Biochemistry and Biophysics Reports (Sep 2024)

Unconventional localization of PAI-1 in PML bodies: A possible link with cellular growth of endothelial cells

  • Pragya Gehlot,
  • Daniela Brünnert,
  • Vibha Kaushik,
  • Arpana Yadav,
  • Saloni Bage,
  • Kritika Gaur,
  • Mahesh Saini,
  • Jens Ehrhardt,
  • Gowrang Kasaba Manjunath,
  • Abhishek Kumar,
  • Neena Kasliwal,
  • Ajay Kumar Sharma,
  • Marek Zygmunt,
  • Pankaj Goyal

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 39
p. 101793

Abstract

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Plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1/Serpin E1) is classically known for its antifibrinolytic activity via inhibiting uPA and tPA of the fibrinolytic pathway. PAI-1 has a paradoxical role in tumor progression, and its molecular functions are poorly understood. PAI-1 is a widely accepted secretory protease inhibitor, however, a study suggested the localization of PAI-1 in the cytoplasm and the nucleus. Besides the plethora of its biological functions as a secretory protein, intracellular localization, and functions of PAI-1 remain unexplored at the molecular level. In this study, using various in silico approaches, we showed that PAI-1 possesses a nuclear export signal. Using the CRM1-specific inhibitor leptomycin B, we demonstrated that PAI-1 has a functional CRM1-dependent NES, indicating the possibility of its nuclear localization. Further, we confirm that PAI-1 is localized in the nucleus of endothelial cells using fluorescence microscopy and immunoprecipitation. Notably, we identified an unconventional distribution of PAI-1 in the PML bodies of the nucleus of normal endothelial cells, while the protein was restricted in the cytoplasm of slow-growing cells. The data showed that the localization of PAI-1 in PML bodies is highly correlated with the growth potential of endothelial cells. This conditional nucleocytoplasmic shuttling of PAI-1 during the aging of cells could impart a strong link to its age-related functions and tumor progression. Together, this study identifies the novel behavior of PAI-1 that might be linked with cell aging and may be able to unveil the elusive role of PAI-1 in tumor progression.

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