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Featured researches published by An Chi.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

Analysis of phosphorylation sites on proteins from Saccharomyces cerevisiae by electron transfer dissociation (ETD) mass spectrometry

An Chi; Curtis Huttenhower; Lewis Y. Geer; Joshua J. Coon; John E. P. Syka; Dina L. Bai; Jeffrey Shabanowitz; Daniel J. Burke; Olga G. Troyanskaya; Donald F. Hunt

We present a strategy for the analysis of the yeast phosphoproteome that uses endo-Lys C as the proteolytic enzyme, immobilized metal affinity chromatography for phosphopeptide enrichment, a 90-min nanoflow-HPLC/electrospray-ionization MS/MS experiment for phosphopeptide fractionation and detection, gas phase ion/ion chemistry, electron transfer dissociation for peptide fragmentation, and the Open Mass Spectrometry Search Algorithm for phosphoprotein identification and assignment of phosphorylation sites. From a 30-μg (≈600 pmol) sample of total yeast protein, we identify 1,252 phosphorylation sites on 629 proteins. Identified phosphoproteins have expression levels that range from <50 to 1,200,000 copies per cell and are encoded by genes involved in a wide variety of cellular processes. We identify a consensus site that likely represents a motif for one or more uncharacterized kinases and show that yeast kinases, themselves, contain a disproportionately large number of phosphorylation sites. Detection of a pHis containing peptide from the yeast protein, Cdc10, suggests an unexpected role for histidine phosphorylation in septin biology. From diverse functional genomics data, we show that phosphoproteins have a higher number of interactions than an average protein and interact with each other more than with a random protein. They are also likely to be conserved across large evolutionary distances.


Current Biology | 2005

Saccharomyces cerevisiae rad9 acts as a Mec1 adaptor to allow Rad53 activation

Frédéric D. Sweeney; Feng Yang; An Chi; Jeffrey Shabanowitz; Donald F. Hunt; Daniel Durocher

BACKGROUND The DNA damage checkpoint is a protein kinase-based signaling system that detects and signals physical alterations in DNA. Despite having identified many components of this signaling cascade, the exact mechanisms by which checkpoint kinases are activated after DNA damage, as well as the role of the checkpoint mediators, remain poorly understood. RESULTS To elucidate the mechanisms that underlie the MEC1 and RAD9-dependent activation of Rad53, the Saccharomyces cerevisiae ortholog of Chk2, we mapped and characterized in vivo phosphorylation sites present on Rad53 after DNA damage by mass spectrometry. We find that Rad53 requires for its activation multisite phosphorylation on a number of typical and atypical Mec1 phosphorylation sites, thus confirming that Rad53 is a direct target of Mec1, the mammalian ATR homolog. Moreover, by using biochemical reconstitution experiments, we demonstrate that efficient and direct phosphorylation of Rad53 by Mec1 is only observed in the presence of purified Rad9, the archetypal checkpoint mediator. We find that the stimulatory activity of Rad9 requires a phospho- and FHA-dependent interaction with Rad53, which allows Rad53 to be recognized as a substrate for Mec1. CONCLUSIONS Our results indicate that Rad9 acts as a bona fide signaling adaptor that enables Rad53 phosphorylation by Mec1. Given the high degree of conservation of checkpoint signaling in eukaryotes, we propose that one of the critical functions of checkpoint mediators such as MDC1, 53BP1, or Brca1 is to act as PIKK adaptors during the DNA damage response.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007

Insulin Controls Subcellular Localization and Multisite Phosphorylation of the Phosphatidic Acid Phosphatase, Lipin 1

Thurl E. Harris; Todd A. Huffman; An Chi; Jeffrey Shabanowitz; Donald F. Hunt; Anil Kumar; John C. Lawrence

Brain, liver, kidney, heart, and skeletal muscle from fatty liver dystrophy (fld/fld) mice, which do not express lipin 1 (lipin), contained much less Mg2+-dependent phosphatidic acid phosphatase (PAP) activity than tissues from wild type mice. Lipin harboring the fld2j (Gly84 → Arg) mutation exhibited relatively little PAP activity. These results indicate that lipin is a major PAP in vivo and that the loss of PAP activity contributes to the fld phenotype. PAP activity was readily detected in immune complexes of lipin from 3T3-L1 adipocytes, where the protein was found both as a microsomal form and a soluble, more highly phosphorylated, form. Fifteen phosphorylation sites were identified by mass spectrometric analyses. Insulin increased the phosphorylation of multiple sites and promoted a gel shift that was due in part to phosphorylation of Ser106. In contrast, epinephrine and oleic acid promoted dephosphorylation of lipin. The PAP-specific activity of lipin was not affected by the hormones or by dephosphorylation of lipin with protein phosphatase 1. However, the ratio of soluble to microsomal lipin was markedly increased in response to insulin and decreased in response to epinephrine and oleic acid. The results suggest that insulin and epinephrine control lipin primarily by changing localization rather than intrinsic PAP activity.


The EMBO Journal | 2006

mTOR-dependent stimulation of the association of eIF4G and eIF3 by insulin

Thurl E. Harris; An Chi; Jeffrey Shabanowitz; Donald F. Hunt; Robert E. Rhoads; John C. Lawrence

Insulin stimulates protein synthesis by increasing translation initiation. This response is mediated by mTOR and is believed to result from 4EBP1 phosphorylation, which allows eIF4E to bind eIF4G. Here, we present evidence that mTOR interacts directly with eIF3 and that mTOR controls the association of eIF3 and eIF4G. Activating mTOR signaling with insulin increased by as much as five‐fold the amount of eIF4G bound to eIF3. This novel effect was blocked by rapamycin and other inhibitors of mTOR, and it required neither eIF4E binding to eIF4G nor eIF3 binding to the 40S ribosomal subunit. The increase in eIF4G associated with eIF3 occurred rapidly and at physiological concentrations of insulin. Moreover, the magnitude of the response was similar to the increase in eIF4E binding to eIF4G produced by insulin. Thus, increasing eIF4G association with eIF3 represents a potentially important mechanism by which insulin, as well as amino acids and growth factors that activate mTOR, stimulate translation.


Journal of Cell Science | 2006

Sorting of Pmel17 to melanosomes through the plasma membrane by AP1 and AP2: evidence for the polarized nature of melanocytes

Julio C. Valencia; Hidenori Watabe; An Chi; Francois Rouzaud; Kevin G. Chen; Wilfred D. Vieira; Kaoruko Takahashi; Yuji Yamaguchi; Werner Berens; Kunio Nagashima; Jeffrey Shabanowitz; Donald F. Hunt; Ettore Appella; Vincent J. Hearing

Adaptor proteins (AP) play important roles in the sorting of proteins from the trans-Golgi network, but how they function in the sorting of various melanosome-specific proteins such as Pmel17, an essential structural component of melanosomes, in melanocytes is unknown. We characterized the processing and trafficking of Pmel17 via adaptor protein complexes within melanocytic cells. Proteomics analysis detected Pmel17, AP1 and AP2, but not AP3 or AP4 in early melanosomes. Real-time PCR, immunolabeling and tissue in-situ hybridization confirmed the coexpression of AP1 isoforms μ1A and μ1B (expressed only in polarized cells) in melanocytes and keratinocytes, but expression of μ1B is missing in some melanoma cell lines. Transfection with AP1 isoforms (μ1A or μ1B) showed two distinct distribution patterns that involved Pmel17, and only μ1B was able to restore the sorting of Pmel17 to the plasma membrane in cells lacking μ1B expression. Finally, we established that expression of μ1B is regulated physiologically in melanocytes by UV radiation or DKK1. These results show that Pmel17 is sorted to melanosomes by various intracellular routes, directly or indirectly through the plasma membrane, and the presence of basolateral elements in melanocytes suggests their polarized nature.


Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2007

Periplasmic Proteins of the Extremophile Acidithiobacillus ferrooxidans A High Throughput Proteomics Analysis

An Chi; Lissette Valenzuela; Simon Beard; Aaron J. Mackey; Jeffrey Shabanowitz; Donald F. Hunt; Carlos A. Jerez

Acidithiobacillus ferrooxidans is a chemolithoautotrophic acidophile capable of obtaining energy by oxidizing ferrous iron or sulfur compounds such as metal sulfides. Some of the proteins involved in these oxidations have been described as forming part of the periplasm of this extremophile. The detailed study of the periplasmic components constitutes an important area to understand the physiology and environmental interactions of microorganisms. Proteomics analysis of the periplasmic fraction of A. ferrooxidans ATCC 23270 was performed by using high resolution linear ion trap-FT MS. We identified a total of 131 proteins in the periplasm of the microorganism grown in thiosulfate. When possible, functional categories were assigned to the proteins: 13.8% were transport and binding proteins, 14.6% were several kinds of cell envelope proteins, 10.8% were involved in energy metabolism, 10% were related to protein fate and folding, 10% were proteins with unknown functions, and 26.1% were proteins without homologues in databases. These last proteins are most likely characteristic of A. ferrooxidans and may have important roles yet to be assigned. The majority of the periplasmic proteins from A. ferrooxidans were very basic compared with those of neutrophilic microorganisms such as Escherichia coli, suggesting a special adaptation of the chemolithoautotrophic bacterium to its very acidic environment. The high throughput proteomics approach used here not only helps to understand the physiology of this extreme acidophile but also offers an important contribution to the functional annotation for the available genomes of biomining microorganisms such as A. ferrooxidans for which no efficient genetic systems are available to disrupt genes by procedures such as homologous recombination.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2006

The utility of ETD mass spectrometry in proteomic analysis.

Leann M. Mikesh; Beatrix Ueberheide; An Chi; Joshua J. Coon; John Edward Philip Syka; Jeffrey Shabanowitz; Donald F. Hunt


Journal of Proteome Research | 2006

Proteomic and Bioinformatic Characterization of the Biogenesis and Function of Melanosomes

An Chi; Julio C. Valencia; Zhang-Zhi Hu; Hidenori Watabe; Hiroshi Yamaguchi; Nancy J. Mangini; Hongzhan Huang; Victor A. Canfield; Keith C. Cheng; Feng Yang; Riichiro Abe; Sho-ichi Yamagishi; Jeffrey Shabanowitz; Vincent J. Hearing; Cathy H. Wu; Ettore Appella; Donald F. Hunt


Biotechnology Advances | 2006

Genomics, metagenomics and proteomics in biomining microorganisms

Lissette Valenzuela; An Chi; Simon Beard; Alvaro Orell; Nicolas Guiliani; J Shabanowitz; Donald F. Hunt; Carlos A. Jerez


International Journal of Mass Spectrometry | 2007

Analysis of intact proteins on a chromatographic time scale by electron transfer dissociation tandem mass spectrometry.

An Chi; Dina L. Bai; Lewis Y. Geer; Jeffrey Shabanowitz; Donald F. Hunt

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Ettore Appella

National Institutes of Health

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Julio C. Valencia

National Institutes of Health

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Vincent J. Hearing

National Institutes of Health

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Cathy H. Wu

University of Delaware

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Dina L. Bai

University of Virginia

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Feng Yang

University of Virginia

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