Searched for: school:SOM
Department/Unit:Cell Biology
Recognition of sialylated poly-N-acetyllactosamine chains on N- and O-linked glycans by human and avian influenza A virus hemagglutinins
Nycholat, Corwin M; McBride, Ryan; Ekiert, Damian C; Xu, Rui; Rangarajan, Janani; Peng, Wenjie; Razi, Nahid; Gilbert, Michel; Wakarchuk, Warren; Wilson, Ian A; Paulson, James C
Human influenza viruses are proposed to recognize sialic acids (pink diamonds) on glycans extended with poly-LacNAc chains (LacNAc=(yellow circle+blue square)). N- and O-linked glycans were extended with different poly-LacNAc chains with alpha2-3- and alpha2-6-linked sialic acids recognized by human and avian influenza viruses, respectively. The specificity of recombinant hemagglutinins (receptors in green) was investigated by using glycan microarray technology.
PMCID:3517101
PMID: 22505324
ISSN: 1521-3773
CID: 2291402
CCDC103 mutations cause primary ciliary dyskinesia by disrupting assembly of ciliary dynein arms
Panizzi, Jennifer R; Becker-Heck, Anita; Castleman, Victoria H; Al-Mutairi, Dalal A; Liu, Yan; Loges, Niki T; Pathak, Narendra; Austin-Tse, Christina; Sheridan, Eamonn; Schmidts, Miriam; Olbrich, Heike; Werner, Claudius; Haffner, Karsten; Hellman, Nathan; Chodhari, Rahul; Gupta, Amar; Kramer-Zucker, Albrecht; Olale, Felix; Burdine, Rebecca D; Schier, Alexander F; O'Callaghan, Christopher; Chung, Eddie M K; Reinhardt, Richard; Mitchison, Hannah M; King, Stephen M; Omran, Heymut; Drummond, Iain A
Cilia are essential for fertilization, respiratory clearance, cerebrospinal fluid circulation and establishing laterality. Cilia motility defects cause primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD, MIM244400), a disorder affecting 1:15,000-30,000 births. Cilia motility requires the assembly of multisubunit dynein arms that drive ciliary bending. Despite progress in understanding the genetic basis of PCD, mutations remain to be identified for several PCD-linked loci. Here we show that the zebrafish cilia paralysis mutant schmalhans (smh(tn222)) encodes the coiled-coil domain containing 103 protein (Ccdc103), a foxj1a-regulated gene product. Screening 146 unrelated PCD families identified individuals in six families with reduced outer dynein arms who carried mutations in CCDC103. Dynein arm assembly in smh mutant zebrafish was rescued by wild-type but not mutant human CCDC103. Chlamydomonas Ccdc103/Pr46b functions as a tightly bound, axoneme-associated protein. These results identify Ccdc103 as a dynein arm attachment factor that causes primary ciliary dyskinesia when mutated.
PMCID:3371652
PMID: 22581229
ISSN: 1061-4036
CID: 169563
Differential diffusivity of Nodal and Lefty underlies a reaction-diffusion patterning system
Muller, Patrick; Rogers, Katherine W; Jordan, Ben M; Lee, Joon S; Robson, Drew; Ramanathan, Sharad; Schier, Alexander F
Biological systems involving short-range activators and long-range inhibitors can generate complex patterns. Reaction-diffusion models postulate that differences in signaling range are caused by differential diffusivity of inhibitor and activator. Other models suggest that differential clearance underlies different signaling ranges. To test these models, we measured the biophysical properties of the Nodal/Lefty activator/inhibitor system during zebrafish embryogenesis. Analysis of Nodal and Lefty gradients revealed that Nodals have a shorter range than Lefty proteins. Pulse-labeling analysis indicated that Nodals and Leftys have similar clearance kinetics, whereas fluorescence recovery assays revealed that Leftys have a higher effective diffusion coefficient than Nodals. These results indicate that differential diffusivity is the major determinant of the differences in Nodal/Lefty range and provide biophysical support for reaction-diffusion models of activator/inhibitor-mediated patterning.
PMCID:3525670
PMID: 22499809
ISSN: 0036-8075
CID: 876802
Hydrophobic imbalance in the cytoplasmic domain of phospholamban is a determinant for lethal dilated cardiomyopathy
Ceholski, Delaine K; Trieber, Catharine A; Young, Howard S
The sarco(endo)plasmic reticulum calcium ATPase (SERCA) and its regulatory partner phospholamban (PLN) are essential for myocardial contractility. Arg(9) --> Cys (R9C) and Arg(14) deletion (R14del) mutations in PLN are associated with lethal dilated cardiomyopathy in humans. To better understand these mutations, we made a series of amino acid substitutions in the cytoplasmic domain of PLN and tested their ability to inhibit SERCA. R9C is a complete loss-of-function mutant of PLN, whereas R14del is a mild loss-of-function mutant. When combined with wild-type PLN to simulate heterozygous conditions, the mutants had a dominant negative effect on SERCA function. A series of targeted mutations in this region of the PLN cytoplasmic domain ((8)TRSAIRR(14)) demonstrated the importance of hydrophobic balance in proper PLN regulation of SERCA. We found that Arg(9) --> Leu and Thr(8) --> Cys substitutions mimicked the behavior of the R9C mutant, and an Arg(14) --> Ala substitution mimicked the behavior of the R14del mutant. The results reveal that the change in hydrophobicity resulting from the R9C and R14del mutations is sufficient to explain the loss of function and persistent interaction with SERCA. Hydrophobic imbalance in the cytoplasmic domain of PLN appears to be a predictor for the development and progression of dilated cardiomyopathy.
PMCID:3351288
PMID: 22427649
ISSN: 1083-351x
CID: 2444562
Brain-wide neuronal dynamics during motor adaptation in zebrafish
Ahrens, Misha B; Li, Jennifer M; Orger, Michael B; Robson, Drew N; Schier, Alexander F; Engert, Florian; Portugues, Ruben
A fundamental question in neuroscience is how entire neural circuits generate behaviour and adapt it to changes in sensory feedback. Here we use two-photon calcium imaging to record the activity of large populations of neurons at the cellular level, throughout the brain of larval zebrafish expressing a genetically encoded calcium sensor, while the paralysed animals interact fictively with a virtual environment and rapidly adapt their motor output to changes in visual feedback. We decompose the network dynamics involved in adaptive locomotion into four types of neuronal response properties, and provide anatomical maps of the corresponding sites. A subset of these signals occurred during behavioural adjustments and are candidates for the functional elements that drive motor learning. Lesions to the inferior olive indicate a specific functional role for olivocerebellar circuitry in adaptive locomotion. This study enables the analysis of brain-wide dynamics at single-cell resolution during behaviour.
PMCID:3618960
PMID: 22622571
ISSN: 0028-0836
CID: 876812
Removal of shelterin reveals the telomere end-protection problem
Sfeir, Agnel; de Lange, Titia
The telomere end-protection problem is defined by the aggregate of DNA damage signaling and repair pathways that require repression at telomeres. To define the end-protection problem, we removed the whole shelterin complex from mouse telomeres through conditional deletion of TRF1 and TRF2 in nonhomologous end-joining (NHEJ) deficient cells. The data reveal two DNA damage response pathways not previously observed upon deletion of individual shelterin proteins. The shelterin-free telomeres are processed by microhomology-mediated alternative-NHEJ when Ku70/80 is absent and are attacked by nucleolytic degradation in the absence of 53BP1. The data establish that the end-protection problem is specified by six pathways [ATM (ataxia telangiectasia mutated) and ATR (ataxia telangiectasia and Rad3 related) signaling, classical-NHEJ, alt-NHEJ, homologous recombination, and resection] and show how shelterin acts with general DNA damage response factors to solve this problem.
PMCID:3477646
PMID: 22556254
ISSN: 0036-8075
CID: 166976
N-cadherin prodomain processing regulates synaptogenesis
Reines, Analia; Bernier, Louis-Philippe; McAdam, Robyn; Belkaid, Wiam; Shan, Weisong; Koch, Alexander W; Seguela, Philippe; Colman, David R; Dhaunchak, Ajit S
Classical cadherins, which are adhesion molecules functioning at the CNS synapse, are synthesized as adhesively inactive precursor proteins in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). Signal sequence and prodomain cleavage in the ER and Golgi apparatus, respectively, activates their adhesive properties. Here, we provide the first evidence for sorting of nonadhesive precursor N-cadherin (ProN) to the neuronal surface, where it coexists with adhesively competent mature N-cadherin (N-cad), generating a spectrum of adhesive strengths. In cultured hippocampal neurons, a high ProN/N-cad ratio downregulates synapse formation. Neurons expressing genetically engineered uncleavable ProN make markedly fewer synapses. The synapse number can be rescued to normality by depleting surface ProN levels through prodomain cleavage by an exogenous protease. Finally, prodomain processing is developmentally regulated in the rat hippocampus. We conclude that it is the ProN/N-cad ratio and not mature N-cad alone that is critical for regulation of adhesion during synaptogenesis.
PMID: 22553038
ISSN: 0270-6474
CID: 605622
Antigen-induced release and retroviral subversion of TCR-enriched microvesicles at the CD4+T cell immunological synapse [Meeting Abstract]
Choudhuri, Kaushik; Llodra, Jaime; Kam, Lance; Stokes, David; Dustin, Micheal
ISI:000304659700415
ISSN: 0022-1767
CID: 169542
Pro-apoptotic signaling pathway by CDK5 and MEKK1
Ryoo, Hyung Don
Comment on: Kang MJ, et al. Nat Cell Biol 2012; In press.
PMCID:3372387
PMID: 22510567
ISSN: 1551-4005
CID: 166825
Dysregulation of the unfolded protein response contributes to chemoresistance in melanocytes [Meeting Abstract]
Cheng, T; Orlow, SJ; Manga, P
ISI:000302866900767
ISSN: 0022-202x
CID: 2781822