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      Stability of Smyd1 in endothelial cells is controlled by PML-dependent SUMOylation upon cytokine stimulation

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          Abstract

          Smyd1 is an epigenetic modulator of gene expression that has been well-characterized in muscle cells. It was recently reported that Smyd1 levels are modulated by inflammatory processes. Since inflammation affects the vascular endothelium, this study aimed to characterize Smyd1 expression in endothelial cells. We detected Smyd1 in human endothelial cells (HUVEC and EA.hy926 cells), where the protein was largely localized in PML nuclear bodies (PML-NBs). By transfection of EA.hy926 cells with expression vectors encoding Smyd1, PML, SUMO1, active or mutant forms of the SUMO protease SuPr1 and/or the SUMO-conjugation enzyme UBC9, as well as Smyd1- or PML-specific siRNAs, in the presence or absence of the translation blocker cycloheximide or the proteasome-inhibitor MG132, and supported by computational modeling, we show that Smyd1 is SUMOylated in a PML-dependent manner and thereby addressed for degradation in proteasomes. Furthermore, transfection with Smyd1-encoding vectors led to PML up-regulation at the mRNA level, while PML transfection lowered Smyd1 protein stability. Incubation of EA.hy926 cells with the pro-inflammatory cytokine TNF-α resulted in a constant increase in Smyd1 mRNA and protein over 24 h, while incubation with IFN-γ induced a transient increase in Smyd1 expression, which peaked at 6 h and decreased to control values within 24 h. The IFN-γ-induced increase in Smyd1 was accompanied by more Smyd1 SUMOylation and more/larger PML-NBs. In conclusion, our data indicate that in endothelial cells, Smyd1 levels are regulated through a negative feedback mechanism based on SUMOylation and PML availability. This molecular control loop is stimulated by various cytokines.

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          Most cited references54

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          GROMACS: High performance molecular simulations through multi-level parallelism from laptops to supercomputers

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            PROCHECK: a program to check the stereochemical quality of protein structures

            Journal of Applied Crystallography, 26(2), 283-291
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              The HADDOCK2.2 Web Server: User-Friendly Integrative Modeling of Biomolecular Complexes.

              The prediction of the quaternary structure of biomolecular macromolecules is of paramount importance for fundamental understanding of cellular processes and drug design. In the era of integrative structural biology, one way of increasing the accuracy of modeling methods used to predict the structure of biomolecular complexes is to include as much experimental or predictive information as possible in the process. This has been at the core of our information-driven docking approach HADDOCK. We present here the updated version 2.2 of the HADDOCK portal, which offers new features such as support for mixed molecule types, additional experimental restraints and improved protocols, all of this in a user-friendly interface. With well over 6000 registered users and 108,000 jobs served, an increasing fraction of which on grid resources, we hope that this timely upgrade will help the community to solve important biological questions and further advance the field. The HADDOCK2.2 Web server is freely accessible to non-profit users at http://haddock.science.uu.nl/services/HADDOCK2.2.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                (View ORCID Profile)
                Journal
                Biochemical Journal
                Portland Press Ltd.
                0264-6021
                1470-8728
                January 15 2021
                January 15 2021
                January 15 2021
                : 478
                : 1
                : 217-234
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Shear Stress and Vascular Biology Research Group, Institute of Physiology, Charité — Universitätsmedizin, Berlin, 10117 Berlin, Germany
                [2 ]In Silico Toxicology and Structural Bioinformatics, Institute of Physiology, Charité — Universitätsmedizin, Berlin, 10117 Berlin, Germany
                [3 ]Department of Sports Medicine, University Medicine Tübingen, 72076 Tübingen, Germany
                [4 ]German Centre for Cardiovascular Research (DZHK), 13353 Berlin, Germany
                Article
                10.1042/BCJ20200603
                33241844
                17e7f1fa-f0c6-4d22-bfa8-e31e73a05f83
                © 2021

                http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/

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