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166


MgBr2 center dot OEt2: A LEWIS ACID CATALYST FOR THE O- AND N-Boc PROTECTION OF PHENOLS AND AMINES

Schechter, Aaron; Goldrich, David; Chapman, Jessica R.; Uberheide, Beatrix M.; Lim, Daniel
ISI:000348463200010
ISSN: 0039-7911
CID: 4706812

The effects of dexamethasone and acyclovir on a cell culture model of delayed facial palsy

Turner, Meghan T; Nayak, Shruti; Kuhn, Maggie; Roehm, Pamela Carol
HYPOTHESIS: Pretreatment with antiherpetic medications and steroids decreases likelihood of development of delayed facial paralysis (DFP) after otologic surgery. BACKGROUND: Heat-induced reactivation of herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV1) in geniculate ganglion neurons (GGNs) is thought to cause of DFP after otologic surgery. Antiherpetic medications and dexamethasone are used to treat DFP. Pretreatment with these medications has been proposed to prevent development of DFP. METHODS: Rat GGN cultures were latently infected with HSV1 expressing a lytic protein-GFP chimera. Cultures were divided into pretreatment groups receiving acyclovir (ACV), acyclovir-plus-dexamethasone (ACV + DEX), dexamethasone alone (DEX), or untreated media (control). After pretreatment, all cultures were heated 43 degrees C for 2 hours. Cultures were monitored daily for reactivation with fluorescent microscopy. Viral titers were determined from culture media. RESULTS: Heating cultures to 43 degrees C for 2 hours leads to HSV1 reactivation and production of infectious virus particles (59 +/- 6.8%); heating cultures to 41 degrees C showed a more variable frequency of reactivation (60 +/- 40%), compared with baseline rates of 14.4 +/- 5%. Cultures pretreated with ACV showed lower reactivation rates (ACV = 3.7%, ACV + DEX = 1.04%) compared with 44% for DEX alone. Viral titers were lowest for cultures treated with ACV or ACV + DEX. CONCLUSION: GGN cultures harboring latent HSV1 infection reactivate when exposed to increased temperatures that can occur during otologic surgery. Pretreatment with ACV before heat provides prophylaxis against heat-induced HSV reactivation, whereas DEX alone is associated with higher viral reactivation rates. This study provides evidence supporting the use of prophylactic antivirals for otologic surgeries associated with high rates of DFP.
PMCID:3995419
PMID: 24622026
ISSN: 1537-4505
CID: 2364052

A disulfide tether stabilizes the block of sodium channels by the conotoxin muO{section}-GVIIJ

Gajewiak, Joanna; Azam, Layla; Imperial, Julita; Walewska, Aleksandra; Green, Brad R; Bandyopadhyay, Pradip K; Raghuraman, Shrinivasan; Ueberheide, Beatrix; Bern, Marshall; Zhou, H Mimi; Minassian, Natali A; Hagan, Rebecca H; Flinspach, Mack; Liu, Yi; Bulaj, Grzegorz; Wickenden, Alan D; Olivera, Baldomero M; Yoshikami, Doju; Zhang, Min-Min
A cone snail venom peptide, muO section sign-conotoxin GVIIJ from Conus geographus, has a unique posttranslational modification, S-cysteinylated cysteine, which makes possible formation of a covalent tether of peptide to its target Na channels at a distinct ligand-binding site. muO section sign-conotoxin GVIIJ is a 35-aa peptide, with 7 cysteine residues; six of the cysteines form 3 disulfide cross-links, and one (Cys24) is S-cysteinylated. Due to limited availability of native GVIIJ, we primarily used a synthetic analog whose Cys24 was S-glutathionylated (abbreviated GVIIJSSG). The peptide-channel complex is stabilized by a disulfide tether between Cys24 of the peptide and Cys910 of rat (r) NaV1.2. A mutant channel of rNaV1.2 lacking a cysteine near the pore loop of domain II (C910L), was >10(3)-fold less sensitive to GVIIJSSG than was wild-type rNaV1.2. In contrast, although rNaV1.5 was >10(4)-fold less sensitive to GVIIJSSG than NaV1.2, an rNaV1.5 mutant with a cysteine in the homologous location, rNaV1.5[L869C], was >10(3)-fold more sensitive than wild-type rNaV1.5. The susceptibility of rNaV1.2 to GVIIJSSG was significantly altered by treating the channels with thiol-oxidizing or disulfide-reducing agents. Furthermore, coexpression of rNaVbeta2 or rNaVbeta4, but not that of rNaVbeta1 or rNaVbeta3, protected rNaV1.1 to -1.7 (excluding NaV1.5) against block by GVIIJSSG. Thus, GVIIJ-related peptides may serve as probes for both the redox state of extracellular cysteines and for assessing which NaVbeta- and NaValpha-subunits are present in native neurons.
PMCID:3932919
PMID: 24497506
ISSN: 0027-8424
CID: 852632

UvrD facilitates DNA repair by pulling RNA polymerase backwards

Epshtein, Vitaly; Kamarthapu, Venu; McGary, Katelyn; Svetlov, Vladimir; Ueberheide, Beatrix; Proshkin, Sergey; Mironov, Alexander; Nudler, Evgeny
UvrD helicase is required for nucleotide excision repair, although its role in this process is not well defined. Here we show that Escherichia coli UvrD binds RNA polymerase during transcription elongation and, using its helicase/translocase activity, forces RNA polymerase to slide backward along DNA. By inducing backtracking, UvrD exposes DNA lesions shielded by blocked RNA polymerase, allowing nucleotide excision repair enzymes to gain access to sites of damage. Our results establish UvrD as a bona fide transcription elongation factor that contributes to genomic integrity by resolving conflicts between transcription and DNA repair complexes. Furthermore, we show that the elongation factor NusA cooperates with UvrD in coupling transcription to DNA repair by promoting backtracking and recruiting nucleotide excision repair enzymes to exposed lesions. Because backtracking is a shared feature of all cellular RNA polymerases, we propose that this mechanism enables RNA polymerases to function as global DNA damage scanners in bacteria and eukaryotes.
PMCID:4471481
PMID: 24402227
ISSN: 0028-0836
CID: 741112

Sample Limited Characterization of a Novel Disulfide-Rich Venom Peptide Toxin from Terebrid Marine Snail Terebra variegata

Anand, Prachi; Grigoryan, Alexandre; Bhuiyan, Mohammed H; Ueberheide, Beatrix; Russell, Victoria; Quinonez, Jose; Moy, Patrick; Chait, Brian T; Poget, Sebastien F; Holford, Mande
Disulfide-rich peptide toxins found in the secretions of venomous organisms such as snakes, spiders, scorpions, leeches, and marine snails are highly efficient and effective tools for novel therapeutic drug development. Venom peptide toxins have been used extensively to characterize ion channels in the nervous system and platelet aggregation in haemostatic systems. A significant hurdle in characterizing disulfide-rich peptide toxins from venomous animals is obtaining significant quantities needed for sequence and structural analyses. Presented here is a strategy for the structural characterization of venom peptide toxins from sample limited (4 ng) specimens via direct mass spectrometry sequencing, chemical synthesis and NMR structure elucidation. Using this integrated approach, venom peptide Tv1 from Terebra variegata was discovered. Tv1 displays a unique fold not witnessed in prior snail neuropeptides. The novel structural features found for Tv1 suggest that the terebrid pool of peptide toxins may target different neuronal agents with varying specificities compared to previously characterized snail neuropeptides.
PMCID:3979744
PMID: 24713808
ISSN: 1932-6203
CID: 881922

Top Down Venom Analysis with Byonic Software [Meeting Abstract]

Bern, Marshall; Kletter, Doron; Fenyo, David; Morgenstern, David; Ueberheide, Beatrix; Bern, Nicholas; Tang, Wilfred; Kil, Yong J.; Becker, Christopher
ISI:000340720100031
ISSN: 1535-9476
CID: 4706602

DUB-Resistant Ubiquitin to Survey Ubiquitination Switches in Mammalian Cells

Bekes, Miklos; Okamoto, Keiji; Crist, Sarah B; Jones, Mathew J; Chapman, Jessica R; Brasher, Bradley B; Melandri, Francesco D; Ueberheide, Beatrix M; Lazzerini Denchi, Eros; Huang, Tony T
The ubiquitin-modification status of proteins in cells is highly dynamic and maintained by specific ligation machineries (E3 ligases) that tag proteins with ubiquitin or by deubiquitinating enzymes (DUBs) that remove the ubiquitin tag. The development of tools that offset this balance is critical in characterizing signaling pathways that utilize such ubiquitination switches. Herein, we generated a DUB-resistant ubiquitin mutant that is recalcitrant to cleavage by various families of DUBs both in vitro and in mammalian cells. As a proof-of-principle experiment, ectopic expression of the uncleavable ubiquitin stabilized monoubiquitinated PCNA in the absence of DNA damage and also revealed a defect in the clearance of the DNA damage response at unprotected telomeres. Importantly, a proteomic survey using the uncleavable ubiquitin identified ubiquitinated substrates, validating the DUB-resistant ubiquitin expression system as a valuable tool for interrogating cell signaling pathways.
PMCID:3889155
PMID: 24210823
ISSN: 2211-1247
CID: 617482

The yeast Snt2 protein coordinates the transcriptional response to hydrogen peroxide-mediated oxidative stress

Baker, Lindsey A; Ueberheide, Beatrix M; Dewell, Scott; Chait, Brian T; Zheng, Deyou; Allis, C David
Regulation of gene expression is a vital part of the cellular stress response, yet the full set of proteins that orchestrate this regulation remains unknown. Snt2 is a Saccharomyces cerevisiae protein whose function has not been well characterized that was recently shown to associate with Ecm5 and the Rpd3 deacetylase. Here, we confirm that Snt2, Ecm5, and Rpd3 physically associate. We then demonstrate that cells lacking Rpd3 or Snt2 are resistant to hydrogen peroxide (H2O2)-mediated oxidative stress and use chromatin immunoprecipitation followed by high-throughput sequencing (ChIP-seq) to show that Snt2 and Ecm5 recruit Rpd3 to a small number of promoters and in response to H2O2, colocalize independently of Rpd3 to the promoters of stress response genes. By integrating ChIP-seq and expression analyses, we identify target genes that require Snt2 for proper expression after H2O2. Finally, we show that cells lacking Snt2 are also resistant to nutrient stress imparted by the TOR (target of rapamycin) pathway inhibitor rapamycin and identify a common set of genes targeted by Snt2 and Ecm5 in response to both H2O2 and rapamycin. Our results establish a function for Snt2 in regulating transcription in response to oxidative stress and suggest Snt2 may also function in multiple stress pathways.
PMCID:3811877
PMID: 23878396
ISSN: 0270-7306
CID: 628752

Detection and correction of interference in SRM analysis

Bao, Y; Waldemarson, S; Zhang, G; Wahlander, A; Ueberheide, B; Myung, S; Reed, B; Molloy, K; Padovan, J C; Eriksson, J; Neubert, T A; Chait, B T; Fenyo, D
Selected Reaction Monitoring (SRM) is a method of choice for accurate quantitation of low-abundance proteins in complex backgrounds. This strategy is, however, sensitive to interference from other components in the sample that have the same precursor and fragment masses as the monitored transitions. We present here an approach to detect interference by using the expected relative intensity of SRM transitions. We also designed an algorithm to automatically detect the linear range of calibration curves. These approaches were applied to the experimental data of Clinical Proteomic Tumor Analysis Consortium (CPTAC) Verification Work Group Study 7 and show that the corrected measurements provide more accurate quantitation than the uncorrected data.
PMCID:3771650
PMID: 23707623
ISSN: 1046-2023
CID: 415052

Atypical and classical memory B cells produce Plasmodium falciparum neutralizing antibodies

Muellenbeck, Matthias F; Ueberheide, Beatrix; Amulic, Borko; Epp, Alexandra; Fenyo, David; Busse, Christian E; Esen, Meral; Theisen, Michael; Mordmuller, Benjamin; Wardemann, Hedda
Antibodies can protect from Plasmodium falciparum (Pf) infection and clinical malaria disease. However, in the absence of constant reexposure, serum immunoglobulin (Ig) levels rapidly decline and full protection from clinical symptoms is lost, suggesting that B cell memory is functionally impaired. We show at the single cell level that natural Pf infection induces the development of classical memory B cells (CM) and atypical memory B cells (AtM) that produce broadly neutralizing antibodies against blood stage Pf parasites. CM and AtM contribute to anti-Pf serum IgG production, but only AtM show signs of active antibody secretion. AtM and CM were also different in their IgG gene repertoire, suggesting that they develop from different precursors. The findings provide direct evidence that natural Pf infection leads to the development of protective memory B cell antibody responses and suggest that constant immune activation rather than impaired memory function leads to the accumulation of AtM in malaria. Understanding the memory B cell response to natural Pf infection may be key to the development of a malaria vaccine that induces long-lived protection.
PMCID:3570107
PMID: 23319701
ISSN: 0022-1007
CID: 232492