Glucocorticoids Preferentially Influence Expression of Nucleoskeletal Actin Network and Cell Adhesive Proteins in Human Trabecular Meshwork Cells.

dc.contributor.author

Bachman, William

dc.contributor.author

Maddala, Rupalatha

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Chakraborty, Ayon

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Eldawy, Camelia

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Skiba, Nikolai P

dc.contributor.author

Rao, Ponugoti V

dc.date.accessioned

2022-06-01T13:18:39Z

dc.date.available

2022-06-01T13:18:39Z

dc.date.issued

2022-01

dc.date.updated

2022-06-01T13:18:38Z

dc.description.abstract

Clinical use of glucocorticoids is associated with increased intraocular pressure (IOP), a major risk factor for glaucoma. Glucocorticoids have been reported to induce changes in actin cytoskeletal organization, cell adhesion, extracellular matrix, fibrogenic activity, and mechanical properties of trabecular meshwork (TM) tissue, which plays a crucial role in aqueous humor dynamics and IOP homeostasis. However, we have a limited understanding of the molecular underpinnings regulating these myriad processes in TM cells. To understand how proteins, including cytoskeletal and cell adhesion proteins that are recognized to shuttle between the cytosolic and nuclear regions, influence gene expression and other cellular activities, we used proteomic analysis to characterize the nuclear protein fraction of dexamethasone (Dex) treated human TM cells. Treatment of human TM cells with Dex for 1, 5, or 7 days led to consistent increases (by ≥ two-fold) in the levels of various actin cytoskeletal regulatory, cell adhesive, and vesicle trafficking proteins. Increases (≥two-fold) were also observed in levels of Wnt signaling regulator (glypican-4), actin-binding chromatin modulator (BRG1) and nuclear actin filament depolymerizing protein (MICAL2; microtubule-associated monooxygenase, calponin and LIM domain containing), together with a decrease in tissue plasminogen activator. These changes were independently further confirmed by immunoblotting analysis. Interestingly, deficiency of BRG1 expression blunted the Dex-induced increases in the levels of some of these proteins in TM cells. In summary, these findings indicate that the widely recognized changes in actin cytoskeletal and cell adhesive attributes of TM cells by glucocorticoids involve actin regulated BRG1 chromatin remodeling, nuclear MICAL2, and glypican-4 regulated Wnt signaling upstream of the serum response factor/myocardin controlled transcriptional activity.

dc.identifier

886754

dc.identifier.issn

2296-634X

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2296-634X

dc.identifier.uri

https://hdl.handle.net/10161/25061

dc.language

eng

dc.publisher

Frontiers Media SA

dc.relation.ispartof

Frontiers in cell and developmental biology

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10.3389/fcell.2022.886754

dc.subject

chromatin

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glaucoma

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glucocorticoids

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intraocular pressure

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nucleoskeleton

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proteomics

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trabecular meshwork

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transcription

dc.title

Glucocorticoids Preferentially Influence Expression of Nucleoskeletal Actin Network and Cell Adhesive Proteins in Human Trabecular Meshwork Cells.

dc.type

Journal article

duke.contributor.orcid

Rao, Ponugoti V|0000-0003-1553-1691

pubs.begin-page

886754

pubs.organisational-group

Duke

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School of Medicine

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Basic Science Departments

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Clinical Science Departments

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Pharmacology & Cancer Biology

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Ophthalmology

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Ophthalmology, Glaucoma

pubs.publication-status

Published

pubs.volume

10

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