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Dive into the research topics where Nina V. Chichkova is active.

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Featured researches published by Nina V. Chichkova.


The Plant Cell | 2004

A Plant Caspase-Like Protease Activated during the Hypersensitive Response

Nina V. Chichkova; Sang Hyon Kim; Elena S. Titova; Markus Kalkum; Vasiliy S. Morozov; Yuri P. Rubtsov; Natalia O. Kalinina; Michael Taliansky; Andrey B. Vartapetian

To test the hypothesis that caspase-like proteases exist and are critically involved in the implementation of programmed cell death (PCD) in plants, a search was undertaken for plant caspases activated during the N gene–mediated hypersensitive response (HR; a form of pathogen-induced PCD in plants) in tobacco plants infected with Tobacco mosaic virus (TMV). For detection, characterization, and partial purification of a tobacco caspase, the Agrobacterium tumefaciens VirD2 protein, shown here to be cleaved specifically at two sites (TATD and GEQD) by human caspase-3, was used as a target. In tobacco leaves, specific proteolytic processing of the ectopically produced VirD2 derivatives at these sites was found to occur early in the course of the HR triggered by TMV. A proteolytic activity capable of specifically cleaving the model substrate at TATD was partially purified from these leaves. A tetrapeptide aldehyde designed and synthesized on the basis of the elucidated plant caspase cleavage site prevented fragmentation of the substrate protein by plant and human caspases in vitro and counteracted TMV-triggered HR in vivo. Therefore, our data provide a characterization of caspase-specific protein fragmentation in apoptotic plant cells, with implications for the importance of such activity in the implementation of plant PCD.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2005

Nuclear oncoprotein prothymosin alpha is a partner of Keap1: implications for expression of oxidative stress-protecting genes.

Ruben N. Karapetian; Alexandra G. Evstafieva; Irina S. Abaeva; Nina V. Chichkova; Grigoriy S. Filonov; Yuri P. Rubtsov; Elena A Sukhacheva; Sergey V. Melnikov; Ulrich Schneider; Erich E. Wanker; Andrey B. Vartapetian

ABSTRACT Animal cells counteract oxidative stress and electrophilic attack through coordinated expression of a set of detoxifying and antioxidant enzyme genes mediated by transcription factor Nrf2. In unstressed cells, Nrf2 appears to be sequestered in the cytoplasm via association with an inhibitor protein, Keap1. Here, by using the yeast two-hybrid screen, human Keap1 has been identified as a partner of the nuclear protein prothymosin α. The in vivo and in vitro data indicated that the prothymosin α-Keap1 interaction is direct, highly specific, and functionally relevant. Furthermore, we showed that Keap1 is a nuclear-cytoplasmic shuttling protein equipped with a nuclear export signal that is important for its inhibitory action. Prothymosin α was able to liberate Nrf2 from the Nrf2-Keap1 inhibitory complex in vitro through competition with Nrf2 for binding to the same domain of Keap1. In vivo, the level of Nrf2-dependent transcription was correlated with the intracellular level of prothymosin α by using prothymosin α overproduction and mRNA interference approaches. Our data attribute to prothymosin α the role of intranuclear dissociator of the Nrf2-Keap1 complex, thus revealing a novel function for prothymosin α and adding a new dimension to the molecular mechanisms underlying expression of oxidative stress-protecting genes.


The EMBO Journal | 2010

Phytaspase, a relocalisable cell death promoting plant protease with caspase specificity

Nina V. Chichkova; Jane Shaw; Raisa A. Galiullina; Georgina E Drury; Alexander I. Tuzhikov; Sang Hyon Kim; Markus Kalkum; Teresa B. Hong; Elena N. Gorshkova; Lesley Torrance; Andrey B. Vartapetian; Michael Taliansky

Caspases are cysteine‐dependent proteases and are important components of animal apoptosis. They introduce specific breaks after aspartate residues in a number of cellular proteins mediating programmed cell death (PCD). Plants encode only distant homologues of caspases, the metacaspases that are involved in PCD, but do not possess caspase‐specific proteolytic activity. Nevertheless, plants do display caspase‐like activities indicating that enzymes structurally distinct from classical caspases may operate as caspase‐like proteases. Here, we report the identification and characterisation of a novel PCD‐related subtilisin‐like protease from tobacco and rice named phytaspase (plant aspartate‐specific protease) that possesses caspase specificity distinct from that of other known caspase‐like proteases. We provide evidence that phytaspase is synthesised as a proenzyme, which is autocatalytically processed to generate the mature enzyme. Overexpression and silencing of the phytaspase gene showed that phytaspase is essential for PCD‐related responses to tobacco mosaic virus and abiotic stresses. Phytaspase is constitutively secreted into the apoplast before PCD, but unexpectedly is re‐imported into the cell during PCD providing insights into how phytaspase operates.


Cell Death & Differentiation | 2011

A plant alternative to animal caspases: subtilisin-like proteases.

Andrey B. Vartapetian; Alexander I. Tuzhikov; Nina V. Chichkova; Michael Taliansky; T J Wolpert

Activities displaying caspase cleavage specificity have been well documented in various plant programmed cell death (PCD) models. However, plant genome analyses have not revealed clear orthologues of caspase genes, indicating that enzyme(s) structurally unrelated yet possessing caspase specificity have functions in plant PCD. Here, we review recent data showing that some caspase-like activities are attributable to the plant subtilisin-like proteases, saspases and phytaspases. These proteases hydrolyze a range of tetrapeptide caspase substrates following the aspartate residue. Data obtained with saspases implicate them in the proteolytic degradation of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco) during biotic and abiotic PCD, whereas phytaspase overproducing and silenced transgenics provide evidence that phytaspase regulates PCD during both abiotic (oxidative and osmotic stresses) and biotic (virus infection) insults. Like caspases, phytaspases and saspases are synthesized as proenzymes, which are autocatalytically processed to generate a mature enzyme. However, unlike caspases, phytaspases and saspases appear to be constitutively processed and secreted from healthy plant cells into the intercellular space. Apoplastic localization presumably prevents enzyme-mediated protein fragmentation in the absence of PCD. In response to death-inducing stimuli, phytaspase has been shown to re-localize to the cell interior. Thus, plant PCD-related proteases display both common (D-specific protein fragmentation during PCD) and distinct (enzyme structure and activity regulation) features with animal PCD-related proteases.


FEBS Letters | 2000

Prothymosin α fragmentation in apoptosis

Alexandra G. Evstafieva; George A. Belov; Markus Kalkum; Nina V. Chichkova; Alexey A. Bogdanov; Vadim I. Agol; Andrey B. Vartapetian

We observed fragmentation of an essential proliferation‐related human nuclear protein prothymosin α in the course of apoptosis induced by various stimuli. Prothymosin α cleavage occurred at the DDVD99 motif. In vitro, prothymosin α could be cleaved at D99 by caspase‐3 and ‐7. Caspase hydrolysis disrupted the nuclear localization signal of prothymosin α and abrogated the ability of the truncated protein to accumulate inside the nucleus. Prothymosin α fragmentation may therefore be proposed to disable intranuclear proliferation‐related function of prothymosin α in two ways: by cleaving off a short peptide containing important determinants, and by preventing active nuclear uptake of the truncated protein.


Experimental Cell Research | 2003

Apoptosis-related fragmentation, translocation, and properties of human prothymosin alpha

Alexandra G. Evstafieva; George A. Belov; Yuri P. Rubtsov; Markus Kalkum; Bertrand Joseph; Nina V. Chichkova; Elena A Sukhacheva; Alexey A. Bogdanov; Ralf F. Pettersson; Vadim I. Agol; Andrey B. Vartapetian

Human prothymosin alpha is a proliferation-related nuclear protein undergoing caspase-mediated fragmentation in apoptotic cells. We show here that caspase-3 is the principal executor of prothymosin alpha fragmentation in vivo. In apoptotic HeLa cells as well as in vitro, caspase-3 cleaves prothymosin alpha at one major carboxy terminal (DDVD(99)) and several suboptimal sites. Prothymosin alpha cleavage at two amino-terminal sites (AAVD(6) and NGRD(31)) contributes significantly to the final pattern of prothymosin alpha fragmentation in vitro and could be detected to occur in apoptotic cells. The major caspase cleavage at D(99) disrupts the nuclear localization signal of prothymosin alpha, which leads to a profound alteration in subcellular localization of the truncated protein. By using a set of anti-prothymosin alpha monoclonal antibodies, we were able to observe nuclear escape and cell surface exposure of endogenous prothymosin alpha in apoptotic, but not in normal, cells. We demonstrate also that ectopic production of human prothymosin alpha and its mutants with nuclear or nuclear-cytoplasmic localization confers increased resistance of HeLa cells toward the tumor necrosis factor-induced apoptosis.


FEBS Letters | 1997

Mutational analysis of human prothymosin α reveals a bipartite nuclear localization signal

Yuri P. Rubtsov; Andrei S. Zolotukhin; Ivan A. Vorobjev; Nina V. Chichkova; Nickolay Pavlov; E. M. Karger; Alexandra G. Evstafieva; Barbara K. Felber; Andrey B. Vartapetian

Mutants of human prothymosin α with impaired ability to inhibit yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. cerevisiae cell growth were characterized. Two types of prothymosin α‐inactivating mutations were observed. Mutations that belong to the first type compromised the nuclear entry of prothymosin α by affecting its nuclear localization signal. Analysis of subcellular distribution of GFP‐prothymosin α fusions revealed a bipartite nuclear localization signal that is both necessary and sufficient for nuclear import of the protein in human cells. Mutations of the second type abrogated the inhibitory action of prothymosin α through an unknown mechanism, without influencing the nuclear import of the protein.


Plant Cell Reports | 2007

Caspase-resistant VirD2 protein provides enhanced gene delivery and expression in plants

Brian Reavy; Svetlana Bagirova; Nina V. Chichkova; Svetlana V. Fedoseeva; Sang Hyon Kim; Andrey B. Vartapetian; Michael Taliansky

Agrobacterium tumefaciens VirD2 protein is one of the key elements of Agrobacterium-mediated plant transformation, a process of transfer of T-DNA sequence from the Agrobacterium tumour inducing plasmid into the nucleus of infected plant cells and its integration into the host genome. The VirD2 protein has been shown to be a substrate for a plant caspase-like protease activity (PCLP) in tobacco. We demonstrate here that mutagenesis of the VirD2 protein to prevent cleavage by PCLP increases the efficiency of reporter gene transfer and expression. These results indicate that PCLP cleavage of the Agrobacterium VirD2 protein acts to limit the effectiveness of T-DNA transfer and is a novel resistance mechanism that plants utilise to combat Agrobacterium infection.


Physiologia Plantarum | 2012

Plant phytaspases and animal caspases: structurally unrelated death proteases with a common role and specificity

Nina V. Chichkova; Alexander I. Tuzhikov; Michael Taliansky; Andrey B. Vartapetian

Proteases with an aspartate cleavage specificity are known to contribute to programmed cell death (PCD) in animals and plants. In animal cells this proteolytic activity belongs to caspases, a well-characterized family of cysteine-dependent death proteases. Plants, however, lack caspase homologs and thus the origin of this type of proteolytic activity in planta was poorly understood. Here, we review recent data demonstrating that a plant serine-dependent protease, phytaspase, shares cleavage specificity and a role in PCD analogous to that of caspases. However, unlike caspases, regulation of phytaspase-mediated cleavage of intracellular target proteins appears to be attained not at the level of proenzyme processing/activation, which occurs, in the case of phytaspase, autocatalytically and constitutively. Rather, the mature phytaspase is excluded from healthy cells into the apoplast and is allowed to re-enter cells upon the induction of PCD. Thus, PCD-related proteases in animals and plants display both common features and important distinctions.


Biochemistry | 2012

Programmed cell death in plants

A. S. Fomicheva; Alexander I. Tuzhikov; R. E. Beloshistov; S. V. Trusova; Raisa A. Galiullina; Larisa Mochalova; Nina V. Chichkova; Andrey B. Vartapetian

The modern concepts of programmed cell death (PCD) in plants are reviewed as compared to PCD (apoptosis) in animals. Special attention is focused on considering the potential mechanisms of implementation of this fundamental biological process and its participants. In particular, the proteolytic enzymes involved in PCD in animals (caspases) and plants (phytaspases) are compared. Emphasis is put on elucidation of both common features and substantial differences of PCD implementation in plants and animals.

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Shabarova Za

Moscow State University

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