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Protein linked to oxidative stress and related diseases

Protein linked to oxidative stress and related diseases
Fig. 1: The IPO13-dependent transcriptome in oxidative stress. a Heat-map of transcript data for IPO13+/+ and IPO13鈭/鈭 mESCs with or without treatment with 125鈥壩糓 hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) for 1鈥塰 followed by 2鈥塰 recovery (ST; stress treated). Log2-fold differences in expression across the four data sets (FDR cut-off鈥=鈥0.05) are shown for 2352 gene models (horizontal axis). b Multi-dimensional scaling (MDS) plot summarizing gene expression profiles of IPO13+/+ (鈥淲T鈥) and IPO13鈭/鈭 (鈥淜O鈥) ESCs for control (NS; no stress) and oxidative stress-treated (ST) conditions. c Venn diagram for the differentially expressed genes in response to stress in IPO13+/+ and IPO13鈭/鈭 ESCs (498 and 521 genes, respectively). d MA plot showing differentially expressed genes with a log2-fold change increase or decrease in expression (FDR cut-off鈥=鈥0.05) in response to oxidative stress compared to untreated ESCs. Log fold change (logFC) values are plotted against log expression values (standardized read counts). Genes highlighted in yellow were selected for validation. e鈥揻 IPO13+/+ and IPO13鈭/鈭 ESCs were treated with 125鈥壜礛 H2O2 as indicated for 1鈥塰 and then stained for 30鈥塵in with 5鈥壜礛 CellROX Green either immediately, or after a 2鈥塰 recovery period, and then analysed by flow cytometry. Quantification of the median fluorescence intensity relative to the untreated (UT) sample are shown representing the mean 卤鈥塖EM (n鈥=鈥3 independent experiments); p values (two-tailed student鈥檚 t-test) top to bottom left to right: p鈥=鈥0.0617, p鈥=鈥0.0479, p鈥=鈥0.2167, and p鈥=鈥0.0136. Source data are provided as a Source Data file. Credit: DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-26125-x

Scientists at Monash University's Biomedicine Discovery Institute (BDI) have discovered a new role for a known protein in oxidative stress, which is linked to diseases such as Alzheimer's and Parkinson's, diabetes, cardiovascular diseases, viral infection and cancer.

When cells are stressed they get damaged; the cell can then either repair itself or if the damage is too great it can die. The BDI researchers looked at , a form of chemical stress, and found that the Importin-13 protein promotes cellular death pathways in response to stress.

The study, led by Professor David Jans and conducted by post-doctoral researcher Dr. Kasia Gajewska, identified a new pathway regulated by Importin-13, which belongs to a superfamily of transporters in that move proteins, RNAs, and protein-RNA complexes in and out of the control center of the cell and the nucleus, helping to regulate stress response pathways impacting cell survival.

The findings are now published in Nature Communications.

"We were able to identify that quite a lot of genes that respond to stress are dependent on Importin-13," Dr. Gajewska said.

"No one has really worked out that Importin-13 is important in stress鈥攊n fact, it may be one of the key things in responding to stress," Professor Jans said.

"Our findings have relevance to other forms of stress such as relevant to climate change," Dr. Gajewska said. "Understanding the molecular basis of the impact of stress is more important than ever before."

Importin-13 is conserved widely in evolution, meaning that the pathway potentially relates to many different organisms, including plants.

Although a basic science study, its authors are flagging Importin-13 as a potential target for drug development.

"Kasia has demonstrated that Importin-13 is of great interest as a target for an inhibitor," Professor Jans said. "Inhibitors against these sorts of transporters have already been identified鈥攚e have worked on several for other transporters.

"This was a fantastic piece of work by Kasia," he said. "It has great implications."

Dr. Gajewska, who works in Professor Jans' Nuclear Signalling lab, was guided in bioinformatics by co-author Dr. Mirana Ramialison from the Australian Regenerative Medicine Institute at Monash to conduct the bioinformatics and analyze the transcriptomic data generated, which used a knockout cell line. She was co-supervised by Professor Jans and Dr. Kylie Wagstaff.

The study builds on previous work into Importin-13 by Professor Jans and Dr. Kylie Wagstaff that spans a decade.

Dr. Gajewska is currently working on Importin-13's critical role in neuronal differentiation. She is keen to pursue studies into the potential role of the protein in neurodegenerative diseases since oxidative stress is thought to contribute to neurological cell death and dysfunction.

The paper in Nature Communications is titled "Nuclear transporter Importin-13 plays a key role in the oxidative transcriptional response."

More information: K. A. Gajewska et al, Nuclear transporter Importin-13 plays a key role in the oxidative stress transcriptional response, Nature Communications (2021).

Journal information: Nature Communications

Provided by Monash University

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