Cells respond to changes in their environment by appropriately increasing or decreasing the expression of proteins to obtain an optimal response to the new conditions. This process in which an external stimulus results in changes in gene expression is called signal transduction. It has been recently appreciated that another major mode of regulation of protein level in cells exists and it does not involve transcriptional regulation. It involves changes in proteolysis, either via increases in protein degradation efficiency or by decreasing substrate availability. This mode of regulation of protein levels in cells is rapid and irreversible. The most robust protein degradation system that is responsible for these rapid responses is the ubiquitin-proteolytic pathway. This pathway is characterized by three activities that result in the covalent attachment of a small protein called ubiquitin to lysine side chains of proteins to be degraded. These activities are referred to as the E1 or ubiquitin activating enzyme, the E2 or the ubiquitin conjugating enzyme and the E3 or ubiquitin ligase. Of these three, the E3s or ubiquitin ligases are responsible for the recognition of substrates. We identified Cul3 as being an essential E3 ligase for mammalian cyclin E. We have shown that it is required for mouse embryonic development and normal cell cycle progression in primary fibroblasts. Here we propose to further investigate how Cul1 and Cul3 cooperate to degrade cyclin E. In addition we are investigating the functional significance of mapped binding regions for subunits of the ligase. Lastly, we have identified some novel Cul3 binding proteins using proteomics and are testing a model for a novel mode of substrate recognition. Public Health Relevance: The broad reaching impact of these studies includes most proliferative events especially embryonic development and cancer. Many therapies that utilize stem cells will benefit from our work since such approaches hinge upon understanding how to induce proliferation under some circumstances as well as how to prevent unwanted proliferation. It is clear that the major regulators of these processes are the cullin-based E3 ligases.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01GM082940-03
Application #
7658103
Study Section
Membrane Biology and Protein Processing (MBPP)
Program Officer
Ikeda, Richard A
Project Start
2008-08-01
Project End
2013-07-31
Budget Start
2009-08-01
Budget End
2010-07-31
Support Year
3
Fiscal Year
2009
Total Cost
$263,700
Indirect Cost
Name
Portland State University
Department
Biology
Type
Schools of Arts and Sciences
DUNS #
052226800
City
Portland
State
OR
Country
United States
Zip Code
97207
Gladwyn-Ng, Ivan Enghian; Li, Shan Shan; Qu, Zhengdong et al. (2015) Bacurd2 is a novel interacting partner to Rnd2 which controls radial migration within the developing mammalian cerebral cortex. Neural Dev 10:9
Lampert, Lester; Timonen, Brittany; Smith, Sean et al. (2014) Amorphous alumina nanowire array efficiently delivers Ac-DEVD-CHO to inhibit apoptosis of dendritic cells. Chem Commun (Camb) 50:1234-7
Wimuttisuk, Wananit; West, Mark; Davidge, Brittney et al. (2014) Novel Cul3 binding proteins function to remodel E3 ligase complexes. BMC Cell Biol 15:28
McCormick, James A; Yang, Chao-Ling; Zhang, Chong et al. (2014) Hyperkalemic hypertension-associated cullin 3 promotes WNK signaling by degrading KLHL3. J Clin Invest 124:4723-36
Mathew, Rebecca; Mao, Ai-ping; Chiang, Andrew H et al. (2014) A negative feedback loop mediated by the Bcl6-cullin 3 complex limits Tfh cell differentiation. J Exp Med 211:1137-51
Ye, Yanping; Yaeger, Daniel; Owen, Laura J et al. (2012) Designing calcium release channel inhibitors with enhanced electron donor properties: stabilizing the closed state of ryanodine receptor type 1. Mol Pharmacol 81:53-62
Werwein, Eugen; Schmedt, Thore; Hoffmann, Heiko et al. (2012) B-Myb promotes S-phase independently of its sequence-specific DNA binding activity and interacts with polymerase delta-interacting protein 1 (Pdip1). Cell Cycle 11:4047-58
Mathew, Rebecca; Seiler, Michael P; Scanlon, Seth T et al. (2012) BTB-ZF factors recruit the E3 ligase cullin 3 to regulate lymphoid effector programs. Nature 491:618-21
Marshall, John; Blair, Leslie A C; Singer, Jeffrey D (2011) BTB-Kelch proteins and ubiquitination of kainate receptors. Adv Exp Med Biol 717:115-25
Kossatz, Uta; Breuhahn, Kai; Wolf, Benita et al. (2010) The cyclin E regulator cullin 3 prevents mouse hepatic progenitor cells from becoming tumor-initiating cells. J Clin Invest 120:3820-33

Showing the most recent 10 out of 13 publications