Krisztina Takács-Vellai
Eötvös Loránd University
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Krisztina Takács-Vellai.
Autophagy | 2008
Márton L. Tóth; Tímea Sigmond; Éva Borsos; János Barna; Péter Erdélyi; Krisztina Takács-Vellai; László Orosz; Attila L. Kovács; György Csikós; Miklós Sass; Tibor Vellai
Aging is a multifactorial process with many mechanisms contributing to the decline. Mutations decreasing insulin/IGF-1 (insulin-like growth factor-1) or TOR (target of rapamycin) kinase-mediated signaling, mitochondrial activity and food intake each extend life span in divergent animal phyla. Understanding how these genetically distinct mechanisms interact to control longevity is a fundamental and fascinating problem in biology. Here we show that mutational inactivation of autophagy genes, which are involved in the degradation of aberrant, damaged cytoplasmic constituents accumulating in all aging cells, accelerates the rate at which the tissues age in the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans. According to our results Drosophila flies deficient in autophagy are also short-lived. We further demonstrate that reduced activity of autophagy genes suppresses life span extension in mutant nematodes with inherent dietary restriction, aberrant insulin/IGF-1 or TOR signaling, and lowered mitochondrial respiration. These findings suggest that the autophagy gene cascade functions downstream of and is inhibited by different longevity pathways in C. elegans, therefore, their effects converge on autophagy genes to slow down aging and lengthen life span. Thus, autophagy may act as a central regulatory mechanism of animal aging.
Trends in Cell Biology | 2009
Tibor Vellai; Krisztina Takács-Vellai; Miklós Sass; Daniel J. Klionsky
The accumulation of cellular damage is a feature common to all aging cells and leads to decreased ability of the organism to survive. The overall rate at which damage accumulates is influenced by conserved metabolic factors (longevity pathways and regulatory proteins) that control lifespan through adjusting mechanisms for maintenance and repair. Autophagy, the major catabolic process of eukaryotic cells that degrades and recycles damaged macromolecules and organelles, is implicated in aging and in the incidence of diverse age-related pathologies. Recent evidence has revealed that autophagic activity is required for lifespan extension in various long-lived mutant organisms, and that numerous autophagy-related genes or proteins are directly regulated by longevity pathways. These findings support the emerging view that autophagy is a central regulatory mechanism for aging in diverse eukaryotic species.
Autophagy | 2008
Tibor Vellai; Bertalan Bicsák; Márton L. Tóth; Krisztina Takács-Vellai; Attila L. Kovács
Cell growth–the primary determinant of cell size–has an intimate relationship with proliferation; cells divide only after they reach a critical size. Despite its developmental and medical significance, little is known about cellular pathways that mediate the growth of cells. Accumulating evidence demonstrates a role for autophagy–a mechanism of eukaryotic cells to digest their own constituents during development or starvation–in cell size control. Increasing autophagic activity by prolonged starvation, rapamycin treatment inhibiting TOR (target of rapamycin) signaling, or genetic intervention, causes cellular atrophy in worms, flies and mammalian cell cultures. In contrast, we have shown that in the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans mutational inactivation of two autophagy genes, unc-51/Atg1 and bec-1/Atg6, confers reduced cell size. We argue that physiological levels of autophagy are required for normal cell size, whereas both insufficient and excessive levels of autophagy lead to retarded cell growth. Furthermore, we discuss data suggesting that the insulin/IGF-1 (insulin-like growth factor receptor-1) and TGFβ (transforming growth factor-beta) signaling systems acting as major growth regulatory pathways converge on autophagy genes to control cell size. Thus, autophagy may act as a central regulatory mechanism of cell growth. Addendum to: Aladzsity I, Tóth ML, Sigmond T, Szabó E., Bicsák B, Barna J, Regős A, Orosz L, Kovács AL, Vellai T. Autophagy genes unc-51 and bec-1 are required for normal cell size in Caenorhabditis elegans. Genetics 2007; 177:655-60, DOI: 10.1534/genetics.107.075762
Cell Death & Differentiation | 2014
Máté Varga; Miklós Sass; Diána Papp; Krisztina Takács-Vellai; Julianna Kobolák; Andras Dinnyes; Daniel J. Klionsky; Tibor Vellai
Regeneration is the ability of multicellular organisms to replace damaged tissues and regrow lost body parts. This process relies on cell fate transformation that involves changes in gene expression as well as in the composition of the cytoplasmic compartment, and exhibits a characteristic age-related decline. Here, we present evidence that genetic and pharmacological inhibition of autophagy – a lysosome-mediated self-degradation process of eukaryotic cells, which has been implicated in extensive cellular remodelling and aging – impairs the regeneration of amputated caudal fins in the zebrafish (Danio rerio). Thus, autophagy is required for injury-induced tissue renewal. We further show that upregulation of autophagy in the regeneration zone occurs downstream of mitogen-activated protein kinase/extracellular signal-regulated kinase signalling to protect cells from undergoing apoptosis and enable cytosolic restructuring underlying terminal cell fate determination. This novel cellular function of the autophagic process in regeneration implies that the role of cellular self-digestion in differentiation and tissue patterning is more fundamental than previously thought.
Methods in Enzymology | 2008
Tímea Sigmond; János Barna; Márton L. Tóth; Krisztina Takács-Vellai; Gabriella Pásti; Attila L. Kovács; Tibor Vellai
Autophagy (cellular self-eating) is a highly regulated, lysosome-mediated catabolic process of eukaryotic cells to segregate by a special membrane and subsequently degrade their own constituents during development or starvation. Electron microscopy analysis reveals autophagic elements in various cell types of the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans, whose genome contains counterparts of several yeast genes involved in autophagy. Genetic manipulation inactivating autophagy-related genes in C. elegans causes defects in development, affects dauer larval morphogenesis, accelerates aging thereby shortening life span, reduces cell size, decreases survival during starvation, promotes apoptotic cell death, and protects neurons from undergoing hyperactive ion channel- or neurotoxin-induced degeneration. These results implicate autophagy in various developmental and cellular functions such as reproductive growth, aging, and cell growth, as well as cell survival and loss. This chapter discusses methods of inactivating C. elegans autophagy genes by RNA interference, testing the resistance of autophagy-deficient nematodes to starvation-induced stress, handling mutants carrying a deletion in the autophagy pathway, and monitoring autophagic activity by using LysoTracker Red dye or reporters labeled with green fluorescent protein. Such methods may be adaptable to identify additional roles of autophagy in development and cellular function, and may also help to detect the intracellular accumulation of autophagy proteins and monitor autophagosome formation.
Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology | 2010
Tibor Vellai; Krisztina Takács-Vellai
Cellular homeostasis, which is needed for the cells to survive, requires a well-controlled balance in protein turnover. Both protein synthesis and degradation are influenced by distinct genetic pathways that control aging in divergent eukaryotic species. These conserved mechanisms involve the insulin/IGF-1 (Insulin-like Growth Factor-i), TGF-I (Transforming Growth Factor-beta), JNK (c-Jun terminal kinase), RTK/Ras/MAPK (Receptor Tyrosine Kinase/ Ras/Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinase) and TOR (kinase Target Of Rapamycin) signaling cascades and the mitochondrial respiratory system-each of them promotes protein synthesis; as well as the intracellular protein degradation machineries, including the ubiquitin-proteasome system and lysosome-mediated autophagy. In addition to providing building blocks for generation of new proteins and fuelling the cell with energy under starvation, the protein degradation processes eliminate damaged, nonfunctional proteins, the accumulation of which serves as the primary contributory factor to aging. Interestingly, a complex, intimate regulatory relationship exists between mechanisms promoting protein synthesis and those mediating protein degradation: under certain circumstances the former downregulate the latter. Thus, conditions that favor protein synthesis can enhance the rate at which damaged proteins accumulate. This may explain why genetic interventions and environmental factors (e.g., dietary restriction) that reduce protein synthesis, at least to tolerable levels, extend lifespan and increase resistance to cellular stress in various experimental model organisms of aging. In this chapter, the molecular mechanisms by which protein synthesis-promoting longevity pathways and protein degradation pathways interact with each other are discussed.
BMC Developmental Biology | 2012
János Barna; Andrea Princz; Mónika Kosztelnik; Balázsázs Hargitai; Krisztina Takács-Vellai; Tibor Vellai
BackgroundTemperature affects virtually all cellular processes. A quick increase in temperature challenges the cells to undergo a heat shock response to maintain cellular homeostasis. Heat shock factor-1 (HSF-1) functions as a major player in this response as it activates the transcription of genes coding for molecular chaperones (also called heat shock proteins) that maintain structural integrity of proteins. However, the mechanisms by which HSF-1 adjusts fundamental cellular processes such as growth, proliferation, differentiation and aging to the ambient temperature remain largely unknown.ResultsWe demonstrate here that in Caenorhabditis elegans HSF-1 represses the expression of daf-7 encoding a TGF-β (transforming growth factor-beta) ligand, to induce young larvae to enter the dauer stage, a developmentally arrested, non-feeding, highly stress-resistant, long-lived larval form triggered by crowding and starvation. Under favorable conditions, HSF-1 is inhibited by crowding pheromone-sensitive guanylate cyclase/cGMP (cyclic guanosine monophosphate) and systemic nutrient-sensing insulin/IGF-1 (insulin-like growth factor-1) signaling; loss of HSF-1 activity allows DAF-7 to promote reproductive growth. Thus, HSF-1 interconnects the insulin/IGF-1, TGF-β and cGMP neuroendocrine systems to control development and longevity in response to diverse environmental stimuli. Furthermore, HSF-1 upregulates another TGF-β pathway-interacting gene, daf-9/cytochrome P450, thereby fine-tuning the decision between normal growth and dauer formation.ConclusionTogether, these results provide mechanistic insight into how temperature, nutrient availability and population density coordinately influence development, lifespan, behavior and stress response through HSF-1.
Developmental Biology | 2009
Emese Szabó; Balázs Hargitai; Ágnes Regos; Borbála Tihanyi; János Barna; Éva Borsos; Krisztina Takács-Vellai; Tibor Vellai
The vulva of the Caenorhabditis elegans hermaphrodite develops from a subset of six vulval precursor cells (VPCs) by the combined effect of the Ras, Wingless and Notch signaling cascades, and of three redundant synMuv (synthetic Multivulva) pathways grouped into classes A, B and C. Here we show that signaling via the GLI- (Glioma-associated protein) like transcription factor TRA-1, which is the terminal regulator of the C. elegans sex determination cascade, is a newly discovered pathway specifying vulval cell fates. We found that TRA-1 accumulates in, and regulates the fusion process of, cells (including the VPCs and hypodermal cells) involved in vulval patterning. TRA-1 also influenced the expression of the Hox gene lin-39, a central regulator of vulval development. Furthermore, inactivation of tra-1, which transforms animals with hermaphrodite-specific karyotype into males, promoted vulval induction in synMuv A, but not in synMuv B, mutant background. This implies that TRA-1 interacts with the class B synMuv genes, many of which are involved in chromatin-mediated transcriptional repression of cell proliferation. These results may help to understand how compromised GLI activity in humans leads to cancer. Together, we suggest that the GLI protein family involved in several key developmental processes in both invertebrates and vertebrates regulates somatic cell fates through influencing, at least in part, the expression of specific Hox genes.
Methods in Enzymology | 2008
Tímea Sigmond; Judit Fehér; Attila Baksa; Gabriella Pásti; Zsolt Pálfia; Krisztina Takács-Vellai; János Kovács; Tibor Vellai; Attila L. Kovács
Caenorhabditis elegans has been introduced relatively late into the field of autophagy with no previous results by classical methods. Therefore, it has to be studied in parallel with both traditional electron microscopy and modern molecular approaches. In general, correct identification of autophagic elements by electron microscopy is indispensable to establish a firm basis for our understanding of the process. The principles and the method for identification, applied also for C. elegans, are summarized first in this article, to facilitate their utilization both for further studies and the analysis of new cell types and to support researchers new to electron microscopy techniques. Studying autophagy in the worm by electron microscopy has required the development of special handling and sampling techniques in addition to overcoming the general technical difficulties due to the nature of C. elegans samples. These are described in detail, together with some initial qualitative and quantitative results obtained by them. The feasibility of the presented method is supported by data which show that in continuously fed worms the autophagic compartment is in the lower range of the 10(-2)% order of magnitude of the cytoplasmic volume, while immediately after molting or upon starvation in the second larval period, usually more than a 10-fold increase can be measured. In dauer larvae, individual variation of the autophagic compartment is very high. The predauer stage in daf-2 mutants does not seem to show significant constitutive autophagic activity. Some autophagy-related gene mutants show characteristic ultrastuctural features, such as autophagosomes with membrane abnormalities (unc-51/Atg1) or the hypertrophy of multivesicular bodies (let-512/Vps34, bec-1/Atg6).
Development | 2013
Neda Masoudi; Luca Fancsalszky; Ehsan Pourkarimi; Tibor Vellai; Anita Alexa; Attila Reményi; Anton Gartner; Anil Mehta; Krisztina Takács-Vellai
The group I members of the Nm23 (non-metastatic) gene family encode nucleoside diphosphate kinases (NDPKs) that have been implicated in the regulation of cell migration, proliferation and differentiation. Despite their developmental and medical significance, the molecular functions of these NDPKs remain ill defined. To minimize confounding effects of functional compensation between closely related Nm23 family members, we studied ndk-1, the sole Caenorhabditis elegans ortholog of group I NDPKs, and focused on its role in Ras/mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK)-mediated signaling events during development. ndk-1 inactivation leads to a protruding vulva phenotype and affects vulval cell fate specification through the Ras/MAPK cascade. ndk-1 mutant worms show severe reduction of activated, diphosphorylated MAPK in somatic tissues, indicative of compromised Ras/MAPK signaling. A genetic epistasis analysis using the vulval induction system revealed that NDK-1 acts downstream of LIN-45/Raf, but upstream of MPK-1/MAPK, at the level of the kinase suppressors of ras (KSR-1/2). KSR proteins act as scaffolds facilitating Ras signaling events by tethering signaling components, and we suggest that NDK-1 modulates KSR activity through direct physical interaction. Our study reveals that C. elegans NDK-1/Nm23 influences differentiation by enhancing the level of Ras/MAPK signaling. These results might help to better understand how dysregulated Nm23 in humans contributes to tumorigenesis.