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Dive into the research topics where Amie J. McClellan is active.

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Featured researches published by Amie J. McClellan.


Nature Cell Biology | 2005

Protein quality control: chaperones culling corrupt conformations.

Amie J. McClellan; Stephen Tam; Daniel Kaganovich; Judith Frydman

Achieving the correct balance between folding and degradation of misfolded proteins is critical for cell viability. The importance of defining the mechanisms and factors that mediate cytoplasmic quality control is underscored by the growing list of diseases associated with protein misfolding and aggregation. Molecular chaperones assist protein folding and also facilitate degradation of misfolded polypeptides by the ubiquitin–proteasome system. Here we discuss emerging links between folding and degradation machineries and highlight challenges for future research.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 1997

The amino-terminal transforming region of simian virus 40 large T and small t antigens functions as a J domain.

Ashok Srinivasan; Amie J. McClellan; Jai V. Vartikar; Ian Marks; Paul G. Cantalupo; Yun Li; Peter Whyte; Kathleen Rundell; Jeffrey L. Brodsky; James M. Pipas

Simian virus 40 (SV40) encodes two proteins, large T antigen and small t antigen that contribute to virus-induced tumorigenesis. Both proteins act by targeting key cellular regulatory proteins and altering their function. Known targets of the 708-amino-acid large T antigen include the three members of the retinoblastoma protein family (pRb, p107, and p130), members of the CBP family of transcriptional adapter proteins (cap-binding protein [CBP], p300, and p400), and the tumor suppressor p53. Small t antigen alters the activity of phosphatase pp2A and transactivates the cyclin A promoter. The first 82 amino acids of large T antigen and small t antigen are identical, and genetic experiments suggest that an additional target(s) important for transformation interacts with these sequences. This region contains a motif similar to the J domain, a conserved sequence found in the DnaJ family of molecular chaperones. We show here that mutations within the J domain abrogate the ability of large T antigen to transform mammalian cells. To examine whether a purified 136-amino-acid fragment from the T antigen amino terminus acts as a DnaJ-like chaperone, we investigated whether this fragment stimulates the ATPase activity of two hsc70s and discovered that ATP hydrolysis is stimulated four- to ninefold. In addition, ATPase-defective mutants of full-length T antigen, as well as wild-type small t antigen, stimulated the ATPase activity of hsc70. T antigen derivatives were also able to release an unfolded polypeptide substrate from an hsc70, an activity common to DnaJ chaperones. Because the J domain of T antigen plays essential roles in viral DNA replication, transcriptional control, virion assembly, and tumorigenesis, we conclude that this region may chaperone the rearrangement of multiprotein complexes.


Cell | 2005

Folding and quality control of the VHL tumor suppressor proceed through distinct chaperone pathways

Amie J. McClellan; Melissa D. Scott; Judith Frydman

The mechanisms by which molecular chaperones assist quality control of cytosolic proteins are poorly understood. Analysis of the chaperone requirements for degradation of misfolded variants of a cytosolic protein, the VHL tumor suppressor, reveals that distinct chaperone pathways mediate its folding and quality control. While both folding and degradation of VHL require Hsp70, the chaperonin TRiC is essential for folding but is dispensable for degradation. Conversely, the chaperone Hsp90 neither participates in VHL folding nor is required to maintain misfolded VHL solubility but is essential for its degradation. The cochaperone HOP/Sti1p also participates in VHL quality control and may direct the triage decision by bridging the Hsp70-Hsp90 interaction. Our finding that a distinct chaperone complex is uniquely required for quality control provides evidence for active and specific chaperone participation in triage decisions and suggests that a hierarchy of chaperone interactions can control the alternate fates of a cytosolic protein.


Nature Cell Biology | 2001

Molecular chaperones and the art of recognizing a lost cause.

Amie J. McClellan; Judith Frydman

Molecular chaperones have long been heralded as machines for folding and salvaging proteins. However, not every attempt to fold or refold a protein can be successful. Chaperones are known to participate in the degradation of misfolded polypeptides, but a direct link between folding and degradation pathways has remained elusive. Two recent reports show that the co-chaperone CHIP mediates ubiquitin-dependent degradation of substrates bound to heat-shock protein 70 (Hsp70) and/or Hsp90.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2003

The Hsp70 and TRiC/CCT Chaperone Systems Cooperate In Vivo To Assemble the Von Hippel-Lindau Tumor Suppressor Complex

Mark W. Melville; Amie J. McClellan; Anne S. Meyer; Andre Darveau; Judith Frydman

ABSTRACT The degree of cooperation and redundancy between different chaperones is an important problem in understanding how proteins fold in the cell. Here we use the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae as a model system to examine in vivo the chaperone requirements for assembly of the von Hippel-Lindau protein (VHL)-elongin BC (VBC) tumor suppressor complex. VHL and elongin BC expressed in yeast assembled into a correctly folded VBC complex that resembles the complex from mammalian cells. Unassembled VHL did not fold and remained associated with the cytosolic chaperones Hsp70 and TRiC/CCT, in agreement with results from mammalian cells. Analysis of the folding reaction in yeast strains carrying conditional chaperone mutants indicates that incorporation of VHL into VBC requires both functional TRiC and Hsp70. VBC assembly was defective in cells carrying either a temperature-sensitive ssa1 gene as their sole source of cytosolic Hsp70/SSA function or a temperature-sensitive mutation in CCT4, a subunit of the TRiC/CCT complex. Analysis of the VHL-chaperone interactions in these strains revealed that the cct4ts mutation decreased binding to TRiC but did not affect the interaction with Hsp70. In contrast, loss of Hsp70 function disrupted the interaction of VHL with both Hsp70 and TRiC. We conclude that, in vivo, folding of some polypeptides requires the cooperation of Hsp70 and TRiC and that Hsp70 acts to promote substrate binding to TRiC.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Heterozygous Yeast Deletion Collection Screens Reveal Essential Targets of Hsp90

Eric A. Franzosa; Véronique Albanèse; Judith Frydman; Yu Xia; Amie J. McClellan

Hsp90 is an essential eukaryotic chaperone with a role in folding specific “client” proteins such as kinases and hormone receptors. Previously performed homozygous diploid yeast deletion collection screens uncovered broad requirements for Hsp90 in cellular transport and cell cycle progression. These screens also revealed that the requisite cellular functions of Hsp90 change with growth temperature. We present here for the first time the results of heterozygous deletion collection screens conducted at the hypothermic stress temperature of 15°C. Extensive bioinformatic analyses were performed on the resulting data in combination with data from homozygous and heterozygous screens previously conducted at normal (30°C) and hyperthermic stress (37°C) growth temperatures. Our resulting meta-analysis uncovered extensive connections between Hsp90 and (1) general transcription, (2) ribosome biogenesis and (3) GTP binding proteins. Predictions from bioinformatic analyses were tested experimentally, supporting a role for Hsp90 in ribosome stability. Importantly, the integrated analysis of the 15°C heterozygous deletion pool screen with previously conducted 30°C and 37°C screens allows for essential genetic targets of Hsp90 to emerge. Altogether, these novel contributions enable a more complete picture of essential Hsp90 functions.


FEBS Letters | 1998

Mitochondrial Hsp70 cannot replace BiP in driving protein translocation into the yeast endoplasmic reticulum.

Jeffrey L. Brodsky; Marc Bäuerle; Martin Horst; Amie J. McClellan

To determine whether mitochondrial hsp70 (mHsp70) could substitute for the endoplasmic retuculum (ER) Hsp70 (BiP) during protein translocation, we assembled ER‐derived reconstituted proteoliposomes supplemented with either protein. We found that only BiP restored translocation in kar2 mutant vesicles and stimulated translocation ∼3‐fold in wild type proteoliposomes. mHsp70 associated poorly with both a BiP binding (DnaJ) domain of Sec63p and an ER precursor, and its ATPase activity was poorly enhanced upon incubation with the DnaJ domain. In contrast, BiP bound to the Sec63p‐DnaJ domain in an ATP‐dependent manner and its ATPase activity was stimulated significantly by this polypeptide. We conclude that mHsp70 is unable to support protein translocation into the ER because it fails to associate productively with Sec63p and a precursor.


Cell Stress & Chaperones | 2018

Evidence for interaction between Hsp90 and the ER membrane complex

Tambudzai Kudze; Carlos Mendez-Dorantes; Chernoh Sallieu Jalloh; Amie J. McClellan

Numerous putative heat shock protein 90 (Hsp90)-interacting proteins, which could represent novel folding clients or co-chaperones, have been identified in recent years. Two separate high-throughput screens in yeast uncovered genetic effects between Hsp90 and components of the ER membrane complex (EMC), which is required for tolerance to unfolded protein response stress in yeast. Herein, we provide the first experimental evidence supporting that there is a genuine interaction of Hsp90 with the EMC. We demonstrate genetic interactions between EMC2 and the known Hsp90 co-chaperone encoded by STI1, as well as Hsp90 point mutant allele-specific differences in inherent growth and Hsp90 inhibitor tolerance in the absence and presence of EMC2. In co-precipitation experiments, Hsp90 interacts with Emc2p, whether or not Emc2p contains amino acid sequences designated as a tetratricopeptide repeat motif. Yeast with multiple EMC gene deletions exhibit increased sensitivity to Hsp90 inhibitor as well as defective folding of the well-established Hsp90 folding client, the glucocorticoid receptor. Altogether, our evidence of physical, genetic, and functional interaction of Hsp90 with the EMC, as well as bioinformatic analysis of shared interactors, supports that there is a legitimate interaction between them in vivo.


Cell | 2007

Diverse Cellular Functions of the Hsp90 Molecular Chaperone Uncovered Using Systems Approaches

Amie J. McClellan; Yu Xia; Adam M. Deutschbauer; Ronald W. Davis; Mark Gerstein; Judith Frydman


Molecular Cell | 2006

Identification of the TRiC/CCT Substrate Binding Sites Uncovers the Function of Subunit Diversity in Eukaryotic Chaperonins

Christoph Spiess; Erik J. Miller; Amie J. McClellan; Judith Frydman

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Adam M. Deutschbauer

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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