Main research topics and
results
1. Regulation of membrane markers and growth factors during
differentiation and development of enterocytes and thymocytes. (i) Much
higher expression of TGF-a mRNA than EGF mRNA observed in developing
small intestine suggests that TGF-a is an integral physiological
regulator of growth of the small intestine during ontogeny. (ii)
Increase in the relative number of mature thymocytes by the
antiglucocorticoids mifepristone and onapristone indicate a negative
regulation of the development of T-lymphocyte precursors at the level
of dividing precursors. (iii) Lower expression of fucosylated structures
on brush-border membranes of enterocytes of adult germ-free rats as
compared with conventional rats suggests the importance of terminally
bound fucose for bacterial colonization. (iv) Surface of mannose-specific
lectin of Galanthus nivalis discriminates between immature and mature
thymocytes. The expression of the target surface structure on thymocytes
is multi-modal.
2. Structure and molecular mechanisms of function of iontransport
systems. (i) The NHAl has been cloned and sequenced in Saccharomyces
cerevisiae. Its molecular and functional characterization revealed that
it encodes a sodium/proton antiport with dual function. It may be
involved not only in the regulation of the internal concentrations of
K+, toxic Na+, Li+, and other alkaline cations, but also in buffering
of cytosolic pH. (ii) Plasma membrane H+ATPase of S. cerevisiae plays
the most important role in acidification mechanisms in yeast following
addition of glucose or other metabolizable sugars. The H+ATPase is
activated through phosphorylation of some amino acid residues near the
Cterminus. The process starts with a specific sensor (most probably
activated by fructose 6phosphate) and involves one of two G proteins (also
defined here), which activate phospholipase C and subsequently protein
kinase C, instrumental in ATPase phosphorylation. The second source of
acidity is the glycolytic production of (phosphorylated) organic acids (
a process most pronounced with glucose and fructose but very little with
galactose or maltose. (iii) ATP hydrolysis by Na+/K+ATPase proceeds via
interaction of simultaneously existing and cooperating high (E1ATP) and
low (E2ATP) affinity substrate binding sites. The interacting high and
lowaffinity ATPbinding sites resides on different catalytic subunits,
and active Na+/K+ transport requires cooperation of the catalytic
subunits. In addition, all available data are consistent with the hypothesis
that Na+/K+ATPase in the plasma membrane is an ((()2 diprotomer and
works as a functional dimer. A key role in the Na+/K+ATPase function
is played by the large cytoplasmic loop between the fourth and fifth
transmembrane segments, where the high affinity ATPbinding site is
localized.
3. Biogenesis and regulation by proteolytic degradation of amino
acid and sugar transporters.
(i) The functional heterologous expression of Candida albicans Can l
transporter in Saccharomyces cerevisiae was shown to depend upon an
operational secretory pathway in S. cerevisiae Moreover, Shr3p, an
ER-resident
protein that participates in specific packaging of S. cerevisiae amino
acid transporters into ER-derived transport vesicles, is also required.
(ii) Plasma membrane galactose-specific transporter Ga12 is internalized
via the endocytotic pathway and subsequently de-graded in the vacuole in
response to glucose addition to galactosegrown cells. The
ubiquitination of Ga12, involving transfer of ubiquitin moieties to
lysine residues of the Gal2 through the El-E2-E3 enzyme thioester
cascade, signals its degradation pathway. Of 19 known El-E2-E3 protein
components of the ubiquitination machinery, only four (Ubcl,-4,-5 and
Rsp5/Npil) are required for Gal2 degradation. (iii) Can l transporter of
C. albicans expressed in S. cerevisiae also appears to be degraded in
the vacuole in a ubiquitindependent manner.
Publications
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