Karin Mattsson
Karolinska Institutet
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Karin Mattsson.
Journal of General Virology | 1999
Laszlo Szekely; Csaba Kiss; Karin Mattsson; Elena Kashuba; Katja Pokrovskaja; A. Juhász; Pia Holmvall; George Klein
Subnuclear distribution of the human herpesvirus-8 (HHV-8)- encoded nuclear protein LNA-1 was analysed at high resolution in body cavity (BC) lymphoma-derived cell lines, in cell hybrids between BC cells and various human and mouse cells and in freshly infected K562 and ECV cell lines. Three-dimensional reconstruction of nuclei from optical sections and quantitative analysis of the distribution of LNA-1 fluorescence in relation to chromatin showed that LNA-1 associates preferentially with the border of heterochromatin in the interphase nuclei. This was further confirmed in the following systems: in endo- and exonuclease-digested nuclei, in human-mouse (BC-1-Sp2- 0) hybrids and on chromatin spreads. LNA-1 was found to bind to mitotic chromosomes at random. Epstein-Barr virus (EBV), but not HHV-8, was rapidly lost from mouse-human hybrid cells in parallel with the loss of human chromosomes. HHV-8 could persist on the residual mouse background for more than 8 months. In early human-mouse hybrids that contain a single fused nucleus, LNA-1 preferentially associates with human chromatin. After the gradual loss of the human chromosomes, LNA-1 becomes associated with the murine pericentromeric heterochromatin. In human-human hybrids derived from the fusion of the HHV-8-carrying BCBL-1 cells and the EBV-immortalized lymphoblastoid cell line IB4, LNA-1 did not co-localize with EBNA-1, EBNA-2, EBNA-5 or EBNA-6. LNA-1 was not associated with PML containing ND10 bodies either. DNase but not RNase or detergent treatment of isolated nuclei destroys LNA-1 bodies. In advanced apoptotic cells LNA- 1 bodies remain intact but are not included in the apoptotic bodies themselves.
Journal of General Virology | 2002
Karin Mattsson; Csaba Kiss; Georgina Platt; Guy R. Simpson; Elena Kashuba; George Klein; Thomas F. Schulz; Laszlo Szekely
LANA, the major latency-associated nuclear antigen of Kaposis sarcoma herpesvirus/human herpesvirus-8 (KSHV/HHV-8), binds RING3 protein, one of five human homologues of the fsh (female sterile homeotic) gene product of Drosophila. In KSHV/HHV-8-infected cells LANA and the viral episomes accumulate in heterochromatin-associated nuclear bodies. Here we show that in several KSHV/HHV-8-negative cell lines derived from carcinomas, sarcomas and lymphomas, RING3 was expressed at low levels, primarily localized to the euchromatin, and dissociated from the chromosomes during mitosis. In contrast, in KSHV/HHV-8-infected body cavity lymphoma cells the bulk of RING3 localizes to the LANA nuclear bodies and remains associated with the chromosomes during cell division. KSHV/HHV-8-infected body cavity lymphoma cells expressed RING3 at much higher levels than cells without the virus. Transfection of full-length LANA, but not the C terminus alone, greatly induced RING3 gene expression, and LANA and RING3 co-localized even in the transfected cells, in the absence of KSHV/HHV-8 viral DNA. High levels of LANA expression led to the disappearance of heterochromatin in both human and mouse cells. We suggest that LANA and RING3 may create a local euchromatic microenvironment around the viral episomes that are anchored to the heterochromatin.
Journal of Virology | 2003
Abel Viejo-Borbolla; Emrah Kati; Julie Sheldon; Kavita Nathan; Karin Mattsson; Laszlo Szekely; Thomas F. Schulz
ABSTRACT The latency-associated nuclear antigen 1 (LANA-1) of Kaposis sarcoma-associated herpesvirus (KSHV) is required for the maintenance and replication of viral episomal DNA. The binding sites for nuclear heterochromatin and transcriptional repressor complexes are located in an amino-terminal region of LANA-1, whereas those for viral episomal DNA, p53, pRB, and members of the BRD/fsh family of nuclear proteins are located in its carboxy-terminal domain. LANA-1 activates or represses several cellular and viral promoters. In this report we show that a domain of 15 amino acids (amino acids 1129 to 1143), located close to the carboxy-terminal end of LANA-1, is required for the interaction of LANA-1 with nuclear heterochromatin or nuclear matrix, and for the ability of LANA-1 to activate the Epstein-Barr virus Cp promoter. LANA-1 proteins that are tightly associated with nuclear heterochromatin or matrix differ in molecular weight from LANA-1 proteins that can be dissociated from the nuclear matrix by high-salt buffers, suggesting that posttranslational modifications may determine the association of LANA-1 with nuclear heterochromatin or matrix.
Journal of General Virology | 2001
Katja Pokrovskaja; Karin Mattsson; Elena Kashuba; George Klein; Laszlo Szekely
We have previously shown that Epstein-Barr virus (EBV)-encoded EBNA-5 is localized to PML bodies (PODs) in EBV-immortalized lymphoblastoid cell lines (LCLs). Here we have extended our study of the subnuclear localization of EBNA-5 and found a strict co-localization with PML in LCLs and in BL lines with an immunoblastic, LCL-like phenotype. Moreover, GFP-EBNA-5 accumulated in PML bodies upon transfection into LCLs. In contrast, transfection of cell lines of non-immunoblastic origin with an EBNA-5 expression construct showed preferential localization of the protein to the nucleoplasm. Since PML is involved in proteasome-dependent protein degradation, we investigated the total levels and sub-cellular localization of EBNA-5 upon inhibition of proteasome activity. We found that a proteasome inhibitor, MG132, induced the translocation of both endogenous and transfected EBNA-5 to the nucleoli in every cell line tested. The total EBNA-5 protein levels were not affected by the proteasomal block. EBNA-5 forms complexes with heat shock protein Hsp70. The proteasome inhibitor induced a rise in total levels of Hsp70 and dramatically changed its homogeneous nuclear and cytoplasmic distribution into nucleolar and cytoplasmic. This effect was EBNA-5-independent. The nucleolar localization of Hsp70 was enhanced by the presence of EBNA-5, however. EBNA-5 also enhanced the nucleolar translocation of a mutant p53 in a colon cancer line, SW480, treated with MG132. The coordinated changes in EBNA-5 and Hsp70 localization and the effect of EBNA-5 on mutant p53 distribution upon MG132 treatment might reflect the involvement of EBNA-5 in the regulation of intracellular protein trafficking associated with the proteasome-mediated degradation.
International Journal of Cancer | 2003
Elena Kashuba; Karin Mattsson; Katja Pokrovskaja; Csaba Kiss; Marina Protopopova; Barbro Ehlin-Henriksson; George Klein; Laszlo Szekely
Epstein‐Barr virus (EBV) carrying lymphoblastoid cells of normal origin express the full program of all 9 virus‐encoded, growth transformation associated proteins. They have an intact p53 pathway as a rule. This raises the question of whether any of the viral proteins impair the pathway functionally. Using a yeast 2‐hybrid system, we have shown that EBNA‐5 but not the other EBNAs interacts with the p14ARF protein, a regulator of the p53 pathway. The interaction was confirmed in vitro using a GST pull‐down assay. Moreover, expression of EBNA‐5 increased the survival of p14ARF‐transfected cells. EBV infection of resting B cells induced the expression of p14ARF mRNA without increased level of the protein. A fraction of the p14ARF localized to the nucleoli but the bulk of the protein accumulated in nuclear but extranucleolar inclusions. Formation of the extranucleolar inclusions led to complete relocalization of EBNA‐5 from nucleoplasm to these structures. The inclusions also contained p53 and HDM2, and were surrounded by PML bodies and proteasomes, which suggests that these inclusions could be targets for proteasome dependent protein degradation.
Molecular Cancer | 2003
Elena Kashuba; Karin Mattsson; George Klein; Laszlo Szekely
Backgroundp14ARF is a protein product of the alternative reading frame of the human INK4a locus. It functions as a tumor suppressor protein. p14ARF suppresses growth through p53-dependent and p53-independent pathways.Resultsp14ARF protein localizes primarily to the nucleoli. Here we show that in transfected cells p14ARF also appears in Hsp70 positive extranucleolar inclusions. The formation of p14ARF inclusions induces the parallel re-localization p53 and HDM2 to these sites that are also targeted by PML bodies and proteasomes.ConclusionOur data show that co-localization between p53, HDM2 and p14ARF occurs at extranucleolar sites. Accumulation of PML and proteasomes at these sites suggest that the components of the nuclear inclusions are targeted for proteasome-mediated degradation.
Immunology Letters | 2002
Noémi M. Nagy; Karin Mattsson; Akihiko Maeda; Anquan Liu; Laszlo Szekely; Eva Klein
The unique manifestation of the inherited immunodeficiency, X-linked lymphoproliferative disease (XLP), is the impaired control of EBV infection. The gene, which carries mutations or is deleted in the patients, has been identified (Xq25). The encoded protein (SAP, 128 aa) contains a single SH2 domain and binds to signaling lymphocytic activation molecule (SLAM) and to other related surface molecules that are expressed on activated T, B and NK cells. SAP modifies signal transduction through its association with these molecules. Initially it was assumed that SAP acts passively by interfering and blocking active interactions involving other SH2 carrying molecules. We demonstrated that SAP protein is expressed in activated T and NK, but not in activated B cells. This finding is in line with the fact that in vitro performance of effector cells derived from XLP patients is impaired. However, it is still not known why the severe symptoms (fatal mononucleosis or malignant lymphoproliferation in the survivors of the primary infection) are elicited by EBV. We studied SAP expression in several Burkitt lymphoma (BL) derived lines. In contrast to normal B cells, certain lines expressed SAP. These were all type I cells in the Burkitt line nomenclature: they expressed only one of the EBV encoded proteins (EBNA-1) and their phenotype corresponded to resting B cells. Lymphoblastoid cell lines and type III BLs, whose phenotype resembled activated B cells and expressed all nine EBV encoded proteins, were devoid of SAP. The relationship between cell activation and SAP expression is reciprocal in T and B cells i.e. BL lines, activated T and NK cells express SAP, while BL blasts do not express SAP. This opposite relationship may be exploited for studies about the function of SAP.
Virology | 2003
Eileen Bridge; Karin Mattsson; Anders Aspegren; Arunima Sengupta
Adenovirus early region 4 (E4) mutants are defective for late gene expression and show reduced levels of late RNA in both the cytoplasm and the nucleus. These reductions reflect a posttranscriptional defect in the production of viral late RNA. We find that E4 mutants form replication centers during the initial stages of infection and are able to redistribute splicing factors to transcription sites that surround viral replication centers. However, E4 mutant infected cultures have reduced numbers of cells with splicing factors localized in enlarged interchromatin granule clusters during the late phase. Although the late-phase interchromatin granule clusters that formed in wild-type and E4 mutant infected cells had similar levels of poly(A) RNA, they contained reduced levels of viral RNA. These results suggest that E4 mutants do not efficiently accumulate viral late RNA in late-phase interchromatin granule clusters following the onset of late RNA transcription.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2001
Karin Mattsson; Katja Pokrovskaja; Csaba Kiss; George Klein; Laszlo Szekely
International Journal of Cancer | 2000
Noémi M. Nagy; Cristina Cerboni; Karin Mattsson; Akihiko Maeda; Péter Gogolák; Janos Sumegi; Arpad Lanyi; Laszlo Szekely; Ennio Carbone; George Klein; Eva Klein