicit in experimental animals except with inoculum 3-5 orders of magnitude greater than the colony counts that define an acute urinary infection in humans (105 cfu/ml), also speaks to the robustness of the urinary tract defense. How can the urinary tract be so effective in fending off harmful microbes despite its orifice in a close vicinity to that of the microbe-laden gastrointestinal tract? While a complete picture is still evolving, the general consensus is that the anatomical and physiological integrity of the urinary tract is of paramount importance in maintaining a healthy urinary tract. When this integrity is breached, however, the urinary tract can be at a heightened risk or even recurrent episodes of microbial infections. In fact, recurrent urinary tract infections are a significant cause of morbidity and time lost from work and a major challenge to manage clinically. Additionally, infections of the upper urinary tract often require hospitalization and prolonged antibiotic therapy. In this chapter, we provide an overview of the basic anatomy and physiology of the urinary tract with an emphasis on their specific roles in host defense. We also highlight the important structural and functional abnormalities that predispose the urinary tract to microbial infections.
PMCID:4566164
PMID: 26350322
ISSN: 2165-0497
CID: 2482942

Generation of divergent uroplakin tetraspanins and their partners during vertebrate evolution: identification of novel uroplakins

Desalle, Rob; Chicote, Javier U; Sun, Tung-Tien; Garcia-Espana, Antonio
BACKGROUND: The recent availability of sequenced genomes from a broad array of chordates (cephalochordates, urochordates and vertebrates) has allowed us to systematically analyze the evolution of uroplakins: tetraspanins (UPK1a and UPK1b families) and their respective partner proteins (UPK2 and UPK3 families). RESULTS: We report here: (1) the origin of uroplakins in the common ancestor of vertebrates, (2) the appearance of several residues that have statistically significantly positive dN/dS ratios in the duplicated paralogs of uroplakin genes, and (3) the existence of strong coevolutionary relationships between UPK1a/1b tetraspanins and their respective UPK2/UPK3-related partner proteins. Moreover, we report the existence of three new UPK2/3 family members we named UPK2b, 3c and 3d, which will help clarify the evolutionary relationships between fish, amphibian and mammalian uroplakins that may perform divergent functions specific to these different and physiologically distinct groups of vertebrates. CONCLUSIONS: Since our analyses cover species of all major chordate groups this work provides an extremely clear overall picture of how the uroplakin families and their partner proteins have evolved in parallel. We also highlight several novel features of uroplakin evolution including the appearance of UPK2b and 3d in fish and UPK3c in the common ancestor of reptiles and mammals. Additional studies of these novel uroplakins should lead to new insights into uroplakin structure and function.
PMCID:3922775
PMID: 24450554
ISSN: 1471-2148
CID: 941092