Anne M. Verhagen
Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research
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Featured researches published by Anne M. Verhagen.
Cell | 2000
Anne M. Verhagen; Paul G. Ekert; Miha Pakusch; John Silke; Lisa M. Connolly; Gavin E. Reid; Robert L. Moritz; Richard J. Simpson; David L. Vaux
To identify proteins that bind mammalian IAP homolog A (MIHA, also known as XIAP), we used coimmuno-precipitation and 2D immobilized pH gradient/SDS PAGE, followed by electrospray ionization tandem mass spectrometry. DIABLO (direct IAP binding protein with low pI) is a novel protein that can bind MIHA and can also interact with MIHB and MIHC and the baculoviral IAP, OpIAP. The N-terminally processed, IAP-interacting form of DIABLO is concentrated in membrane fractions in healthy cells but released into the MIHA-containing cytosolic fractions upon UV irradiation. As transfection of cells with DIABLO was able to counter the protection afforded by MIHA against UV irradiation, DIABLO may promote apoptosis by binding to IAPs and preventing them from inhibiting caspases.
Genome Biology | 2001
Anne M. Verhagen; Elizabeth J. Coulson; David L. Vaux
SummaryApoptosis is a physiological cell death process important for development, homeostasis and the immune defence of multicellular animals. The key effectors of apoptosis are caspases, cysteine proteases that cleave after aspartate residues. The inhibitor of apoptosis (IAP) family of proteins prevent cell death by binding to and inhibiting active caspases and are negatively regulated by IAP-binding proteins, such as the mammalian protein DIABLO/Smac. IAPs are characterized by the presence of one to three domains known as baculoviral IAP repeat (BIR) domains and many also have a RING-finger domain at their carboxyl terminus. More recently, a second group of BIR-domain-containing proteins (BIRPs) have been identified that includes the mammalian proteins Bruce and Survivin as well as BIR-containing proteins in yeasts and Caenorhabditis elegans. These Survivin-like BIRPs regulate cytokinesis and mitotic spindle formation. In this review, we describe the IAPs and other BIRPs, their evolutionary relationships and their subcellular and tissue localizations.
Apoptosis | 2002
Anne M. Verhagen; David L. Vaux
In Drosophila, the genetic locus 75CI1,2 is essential for all developmental cell death. Within this region are the genes for three pro-death proteins, Grim, Reaper and HID. These proteins are transcriptionally regulated and their expression tightly associated with cell death in the developing fly embryo. When ectopically expressed in the retina, Grim, Reaper and HID cause apoptosis and eye ablation. They have a short region of similarity at their N-termini through which they can interact with inhibitor of apoptosis (IAP) proteins, and it is by antagonising IAP inhibition of caspases that Grim, Reaper and HID promote cell death. The observation that Grim, Reaper and HID can interact with mammalian IAPs and induce apoptosis in mammalian cells suggested that mammalian IAP antagonists might also exist. Diablo/Smac, identified six years after the first description of a Drosophila IAP antagonist, is the only mammalian protein identified to date that is clearly functionally related to the Drosophila proteins. Since its discovery, there have been numerous studies investigating how Diablo/Smac interacts with IAPs and promotes cell death. Here we review what is currently known about Diablo/Smac and speculate on other mammalian IAP antagonists.
FEBS Journal | 2006
Bernard A. Callus; Anne M. Verhagen; David L. Vaux
Genetic screens in Drosophila have revealed that the serine/threonine kinase Hippo (Hpo) and the scaffold protein Salvador participate in a pathway that controls cell proliferation and apoptosis. Hpo most closely resembles the pro‐apoptotic mammalian sterile20 kinases 1 and 2 (Mst1 and 2), and Salvador (Sav) has a human orthologue hSav (also called hWW45). Here we show that Mst and hSav heterodimerize in an interaction requiring the conserved C‐terminal coiled‐coil domains of both proteins. hSav was also able to homodimerize, but this did not require its coiled‐coil domain. Coexpression of Mst and hSav led to phosphorylation of hSav and also increased its abundance. In vitro phosphorylation experiments indicate that the phosphorylation of Sav by Mst is direct. The stabilizing effect of Mst was much greater on N‐terminally truncated hSav mutants, as long as they retained the ability to bind Mst. Mst mutants that lacked the C‐terminal coiled‐coil domain and were unable to bind to hSav, also failed to stabilize or phosphorylate hSav, whereas catalytically inactive Mst mutants that retained the ability to bind to hSav were still able to increase its abundance, although they were no longer able to phosphorylate hSav. Together these results show that hSav can bind to, and be phosphorylated by, Mst, and that the stabilizing effect of Mst on hSav requires its interaction with hSav but is probably not due to phosphorylation of hSav by Mst.
Journal of Cell Biology | 2002
John Silke; Christine J. Hawkins; Paul G. Ekert; Joanne Chew; Catherine L. Day; Miha Pakusch; Anne M. Verhagen; David L. Vaux
The X-linked mammalian inhibitor of apoptosis protein (XIAP) has been shown to bind several partners. These partners include caspase 3, caspase 9, DIABLO/Smac, HtrA2/Omi, TAB1, the bone morphogenetic protein receptor, and a presumptive E2 ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme. In addition, we show here that XIAP can bind to itself. To determine which of these interactions are required for it to inhibit apoptosis, we generated point mutant XIAP proteins and correlated their ability to bind other proteins with their ability to inhibit apoptosis. ∂RING point mutants of XIAP were as competent as their full-length counterparts in inhibiting apoptosis, although impaired in their ability to oligomerize with full-length XIAP. Triple point mutants, unable to bind caspase 9, caspase 3, and DIABLO/HtrA2/Omi, were completely ineffectual in inhibiting apoptosis. However, point mutants that had lost the ability to inhibit caspase 9 and caspase 3 but retained the ability to inhibit DIABLO were still able to inhibit apoptosis, demonstrating that IAP antagonism is required for apoptosis to proceed following UV irradiation.
The EMBO Journal | 2001
John Silke; Paul G. Ekert; Catherine L. Day; Christine J. Hawkins; Manuel Baca; Joanne Chew; Miha Pakusch; Anne M. Verhagen; David L. Vaux
XIAP is a mammalian inhibitor of apoptosis protein (IAP). To determine residues within the second baculoviral IAP repeat (BIR2) required for inhibition of caspase 3, we screened a library of BIR2 mutants for loss of the ability to inhibit caspase 3 toxicity in the yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe. Four of the mutations, not predicted to affect the structure of the BIR fold, clustered together on the N‐terminal region that flanks BIR2, suggesting that this is a site of interaction with caspase 3. Introduction of these mutations into full‐length XIAP reduced caspase 3 inhibitory activity up to 500‐fold, but did not affect its ability to inhibit caspase 9 or interact with the IAP antagonist DIABLO. Furthermore, these mutants retained full ability to inhibit apoptosis in transfected cells, demonstrating that although XIAP is able to inhibit caspase 3, this activity is dispensable for inhibition of apoptosis by XIAP in vivo.
Journal of Cell Science | 2009
Stanley S. Stylli; Stacey T.T. I; Anne M. Verhagen; San San Xu; Ian Pass; Sara A. Courtneidge; Peter Lock
Invadopodia are actin-based projections enriched with proteases, which invasive cancer cells use to degrade the extracellular matrix (ECM). The Phox homology (PX)-Src homology (SH)3 domain adaptor protein Tks5 (also known as SH3PXD2A) cooperates with Src tyrosine kinase to promote invadopodia formation but the underlying pathway is not clear. Here we show that Src phosphorylates Tks5 at Y557, inducing it to associate directly with the SH3-SH2 domain adaptor proteins Nck1 and Nck2 in invadopodia. Tks5 mutants unable to bind Nck show reduced matrix degradation-promoting activity and recruit actin to invadopodia inefficiently. Conversely, Src- and Tks5-driven matrix proteolysis and actin assembly in invadopodia are enhanced by Nck1 or Nck2 overexpression and inhibited by Nck1 depletion. We show that clustering at the plasma membrane of the Tks5 inter-SH3 region containing Y557 triggers phosphorylation at this site, facilitating Nck recruitment and F-actin assembly. These results identify a Src-Tks5-Nck pathway in ECM-degrading invadopodia that shows parallels with pathways linking several mammalian and pathogen-derived proteins to local actin regulation.
Cell Death & Differentiation | 2007
Anne M. Verhagen; Tobias Kratina; Christine J. Hawkins; John Silke; Paul G. Ekert; David L. Vaux
Direct IAP binding protein with low pI/second mitochondrial activator of caspases, HtrA2/Omi and GstPT/eRF3 are mammalian proteins that bind via N-terminal inhibitor of apoptosis protein (IAP) binding motifs (IBMs) to the baculoviral IAP repeat (BIR) domains of IAPs. These interactions can prevent IAPs from inhibiting caspases, or displace active caspases, thereby promoting cell death. We have identified several additional potential IAP antagonists, including glutamate dehydrogenase (GdH), Nipsnap 3 and 4, CLPX, leucine-rich pentatricopeptide repeat motif-containing protein and 3-hydroxyisobutyrate dehydrogenase. All are mitochondrial proteins from which N-terminal import sequences are removed generating N-terminal IBMs. Whereas most of these proteins have alanine at the N-terminal position, as observed for previously described antagonists, GdH has an N-terminal serine residue that is essential for X-linked IAP (XIAP) interaction. These newly described IAP binding proteins interact with XIAP mainly via BIR2, with binding eliminated or significantly reduced by a single point mutation (D214S) within this domain. Through this interaction, many are able to antagonise XIAP inhibition of caspase 3 in vitro.
Apoptosis | 2001
Christine J. Hawkins; John Silke; Anne M. Verhagen; R. Foster; Paul G. Ekert; David M. Ashley
We have reconstituted the Apaf-1-activated apoptosis mechanism in Sacchromyces cerevisiae such that the presence of a constitutively active form of Apaf-1 together with both Caspase-9 and Caspase-3 results in yeast death. This system is a good model of the Apaf-1-activated pathway in mammalian cells: MIHA (XIAP/hILP), and to a lesser degree MIHB (c-IAP1/HIAP2) and MIHC (c-IAP-2/HIAP1) can inhibit caspases in this system, and protection by IAPs (inhibitor of apoptosis) can be abrogated by coexpression of the Drosophila pro-apoptotic proteins HID and GRIM or the mammalian protein DIABLO/Smac. Using this system we demonstrate that unlike DIABLO/Smac, other proteins which interact with mammalian IAPs (TAB-1, Zap-1, Traf-1 and Traf-2) do not act to antagonise IAP- mediated caspase inhibition.
Journal of Cell Biology | 2002
Raffi Gugasyan; Cathy Quilici; Stacey T.T. I; Dianne Grail; Anne M. Verhagen; Andrew W. Roberts; Toshio Kitamura; Ashley R. Dunn; Peter Lock
Downstream of kinase (Dok)–related protein (DokR, also known as p56dok/FRIP/Dok-R) is implicated in cytokine and immunoreceptor signaling in myeloid and T cells. Tyrosine phosphorylation induces DokR to bind the signal relay molecules, RasGTPase-activating protein (RasGAP) and Nck. Here, we have examined the function of DokR during hematopoietic development and the requirement for RasGAP and Nck binding sites in its biological function. Retroviral-mediated expression of DokR in bone marrow cells dramatically inhibited their capacity to form colonies in vitro in response to the cytokines macrophage colony–stimulating factor and stem cell factor, whereas responses to interleukin-3 and granulocyte macrophage colony–stimulating factor were only weakly affected. When introduced into lethally irradiated mice, hematopoietic cells expressing DokR showed a drastically reduced capacity to repopulate lymphoid tissues. Most notably, DokR dramatically reduced repopulation of the thymus, in part by reducing the number of T cell precursors seeding in the thymus, but equally, through inhibiting the transition of CD4−CD8− to CD4+CD8+ T cells. Consequently, the number of mature peripheral T cells was markedly reduced. In contrast, a minimal effect on B cell and myeloid lineage development was observed. Importantly, functional RasGAP and Nck binding sites were found to be essential for the biological effects of DokR in vitro and in vivo.