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1

Ahmed, Zareen. "Magnetic resonance spectroscopy of phospholamban and its interaction with Ca'2'+-ATPase." Thesis, University of Oxford, 2000. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.343301.

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2

Zhao, Yue. "Synthetic probes for bacterial lipids and dimerizing proteins." Thesis, Boston College, 2015. http://hdl.handle.net/2345/bc-ir:104623.

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Thesis advisor: Eranthie Weerapana
This thesis includes two projects: “Bacteria-selective borono-peptides” and “A split ligand for lanthanide binding: facile evaluation of dimerizing proteins”. In both projects, de novo designed molecules were synthesized, optimized and incorporated into peptides. These synthetic molecular tools allow selective targeting of bacterial cell membranes and analyzing the dynamic associations of membrane-embedded proteins. 1. Bacteria-selective borono-peptides As the antibiotic resistance continues to grow, bacterial infection becomes one of the major threats to global public health. Currently, almost all the bacteria targeting strategies employ non-covalent driving forces, including charge-charge interactions, hydrophobic interactions and the formation of hydrogen bonds, to achieve bacterial selectivity. Towards novel bacteria targeting molecules, we have recruited reversible covalent chemistry in the development of bacteria-selective peptides. Targeting the diol-rich environment of a bacterial surface, we have designed and synthesized several unnatural amino acids that contain boronic acid moieties. Taking advantage of the boronic acid-diol reaction and multivalency effect, our borono-peptides are found to selectively recognize bacteria over mammalian cells. The sensitivity of the binding event to carbohydrate competitors gives a safe and facile approach to regulate molecular association with bacterial cells. This design may find applications in the fields of bacterial detection, imaging and antimicrobial drug delivery. 2. A split ligand for lanthanide binding: facile evaluation of dimerizing proteins Protein dimerization is a ubiquitous phenomenon in biology and plays a critical role in transcription regulations and various signaling processes. Methods that allow facile detection and quantification of protein dimers are highly desirable for evaluating protein dimerization in physiology and disease. Meanwhile, luminescence of lanthanides is attractive for biological applications due to its long lifetime and sharp emission profiles. We have developed a split lanthanide binding ligand that allows facile evaluation of dimerizing proteins. The fast lanthanide–ligand (dis)association allows us to monitor the dynamic behavior of dimerizing proteins. We have demonstrated the successful application of our assay on both soluble and transmembrane proteins in complex biological milieu. The split lanthanide ligand is cysteine reactive, and therefore should be readily applicable to a variety of proteins of interest
Thesis (PhD) — Boston College, 2015
Submitted to: Boston College. Graduate School of Arts and Sciences
Discipline: Chemistry
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3

Zheng, Hong. "Designing Peptides to Target Membrane Lipids and to Evaluate Fluorination of Proteins." Thesis, Boston College, 2012. http://hdl.handle.net/2345/3682.

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Thesis advisor: Jianmin Gao
My graduate research has used engineered peptides to perturb the non-covalent interactions in protein folding, protein-protein association and protein-membrane association. We have focused on understanding the fundamental principles of molecular recognition behind protein-protein and protein-membrane interactions, and further using these principles in protein engineering. This thesis includes three projects. I) Towards Small Molecule Receptors for Membrane Lipids: A Case Study on Phosphatidylserine The lipid composition and distribution of cell membranes play important roles in regulating the physiology of the cell. The lipid composition of plasma membranes is one characteristic feature that can be used to identify cell types and functions. Molecules that specifically recognize a particular lipid are useful as imaging probes for targeting cells or tissues of interest. Protein based lipid binding probes have intrinsic limitations due to their large size and poor pharmacokinetic properties such as slow clearance rate and poor in vivo stability. A plausible strategy to achieve a probe with small size and high binding affinity and selectivity is to use a peptide to mimic the protein lipid-binding domains. As a case study, a cyclic peptide that specifically targets phosphatidylserine containing membranes has been developed. This cyclic peptide is potentially capable of imaging apoptosis in vivo, and the strategy of developing this cyclic peptide can be generalized to the design of peptide-based probes for other lipid species. My research has pointed out a challenging but feasible way to design a peptide that achieves specificity and affinity similar to lipid-binding proteins. (II) Study of Apoptotic Cell Membrane (ACM) Permeant Molecules Noninvasive imaging of apoptosis is highly desirable for the diagnosis of a variety of diseases, as well as for the early prognosis of anticancer treatments. One characteristic feature of apoptotic cells that has been targeted for developing specific biomarkers is enhanced membrane permeability compared to that of healthy cells. Several unrelated molecules that are capable of selectively penetrating the apoptotic cell membrane (ACM) have recently been reported. However, the origin of the altered ACM permeability is poorly understood, as is the scope of molecular structures that can permeate through the ACM. Herein, we report a systematic investigation on the altered ACM permeability. Our results show that simple modifications of commonly used dyes (e.g. fluorescein) afford specific entry into cells at the early stages of apoptosis. The ACM appears to be permeable to molecules of various functional groups and charge, but does discriminate against molecules of large size. The new findings reported here greatly expand the pool of small molecules for imaging cell death, thus facilitating the development of noninvasive imaging agents for apoptosis. (III) Study of Aromatic-Fluorinated Aromatic Interactions in Peptide Systems Therapeutic proteins have been through a remarkable expansion in the last two decades. A general problem that they are facing is poor stability. Protein engineering focuses on solving this problem by incorporating unnatural amino acids into protein sequences to purposefully modify protein structures. Fluorinated aliphatic amino acids have been demonstrated to be effective in stabilizing protein structures and functioning as recognition motifs. In contrast, fluorinated aromatic amino acids are less studied. We investigated the effect of perturbation of fluorination on aromatic residues on the stability of protein model systems, as well as the influence on protein-protein association behavior. The results of this study provided a fundamental understanding of aromatic interactions in protein systems, and guidelines for protein engineering with fluorinated aromatics for stabilizing protein structures or directing specific protein-protein interactions
Thesis (PhD) — Boston College, 2012
Submitted to: Boston College. Graduate School of Arts and Sciences
Discipline: Chemistry
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4

Maitra, Sushmit. "The AU-rich element mRNA decay-promoting activity of BRF1 is regulated by mitogen-activated protein kinase activated protein kinase 2." Thesis, Birmingham, Ala. : University of Alabama at Birmingham, 2008. https://www.mhsl.uab.edu/dt/2008r/maitra.pdf.

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5

Oldham, Alexis Jean. "Modulation of lipid domain formation in mixed model systems by proteins and peptides." View electronic thesis, 2008. http://dl.uncw.edu/etd/2008-1/r1/oldhama/alexisoldham.pdf.

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6

Danai, Laura V. "Role of Protein Kinase Map4k4 in Energy Metabolism: A Dissertation." eScholarship@UMMS, 2015. https://escholarship.umassmed.edu/gsbs_diss/791.

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Systemic glucose regulation is essential for human survival as low or chronically high glucose levels can be detrimental to the health of an individual. Glucose levels are highly regulated via inter-organ communication networks that alter metabolic function to maintain euglycemia. For example, when nutrient levels are low, pancreatic α-cells secrete glucagon, which signals to the liver to promote glycogen breakdown and glucose production. In times of excess nutrient intake, pancreatic β-cells release insulin. Insulin signals to the liver to suppress hepatic glucose production, and signals to the adipose tissue and the skeletal muscle to take up excess glucose via insulin-regulated glucose transporters. Defects in this inter-organ communication network including insulin resistance can result in glucose deregulation and ultimately the onset of type-2 diabetes (T2D). To identify novel regulators of insulin-mediated glucose transport, our laboratory performed an siRNA-mediated gene-silencing screen in cultured adipocytes and measured insulin-mediated glucose transport. Gene silencing of Mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase kinase kinase 4 (Map4k4), a Sterile-20-related serine/threonine protein kinase, enhanced insulin-stimulated glucose transport, suggesting Map4k4 inhibits insulin action and glucose transport. Thus, for the first part of my thesis, I explore the role of Map4k4 in cultured adipose cells and show that Map4k4 also represses lipid synthesis independent of its effects on glucose transport. Map4k4 inhibits lipid synthesis in a Mechanistic target of rapamycin complex 1 (mTORC1)- and Sterol regulatory element-binding transcription factor 1 (Srebp-1)-dependent mechanism and not via a c-Jun NH2-terminal kinase (Jnk)-dependent mechanism. For the second part of my thesis, I explore the metabolic function of Map4k4 in vivo. Using mice with loxP sites flanking the Map4k4 allele and a ubiquitously expressed tamoxifen-activated Cre, we inducibly ablated Map4k4 expression in adult mice and found significant improvements in metabolic health indicated by improved fasting glucose and whole-body insulin action. To assess the role of Map4k4 in specific metabolic tissues responsible for systemic glucose regulation, we employed tissue-specific knockout mice to deplete Map4k4 in adipose tissue using an adiponectin-cre transgene, liver using an albumin-cre transgene, and skeletal muscle using a Myf5-cre transgene. Ablation of Map4k4 expression in adipose tissue or liver had no impact on whole body glucose homeostasis or insulin resistance. However, we surprisingly found that Map4k4 depletion in Myf5-positive tissues, which include skeletal muscles, largely recapitulates the metabolic phenotypes observed in systemic Map4k4 knockout mice, restoring obesity-induced glucose intolerance and insulin resistance. Furthermore these metabolic changes were associated with enhanced insulin signaling to Akt in the visceral adipose tissue, a tissue that is nearly devoid of Myf5-positive cells and does not display changes in Map4k4 expression. Thus, these results indicate that Map4k4 in Myf5-positive cells, most likely skeletal muscle cells, inhibits whole-body insulin action and these effects may be mediated via an indirect effect on the visceral adipose tissue. The results presented here provide evidence for Map4k4 as a potential therapeutic target for the treatment of insulin resistance and T2D.
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7

Danai, Laura V. "Role of Protein Kinase Map4k4 in Energy Metabolism: A Dissertation." eScholarship@UMMS, 2004. http://escholarship.umassmed.edu/gsbs_diss/791.

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Systemic glucose regulation is essential for human survival as low or chronically high glucose levels can be detrimental to the health of an individual. Glucose levels are highly regulated via inter-organ communication networks that alter metabolic function to maintain euglycemia. For example, when nutrient levels are low, pancreatic α-cells secrete glucagon, which signals to the liver to promote glycogen breakdown and glucose production. In times of excess nutrient intake, pancreatic β-cells release insulin. Insulin signals to the liver to suppress hepatic glucose production, and signals to the adipose tissue and the skeletal muscle to take up excess glucose via insulin-regulated glucose transporters. Defects in this inter-organ communication network including insulin resistance can result in glucose deregulation and ultimately the onset of type-2 diabetes (T2D). To identify novel regulators of insulin-mediated glucose transport, our laboratory performed an siRNA-mediated gene-silencing screen in cultured adipocytes and measured insulin-mediated glucose transport. Gene silencing of Mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase kinase kinase 4 (Map4k4), a Sterile-20-related serine/threonine protein kinase, enhanced insulin-stimulated glucose transport, suggesting Map4k4 inhibits insulin action and glucose transport. Thus, for the first part of my thesis, I explore the role of Map4k4 in cultured adipose cells and show that Map4k4 also represses lipid synthesis independent of its effects on glucose transport. Map4k4 inhibits lipid synthesis in a Mechanistic target of rapamycin complex 1 (mTORC1)- and Sterol regulatory element-binding transcription factor 1 (Srebp-1)-dependent mechanism and not via a c-Jun NH2-terminal kinase (Jnk)-dependent mechanism. For the second part of my thesis, I explore the metabolic function of Map4k4 in vivo. Using mice with loxP sites flanking the Map4k4 allele and a ubiquitously expressed tamoxifen-activated Cre, we inducibly ablated Map4k4 expression in adult mice and found significant improvements in metabolic health indicated by improved fasting glucose and whole-body insulin action. To assess the role of Map4k4 in specific metabolic tissues responsible for systemic glucose regulation, we employed tissue-specific knockout mice to deplete Map4k4 in adipose tissue using an adiponectin-cre transgene, liver using an albumin-cre transgene, and skeletal muscle using a Myf5-cre transgene. Ablation of Map4k4 expression in adipose tissue or liver had no impact on whole body glucose homeostasis or insulin resistance. However, we surprisingly found that Map4k4 depletion in Myf5-positive tissues, which include skeletal muscles, largely recapitulates the metabolic phenotypes observed in systemic Map4k4 knockout mice, restoring obesity-induced glucose intolerance and insulin resistance. Furthermore these metabolic changes were associated with enhanced insulin signaling to Akt in the visceral adipose tissue, a tissue that is nearly devoid of Myf5-positive cells and does not display changes in Map4k4 expression. Thus, these results indicate that Map4k4 in Myf5-positive cells, most likely skeletal muscle cells, inhibits whole-body insulin action and these effects may be mediated via an indirect effect on the visceral adipose tissue. The results presented here provide evidence for Map4k4 as a potential therapeutic target for the treatment of insulin resistance and T2D.
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8

Yamahara, Kenichi. "Significance and therapeutic potential of the natriuretic peptides/cGMP/cGMP-depnendent protein kinase pathway in vascular regeneration." Kyoto University, 2004. http://hdl.handle.net/2433/147491.

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9

Polozov, Ivan V. "Interactions of class A and class L amphipathic helical peptides with model membranes." Thesis, National Library of Canada = Bibliothèque nationale du Canada, 1997. http://www.collectionscanada.ca/obj/s4/f2/dsk2/tape16/PQDD_0006/NQ30110.pdf.

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10

Yang, Chunhua. "Synthesis and Kinetic Mechanism Study of Phosphonopeptide as a Dead-End Inhibitor of cAMP-Dependent Protein Kinase." Thesis, University of North Texas, 1991. https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc500671/.

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DL-2-Amino-4-phosphonobutyric acid, an isostere of phosphoserine, was incorporated into the heptapeptide sequence, Leu-Arg-Arg-Ala-(DL-2-amino-4-phosphonobutyric acid)-Leu-Gly, for kinetic mechanistic studies of the cAMP-dependent protein kinase. To block the phosphono hydroxyl groups, methyl, ethyl and 4nitrobenzyl esters were studied as possible protecting groups. The phosphono diethyl ester of the N-Fmoc-protected amino acid was utilized in the synthesis of the heptapeptide. Two configurational forms of the protected peptide were obtained and were separated by C18-reverse phase HPLC. Characterization of the two isomeric forms was accomplished by 3 1P NMR, 1H NMR, 13C% NMR and amino acid analysis. The protecting groups of the isomeric phsophonopeptides were removed by HBr/AcOH and purified by cation exchange HPLC. Both phosphonopeptides were found to be inhibitors of the cAMP-dependent protein kinase, having Ki values of 0.6 mM (peptide A) and 1.9 mM (peptide B).
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11

Guntur, Kalyani V. P. "Role of the Yeast Ste20 Protein Kinase Ortholog Map4k4 in Adipose Tissue Function: A Dissertation." eScholarship@UMMS, 2011. https://escholarship.umassmed.edu/gsbs_diss/521.

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Obesity has increased globally in epidemic proportions and as have the associated disorders. Insulin resistance that could further lead to type 2 diabetes is a major obesity associated dysfunction. Studies using insulin resistant mouse models and observations from human subjects exhibiting insulin resistance provide evidence for ectopic lipid deposition in organs like liver, muscle and heart as one of the major risk factors for developing insulin resistance. These observations suggest that deregulated adipose function to sequester and store excess energy as fat, could lead to insulin resistance. Furthermore, several studies have demonstrated adipose tissue dysfunction leading to inflammation and related syndromes. Interestingly, a mouse model with transgenic expression of glucose transporter in the adipose tissue exhibited improved glucose tolerance and increased insulin sensitivity despite development of obesity, upon high fat feeding. Thus mechanisms that improve adipose function could alleviate insulin resistance and associated diseases. Mitogen activated protein kinase kinase kinase kinase 4 (MAP4K4) was identified in our laboratory as a negative regulator of adipocyte function. Interestingly, siRNA mediated knockdown of MAP4K4 promoted PPARγ protein expression. Additionally, silencing of MAP4K4 increased adipocyte triglyceride content. Because MAP4K4 is a negative regulator of PPARγ expression and adipocyte function, understanding the mechanism by which MAP4K4 regulates PPARγ expression is of interest. Thus, for the first part of this thesis, I characterized the signaling pathways utilized by MAP4K4 to regulate PPARγ expression in cultured adipocytes. Here I show that MAP4K4 regulates PPARγ expression through regulation of its protein translation. siRNA mediated MAP4K4 gene silencing stimulated PPARγ protein synthesis without changing its mRNA transcription or its protein degradation. This increase in PPARγ protein translation was due to an increase in the activity of mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR). The increase in PPARγ protein expression mediated by mTOR activation was a specific effect of the 4E-BP1 phosphorylation that leads to its inactivation and was not a general increase in mTOR activity towards all of its substrates. Finally, adenovirus mediated over expression of MAP4K4 inhibited mTOR activation, and suppressed PPARγ protein translation. For the second part of this thesis, I assessed the role of MAP4K4 in adipocytes in vivo. To accomplish this, a lentivirus mediated shRNA construct was generated to attenuate MAP4K4 expression selectively in the mouse adipose tissue. First we demonstrate that the MAP4K4 shRNA construct is able to efficiently silence the expression of MAP4K4 in vitro when co-expressed with Cre recombinase. Furthermore, we show that following modification of the lentiviral conditional vector that was introduced into a mouse embryo at one cell stage, and crossing the resulting founders with aP2-Cre mice, adipose tissue specific MAP4K4 gene silencing was achieved. Moreover, shRNA mediated gene silencing is a faster and an inexpensive means of achieving tissue specific gene knockdown relative to the available traditional gene knockout approaches. Utilizing these adipose specific MAP4K4 gene knockdown mice, I reveal that MAP4K4 silencing enhanced fat mass as well as PPARγ expression significantly. This is accompanied by improved whole body insulin sensitivity. Furthermore, when challenged with high fat diet, adipose-specific MAP4K4 silenced mice exhibit enhanced adiposity with decreased lean mass. Moreover, adipocyte cell size and triglyceride content are significantly increased. Interestingly, despite increased adiposity, hepatic insulin sensitivity is significantly improved leading to decreased glucose output. Thus MAP4K4 is an important regulator of adipocyte function that mediates whole body glucose homeostasis, through a mechanism that is yet to be identified.
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12

Iglesias, Miguel Angel University of New South Wales /. Garvan Institute of Medical Research Physiology &amp Pharmacology UNSW. "Mechanisms of amelioration of lipid-induced insulin resistance: role of AMP-activated protein kinase." Awarded by:University of New South Wales / Garvan Institute of Medical Research. Physiology and Pharmacology, 2004. http://handle.unsw.edu.au/1959.4/22391.

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Insulin resistance is an early marker of Type II diabetes. Excessive lipid accumulation in muscle and liver leads to insulin resistance, and lowering tissue lipids causes an enhancement of insulin action. The enzyme AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) is activated when cellular energy levels are compromised, such as during exercise; this enhances fuel oxidation and inhibits energy consuming processes. The hypothesis in this thesis was that activating AMPK in a lipid-induced insulin resistant state leads to tissue lipid reduction and improved insulin sensitivity. Insulin resistant high-fat fed (HF-) rats were administered 5-aminoimidazole-4-carboxamide-1-??-D-ribofuranoside (AICAR), a specific AMPK activator. During an euglycaemic hyperinsulinaemic clamp performed 24h later, HF-rats showed increased whole body, muscle and liver insulin action, independent of changes in PKB-phosphorylation. The liver had reduced triglycerides, malonyl-CoA and increased IkB-a content. A lowering of muscle malonyl-CoA was consistent with conditions favouring increased lipid utilisation. Normal, chow-fed rats also showed improved insulin action post-AICAR. Further studies showed that basal glucose uptake was not increased 24h after AICAR, suggesting that AMPK activation had caused an increase in insulin sensitivity. Diacylglycerols and triglycerides, but not ceramides, were reduced in the liver of AICAR treated HF-rats, suggesting lipid reduction as a likely mediator of enhanced liver insulin action. These lipid species were not reduced in muscle. AICAR administration to HF-rats lowered plasma glucose and fatty acids (FA) acutely, probably due to increased muscle glucose uptake and FA oxidation. Glycogen was reduced in liver and increased in muscle, suggesting glucose mobilisation from liver to muscle. Adrenergic blockade excluded the sympathetic nervous system in the acute AICAR effects. AMPK was activated in white muscle and liver of HF-rats immediately after AICAR, the same tissues that exhibited later improved insulin sensitivity. Tracer technologies used to investigate glucose and lipid fluxes showed that AMPK activation in white muscle simultaneously increased both glucose and FA uptake and their metabolism, with glucose also being stored as glycogen. The liver showed lower lipid synthesis, consistent with reduced liver lipid accumulation observed 24h post-AICAR. In conclusion, these results suggest that activation of AMPK leads to selective tissue lipid reduction and improved insulin action, and is a potential target for the treatment of insulin resistance and type II diabetes.
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13

Brancho, Deborah Marie. "Regulation and Function of Stress-Activated Protein Kinase Signal Transduction Pathways: A Dissertation." eScholarship@UMMS, 2005. https://escholarship.umassmed.edu/gsbs_diss/101.

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The c-Jun NH2-terminal kinase (JNK) group and the p38 group of mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPK) are stress-activated protein kinases that regulate cell proliferation, differentiation, development, and apoptosis. These protein kinases are involved in a signal transduction cascade that includes a MAP kinase (MAPK), a MAP kinase kinase (MAP2K), and a MAP kinase kinase kinase (MAP3K). MAPK are phosphorylated and activated by the MAP2K, which are phosphorylated and activated by various MAP3K. The work presented in this dissertation focuses on understanding the regulation and function of the JNK and p38 MAPK pathways. Two different strategies were utilized. First, I used molecular and biochemical techniques to examine how MAP2K and MAP3K mediate signaling specificity and to define their role in the MAPK pathway. Second, I used gene targeted disruption studies to determine the in vivo role ofMAP2K and MAP3K in MAPK activation. I specifically used these approaches to examine: (1) docking interactions between p38 MAPK and MAP2K [MKK3 and MKK6 (Chapter II)]; (2) the differential activation of p38 MAPK by MAP2K [MKK3, MKK4, and MKK6 (Chapter III)]; and (3) the selective involvement of the mixed lineage kinase (MLK) group of MAP3K in JNK and p38 MAPK activation (Chapter IV and Appendix). In addition, I analyzed the role of the MKK3 and MKK6 MAP2K in cell proliferation and the role of the MLK MAP3K in adipocyte differentiation (Chapter III and Chapter IV). Together, these data provide insight into the regulation and function of the stress-activated MAPK signal transduction pathways.
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14

Chand, Annisa Natalie. "Developmental expression and functional requirements of pituitary guanylyl cyclase-B (GC-B) and calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaMKII) in vivo and in vitro." Thesis, Royal Veterinary College (University of London), 2010. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.558959.

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15

Mitra, Ganguli Tora. "Modulation of Voltage-Gated N-Type Calcium Channels by G Protein-Coupled Receptors Involves Lipids and Proteins: A Dissertation." eScholarship@UMMS, 2008. https://escholarship.umassmed.edu/gsbs_diss/389.

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Pain signaling involves transmission of nociceptive stimuli in the spinal cord where a critical balance between excitatory and inhibitory inputs determines the response to noxious stimuli. The neuropeptide, substance P (SP), mediates transmission of pain in part by binding to the tachykinin receptor (NK-1R) in the dorsal horn (DH) of the spinal cord. One of SP’s downstream effects is to modulate N-type Ca2+(N-) channels. While phospholipid breakdown is a part of the inflammatory process that accompanies tissue damage, the role of this metabolic pathway has not been completely described with respect to N-channel modulation during pain signaling. Despite the incomplete understanding of this modulation, pharmacological antagonists of both NK-1R and N-channels have been used to treat pain. In Chapter II, using whole-cell patch clamp recording techniques, the SP signaling cascade that mediates inhibition of recombinant N-channel activity was characterized. By adopting a pharmacological approach, I show that this pathway resembles the slow pathway that was earlier described for modulation of N-current by the M1 muscarinic receptor (M1R). M1R couples to Gq to stimulate phospholipid breakdown. Together with previous observations, the data presented in this chapter provide evidence for involvement of the extracellular receptor kinase (ERK1/2), phospholipase A2 and release of phospholipid metabolites in the modulation of N-current by SP. Overall, this chapter shows that phospholipid metabolism involved in modulation of N-currents is not specific to M1Rs but that other Gq-coupled receptors may also modulate N-currents via the same signal transduction pathway. In Chapter III, enhancement of N-current by SP was studied as part of a collaborative project to understand current enhancement that occurs when a palmitoylated accessory CaVβ2a subunit is co-expressed with the pore-forming subunit CaV2.2 and the accessory subunit α2δ-1. When CaVβ3 is present, SP inhibits N-current as described in Chapter II. However, when palmitoylated CaVβ2a is co-expressed with CaV2.2 (and α2δ-1), current enhancement is observed at negative test potentials, demonstrating that both M1Rs and NK-1Rs exhibit the same profile of N-current modulation. This change in modulation by muscarinic agonists is not observed in the presence of a depalmitoylated CaVβ2a. However a chimeric CaVβ2aβ1b subunit that contains the palmitoylated N-terminus from CaVβ2a confers enhancement. Normally expression of the β1b subunit resulted in current inhibition. These findings indicated that the palmitoylated CaVβ2a participates in enhancement of current. Our data support a model where inhibition dominates over enhancement; when inhibition is blocked, enhancement may be observed. Lastly, we show that N-current inhibition by SP is minimized when exogenous palmitic acid is applied to cells co-expressing CaVβ3 subunits with N-channels. These results indicate that the presence of palmitic acid can prevent N-current inhibition when SP is applied most likely by interacting with CaV2.2. We propose a model where palmitic acid occupies the inhibitory site and serves to antagonize inhibition by a lipid metabolite, which is most likely arachidonic acid. The CaVβ2a protein seems to have a role in positioning the palmitoyl groups near CaV2.2. This chapter provides a new role for protein palmitoylation where the palmitoyl groups of CaVβ2a are both necessary and sufficient to block inhibition of another protein: CaV2.2. In Chapter IV, I probe the role of the relative orientation of CaVβ2a and the pore-forming subunit of the N-channel in N-current modulation. Evidence is presented that shows that not just the presence of a palmitoylated CaVβ2a is necessary, but the relative orientation of CaVβ2a to CaV2.2 is critical for blocking inhibition. Using N-channel mutants that cause a change in the orientation of CaVβ2a relative to CaV2.2, I show that the block of inhibition is disrupted; inhibition by the slow pathway is rescued. These findings further support my model that the palmitoyl groups of CaVβ2a normally reside in a specific location that overlaps with the slow pathway inhibitory site on CaV2.2. Lastly I present data showing that the enhancement of N-current, observed when palmitoylated CaVβ2a is present, occurs via the slow pathway. In Chapter V the effect of CaVβ’s orientation on N-channel modulation by the dopamine D2 receptor is tested. In this form of modulation, inhibition is rapid and voltage-dependent. The signaling pathway is membrane-delimited since Gβγ, released after receptor stimulation, directly interacts with the N-channel at a site that overlaps with a high affinity binding site for CaVβs. While N-currents are modulated by this pathway, the deletion mutants show aberrant membrane-delimited modulation. The findings in this chapter further underscore the importance of proper positioning of CaVβ to CaV2.2 for eliciting proper N-current modulation after GPCR stimulation. Overall, the data presented in this dissertation provides a mechanistic approach into examining modulation of N-current by different GPCRs via two different signaling pathways as well as the role CaVβ subunits serve in each modulatory pathway.
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Wysk, Mark Allen. "The Role of MKK3 in Mediating Signals to the p38 MAP Kinase Pathway: A Dissertation." eScholarship@UMMS, 2000. https://escholarship.umassmed.edu/gsbs_diss/184.

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p38 mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinases represent a subgroup of MAP kinases that respond to environmental stress and inflammatory cytokines. p38 MAPK is activated by two upstream kinases, MKK3 and MKK6, by dual phosphorylation on threonine and tyrosine in conserved kinase subdomain VII. Until recently the relative roles of MKK3 and MKK6 have remained unclear. I have undertaken two strategies in an effort to understand the importance of MKK3 as a p38 MAPK activator. First, I cloned and characterized the murine mkk3 gene and determined the structure of the 5'-terminus. Comparison of the murine and human mkk3 genes revealed that the mouse gene encodes a single MKK3 isoform, MKK3b, and the human gene encodes two isoforms, MKK3a and MKK3b. Comparison of the mouse and human mkk3 genes suggests that expression of MKK3a and MKK3b is regulated from different promotors. Analysis of the mkk3 promoter demonstrates that muscle specific expression of murine MKK3b is controlled, in part, by the transcription factors MEF2 and MyoD. Second, I have utilized a gene targeting strategy to disrupt the murine mkk3 gene and to examine the effect on p38 MAPK signaling. I found that there is a p38-specific signaling defect in MKK3 deficient primary mouse embryo fibroblasts (MEF) which correlates with deficits in interleukin (IL)-1 and IL-6 production in response to tumor necrosis factor-α (TNFα) stimulation. In addition there is a defect in TNFα mediated expression of TNFα and macrophage inflammatory proteins (MIP) 1α, MIP1β and MIP2. p38 MAPK-specific signaling defects were also observed in lipopolysaccharide (LPS) stimulated mkk3 (-/-) macrophages. Additionally, mkk3 (-/-) macrophages exhibit defects in LPS and CD40-ligand (CD40L) stimulated IL-12 biosynthesis. Similar data were obtained from CD40L-stimulated mkk3 (-/-) dendritic cells. I also observe that interferon (Ifn)-γ production is diminished during T-helper-1 (TH1) differentiation of CD4+ T-cells derived from mkk3 (-/-) mice. Taken together these data demonstrate a crucial role for p38 MAPK activation by MKK3 in response to the inflammatory cytokine, TNFα and during a TH1 inflammatory response.
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17

Wirschell, Maureen. "Chlamydomonas Reinhardtii ODA5 Encodes an Axonemal Protein Required for Assembly of the Outer Dynein Arm and an Associated Flagellar Adenylate Kinase: A Dissertation." eScholarship@UMMS, 2004. https://escholarship.umassmed.edu/gsbs_diss/25.

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The first type of dynein identified, axonemel dynein (Gibbons and Rowe, 1965), slides adjacent microtubules within the axoneme, generating the force necessary for ciliary and flagellar beating. The outer dynein arm is an important component of the flagellar axoneme, providing up to 60% of the force for flagellar motility. In the absence of the outer arm, cells swim with a slow-jerky motion at about 1/3rd the speed of wild-type cells, and the flagellar beat frequency is markedly reduced. Sixteen genes (ODA1-ODA16) have been identified that are required for outer arm assembly in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. In addition, PF13, PF22, and FLA14 are required for outer dynein arm assembly, but their phenotypes are pleiotropic, suggesting that they affect additional flagellar components. Of the uncloned genes, ODA5, ODA8, and ODA10 are of particular interest because they do not encode subunits of the outer arm or the outer dynein arm-docking complex (ODA-DC). Mutant alleles of these genes are unable to complement in temporary dikaryons, suggesting that the gene products interact with each other (Kamiya, 1988). Since the genes encoding all of the known components of the outer dynein arm and the ODA-DC have been characterized, it is of great interest to identify the gene products of these additional, uncloned ODA alleles. The first chapter provides an introduction to the Chlamydomonasflagellum, the dyneins in general, the outer dynein arm in particular, and mutations that impinge on the assembly and regulation of this important axonemal structure. The second chapter addresses the identification and isolation of genomic DNA containing the ODA5 gene. Utilizing a NIT1-tagged oda5-insertional mutant, I identified sequences flanking the site of the inserted NIT1 gene. These sequences were used to isolate wild-type genomic clones spanning the ODA5 gene. When transformed into the oda5 mutant, the wild-type clones rescued the mutant phenotype. These results demonstrated the successful isolation of the ODA5 gene. The third chapter describes the identification of the ODA5 gene and its corresponding cDNA. The rescuing genomic fragments were sequenced. Gene modeling was used to predict intron-exon splice sites. Primers to predicted exons were designed and used to obtain the ODA5 cDNA. The gene structure of Oda5 was analyzed and its predicted amino acid sequence deduced. Secondary structure predictions indicate that Oda5p is likely to contain a series of coiled-coil domains, followed by a poly-glycine sequence and a short, highly charged region. Northern analysis demonstrated that ODA5 gene expression is upregulated by deflagellation, a hallmark of many flagellar mRNAs. Data in CHAPTER IV further characterize the Oda5 protein and its association with the axoneme. Oda5p localizes to the flagellum, consistent with the enhancement in mRNA levels in response to deflagellation. Within the flagellum, Oda5p is an axonemal component that is released from the axoneme upon high salt extraction, as are the ODA-DC and the outer dynein arm. However, Oda5p does not associate with this super-complex in the high salt extract as determined by sucrose gradient sedimentation. Oda5p assembles onto the axoneme independently of the outer dynein arm and the ODA-DC,demonstrating it does not require these complexes for localization. Furthermore, Oda5p assembles onto the axoneme in the oda8, but not the oda10 mutant, demonstrating a role for the Oda10 protein in localization of Oda5p. These data provide the first biochemical evidence for an interaction between Oda5p and Oda10p. CHAPTER V reveals the discovery of a previously unrecognized phenotype exhibited in both oda5 and oda10 mutant strains: a defect in the assembly of a previously unknown flagellar adenylate kinase (AK). The protein levels of this flagellar AK are reduced in oda5 mutant axonemes, as determined by quantitative mass spectrometry. Direct enzymatic assays confirmed a reduction in AK activity in both oda5 and oda10 mutant axonemes, providing a second line of biochemical evidence supporting a complex containing Oda5p and OdalOp. The sequence of the flagellar AK gene and its cDNA were determined. CHAPTER VI details our efforts to identify the ODA10 gene. Genomic clones were isolated, which contain sequences at, or near, the ODA10 locus. Analysis of the genomic clones yielded no insights into the identity of the ODA10 gene. The inability of these clones to rescue the Oda10-motility phenotype indicates that these clones most likely do not contain an intact ODA10 gene. And lastly, CHAPTER VII discusses future experimentation that can be done based on the data provided by the current study.
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Chen, Chun-Ti. "Regulation of the Cdc14-like Phosphatase CLP1 in Schizosaccharomyces pombe and Identification of SID2 Kinase Substrates: A Dissertation." eScholarship@UMMS, 2009. https://escholarship.umassmed.edu/gsbs_diss/449.

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Coordination of mitosis and cytokinesis is crucial to generate healthy daughter cells with equal amounts of genetic and cytoplasmic materials. In the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe, an evolutionarily conserved Cdc14-like phosphatase (Clp1) functions to couple mitosis and cytokinesis by antagonizing CDK activity. The activity of Clp1 is thought to be regulated in part by its subcellular localization. It is sequestered in the nucleolus and the spindle pole body (SPB) during interphase. Upon mitotic entry, it is released into the cytoplasm and localized to the kinetochores, the actomyosin ring, and the mitotic spindle to carry out distinct functions. It is not clear how Clp1 is released from the nucleolus, however, once released, a conserved signaling pathway termed Septation Initiation Network (SIN) functions to retain Clp1 in the cytoplasm until completion of cytokinesis. The SIN and Clp1 function together in a positive feedback loop to promote each other’s activity. That is, the SIN promotes cytoplasmic retention of Clp1, and cytoplasmic Clp1 antagonizes CDK activity and reverses CDK inhibition on the SIN pathway to promote its function and activity. However, at the start of this thesis, the mechanism by which the SIN regulated Clp1 was unknown. The SIN pathway is also required to promote constriction of the actomyosin ring, and the septum formation. However, its downstream targets were still uncharacterized. In two separate studies, we studied how Clp1 is released from the nucleolus at mitotic entry and how the SIN kinase Sid2 acts to retain Clp1 in the cytoplasm. We identified several Sid2 candidate substrates, and revealed other functions of the SIN pathway in coordinating mitotic events.
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Cellurale, Cristina Arrigo. "Role of the cJun NH2-Terminal Kinase (JNK) in Cancer: A Dissertation." eScholarship@UMMS, 2010. https://escholarship.umassmed.edu/gsbs_diss/478.

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cJun NH2-terminal kinase (JNK) is a member of the MAPK (mitogen- activated protein kinase) signaling family that responds to various extracellular stimuli, such as stress, growth factors, cytokines, or UV radiation. JNK activation can lead to cellular responses including gene expression, growth, survival, and apoptosis. JNK has been implicated in normal developmental processes, including tissue morphogenesis, as well as pathological processes, such as cellular transformation and cancer. JNK exists in three isoforms, and knockout mice have been generated for each isoform; the ubiquitously expressed Jnk1 and Jnk2 have been studied independently, however, the two isoforms are partially functionally redundant. Jnk1-/- Jnk2-/-mice are nonviable, therefore studies of compound JNK-deficiency have been limited to mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEF). Understanding the role of JNK in epithelial cells is now possible with the creation of conditional JNK knockout animals. I sought to elucidate the role of JNK in cellular transformation, cancer, and normal development. I employed both in vitro and in vivo approaches. First, I evaluated the role of JNK in cellular transformation using p53-/- Jnk1-/- Jnk2-/- MEF transduced with oncogenic Ras. To extend this study, I examined JNK-deficiency in a Kras-induced model of lung tumorigenesis. Second, I investigated JNK1- and JNK2-deficiency in a p53-mediated model of mammary tumorigenesis. Finally, I examined the role of JNK in mouse mammary gland development by establishing JNK-deficient primary mouse mammary epithelial cells and evaluating JNK-deficient mammary gland transplants. Taken together, this work provides evidence of context-dependent roles for JNK in both normal and pathological cell biology.
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20

Mayack, Shane Renee. "The role of Janus Kinase 3 in CD4+ T Cell Homeostasis and Function: A Dissertation." eScholarship@UMMS, 2004. https://escholarship.umassmed.edu/gsbs_diss/94.

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This dissertation addresses the role for Janus Kinase 3 (Jak3) in CD4+ T cell homeostasis and function. Jak3 is a protein tyrosine kinase whose activity is essential for signals mediated by the γc dependent cytokines IL-2, -4, -7, -9, -15, and -21. Previous data have demonstrated that peripheral CD4+ T cells from Jak3-deficient mice have a memory phenotype and are functionally impaired in both proliferative and IL-2 responses in vitro. Interestingly, Jak3/γc activity has been previously shown to play a role in the prevention of T cell anergy. These studies were initiated to more precisely define the role for Jak3/γc cytokines in the prevention of T cell anergy and the maintenance of functional CD4+ T cell responses. We began to address this question by assessing global gene expression changes between wild type and Jak3-/- CD4+ T cells. These data indicate that Jak3-/- CD4+ T cells have an increase in gene expression levels of inhibitory surface receptors as well as immunosuppressive cytokines. Further analyses confirmed that Jak3-deficient T cells express high levels of PD-1, secrete a Trl-type cytokine profile following direct ex vivo activation, and suppress the proliferation of wild type T cells in vitro. These characteristics indicate that CD4+ Jak3-/- T cells share properties with regulatory T cell subsets that have an important role in peripheral tolerance and the prevention of autoimmunity. We next addressed whether these regulatory characteristics were T cell intrinsic or rather the result of expanding in a Jak3-deficient microenvironment characterized by a number of immune abnormalities and a disrupted splenic architecture. Jak3-/- CD4+ T cells proliferate in vivoin a lymphopenic environment and selectively acquire regulatory T cell characteristics in the absence of any additional activation signals. While the precise mechanism by which Jak3-deficient T cells acquire these characteristics remains unclear, our data indicate that one important component is a T cell-intrinsic requirement for Jak3 signaling. These findings indicate several interesting aspects of T cell biology. First, these studies, demonstrate that the homeostatic proliferation of CD4+ T cells is not dependent on signaling via γc-dependent cytokine receptors. And, second, that the weak activation signals normally associated with homeostatic expansion are sufficient to drive Jak3-/- T cells into a non-conventional differentiation program. Previous data indicate that, for wild type T cells, signaling through both the TCR as well as γc-dependent cytokine receptors promote the homeostatic proliferation of T cells in lymphopenic hosts. Since Jak3-/- T cells are unable to receive these cytokine signals, their proliferation is likely to be wholly dependent on TCR signaling. As a consequence of this TCR signaling, Jak3-/- T cells proliferate, but in addition, are induced to up regulate PD-1 and to selectively activate the IL-10 locus while shutting off the production of IL-2. Since this fate does not occur for wild type T cells in a comparable environment, it is likely that the unique differentiation pathway taken by Jak3-/- T cells reflects the effects of TCR signaling in the absence of γc-dependent cytokine signaling. Interestingly, wild type T cells undergoing homeostatic expansion in lymphopenic hosts show many common patterns of gene expression to freshly-purified unmanipulated Jak3-/- T cells. For instance, micro array analysis of gene expression in wild type CD4+ T cells after lymphopenia induced homeostatic expansion show a similar pattern of upregulation in surface markers (PD-1 and LAG-3), and cytokine signaling molecules (IL-10 and IFN-γ cytokine, receptors, and inducible gene targets) to that of Jak3-/- CD4+ T cells immediately ex vivo. These data suggest that the process of homeostatic proliferation normally induces immune attenuation and peripheral tolerance mechanisms, but that full differentiation into a regulatory T cell phenotype is prevented by γc-dependent cytokine signals. Taken together these data suggest that Jak3 plays an important role in tempering typical immune attenuation mechanisms employed to maintain T cell homeostasis and peripheral tolerance.
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21

Miller, Andrew Todd. "The Function of the Tyrosine Kinase, Itk, in CD4+ T Cell Differentiation and Death: a Dissertation." eScholarship@UMMS, 2003. https://escholarship.umassmed.edu/gsbs_diss/58.

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The Tec family tyrosine kinase, Itk, plays an important role in signal transduction following T cell receptor engagement. Several prior studies have established the importance of Itk in immune system processes, such as T cell development and T cell activation. Additional biochemical studies have found that Itk specifically functions within a multi-molecular signalosome complex, which ultimately functions to provide a platform by which Itk can phosphorylate and activate PLC-γ1, a crucial step in T cell activation. To further study how Itk regulates distinct immune outcomes via T cell effector processes within the peripheral immune system, and to further understand how Itk functions in T cells in response to a physiological ligand-receptor interaction, I crossed Itk-deficient mice to mice transgenic for a TCR specific for a moth cytochrome C peptide. My studies have established a unique role for Itk in several important aspects of T cell function. Following T cell activation, I identified an imperative role for Itk in activation-induced cell death via FasL, a mechanism of immune homeostasis. Furthermore, I found Itk plays a unique role in the process of T cell differentiation, where Itk positively regulates the induction of cytokine genes, such as IL-4, while negatively regulating the induction of T-bet, a transcription factor important for Th1 differentiation. Lastly, following T cell differentiation, I found that Itk mRNA and protein are up-regulated during Th2 differentiation, while Rlk, a related Tec kinase, disappears rapidly from Th2 cells, indicating a critical role for Itk in Th2 cell function. Collectively, my thesis work has more clearly defined an important function for Itk not only in TCR signaling, but also in immune processes such as T cell differentiation and activation-induced cell death that are required for proper immune function.
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Maimari, Theopisti [Verfasser], Kristina [Gutachter] Lorenz, Andreas [Gutachter] Schlosser, and Karoline [Gutachter] Kisker. "The influence of N-terminal peptides of G-protein coupled receptor kinase (GRK) 2, 3 and 5 on β-adrenergic signaling / Theopisti Maimari ; Gutachter: Kristina Lorenz, Andreas Schlosser, Karoline Kisker." Würzburg : Universität Würzburg, 2020. http://d-nb.info/1204006369/34.

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23

Hess, Patricia M. "Role of c-Jun NH-terminal Kinase in Bcr/Abl Induced Cell Transformation: a dissertation." eScholarship@UMMS, 2003. https://escholarship.umassmed.edu/gsbs_diss/88.

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The c-Jun NH2-terminal kinase (JNK) group of kinases include ten members that are created by alternative splicing of transcripts derived from Jnk1, Jnk2 and Jnk3 genes. The JNK1 and JNK2 protein kinases are ubiquitously expressed while JNK3 is expressed in a limited number of tissues. The JNK signaling pathway is implicated in multiple physiological processes including cell transformation. There is growing evidence that JNK signaling is involved in oncogenesis. Nevertheless, the role that JNK plays in malignant transformation is still unclear. The aim of this thesis is to examine the role of JNK in malignant transformation. For this purpose, I used the Bcr/Abl oncogene as a transforming agent. Bcr/Abl is a leukemogenic oncogene that is created by reciprocal translocation between chromosome 9 and 22. The translocation breakpoint is variable and several different Bcr/Abl isoforms have been identified such as Bcr/AblP185 and Bcr/AblP210, whose expression is associated with different types of leukemia. Bcr/Abl activates the JNK signaling pathway in hematopoietic cells and increases AP-1 transcription activity. Furthermore, dominant negative approaches demonstrate that inhibition of c-Jun or JNK prevents Bcr/ Abl-induced cell transformation in vitro. These data implicate the JNK signaling pathway in Bcr/Abl transformation although the role that JNK might have in this process is unclear. Thus, I examined the importance of JNK signaling in Bcr/Abl-induced lymphoid or myeloid transformation. For this purpose I compared Bcr/AblP185- and Bcr/AblP210- induced transformation of wild-type and JNK1-deficient cells using three approaches: in vitro, in vivo and ex vivo. The results obtained with the in vitro approach suggest that both Bcr/AblP185 and Bcr/AblP210 require JNK activity to induce lymphoid transformation. While JNK1-deficiency inhibits Bcr/AblP210 oncogenic potential in lymphoid cells both in vitro and in vivo, pharmacological inhibition of JNK activity (JNK1 and/or JNK2) blocked Bcr/AblP185 induced malignant proliferation in vitro. The differential requirement for JNK observed in the two Bcr/Abl isoforms can be ascribed to the presence in Bcr/AblP210 of the Dbl domain which can activate the JNK pathway in vitro. In the case of Bcr/AblP210, JNK1 is critical for the survival of the ex vivo derived transformed lymphoblasts upon growth factor removal. This result correlates with the fact that mice reconstituted with Bcr/AblP210 transformed Jnk1-l- bone marrow showed normal malignant lymphoid expansion in the bone marrow yet they had reduced numbers of lymphoblast in the bloodstream and lacked peripheral organ infiltration. Thus JNK1 is essential for the survival of the transformed lymphoblast outside the bone marrow microenvironment in Bcr/AblP210induced lymphoid leukemia. Interestingly, while JNK1 is essential for lymphoid transformation, it is dispensable for the proliferation of transformed myeloblasts. Taken together these results indicate that the JNK signaling pathway plays an essential role in the survival of Bcr/AblP210 lymphoblasts and that JNK-deficiency decreases the leukomogenic potential of Bcr/AblP210 in vivo. Thus, cell survival mediated by JNK may contribute to the pathogenesis of proliferative diseases.
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24

Charni, Seyma. "Localisation subcellulaire d'ERK5 et ses implications physiologiques dans les leucémies." Montpellier 1, 2008. http://www.theses.fr/2008MON1T026.

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Ces travaux de thèse ont montré que la protéine ERK5 joue un rôle clé dans deux processus importants de la tumorigenèse qui sont le changement de métabolisme et la diminution de l'expression du complexe MHC-I. En effet, un des moyens qu'utilisent les cellules tumorales pour échapper à la réponse immune est la diminution de l'expression du MHC-I. D'autre part, les cellules cancéreuses changent leur métabolisme cellulaire en produisant plus d'ATP par la fermentation au lieu de la respiration en condition de normoxie : c'est ce qu'on appelle l'effet Warburg. Nous avons montré que le métabolisme cellulaire régule l'expression d'ERK5, qui va réguler l'expression du MHC-I. L'expression d'ERK5 est induite, quand la respiration est imposée, et l'expression du MHC-I est augmentée. D'autre part, nous avons montré qu'ERK5 régule l'expression du MHC-I au niveau transcriptionnel en contrôlant ses deux chaînes : la chaîne lourde et sa chaîne légère, la β-2m. L'établissement d'une lignée stable exprimant un shRNA dirigé contre la protéine ERK5 (shERK5) nous a permis d'élaborer une stratégie thérapeutique pour traiter les leucémies. Les cellules leucémiques shERK5 ne forment pas de tumeurs in vivo et sont rapidement éliminées, après injection chez la souris, par le système immunitaire inné. En effet, la diminution de l'expression d'ERK5 induit la diminution d'expression du MHC-I, ce qui va rendre ces cellules très sensibles aux cellules Natural Killer. Nos résultats nous laissent penser qu'ERK5 est une bonne cible thérapeutique pour traiter les leucémies.
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25

Abbott, Mary-Alice. "Structural and Signaling Proteins at the Synapse: Dystroglycan & Insulin Receptor Tyrosine Kinase Substrate p58/53: a Dissertation." eScholarship@UMMS, 1999. https://escholarship.umassmed.edu/gsbs_diss/124.

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The synapse is the primary locus of cell-cell communication in the nervous system. The elaboration of a functional synapse requires both a specialized structure and an efficient communication system. For my thesis work, I studied proteins implicated in each of these functions: the structural molecules dystroglycan and dystrophin, and the signaling elements Insulin Receptor Substrate p58/53 and insulin receptor. The α/β-dystroglycan complex, believed to be the heart of cellmatrix adhesion in muscle and other tissues, provides a link between dystrophin, a cytoskeletal protein at the base of the muscle cell's Dystrophin Associated Protein Complex, and the extracellular matrix. In addition, dystrophin is found at central synapses, tightly associated with the postsynaptic density. The absence of dystrophin and the secondary loss of its associated proteins causes the genetic disease Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy. DMD affects both muscle and brain, causing a severe muscular dystrophy and lower IQs than control groups. In the first portion of my thesis work, I sought to determine the role of dystroglycan, dystrophin's peripheral partner, at central synapses. I probed Northern blots of brain regions to delineate the distribution of brain β-dystroglycan mRNA and to uncover any β-dystroglycan-related transcripts in brain. Then, using subcellular brain fractions, and cultured hippocampal neurons, I determined that whereas α-dystroglycan is associated with central synapses, β-dystroglycan is not. This discovery is surprising, and differs from the finding that dystrophin and α- and β-dystroglycan colocalize at the presynaptic membrane of retinal photoreceptors. In the course of the above mentioned work, using the anti-β-dystroglycan antiserum Ab98, I discovered a pair of proteins that were tightly associated with the postsynaptic density. These polypeptides of 58 kDa and 53 kDa (p58/53) were highly enriched in postsynaptic density (PSD) fractions from rat cerebral cortex, hippocampus, and cerebellum. In pursuit of a potential synapse-specific dystroglycan relative, I purified p58 and p53 by a combination of hydrophobic interaction chromatography and two-dimensional gel electrophoresis. Mass spectroscopy and peptide microsequencing revealed that p58/53 is identical to the insulin receptor tyrosine kinase substrate p58/53 (IRSp53). Whereas IRSp58/53 has no significant homology to β-dystroglycan other than the one span of peptides that confers its antibody cross-reactivity, its localization to the PSD newly implicates insulin signaling at synapses. Analysis of IRSp58/53 mass profiles, peptides, and mRNA indicated that IRSp58 and IRSp53 are the product of the same coding sequence. Immunolocalization showed that IRSp58/53 is expressed in the synapserich molecular layer of the cerebellum. Immunostaining of cultured hippocampal neurons showed that both IRSp58/53 and insulin receptor are highly concentrated at synapses. Like IRSp58/53, insulin receptors are a component of the PSD fraction. Together, these data suggest that the synapse is a specialized site for insulin signaling in the brain.
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26

Strickfaden, Shelly Catherine. "Regulation of Cell Polarization and Map Kinase Signaling in the Saccharomyces Cerevisiae Pheromone Response Pathway: a Dissertation." eScholarship@UMMS, 2007. https://escholarship.umassmed.edu/gsbs_diss/321.

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Exposure to external stimuli promotes a variety of cellular responses including changes in morphology, gene expression and cell division status. These responses are promoted by signaling pathways composed of modules that are conserved from lower to higher eukaryotes. In Saccharomyces cerevisiae response to the external stimuli provided by mating pheromone is governed by the pheromone response pathway. This pathway is composed of a G protein coupled receptor/heterotrimeric G protein (Gαβγ) module and a MAP kinase cascade. Activation of this pathway allows the heterotrimeric G protein βγ dimer (Gβγ) to recruit polarity proteins to promote changes in cell morphology and to activate signaling through the MAP kinase cascade. Here we investigate the regulation of these pheromone-induced responses. We first examine how an asymmetric polarization response is generated. Normally, a gradient of pheromone serves as a spatial cue for formation of a polarized mating projection, but cells can still polarize when pheromone is present uniformly. Here we show that an intact receptor/Gαβγ module is required for polarization in response to both a gradient and uniform concentration of pheromone. Further investigation into regulation of Gβγ by Gα revealed that the two interaction interfaces between Gα and Gβ have qualitatively different roles. Our results suggest that one interface controls signaling whereas the other governs coupling to the receptor. Overall our results indicate that communication between the receptor and Gαβγ is required for proper polarization. We then examine how G1 CDKs regulate MAP kinase signaling. Response to pheromone is restricted to the G1 stage of the cell cycle. Once cells commit to a round of division they become refractory to mating pheromone until that round of division is complete. One contributor to this specificity involves inhibition of signaling through the MAP kinase cascade by G1 CDKs, but it was not known how this occurs. Here, we show that the MAP kinase cascade scaffold Ste5 is the target of this inhibition. Cln/CDKs inhibit signaling by phosphorylating sites surrounding a small membrane-binding domain in Ste5, thereby disrupting the membrane localization of Ste5. Furthermore, we found that disrupting this regulation allows cells to arrest at an aberrant non-G1 position. Our findings define a mechanism and a physiological benefit for restricting pheromone-induced signaling to G1. This thesis describes findings related to generation of an asymmetric polarization response, heterotrimeric G protein function, and coordination of differentiation signaling with cell division status. Lessons learned here might be applicable to the regulation of polarization and differentiation responses in other systems as the signaling modules are conserved.
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MacDonald, Jennifer M. "A Role for c-Jun Kinase (JNK) Signaling in Glial Engulfment of Degenerating Axons: A Dissertation." eScholarship@UMMS, 2012. https://escholarship.umassmed.edu/gsbs_diss/609.

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The central nervous system (CNS) is composed of two types of cells: neurons that send electrical signals to transmit information throughout the animal and glial cells. Glial cells were long thought to be merely support cells for the neurons; however, recent work has identified many critical roles for these cells during development and in the mature animal. In the CNS, glial cells act as the resident immune cell and they are responsible for the clearance of dead or dying material. After neuronal injury or death, glial cells become reactive, exhibiting dramatic changes in morphology and patterns of gene expression and ultimately engulfing neuronal debris. This rapid clearance of degenerating neuronal material is thought to be crucial for suppression of inflammation and promotion of functional recovery, but molecular pathways mediating these engulfment events remain poorly defined. Drosophila melanogaster is a genetically tractable model system in which to study glial biology. It has been shown that Drosophila glia rapidly respond to axonal injury both morphologically and molecularly and that they ultimately phagocytose the degenerating axonal debris. This glial response to axonal debris requires the engulfment receptor Draper and downstream signaling molecules dCed-6, Shark, and Rac1. However, much remains unknown about the molecular details of this response. In this thesis I show that Drosophila c-Jun kinase (dJNK) signaling is a critical in vivo mediator of glial engulfment activity. In response to axotomy, glial dJNK signals through a cascade involving the upstream MAPKKKs Slipper and TAK1, the MAPKK MKK4, and ultimately the Drosophila AP-1 transcriptional complex composed of JRA and Kayak to initiate glial phagocytosis of degenerating axons. Interestingly, loss of dJNK also blocked injury-induced up-regulation of Draper levels in glia and glial-specific over-expression of Draper was sufficient to rescue phenotypes associated with loss of dJNK signaling. I have identified the dJNK pathway as a novel mediator of glial engulfment activity and show that a primary role for the glial Slipper/Tak1→MKK4→dJNK→dAP-1 signaling cascade is activation of draper expression after axon injury.
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28

Ghosh, Rajarshi. "Transcriptional Regulation of VEGFA by Unfolded Protein Response Signaling Pathway." eScholarship@UMMS, 2010. https://escholarship.umassmed.edu/gsbs_diss/469.

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The endoplasmic reticulum is the primary organelle in the cell which has the responsibility of properly folding proteins belonging to the secretory pathway. Secretory proteins are essential for a variety of functions within the body like metabolism, growth and survival. Hence, proper folding of the proteins in the ER is absolutely essential to maintain cellular and body function. The environment of the ER is substantially different from that of the cytoplasm and is primed essentially to provide the optimum conditions to fold newly synthesized polypeptides following translation by the ribosomes in the cytoplasm and on the surface of the ER. In order for secretory proteins to fold properly, ER homeostasis must be maintained. ER homeostasis is defined by the dynamic balance between the ER protein load and the ER capacity to process this load. The optimum environment of the ER, or ER homeostasis, can be perturbed by pathological processes such as hypoxia, glucose deprivation, viral infections, environmental toxins, inflammatory cytokines, and mutant protein expression, as well as by physiological processes such as aging. Disruption of ER homeostasis causes accumulation of unfolded and misfolded proteins in the ER. This condition is referred to as ER stress. Cells cope with ER stress by activating the unfolded protein response (UPR). The UPR is initiated by three ER transmembrane proteins: Inositol requiring 1 (IRE1), PKR-like ER kinase, and activating transcription factor 6 (ATF6). These three master regulators sense and interpret protein folding conditions in the ER and translate this information across the ER membrane to activate downstream effectors, spliced XBP1, phosphorylated eIF2α and ATF4, and cleaved active ATF6 respectively. These effectors have two distinct outputs, homeostatic and apoptotic. Homeostatic outputs are adaptive responses that function to attenuate ER stress and restore ER homeostasis. These responses include the attenuation of protein translation to reduce ER workload and prevent further accumulation of unfolded proteins, upregulation of molecular chaperones and protein processing enzymes to enhance the ER folding activity, and the increase in ER-associated degradation (ERAD) components to promote clearance of unfolded proteins. When ER stress reaches a point where the cells cannot tolerate the load of unfolded proteins any more, apoptosis sets in. One of the major secretory proteins in mammals, vascular endothelial growth factor VEGF, is essential for either normal or pathological angiogenesis (blood vessel development). VEGFA is the primary member of this family which is expressed in all endothelial cells and is responsible for sprouting and invasion of blood vessels into the interstitium and thus helps in supplying nutrients and oxygen to growing cells. Recent studies have indicated that cells suffering from insufficient blood supply experience ER stress. The ER needs energy and oxygen for the folding process, thus nutrient deprivation (low ATP production) and hypoxia caused by insufficient blood supply leads to inefficient protein folding and ER stress in cells, especially in cancer cells that grow and spread rapidly. This condition also occurs in the development of the mammalian placenta. The placenta is an essential tissue characterized by a lot of blood vessels. It is responsible for the exchange of nutrients and growth factors between maternal and fetal blood vessels and hence is essential for survival of the embryo. Nutrient deprivation and hypoxia stimulate the production of VEGFA and other angiogenic factors, leading to protection against ischaemic injury in both cancer cells as well as the developing placenta. In this dissertation, we report that the three master regulators of the UPR, IRE1α, PERK and ATF6α, mediate transcriptional regulation of VEGFA under ER stress in cancer cells. Inactivation of any of the three master regulators leads to attenuation of VEGFA expression under ER stress. We show that IRE1α is able to regulate VEGFA through its downstream transcription factor XBP1 which activates the VEGFA promoter. IRE1α mediated VEGFA regulation is also essential for normal development of labyrinthine trophoblast cells in the placenta. ATF6α also regulates VEGFA via its promoter. PERK is able to activate VEGFA by preferential activation of its downstream effector, ATF4, which binds intron 1 of the VEGFA gene. Thus our work reveals a twopronged differential regulatory action of the UPR sensors on VEGFA gene expression. This work suggests that a fully active UPR is essential for VEGFA upregulation under ER stress. All three regulators are required in cancer cells for normal VEGFA expression. This tight regulation of VEGFA by the UPR presents a wonderful opportunity for therapeutic intervention into angiogenic growth of tumors.
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Corey, Elizabeth Ann. "Characterization of the Relationship Between Measles Virus Fusion, Receptor Binding, and the Virus-Specific Interaction Between the Hemagglutinin and Fusion Glycoproteins: a Dissertation." eScholarship@UMMS, 2006. https://escholarship.umassmed.edu/gsbs_diss/221.

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Measles (MV) virions, like those of other enveloped viruses, enter cells by fusing their lipid membranes with those of the target host cells. Additionally, infected tissues often possess giant multinucleate cells, known as syncytia, which are formed by fusion of infected cells with uninfected neighbors. Expression of both the MV attachment (H) and fusion (F) proteins is required for membrane fusion. MV H mediates receptor binding in order to bring the two membranes into close proximity prior to F activation and is thought to trigger F activation through a specific interaction between the two proteins. Although measles H and F are efficiently transported to the cell surface when expressed independently, evidence has been reported in support of an intracellular interaction between the two proteins that can be detected using an ER co-retention approach. However, it was not determined if the putative co-retention was specific to the two measles glycoproteins, as is their ability to complement each other for efficient fusion promotion. Thus, in this thesis, the formation of an intracellular complex between MV H and F was re-examined. Consistent with the formation of an intracellular complex, cell surface expression and receptor binding of untagged wt MV H is slightly reduced by co-expression of an excess of ER-tagged MV F compared to co-expression with wt F. However, the reduction in surface expression is non-specific in that it can also be induced with heterologous proteins of NDV, which lack significant homology with those of MV. Although this approach did not detect a specific intracellular interaction between MV H and F, it cannot be ruled out that there is a weak association of the proteins that is undetectable by this method. This led to the use of an alternative approach to investigate the cellular site(s) of interaction between the measles H and F proteins. Consistent with a cell surface interaction between MV H and F, the combination of surface biotinylation and co-immunoprecipitation detects formation of a virus-specific H-F complex. Approximately, 21% of the total amount of MV H at the cell surface can be captured with MV F using an antibody against the latter protein. Two complementary approaches were used to address the relationship between this cell surface interaction and receptor recognition by MV H. First, the proteins were co-immunoprecipitated from the surface of Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells, which do not express either MV receptor, CD46 or CD150. Similar levels of MV H can be co-immunoprecipitated with F from the surfaces of parental CHO cells and stably transfected cells that express, human CD46 (CHO-CD46), indicating that binding to CD46 is not the trigger for the H-F interaction. Second, MV H proteins, carrying mutations that dramatically reduce CD46 binding, were shown to co-immunoprecipitate efficiently with F from the surface of HeLa cells. Significantly, these results indicate that MV H and F interact in the absence of, and thus prior to, receptor binding. This is in direct contrast to the NDV HN-F cell surface interaction, which is thought to be triggered by receptor binding. Identification of the domains of the para myxovirus attachment and fusion proteins that mediate membrane fusion activities is an essential part of understanding the mechanism of fusion. As a result of the H-F interaction prior to receptor binding, MV H attachment to its cellular receptor must result in conformational changes that trigger activation of the F protein. Site-directed mutagenesis analyses of two regions of MV H indicate that a HR domain in the stalk of the attachment protein is essential to the ability of H to activate F. However, either it is not the only region of H that interacts with F or it is indirectly involved in F activation because mutations in the HR do not disrupt MV H-F complex formation at the cell surface. Additionally, the functional interaction between MV H and F may be mediated, at least in part, by Loop 1 of the amino terminus of the C-rich region of the fusion protein. However, the exact role of this region of the F protein in fusion promotion remains to be determined. Importantly, the cell surface interaction between MV H and F proteins appears to be mediated by more that one region of each protein. In contrast to NDV, in no case has a definitive link between any single amino acid difference in MV H or F and an inability to form the cell surface H-F complex been established. In conclusion, the data presented in this dissertation support a model of measles membrane fusion in which the Hand F proteins form a complex prior to receptor recognition. This complex may hold F in its meta-stable pre-fusion state until binding of H to receptors at the cell surface triggers dissociation of the complex, releasing F to assume its fusogenic form. Importantly, these data also indicate that, although paramyxoviruses may all use the same general process. for promotion of membrane fusion, the mechanism may vary in multiple aspects. A more complete understanding of the means by which measles promotes membrane fusion may direct the development of specific strategies aimed at interfering with the early stages of infection.
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30

Yang, Yibin. "The Role of Rip2 Protein in the Nod Mediated Innate Immune Response: A Dissertation." eScholarship@UMMS, 2010. https://escholarship.umassmed.edu/gsbs_diss/475.

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The Rip2 kinase contains a caspase recruitment domain (CARD) and has been implicated in the activation of the transcriptional factor NF-кB downstream of Nod-like receptors. However, how Rip2 mediates innate immune responses is still largely unclear. We show that Rip2 and IKK-γ become stably polyubiquitinated upon treatment of cells with the Nod2 ligand, muramyl dipeptide. We demonstrate a requirement for the E2 conjugating enzyme Ubc13, the E3 ubiquitin ligase Traf6 and the ubiquitin activated kinase Tak1 in Nod2-mediated NF-кB activation. We also show that M. tuberculosisinfection stimulates Rip2 polyubiquitination. Collectively, this study revealed that the Nod2 pathway is ubiquitin regulated and that Rip2 employs a ubiquitin-dependent mechanism to achieve NF-кB activation. We also demonstrate that intraphagosomal M. tuberculosis stimulates the cytosolic Nod2 pathway. We show that upon Mtb infection, Nod2 recognition triggers the expression of type I interferons in a Tbk1- and Irf5-dependent manner. This response is only partially impaired by the loss of Irf3 and therefore, differs fundamentally from those stimulated by bacterial DNA, which depends entirely on this transcription factor. This difference appears to result from the unusual peptidoglycan produced by mycobacteria, which we show is a uniquely potent agonist of the Nod2/Rip2/Irf5 pathway. Thus, the Nod2 system is specialized to recognize bacteria that actively perturb host membranes and is remarkably sensitive to Mycobacteria, perhaps reflecting the strong evolutionary pressure exerted by these pathogens on the mammalian immune system.
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31

Gatlin, Jesse C. "Eicosanoid-mediated repellent signaling in the nerve growth cone : a role for the PKC substrate MARCKS /." Connect to full text at ProQuest Digital Dissertations. IP filtered, 2005.

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Thesis (Ph.D. in Cell and Developmental Biology) -- University of Colorado at Denver and Health Sciences Center, 2005.
Typescript. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 123-141). Free to UCDHSC affiliates. Online version available via ProQuest Digital Dissertations;
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32

Ramachandran, Preethi. "Cytoskeletal Regulation and Morphogen Signaling During Synaptic Outgrowth at the Drosophila Larval Neuromuscular Junction : A Dissertation." eScholarship@UMMS, 2009. https://escholarship.umassmed.edu/gsbs_diss/442.

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Synaptic plasticity, in its broadest sense, can be defined as the ability of synapses to be modified structurally and functionally in response to various internal and external factors. Growing evidence has established that at the very core of these modifications are alterations in the cytoskeletal architecture. This discovery has led to the unearthing of a number of signaling pathways that might be involved in cytoskeletal regulation and also in the regulation of other aspects of synapse development and plasticity. In this regard, polarity proteins and secreted morphogens such as the Wnt proteins, typically involved in embryonic development, are emerging as critical determinants of synaptic growth and plasticity. However, their mechanism of action at synapses needs further investigation. Additionally, not much is known about how these morphogens are secreted or transported across synapses. Using the Drosophila larval NMJ as a model system, I have addressed aspects related to the issues mentioned above in the subsequent body of work. In the first half of my thesis, I have uncovered a role for the aPKC/Baz/Par-6 polarity protein complex in the regulation of the postsynaptic actin cytoskeleton in conjunction with the lipid and protein phosphatase PTEN. In the second half of my thesis, I have contributed to the elucidation of mechanisms underlying the secretion of Wg, the Drosophila Wnt homolog. Our findings suggest that Wnts might be secreted via a previously unidentified mechanism involving the release of exosome like vesicles from the presynapse and this process requires Evi/Wntless (Evi), a protein dedicated to Wnt secretion. Alterations in signaling pathways and aberrant cytoskeletal regulation lead to a variety of neurological disorders. The body of work in this thesis will provide a deeper understanding of the mechanisms involved in synaptic plasticity and provide a basis for uncovering similar pathways in the context of vertebrate synapses.
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33

Müller, Cynthia Rodrigues. "Potencial do treinamento físico para a prevenção de danos renais em camundongos: papel da proteína ativada por AMP (AMPK)." Universidade de São Paulo, 2018. http://www.teses.usp.br/teses/disponiveis/5/5160/tde-28092018-120959/.

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O acúmulo de lipídeos associado à obesidade, resistência à insulina (RI) e diabetes mellitus tipo 2 (DM2) pode levar ao desenvolvimento de danos renais, e diversos mecanismos podem estar envolvidos neste processo, dentre os quais: 1) redução na atividade da proteína ativada por AMP (AMPK); 2) hiperativação do sistema renina angiotensina (SRA) e consequente aumento na produção de angiotensina II (Ang II). O treinamento físico aeróbio (TFA) promove melhora metabólica significativa, no entanto, pouco se sabe sobre os mecanismos celulares induzidos pelo TFA contra o desenvolvimento de danos renais associados com doenças metabólicas. Sendo assim, o objetivo deste estudo foi avaliar o potencial do TFA para a prevenção de danos renais induzidos por dieta de cafeteria, e a participação do SRA e da proteína AMPK nessa resposta. Para isso, camundongos machos adultos C57BL6/J foram separados em grupos (n=13/grupo) sedentários (SED) alimentados com dieta normocalórica (NO) ou de cafeteria (CAF) (SED-NO e SED-CAF, respectivamente) e treinados (TF) alimentados com dieta NO ou CAF (TF-NO e TF-CAF, respectivamente). O TFA foi realizado a 60% da capacidade máxima, simultaneamente com as dietas durante 8 semanas. A dieta de cafeteria causou maior adiposidade, intolerância à glicose e RI no grupo SED-CAF, enquanto o TFA preveniu esses prejuízos no grupo TF-CAF. Os animais SED-CAF apresentaram 88% de aumento no ritmo de filtração glomerular (RFG), maior deposição lipídica renal e redução do espaço de Bowman comparado ao SED-NO, as quais foram prevenidas no grupo TF-CAF. Não houve alteração no conteúdo de colágeno IV e fibronectina, entretanto o TNF-alfa aumentou em ambos os grupos alimentados com dieta de cafeteria. Houve aumento de 27% da expressão proteica da p-AMPK no grupo TF-CAF, sem diferenças na expressão de t-ACC, p-ACC, PGC1-alfa e SIRT-1. A expressão gênica do SREBP-1 não diferiu entre os grupos, porém a expressão do SREBP-2 aumentou nos grupos SED-CAF e TF-CAF comparado aos grupos SED-NO e TF-NO. No soro, apenas a atividade da ECA2 aumentou nos grupos TF-NO e TF-CAF comparados aos sedentários. No rim, a atividade da ECA aumentou 46% no grupo SED-CAF comparado ao SED-NO, e o TFA foi capaz de prevenir esse aumento. No entanto, a Ang II renal aumentou nos grupos SED-CAF, TF-NO e TF-CAF comparados ao grupo SED-NO. Não houve diferença nos componentes do SRA ECA2/Ang 1-7/Mas renal. Em conclusão, o TFA preveniu os danos renais causados pela dieta de cafeteria, tais como acúmulo de lipídeos nos rins, aumento do RFG e redução do espaço de Bowman, e essa resposta está associada, pelo menos em parte, com a maior ativação da AMPK independente da contribuição do SRA
Lipid accumulation observed in the obesity, insulin resistance (IR) and Diabetes Mellitus type 2 (DM2) may lead to the development of renal damage, and several mechanisms may be involved in this process, such as: 1) reduction in the AMP-activated protein (AMPK) activity; 2) hyperactivation of the renin angiotensin system (RAS) and consequent increase in the production of Angiotensin II (Ang II). Aerobic exercise training (AET) promotes significant metabolic improvement, however, little is known about the cellular mechanisms induced by AET against the development of kidney damage associated with metabolic diseases. Thus, the present study aimed to evaluate the potential of AET to prevent kidney damage induced by cafeteria diet, and the participation of RAS and AMPK protein in this response. Adult male C57BL6/J mice were separated into sedentary (SED) groups fed a normocaloric (NO) or cafeteria (CAF) (SED-NO and SED-CAF, respectively) and trained (TF) fed a NO or CAF diet (TF-NO and TF-CAF, respectively). The AET was performed at 60% of the maximum capacity simultaneously with the diets during 8 weeks. The cafeteria diet induced adiposity increase, glucose intolerance and IR, while AET prevented these changes. Animals SED-CAF increased 88% of glomerular filtration rate (GFR), increased renal lipid deposition and reduced Bowman\'s space compared to SED-NO, which were prevented by AET in the TF-CAF group. There was no change in the collagen IV and fibronectin, however TNF-alpha increased in both cafeteria diet fed groups. There was a 27% increase in the protein p-AMPK expression in the TF-CAF group, with no changes in t-ACC, p-ACC, PGC1-alpha and SIRT-1 expression. The SREBP-1 gene expression did not change among groups, but SREBP-2 gene expression increased in the SED-CAF and TF-CAF groups compared to the SED-NO and TF-NO groups. In the serum, only the activity of ACE 2 increased in TF-NO and TF-CAF groups compared to sedentary groups. In the kidney, ACE activity increased 46% in the SED-CAF group compared to SED-NO, nevertheless the AET was able to prevent this increase. Renal Ang II concentration increased in SED-CAF, TF-NO and TF-CAF groups compared to the SED-NO. No differences were observed in the components of renal RAS ACE2/Ang 1-7/Mas. In conclusion, AET prevented the renal damage caused by cafeteria diet, such as lipid accumulation, increased GFR and reduced Bowman space, and these responses are associated, at least in part, with greater activation of the AMPK protein independent of the RAS contribution
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34

Laliberte, Jason P. "Role of Host Cellular Membrane Raft Domains in the Assembly and Release of Newcastle Disease Virus: A Dissertation." eScholarship@UMMS, 2008. https://escholarship.umassmed.edu/gsbs_diss/360.

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Newcastle disease virus (NDV) belongs to the Paramyxoviridae, a family of enveloped RNA viruses that includes many important human and animal pathogens. Although many aspects of the paramyxovirus life cycle are known in detail, our understanding of the mechanisms regulating paramyxovirus assembly and release are poorly understood. For many enveloped RNA viruses, it has recently become apparent that both viral and host cellular determinants coordinate the proper and efficient assembly of infectious progeny virions. Utilizing NDV as a model system to explore viral and cellular determinants of paramyxovirus assembly, we have shown that host cell membrane lipid raft domains serve as platforms of NDV assembly and release. This conclusion was supported by several key experimental results, including the exclusive incorporation of host cell membrane raftassociated molecules into virions, the association of structural components of the NDV particle with membrane lipid raft domains in infected cells and the strong correlation between the kinetics of viral protein dissociation from membrane lipid raft domains and incorporation into virions. Moreover, perturbation of infected cell membrane raft domains during virus assembly resulted in the disordered assembly of abnormal virions with reduced infectivity. These results further established membrane raft domains as sites of virus assembly and showed the integrity of these domains to be critical for the proper assembly of infectious virions. Although specific viral protein-protein interactions are thought to occur during paramyxovirus assembly, our understanding of how these interactions are coordinated is incomplete. While exploring the mechanisms underlying the disordered assembly of non-infectious virions in membrane raft-perturbed cells, we determined that the integrity of membrane raft domains was critical in the formation and virion incorporation of a complex consisting of the NDV attachment (HN) and fusion (F) proteins. The reduced virus-to-cell membrane fusion capacity of particles released from membrane raft-perturbed cells was attributed to an absence of the HN – F glycoprotein-containing complex within the virion envelope. This result also correlated with a reduction of these glycoprotein complexes in membrane lipid raft fractions of membrane raft-perturbed cells. Specifically, it was determined that the formation of newly synthesized HN and F polypeptides into the glycoprotein complex destined for virion incorporation was dependent on membrane lipid raft integrity. Finally, a novel virion complex between the ribonucleoprotein (RNP) structure and the HN attachment protein was identified and characterized. Unlike the glycoprotein complex, the detection of the RNP – HN protein-containing complex was not affected by membrane raft perturbation during virus assembly in the cell. The biological importance of this novel complex for the proper assembly of an infectious progeny virion is currently under investigation. The results presented in this thesis outline the role of host cell membrane lipid raft domains in the assembly and release processes of a model paramyxovirus. Furthermore, the present work extends our understanding of how these particular host cell domains mechanistically facilitate the ordered assembly and release of an enveloped RNA virus.
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35

Elbirt, Kimberly Kirstin. "Role of MAP Kinases in the Induction of Heme Oxygenase-1 by Arsenite: Studies in Chicken Hepatoma Cells: A Dissertation." eScholarship@UMMS, 1998. https://escholarship.umassmed.edu/gsbs_diss/177.

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The chicken hepatoma cell line, LMH, was evaluated with respect to its usefulness for studies of the regulation of heme metabolism. Levels of δ-aminolevulinate synthase mRNA arid accumulation of porphyrins were used to evaluate the heme biosynthetic pathway. Regulation of heme oxygenase-1 by known inducers was used as a measure of heme degradation. The induction of heme oxygenase-1 by sodium arsenite was characterized. AP-1 transcription factor elements and MAP kinase signal transduction pathways that modulate expression of endogenous heme oxygenase-1 and transfected heme oxygenase-1 reporter gene constructs in response to arsenite were delineated. In initial studies, the drug glutethimide was used alone or in combination with ferric nitrilotriacetate to induce δ-aminolevulinate synthase mRNA. Levels of porphyrins, intermediates in the heme biosynthetic pathway, and levels of δ-aminolevulinate synthase mRNA were increased by these treatments in a manner similar to those previously observed in the widely used model system, primary chick embryo liver cells. The iron chelator, deferoxamine, gave a characteristic shift in the glutethimide induced porphyrin accumulation in primary hepatocytes, but was found to have no, effect on LMH cells. Heme mediated repression of δ-aminolevulinate synthase mRNA levels was similar among primary hepatocytes and LMH cells. Heme oxygenase-1 was regulated by heme, metals, heat shock, and oxidative stress-inducing chemicals in LMH cells. Heat shock induction of heme oxygenase-1 mRNA levels was observed for the first time in primary chick embryo liver cells. These data supported the further use of LMH cells to elucidate mechanisms responsible for modulating heme oxygenase-1 gene expression in response to inducers. The remainder of the studies focused on the role of heme oxygenase-1 as a stress response protein. The oxidative stress inducer, sodium arsenite was used to probe the cellular mechanisms that control the expression of heme oxygenase-1. A series of promoter-reporter constructs were used to search the heme oxygenase-1 promoter for arsenite responsive elements. Several activator protein-1 (AP-1) transcription factor binding elements were identified by computer sequence analysis. Three of these sites, located at -1578, -3656, and -4597 base pairs upstream of the transcription start site, were mutated. The arsenite responsiveness of the reporter constructs containing mutated AP-1 elements was less than that of the same constructs containing wild type AP-1 elements. At least part of the arsenite-mediated induction of heme oxygenase-1 required the activity of AP-1 transcriptional elements. The MAP kinase signal transduction pathways and heme oxygenase-1 are activated by similar stimuli, including cellular stress. MAP kinases have been shown to exert control over gene expression through effects on the AP-1 family of transcription factors. The MAP kinases ERK, JNK, and p38 were activated by arsenite in LMH cells. Constitutively activated components of the ERK and p38 pathways increased expression of heme oxygenase-1 promoter-luciferase reporter constructs. Arsenite-mediated induction of heme oxygenase-1 was blocked by dominant negative ERK or p38 pathway components, and by specific inhibitors of MEK (upstream ERK kinase) or p38. In contrast, reporter gene expression was unchanged in the presence of constitutively activated JNK pathway components. Dominant negative JNK pathway components had no effect on arsenite induced heme oxygenase-1 gene activity. In summary, LMH cells were characterized as a new model system for the study of heme metabolism. This cell line was then used to delineate promoter elements and signaling pathways involved in the arsenite responsiveness of heme oxygenase-1 gene expression. Three AP-1 transcription factor binding sites in the heme oxygenase-1 promoter region were required for responsiveness to arsenite. The MAP kinases ERK and p38 were shown to play an integral role in arsenite-mediated induction of heme oxygenase-1. These studies elucidate one facet of heme oxygenase-1 regulation, and provide tools that will be useful in delineating additional regulatory mechanisms.
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36

Ranjit, Srijana. "Role and Regulation of Fat Specific Protein (FSP27) in Lipolysis in 3T3-L1 Adipocytes: A Dissertation." eScholarship@UMMS, 2010. https://escholarship.umassmed.edu/gsbs_diss/484.

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The alarming rate of increase in incidence and prevalence of the type 2 diabetes mellitus has prompted intense research on understanding the pathogenesis of the type 2 diabetes. It is observed that the development of type 2 diabetes is preceded by a state of insulin resistance and obesity. Previous studies have suggested that the obesity induced insulin resistance may be mediated by elevated levels of circulating free fatty acids (FFAs). The increase in circulating levels of FFAs may be contributed by the release of FFAs from stored triglycerides (TG) in adipocytes via lipolysis. It is hypothesized that the decrease in levels of circulating FFAs by sequestration and storage of FFAs in adipocytes may prevent deleterious effects of FFAs on insulin sensitivity. Recently our lab and others have shown that the storage of TG in adipocytes is promoted by a novel protein, Fat Specific Protein 27 (FSP27). Although, these studies also revealed FSP27 to be a lipid droplet associated protein that suppresses lipolysis to enhance TG accumulation in adipocytes, the role of FSP27 in lipolysis remains largely undetermined. Therefore, this study investigates the role and regulation of FSP27 in adipocytes in both the basal state, as well as during lipolysis. The studies presented here show FSP27 to be a remarkably short-lived protein (half-life=15 min) due to its rapid ubiquitination and proteasomal degradation. Thus, I tested the hypothesis that lipolytic agents like the cytokine, TNF-α and the catecholamine isoproterenol modulate FSP27 protein levels to regulate FFA release. Consistent with this concept, TNF-α markedly decreased FSP27 mRNA and protein along with lipid droplet size as it increased lipolysis in cultured adipocytes. Similarly, FSP27 depletion using siRNA mimicked the effect of TNF-α to enhance lipolysis, while maintaining stable FSP27 protein levels by expression of HA epitope-tagged FSP27 blocked TNF-α mediated lipolysis. In contrast, the robust lipolytic action of isoproterenol is paradoxically associated with increases in FSP27 protein and a delayed degradation rate that corresponds to decreased ubiquitination. This catecholamine-mediated increase in FSP27 abundance, probably a feedback mechanism to restrain excessive lipolysis by catecholamines, is mimicked by forskolin or 8-Bromo-cAMP treatment, and prevented by Protein Kinase A (PKA) inhibitor KT5720 or PKA depletion using siRNA. These results show that isoproterenol stabililizes FSP27 via the canonical PKA pathway and increased cAMP levels. However, the work presented here also suggests that FSP27 does not get phosphorylated in response to isoproterenol treatment, and the stabilization of FSP27 is independent of isoproterenol mediated lipolysis. The data presented in this thesis not only identifies the regulation of FSP27 as an important intermediate in mechanism of lipolysis in adipocytes in response to TNF-α and isoproterenol, but also suggests that FSP27 may be a possible therapeutic target to modulate lipolysis in adipocytes.
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37

Oh, Seung Wook. "Regulation of Life Span by DAF-16/Forkhead Transcription Factor in Caenorhabditis elegans: A Dissertation." eScholarship@UMMS, 2005. https://escholarship.umassmed.edu/gsbs_diss/22.

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The insulin/IGF-1 signaling pathway plays a pivotal role in life span regulation in diverse organisms. In Caenorhabditis elegans, a PI 3-kinase signaling cascade downstream of DAF-2, an ortholog of the mammalian insulin and insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1) receptor, negatively regulates DAF-16/forkhead transcription factor. DAF-16 then regulates a wide variety of genes involved in longevity, stress response, metabolism and development. DAF-16 also receives signals from other pathways regulating life span and development. However, the precise mechanism by which DAF-16 directs multiple functions is poorly understood. First, in Chapter II, we demonstrate that JNK is a novel positive regulator of DAF-16 in both life span regulation and stress resistance. Our genetic analysis suggests that the JNK pathway acts in parallel with the insulin-like signaling pathway to regulate life span and both pathways converge onto DAF-16. We also show that JNK-1 directly interacts with and phosphorylates DAF-16. Moreover, in response to heat stress, JNK-1 promotes the translocation of DAF-16 into thc nucleus. Our findings define a novel interaction between the stress response pathway (JNK) and the master regulator of life span (DAF-16), and provide a mechanism by which JNK regulates longevity and stress resistance. Next, in Chapter III, we focus on the downstream targets of DAF-16. Here, we used a modified chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) method to identify direct target promoters of DAF-16. We cloned 103 target sequences containing consensus DAF-16 binding sites and randomly selected 33 targets for further analysis. The expression of majority of these genes is regulated in a DAF-16-dependent manner. Moreover, inactivation of more than 50% of these genes significantly altered DAF-16-dependent functions such as longevity, fat storage and dauer diapause. Our results show that the ChIP-based cloning strategy leads to greater enrichment of DAF-16 target genes, compared to previous studies using DNA micro array or bioinformatics. We also demonstrate that DAF-16 is recruited to multiple promoters to coordinate regulation of its downstream target genes. In summary, we identified the JNK signaling pathway as a novel input into DAF-16 to adapt animals to the environmental stresses. We also revealed a large number of novel outputs of DAF-16. Taken together, these studies provide insight into the complex regulation by DAF-16 to control diverse biological functions and eventually broaden our understanding of aging.
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38

Takahashi, Satoe. "Plasma Membrane Localization of Signaling Proteins in Yeast: a Dissertation." eScholarship@UMMS, 2008. https://escholarship.umassmed.edu/gsbs_diss/364.

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In response to external stimuli, many intracellular signaling proteins undergo dynamic changes in localization to the plasma membrane. Using the Saccharomyces cerevisiaemating pathway as a model, I investigated the molecular interactions that govern plasma membrane localization of signaling proteins, and how the plasma membrane compartmentalization of a signaling complex influences the overall signaling behavior of the pathway. Signaling proteins often consist of multiple interaction domains that collectively dictate their localization and function. Ste20 is a p21-activated kinase (PAK) that functions downstream of the Rho-type GTPase Cdc42 to activate several mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase pathways in budding yeast, including the mating pathway. I identified a short domain in Ste20 that directly binds to membrane lipids via electrostatic interaction. A mutation in this domain abolishes both the localization and function of Ste20. Thus, the previously known Cdc42 binding is necessary but not sufficient; instead, direct membrane binding by Ste20 is also critical. By replacing this domain with heterologous membranebinding domains, I demonstrated that phospholipid specificity is not essential in vivo. Functionally important short membrane-binding domains were also found in the Cdc42 effectors Gic1 and Gic2, indicating that generic membrane binding can work in concert with the CRIB domain to regulate activation of Cdc42 targets. These results underscore the importance of cooperation between protein-protein and protein-membrane interaction in achieving proper localization of signaling proteins at the cell cortex. At the system level, MAP kinase cascades can be graded or switch-like. The budding yeast mating pathway exhibits a graded response to increasing levels of pheromone. Previously the scaffold protein Ste5 was hypothesized to contribute to this graded response. To test this idea, I activated the pathway in a variety of ways and measured the response at the single cell level. I found that the graded response is not perturbed by the deletion of negative regulators of the pathway whereas the response became switch-like when the pathway was activated by a crosstalk stimulus that bypasses the upstream components. Interestingly, activation of the pathway in the cytoplasm using the graded expression of MAPKKK resulted in an ultrasensitive response. In contrast, activation of the pathway at the plasma membrane using the graded expression of membranetargeted active pathway components remained graded. In these settings, the scaffold protein Ste5 increased ultrasensitivity when limited to the cytosol; however, if Ste5 was allowed to function at the plasma membrane, signaling was graded. The results suggest that, in the mating pathway, the inherently ultrasensitive MAPK cascade is converted to a graded system by the scaffoldmediated assembly of signaling complexes at the plasma membrane. Therefore, the plasma membrane localization of Ste5 helps shape the input-output properties of the mating MAPK pathway in a manner that is suitable for the biology of mating. Taken together, this thesis underscores the importance of plasma membrane localization during mating pathway signaling in yeast. The examples described here provide further appreciation of how multiple interaction domains can function together to achieve specific targeting of the signaling proteins, as well as advances in understanding the role of scaffold proteins in modulating signaling behavior to promote graded signaling at the plasma membrane.
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39

Atherly, Luana O. "The Role of ITK and RLK in CD8+ T Cell Development and Function: a Dissertation." eScholarship@UMMS, 2004. https://escholarship.umassmed.edu/gsbs_diss/120.

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Itk and Rlk are members of the Tec kinase family of non-receptor protein tyrosine kinases that are preferentially expressed in T cells. Numerous previous studies have demonstrated that these proteins play an important a role in the regulation of signalling processes downstream of TCR activation in CD4+ T cells, particularly in the phosphorylation of PLCγl. In addition, Itk and Rlk have both been shown to be important for CD4+ T cell development, differentiation, function and homeostasis following TCR activation. In the absence of Itk and Rlk, CD8+ SP thymocytes and T cells develop a memory/previously activated phenotypic profile, however, very little is known about the influence of Itk and Rlk on CD8+ T cell development and function. This study illustrates a previously unappreciated role for Itk and Rlk in the regulation of cytokine signals during CD8+ SP thymocyte maturation, and in the development of the memory CD44hi profile of Itk -/- and Itk -/- Rlk -/- CD8+ SP thymocytes and CD8+ T cells. This study also provides the first detailed study of the role of loss of Itk and particularly both Itk and Rlk in CD8+ signalling and function and shows that these Tec kinase family members play an important role in the maintenance of CD8+ T cell fitness and function, particularly in the ability of CD8+ T cells to accumulate in response to infection. Collectively, my studies demonstrate a critical role for Itk and Rlk in the generation of optimal CD8+ T cell responses. They also raise the novel observation that these proteins may be involved on the regulation of cytokine signals in T cells.
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40

Gozalo, Sara. "The Role of γс Cytokines in T Cell Development, T Cell Homeostasis and CD8+ T Cell Function: A Dissertation." eScholarship@UMMS, 2004. https://escholarship.umassmed.edu/gsbs_diss/140.

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T lymphocytes are essential components of the immune system and as such are continually regulated by a variety of factors. Every step of their development, survival and function is tightly monitored to ensure their ability to recognize most foreign agents and mount adaptive immune responses during pathogenic infections, while remaining tolerant to self-antigens. Among the many factors that participate in the regulation of T cell development and function are the cytokines. Cytokines that signal through the common gamma (γс) chain and the Janus kinase 3 (Jak3) include IL-2, -4, -7, -9, -15, and -21 and have been implicated in the regulation of every stage in the life of a T cell. Therefore, it is not surprising that mutations in the γс chain or Jak3 lead to a SCID condition in humans and mice. Specifically, Jak3-deficient mice are characterized by a reduction in thymic cellularity and dysregulated T cell homeostasis. They have an expansion of memory-like CD4+ mature T cells and an almost complete absence of mature CD8+ T cells. By investigating the TCR repertoire of CD4+ T cells in the thymus and spleen of Jak3-/- mice, I deduced that the CD4+ T cell activation and expansion is TCR-specific and takes place in the periphery of the mice. After crossing Jak3-deficient mice to Bcl-2 transgenic mice I showed that the developmental block observed in Jak3-/- mice could not be rescued by the anti-apoptotic factor, despite the fact that its expression did increase, slightly, the total numbers of developing thymocytes. The enforced expression of Bcl-2 was also not sufficient to revert the dysregulation of T cell homeostasis in Jak3-/- mice. Finally, in order to further understand the role played by γс cytokines during T cell function, I investigated the ability of mature Jak3-/- CD8+ T cells to become activated and differentiate into effector cells in response to a viral infection. My results indicate that CD8+ T cells are activated and proliferate in response to a viral infection, but their survival, as well as their ability to proliferate and differentiate into effector cells are greatly impaired, resulting in the inability of Jak3-deficient mice to mount a protective response.
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41

Kommajosyula, Naveen. "Regulation of DNA Replication Origins in Fission Yeast: A Dissertation." eScholarship@UMMS, 2009. https://escholarship.umassmed.edu/gsbs_diss/436.

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Cells need to complete DNA replication in a timely and error-free manner. To ensure that replication is completed efficiently and in a finite amount of time, cells regulate origin firing. To prevent any errors from being transmitted to the next generation, cells have the checkpoint mechanism. The S-phase DNA damage slows replication to allow the cell to repair the damage. The mechanism of replication slowing by the checkpoint was not clear in fission yeast, Schizosaccharomyces pombe, at the start of my thesis. The downstream targets of the DNA damage checkpoint in fission yeast were also unclear. I worked on identifying the downstream targets for the checkpoint by studying if Cdc25, a phosphatase, is a target of the checkpoint. Work from our lab has shown that origin firing is stochastic in fission yeast. Origins are also known to be inefficient. Inefficient origins firing stochastically would lead to large stretches of chromosome where no origins may fire randomly leading to long replication times, an issue called the random gap problem. However, cells do not take a long time to complete replication and the process of replication itself is efficient. I focused on understanding the mechanism by which cells complete replication and avoid the random gap problem by attempting to measure the firing efficiency of late origins. Genome-wide origin studies in fission yeast have identified several hundred origins. However, the resolution of these studies can be improved upon. I began a genome-wide origin mapping study using deep sequencing to identify origins at a greater resolution compared to the previous studies. We have extended our origin search to two other Schizosaccharomyces species- S. octosporus and S. japonicus.There have been no origin mapping studies on these fission yeasts and identifying origins in these species will advance the field of replication. My thesis research shows that Cdc25 is not a target of the S-phase DNA damage checkpoint. I showed that DNA damage checkpoint does not target Cdc2-Y15 to slow replication. Based on my preliminary observation, origin firing might be inhibited by the DNA damage checkpoint as a way to slow replication. My efforts to measure the firing efficiency of a late replicating sequence were hindered by potentially unidentified inefficient origins firing at a low rate and replicating the region being studied. Studying the origin efficiency was maybe further complicated by neighboring origins being able to passively replicate the region. To identify origins in recently sequenced Schizosaccharomyces species, we initiated the genome-wide origin mapping. The mapping was also done on S. pombe to identify inefficient origins not mapped by other mapping studies. My work shows that deep sequencing can be used to map origins in other species and provides a powerful tool for origin studies.
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42

Cheniour, Mouhedine. "Étude de l'interaction de la créatine kinase mitochondriale avec des membranes biomimétiques et développement de sondes de fluorescence en vue d'une caractérisation fine de l'organisation latérale des lipides membranaires." Thesis, Lyon 1, 2012. http://www.theses.fr/2012LYO10220.

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L'étude de l'interaction de la CKmt avec des membranes biomimétiques par des techniques microscopiques a permis de mettre en évidence et de visualiser la formation de complexesspécifiques CKmt-cardiolipine (CL). Sur monocouches de Langmuir et par microscopie à l'angle de Brewster, il a pu être montré que la CKmt est capable d'organiser latéralement laCL au sein des monocouches et que la forme des domaines protéine-lipides dépend de la composition en chaines acyles. Une réorientation du moment dipolaire des hélices α de laprotéine a pu être mise en évidence par spectroscopie infrarouge de réflexion-absorption par modulation de la polarisation (PM-IRRAS) ; cette réorientation dépend de la composition des différentes monocouches de CL, et notamment du degré de saturation des chaines acyles. L'interaction entre la CKmt et la CL a été visualisée sur liposomes géants (GUVs) par microscopie confocale avec excitation biphotonique. La CKmt est capable de s'organiser à la surface des GUVs, de créer des contacts inter-liposomes et de modifier la morphologie des membranes contenant la CL. Cette modification de morphologie induite par le réarrangement de la CKmt à la surface des liposomes PC-PE-CL a lieu avec des lipides en phase fluide et, comme montré par les mesures de GP du laurdan et du C-laurdan sur les GUVs, ne modifie que très peu la fluidité membranaire. Les résultats sont discutés au regard des résultats indiquant que, via son interaction avec la membrane, la CKmt joue un rôle dans le maintien de la morphologie mitochondriale. Le laurdan est une sonde fluorescente largement utilisée pour apprécier la fluidité membranaire dans différents modèles d'étude. De nouvelles sondes dérivées du laurdan par modification de la polarité de leur tête polaire ont été synthétisées et caractérisées de façon à développer de nouveaux outils pour l'étude de l'organisation latérale des lipides membranaires
Specific mtCK-cardiolipin (CL) complexes were studied on biomimetic membranes by way of several complementary techniques. The shape of protein-lipids domains changes with CL acyl chain composition as visualized on Langmuir monolayer by Brewster Angle Microscopy (BAM). MtCK promotes lateral organization within the monolayer when CL is present. Using Polarization Modulation Infrared Reflection Adsorption Spectroscopy (PM-IRRAS) we were able to show that mtCK α helix dipole moment orientation depends on CL acyl chains length and on the number of double bonds within these chains. MtCK-CL interaction with giant liposomes (GUVs) was also visualized using confocal microscopy with biphotonic excitation. In the presence of CL, mtCK has the capacity to induce the formation of clusters on the GUVs surface. It can also provoke vesicles clamping and give rise to membrane morphology changes. This phenomenon occurs with a membrane in a liquid phase with local and minimal changes in its fluidity as determined by laurdan and C-laurdan GP measurements. Results are discussed in view of previous results which indicate that, through its interaction with membrane, mtCK is involved in mitochondrial morphology. Laurdan is a fluorescent probe largely used to study membrane fluidity in several models. New lauroylnaphthalene derivative probes with a diversity of polar heads were synthesized and characterized in order to develop new tools for lipids membrane lateral organization studies
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43

Choi, Sung Hugh. "The Role of Dynamic Cdk1 Phosphorylation in Chromosome Segregation in Schizosaccharomyces pombe: A Dissertation." eScholarship@UMMS, 2010. https://escholarship.umassmed.edu/gsbs_diss/453.

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The proper transmission of genetic materials into progeny cells is crucial for maintenance of genetic integrity in eukaryotes and fundamental for reproduction of organisms. To achieve this goal, chromosomes must be attached to microtubules emanating from opposite poles in a bi-oriented manner at metaphase, and then should be separated equally through proper spindle elongation in anaphase. Failure to do so leads to aneuploidy, which is often associated with cancer. Despite the presence of a safety device called the spindle assembly checkpoint (SAC) to monitor chromosome bi-orientation, mammalian cells frequently possess merotelic kinetochore orientation, in which a single kinetochore binds microtubules emanating from both poles. Merotelically attached kinetochores escape from the surveillance mechanism of the SAC and when cells proceed to anaphase cause lagging chromosomes, which are a leading cause of aneuploidy in mammalian tissue cultured cells. The fission yeast monopolin complex functions in prevention of mal-orientation of kinetochores including merotelic attachments during mitosis. Despite the known importance of Cdk1 activity during mitosis, it has been unclear how oscillations in Cdk1 activity drive the dramatic changes in chromosome behavior and spindle dynamics that occur at the metaphase/anaphase transition. In two separate studies, we show how dynamic Cdk1 phosphorylation regulates chromosome segregation. First, we demonstrate that sequential phosphorylation and dephosphorylation of monopolin by Cdk1 and Cdc14 phosphatase respectively helps ensure the orderly execution of two discrete steps in mitosis, namely sister kinetochore bi-orientation at metaphase and spindle elongation in anaphase. Second, we show that elevated Cdk1 activity is crucial for correction of merotelic kinetochores produced in monopolin and heterochromatin mutants.
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44

Farias, Caroline Brunetto de. "Interação funcional entre o receptor do peptídeo liberador de gastrina e a via de sinalização do AMP cíclico/proteína quinase A : um estudo in vitro e in vivo." reponame:Biblioteca Digital de Teses e Dissertações da UFRGS, 2008. http://hdl.handle.net/10183/17832.

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Muitas evidências demonstram que o peptídeo liberador de gastrina (GRP) é um fator de crescimento que afeta funções neuroendócrinas, incluindo proliferação e diferenciação celular, comportamento alimentar, formação de memória, respostas a estresses, desenvolvimento de neoplasias, desordens neurológicas e psiquiátricas. Porém, os eventos moleculares pelos quais isso ocorre ainda não são totalmente compreendidos. No presente estudo, nós avaliamos as interações entre o receptor do peptídeo liberador de gastrina (GRPR) e a via de sinalização celular da PKA, tanto na proliferação celular de glioblastoma humano (in vitro) quanto na consolidação da memória no hipocampo de ratos Wistar (in vivo). Mostramos que o GRP age em sinergismo com agentes que estimulam a via do cAMP/PKA, promovendo a proliferação de células de glioblastoma humano, pois o tratamento com GRP combinado com um ativador de adenilil ciclase (AC), forskolin, ou um análogo de cAMP, 8-Br-cAMP, ou um inibidor do tipo IV de fosfodiesterase, rolipram, aumentaram a proliferação das células de U- 138MG, quando avaliadas pelo método de MTT. Nenhum destes compostos teve efeito sozinho. O mRNA de GRPR e a expressão protéica em U-138MG foram detectados pelas técnicas de RT-PCR e imuno-histoquímica. No estudo in vivo a bombesina em baixas doses induziu um aumento na consolidação da memória. O resultado foi potencializado na combinação com um ativador do receptor de dopamina D1/D5 (D1R), além de ser prevenido quando combinado com um inibidor da via da PKA. Os resultados sugerem que GRP e GRPR interagem com a via de sinalização cAMP/PKA tanto na estimulação da proliferação celular em linhagem de câncer humano quanto na modulação da memória no hipocampo de ratos.
Increasing evidence indicates that gastrin-releasing peptide (GRP) acts as an autocrine growth factor for brain tumors as well as been implicated in memory formation, however, underlying molecular events are poorly understood. In the present study, we examined interactions between the GRPR and cellular signaling pathways in influencing memory consolidation in the hippocampus and on proliferation of glioblastoma cell in vitro. We show here that GRP acts synergistically with agents that stimulate the cAMP/PKA pathway to promote proliferation of human gliobastoma cells. Treatment with GRP combined with the adenylyl cyclase (AC) activator forskolin, the cAMP analog 8-Br-cAMP, or the phosphodiesterase type IV (PDE4) inhibitor rolipram increased proliferation of U138-MG cells in vitro measured by MTT assay. None of the compounds had an effect when given alone. GRP receptor (GRPR) mRNA and protein expression in U138-MG cells was detected by reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) and immunohistochemistry. We investigated the interactions between the GRPR and the PKA pathway in male Wistar rats. BB-induced enhancement of consolidation was potentiated by co infusion of activators of the dopamine D1/D5 receptor (D1R) pathway and prevented by a PKA inhibitor. The results suggest that GRP and the GRPR interact with the cAMP/PKA signaling pathway in stimulating a cancer cell line proliferation and in memory modulation by hippocampal.
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45

Pino, Steven C. "Role of Endoplasmic Reticulum Stress Response Signaling in T Cells: A Dissertation." eScholarship@UMMS, 2008. https://escholarship.umassmed.edu/gsbs_diss/381.

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T cells play a central role in cellular-mediated immunity and must become activated to participate as effector cells in the immune response. The activation process is highly intricate and involves stimulation of a number of downstream signaling pathways enabling T cells to proliferate and produce cytokines that are vital for proper effector function. This increase in protein production and protein folding activity adds to the normal physiological strain on cellular machinery. One cellular compartment that has generated a mechanism to mitigate the stress induced by increased protein production is the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). In general, an increase in cellular production of proteins that overwhelms a cell’s protein folding capability can alter ER homeostasis and lead to ER stress. To counteract this stress, an adaptive cellular mechanism known as the ER stress response (ERSR) is initiated. The ERSR allows a cell to cope with normal physiological stress within the ER caused by increased protein translation. In this dissertation, we show that in vitro and in vivoT cell activation involving T cell receptor (TCR) ligation in the presence of costimulation initiates the physiological ERSR. Interestingly, the ERSR was also activated in T cells exposed only to TCR ligation, a treatment known to induce the ‘non-responsive’ states of anergy and tolerance. We further identified a key component of the downstream TCR signaling pathway, protein kinase C (PKC), as an initiator of physiological ERSR signaling, thus revealing a previously unknown role for this serine/threonine protein kinase in T cells. Therefore, induction of the physiological ERSR through PKC signaling may be an important ‘preparatory’ mechanism initiated during the early activation phase of T cells. If ER stress is persistent and ER homeostasis is not reestablished, physiological ER stress becomes pathological and initiates cellular death pathways through ER stress-induced apoptotic signaling. We further present data demonstrating that absence of functional Gimap5, a putative GTPase implicated to play a role in TCR signaling and maintenance of overall T cell homeostasis, leads to pathological ER stress and apoptosis. Using the BioBreeding diabetes-prone (BBDP) rat, a model for type 1 diabetes (T1D), we link pathological ER stress and ER stress-induced apoptotic signaling to the observed T cell lymphopenic phenotype of the animal. By depleting the ER stress apoptotic factor CHOP with siRNA, we were able to protect Gimap5-/-BBDP rat T cells from ER stress-induced death. These findings indicate a direct relationship between Gimap5 and maintenance of ER homeostasis for T cell survival. Overall, our findings suggest that the ERSR is activated by physiological and pathological conditions that disrupt T cell homeostasis. TCR signaling that leads to PKC activation initiates a physiological ERSR, perhaps in preparation for a T cell response to antigen. In addition, we also describe an example of pathological ERSR induction in T cells. Namely, we report that the absence of functional Gimap5 protein in T cells causes CHOP-dependent ER stress-induced apoptosis, perhaps initiated by deregulation of TCR signaling. This indicates a dual role for TCR signaling and regulation in the initiation of both the physiological and pathological ERSR. Future research that provides insights into the molecular mechanisms that govern ERSR induction in TCR signaling and regulation may lead to development of therapeutic modalities for treatment of immune-mediated diseases such as T1D.
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46

Gabriel, Luke R. "Dynamic Regulation at the Neuronal Plasma Membrane: Novel Endocytic Mechanisms Control Anesthetic-Activated Potassium Channels and Amphetamine-Sensitive Dopamine Transporters: A Dissertation." eScholarship@UMMS, 2013. http://escholarship.umassmed.edu/gsbs_diss/725.

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Endocytic trafficking dynamically regulates neuronal plasma membrane protein presentation and activity, and plays a central role in excitability and plasticity. Over the course of my dissertation research I investigated endocytic mechanisms regulating two neuronal membrane proteins: the anesthetic-activated potassium leak channel, KCNK3, as well as the psychostimulant-sensitive dopamine transporter (DAT). My results indicate that KCNK3 internalizes in response to Protein Kinase C (PKC) activation, using a novel pathway that requires the phosphoserine binding protein, 14-3-3β, and demonstrates for the first time regulated KCNK3 channel trafficking in neurons. Additionally, PKC-mediated KCNK3 trafficking requires a non-canonical endocytic motif, which is shared exclusively between KCNK3 and sodium-dependent neurotransmitter transporters, such as DAT. DAT trafficking studies in intact ex vivo adult striatal slices indicate that DAT endocytic trafficking has both dynamin-dependent and –independent components. Moreover, DAT segregates into two populations at the neuronal plasma membrane: trafficking-competent and -incompetent. Taken together, these results demonstrate that novel, non-classical endocytic mechanisms dynamically control the plasma membrane presentation of these two important neuronal proteins.
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47

Frey, Margo Tilley. "Development of a Substrate with Photo-Modulatable Rigidity for Probing Spatial and Temporal Responses of Cells to Mechanical Signals: A Dissertation." Digital WPI, 2008. https://digitalcommons.wpi.edu/etd-dissertations/337.

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"Topographical and mechanical properties of adhesive substrates provide important biological cues that affect cell spreading, migration, growth, and differentiation. The phenomenon has led to the increased use of topographically patterned and flexible substrates in studying cultured cells. However, these studies may be complicated by various limitations. For example, the effects of ligand distribution and porosity are affected by topographical features of 3D biological constructs. Similarly, many studies of mechanical cues are compounded with cellular deformation from external forces, or limited by comparative studies of separate cells on different substrates. Furthermore, understanding cell responses to mechanical input is dependent upon reliable measurements of mechanical properties. This work addresses each of these issues. To determine how substrate topography and focal adhesion kinase (FAK) affect cell shape and movement, I studied FAK-null (FAK -/-) and wild type mouse 3T3 fibroblasts on chemically identical polystyrene substrates with either flat surfaces or micron-sized pillars, I found that, compared to cells on flat surfaces, those on pillar substrates showed a more branched shape, an increased linear speed, and a decreased directional stability, which were dependent on both myosin-II and FAK. To study the dynamic responses to changes in substrate stiffness without other confounding effects, I developed a UV-modulatable substrate that softens upon UV irradiation. As atomic force microscopy (AFM) proved inadequate to detect microscale changes in stiffness, I first developed and validated a microsphere indentation method that is compatible with fluorescence microscopy. The results obtained with this method were comparable to those obtained with AFM. The UV-modulatable substrates softened by ~20-30% with an intensity of irradiation that has no detectable effect on 3T3 cells on control surfaces. Cells responded to global softening of the substrate with an initial retraction followed by a gradual reduction in spread area. Precise spatial control of softening is also possible - while there was little response to posterior softening, anterior softening elicited a pronounced retraction and either a reversal of cell polarity or a significant decrease in spread area if the cells move into the softened region. In conclusion, these techniques provide advances in gaining mechanistic insight into cellular responses to topographical and mechanical cues. Additionally, there are various other potential applications of the novel UV-softening substrate, particularly in regenerative medicine and tissue engineering. "
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48

Resnick, Moira Stephanie. "Activation and function of protein kinase C [eta] in T cells /." 1998. http://wwwlib.umi.com/dissertations/fullcit/9824293.

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49

Li, Huan. "Kinetics of the inhibition of calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II by pea protein-derived peptides." 2004. http://hdl.handle.net/1993/20118.

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50

Chang, Ching-Yi, and 張靜宜. "Potentiation of NMDA-Mediated Depolarizations by CART Peptides in Rat Dorsal Horn Neurons: Role of Protein Kinase A and Protein Kinase C." Thesis, 2006. http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/29640200776152087883.

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碩士
慈濟大學
神經科學研究所
94
Cocaine- and amphetamine-regulated transcript peptides (CARTp), are novel peptide neurotransmitters that involved in a variety of processes including feeding, reward and reinforcement, stress, autonomic and endocrine control. While the importance of CARTp is clear, little is known about the cellular mechanism by which CARTp exert their effects. CARTp-immunoreactive fibers are found in the outer laminae of the dorsal horn of the spinal cord. Our previous study showed that CARTp fragment 55-102 specifically potentiated spinal N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) mediated nociceptive transmission. Protein phosphorylation has been shown to regulate NMDA receptor function; increases in phosphorylated state of NMDA receptors by protein kinases may cause an increase in the NMDA receptor function. We hypothesize that CARTp potentiation of NMDA-induced responses may result from activation of cellular signaling molecules. Whole-cell patch recording of dorsal horn neurons in 14-21-day-old SD rat in the present study showed that CARTp applied by superfusion for 3-4 min significantly potentiated NMDA-induced depolarization. The effect of CARTp was blocked significantly by pretreatment with KT 5720 (a selective protein kinase A inhibitor) or chelerythrine (a protein kinase C antagonist). In addition, a significant increase in the level of PKA-regulated phosphoserine 897 and PKC-regulated phosphoserine 896 on the NMDA NR1 subunit were found in the dorsal part of lumbar spinal cord after CARTp treatment, our results suggest that protein kinase A and protein kinase C signaling transduction pathways are involved in CARTp potentiation of NMDA-induced responses.
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