Cargando…

ASPSCR-1 and Sirt-5 alleviate Clonorchis liver fluke rCsNOSIP-induced oxidative stress, proliferation, and migration in cholangiocarcinoma cells

BACKGROUND: Clonorchiasis, caused by the infection of Clonorchis sinensis (C. sinensis), is a kind of neglected tropical disease, but it is highly related to cholangiocarcinoma. It has been well known that NO from chronic inflammation responses are thought to be a major component of the damage and u...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Bian, Meng, Li, Shan, Zhou, Hanzong, Bi, Lijun, Shen, Yong, Tingjin, Chen, Yu, Xinbing, Huang, Yan, Xu, Qingxia
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10664913/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37948465
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0011727
_version_ 1785138715343978496
author Bian, Meng
Li, Shan
Zhou, Hanzong
Bi, Lijun
Shen, Yong
Tingjin, Chen
Yu, Xinbing
Huang, Yan
Xu, Qingxia
author_facet Bian, Meng
Li, Shan
Zhou, Hanzong
Bi, Lijun
Shen, Yong
Tingjin, Chen
Yu, Xinbing
Huang, Yan
Xu, Qingxia
author_sort Bian, Meng
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Clonorchiasis, caused by the infection of Clonorchis sinensis (C. sinensis), is a kind of neglected tropical disease, but it is highly related to cholangiocarcinoma. It has been well known that NO from chronic inflammation responses are thought to be a major component of the damage and ultimate carcinogenesis ESPs such as nitric oxide synthase interacting protein (NOSIP) are thought to enhance the damage. The objective of this study was to identify the protein candidates interact with recombinant CsNOSIP (rCsNOSIP) and explore their role involved in CCA development or progression. METHODS: We applied HuProt microarray containing 21,000 probe sets for a systematic identification of rCsNOSIP-binding proteins and grouped binding hits by gene function. Pull-down assays were used to confirm the interaction of rCsNOSIP with alveolar soft part sarcoma (ASPSCR-1) and sirtuins 5 (Sirt-5). ASPSCR-1/Sirt-5 over-expression and siRNA knockdown experiments were employed for obtain of ASPSCR-1/Sirt-5 high or low expression (ASP-oe/Sirt5-oe or ASP-si/Sirt5-si) cholangiocarcinoma cell line (CCLP-1) cells. Nitric oxide (NO) and reactive oxygen species assay (ROS) as well as cell proliferation and wound-healing assays were performed to observe the effect of rCsNOSIP on ASP-oe/Sirt5-oe or ASP-si/Sirt5-si CCLP-1 cells. RESULTS: Seventy candidate proteins protein "hits" were detected as rCsNOSIP-binding proteins by HuProt microarray and bioinformatics analysis. Pull down assay showed that ASPSCR-1 and Sirt-5 could interact with rCsNOSIP. In addition, endotoxin-free-rCsNOSIP could increase the production of NO and ROS and promote the migration of CCLP-1 cells, while its effect on enhancing cell proliferation was not significant. Furthermore, ROS/NO production, proliferation, or migration were increased in ASP-si or Sirt5-si CCLP-1 cells but decreased in Asp-oe or Sirt5-oe CCLP-1 cells when stimulated with rCsNOSIP. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings suggest that CsNOSIP as a component of CsESPs might promote the development and invasion of CCA and Sirt5/ ASPSCR1 as host molecules might play a novel protective role against adverse stimulus during C. sinensis infection. This work supports the idea that CsESPs induce the occurrence and progression of CCA through ROS/RNS-induced oxidative and nitrative DNA damage.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-10664913
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-106649132023-11-10 ASPSCR-1 and Sirt-5 alleviate Clonorchis liver fluke rCsNOSIP-induced oxidative stress, proliferation, and migration in cholangiocarcinoma cells Bian, Meng Li, Shan Zhou, Hanzong Bi, Lijun Shen, Yong Tingjin, Chen Yu, Xinbing Huang, Yan Xu, Qingxia PLoS Negl Trop Dis Research Article BACKGROUND: Clonorchiasis, caused by the infection of Clonorchis sinensis (C. sinensis), is a kind of neglected tropical disease, but it is highly related to cholangiocarcinoma. It has been well known that NO from chronic inflammation responses are thought to be a major component of the damage and ultimate carcinogenesis ESPs such as nitric oxide synthase interacting protein (NOSIP) are thought to enhance the damage. The objective of this study was to identify the protein candidates interact with recombinant CsNOSIP (rCsNOSIP) and explore their role involved in CCA development or progression. METHODS: We applied HuProt microarray containing 21,000 probe sets for a systematic identification of rCsNOSIP-binding proteins and grouped binding hits by gene function. Pull-down assays were used to confirm the interaction of rCsNOSIP with alveolar soft part sarcoma (ASPSCR-1) and sirtuins 5 (Sirt-5). ASPSCR-1/Sirt-5 over-expression and siRNA knockdown experiments were employed for obtain of ASPSCR-1/Sirt-5 high or low expression (ASP-oe/Sirt5-oe or ASP-si/Sirt5-si) cholangiocarcinoma cell line (CCLP-1) cells. Nitric oxide (NO) and reactive oxygen species assay (ROS) as well as cell proliferation and wound-healing assays were performed to observe the effect of rCsNOSIP on ASP-oe/Sirt5-oe or ASP-si/Sirt5-si CCLP-1 cells. RESULTS: Seventy candidate proteins protein "hits" were detected as rCsNOSIP-binding proteins by HuProt microarray and bioinformatics analysis. Pull down assay showed that ASPSCR-1 and Sirt-5 could interact with rCsNOSIP. In addition, endotoxin-free-rCsNOSIP could increase the production of NO and ROS and promote the migration of CCLP-1 cells, while its effect on enhancing cell proliferation was not significant. Furthermore, ROS/NO production, proliferation, or migration were increased in ASP-si or Sirt5-si CCLP-1 cells but decreased in Asp-oe or Sirt5-oe CCLP-1 cells when stimulated with rCsNOSIP. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings suggest that CsNOSIP as a component of CsESPs might promote the development and invasion of CCA and Sirt5/ ASPSCR1 as host molecules might play a novel protective role against adverse stimulus during C. sinensis infection. This work supports the idea that CsESPs induce the occurrence and progression of CCA through ROS/RNS-induced oxidative and nitrative DNA damage. Public Library of Science 2023-11-10 /pmc/articles/PMC10664913/ /pubmed/37948465 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0011727 Text en © 2023 Bian et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Bian, Meng
Li, Shan
Zhou, Hanzong
Bi, Lijun
Shen, Yong
Tingjin, Chen
Yu, Xinbing
Huang, Yan
Xu, Qingxia
ASPSCR-1 and Sirt-5 alleviate Clonorchis liver fluke rCsNOSIP-induced oxidative stress, proliferation, and migration in cholangiocarcinoma cells
title ASPSCR-1 and Sirt-5 alleviate Clonorchis liver fluke rCsNOSIP-induced oxidative stress, proliferation, and migration in cholangiocarcinoma cells
title_full ASPSCR-1 and Sirt-5 alleviate Clonorchis liver fluke rCsNOSIP-induced oxidative stress, proliferation, and migration in cholangiocarcinoma cells
title_fullStr ASPSCR-1 and Sirt-5 alleviate Clonorchis liver fluke rCsNOSIP-induced oxidative stress, proliferation, and migration in cholangiocarcinoma cells
title_full_unstemmed ASPSCR-1 and Sirt-5 alleviate Clonorchis liver fluke rCsNOSIP-induced oxidative stress, proliferation, and migration in cholangiocarcinoma cells
title_short ASPSCR-1 and Sirt-5 alleviate Clonorchis liver fluke rCsNOSIP-induced oxidative stress, proliferation, and migration in cholangiocarcinoma cells
title_sort aspscr-1 and sirt-5 alleviate clonorchis liver fluke rcsnosip-induced oxidative stress, proliferation, and migration in cholangiocarcinoma cells
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10664913/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37948465
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0011727
work_keys_str_mv AT bianmeng aspscr1andsirt5alleviateclonorchisliverflukercsnosipinducedoxidativestressproliferationandmigrationincholangiocarcinomacells
AT lishan aspscr1andsirt5alleviateclonorchisliverflukercsnosipinducedoxidativestressproliferationandmigrationincholangiocarcinomacells
AT zhouhanzong aspscr1andsirt5alleviateclonorchisliverflukercsnosipinducedoxidativestressproliferationandmigrationincholangiocarcinomacells
AT bilijun aspscr1andsirt5alleviateclonorchisliverflukercsnosipinducedoxidativestressproliferationandmigrationincholangiocarcinomacells
AT shenyong aspscr1andsirt5alleviateclonorchisliverflukercsnosipinducedoxidativestressproliferationandmigrationincholangiocarcinomacells
AT tingjinchen aspscr1andsirt5alleviateclonorchisliverflukercsnosipinducedoxidativestressproliferationandmigrationincholangiocarcinomacells
AT yuxinbing aspscr1andsirt5alleviateclonorchisliverflukercsnosipinducedoxidativestressproliferationandmigrationincholangiocarcinomacells
AT huangyan aspscr1andsirt5alleviateclonorchisliverflukercsnosipinducedoxidativestressproliferationandmigrationincholangiocarcinomacells
AT xuqingxia aspscr1andsirt5alleviateclonorchisliverflukercsnosipinducedoxidativestressproliferationandmigrationincholangiocarcinomacells