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Description
Environmental stressors can perturb cellular homeostasis. Cells activate an integrated stress response that will alleviate the effects of the ongoing stress. Stress-activated protein kinases function to phosphorylate the eukaryotic translation initiation factor, eIF2α, which results in inhibition of translation of house-keeping genes. Following these events, formation of cytoplasmic messenger ribonucleoprotein

Environmental stressors can perturb cellular homeostasis. Cells activate an integrated stress response that will alleviate the effects of the ongoing stress. Stress-activated protein kinases function to phosphorylate the eukaryotic translation initiation factor, eIF2α, which results in inhibition of translation of house-keeping genes. Following these events, formation of cytoplasmic messenger ribonucleoprotein complexes, known as stress granules, will take place. Stress granules typically have a pro-survival function. These studies demonstrate that assembly of stress granules can also lead to necroptosis. Necroptosis is a caspase-independent, receptor-interacting protein kinase 3 (RIPK3)-dependent cell death pathway executed by mixed lineage kinase domain-like (MLKL) protein. Cellular stress is induced using arsenite (oxidative stress) or by infection with vaccinia virus (VACV) E3 protein Z-DNA-binding domain mutant, VACV-E3LΔ83N. In both cases, RIPK3-dependent death was observed in interferon (IFN)-primed L929 cells. This death led to phosphorylation and trimerization of MLKL, indicative of necroptosis. Necroptosis induced by oxidative stress and VACV-E3LΔ83N infection was dependent on the host Z-form nucleic acid sensor, DNA-dependent activator of IFN-regulatory factors (DAI), as it was inhibited in DAI-deficient L929 cells. Under both cellular stresses, DAI associated with RIPK3 and formed high-molecular-weight complexes, consistent with formation of the necrosomes. DAI localized into stress granules during necroptosis induced by arsenite and the mutant virus, and the necrosomes formed only in presence of stress granule assembly. The significance of stress granules for cellular stress-induced necroptosis was demonstrated using knock-out (KO) cell lines unable to form granules: T cell-restricted intracellular antigen 1 (TIA-1) KO MEF cells and Ras GTPase-activating protein-binding proteins 1 and 2 (G3BP1/2) KO U2OS cells. Necroptosis was inhibited in absence of stress granule formation as no cell death or activation of MLKL was observed in the knock-out cell lines following arsenite treatment or VACV-E3LΔ83N infection. Furthermore, wild-type VACV was able to inhibit stress granule assembly, which coincided with the virus ability to inhibit necroptosis. These studies have led to a model of Z-form nucleic acids being involved in activation of the stress granule-mediated necroptosis following induction by environmental stressors. These results have significance for understanding the etiology of human diseases and the antiviral innate immunity.
ContributorsSzczerba, Mateusz Bartlomiej (Author) / Jacobs, Bertram L (Thesis advisor) / Langland, Jeffrey (Committee member) / Lake, Douglas (Committee member) / Chen, Qiang (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021
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Description
Programmed cell death plays an important role in a variety of processes that promote the survival of the host organism. Necroptosis, a form of programmed cell death, occurs through a signaling pathway involving the protein kinase RIPK3. In response to vaccinia virus infection, necroptosis acts through RIPK3 and the adaptor

Programmed cell death plays an important role in a variety of processes that promote the survival of the host organism. Necroptosis, a form of programmed cell death, occurs through a signaling pathway involving the protein kinase RIPK3. In response to vaccinia virus infection, necroptosis acts through RIPK3 and the adaptor protein DAI to inhibit further viral replication in host cells. Stress granules are accumulations of mRNAs that have stalled in translation due to cellular stress. The toxin arsenite is a canonical inducer of stress granule formation and can cause necroptosis. By initiating necroptosis with arsenite and vaccinia virus, this research project investigated the roles of necroptosis proteins and their localizations into stress granules. The two aims of this research project were to determine if stress granules are important for arsenite-induced necroptosis, and whether the proteins DAI, RIPK3, MLKL, and G3BP localize into stress granules. The first aim was investigated by establishing a DAI and RIPK3 expression system in U2OS cells; arsenite was then used to treat the U2OS cells as well as U2OSΔG3BP cells, which are not able to form stress granules. The second aim was carried out by designing fluorescent tagging for the necroptosis proteins in order to visualize protein localization with fluorescent microscopy. The results showed that arsenite induces DAI-dependent necroptosis in U2OS cells and that this arsenite-induced necroptosis requires stress granules. In addition, it was determined that vaccinia virus induces DAI-dependent necroptosis that also requires stress granules. This project contributes to a greater understanding of the roles of DAI and RIPK3 in necroptosis, as well as the roles of stress granules in necroptosis, both of which are important in research regarding viral infection and cellular stress.
ContributorsGogerty, Carolina (Author) / Jacobs, Bertram (Thesis director) / Langland, Jeffrey (Committee member) / Jentarra, Garilyn (Committee member) / School of Life Sciences (Contributor, Contributor) / School of Music (Contributor) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor)
Created2020-05
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Description
Programmed cell death plays an important role in a variety of processes that promote the survival of the host organism. Necroptosis, a form of programmed cell death, occurs through a signaling pathway involving receptor-interacting serine-threonine protein kinase 3 (RIPK3). In response to vaccinia virus infection, necroptosis is induced through DNA-induced

Programmed cell death plays an important role in a variety of processes that promote the survival of the host organism. Necroptosis, a form of programmed cell death, occurs through a signaling pathway involving receptor-interacting serine-threonine protein kinase 3 (RIPK3). In response to vaccinia virus infection, necroptosis is induced through DNA-induced activator of interferon (DAI), which activates RIPK3, leading to death of the cell and thereby inhibiting further viral replication in host cells. DAI also localizes into stress granules, accumulations of mRNAs that have stalled in translation due to cellular stress. The toxin arsenite, a canonical inducer of stress granule formation, was used in this project to study necroptosis. By initiating necroptosis with arsenite and vaccinia virus, this research project investigated the roles of necroptosis proteins and their potential localization into stress granules. The two aims of this research project were to determine whether stress granules are important for arsenite- and virus-induced necroptosis, and whether the proteins DAI and RIPK3 localize into stress granules. The first aim was investigated by establishing a DAI and RIPK3 expression system in U2OS cells; arsenite treatment or vaccinia virus infection was then performed on the U2OS cells as well as on U2OSΔΔG3BP1/2 cells, which are not able to form stress granules. The second aim was carried out by designing fluorescent tagging for the necroptosis proteins in order to visualize protein localization with fluorescent microscopy. The results show that arsenite induces DAI-dependent necroptosis in U2OS cells and that this arsenite-induced necroptosis likely requires stress granules. In addition, the results show that vaccinia virus induces DAI-dependent necroptosis that also likely requires stress granules in U2OS cells. Furthermore, a fluorescent RIPK3 construct was created that will allowfor future studies on protein localization during necroptosis and can be used to answer questions regarding localization of necroptosis proteins into stress granules. This project therefore contributes to a greater understanding of the roles of DAI and RIPK3 in necroptosis, as well as the roles of stress granules in necroptosis, both of which are important in research regarding viral infection and cellular stress.
ContributorsGogerty, Carolina (Author) / Jacobs, Bertram (Thesis advisor) / Langland, Jeffrey (Committee member) / Jentarra, Garilyn (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021