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Dive into the research topics where Anne-Sophie Wavreille is active.

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Featured researches published by Anne-Sophie Wavreille.


Biochemistry | 2011

Substrate Specificity of Protein Tyrosine Phosphatases 1B, RPTPα, SHP-1, and SHP-2

Lige Ren; Xianwen Chen; Rinrada Luechapanichkul; Nicholas G. Selner; Tiffany M. Meyer; Anne-Sophie Wavreille; Richard Chan; Caterina Iorio; Xiang Zhou; Benjamin G. Neel; Dehua Pei

We determined the substrate specificities of the protein tyrosine phosphatases (PTPs) PTP1B, RPTPα, SHP-1, and SHP-2 by on-bead screening of combinatorial peptide libraries and solution-phase kinetic analysis of individually synthesized phosphotyrosyl (pY) peptides. These PTPs exhibit different levels of sequence specificity and catalytic efficiency. The catalytic domain of RPTPα has very weak sequence specificity and is approximately 2 orders of magnitude less active than the other three PTPs. The PTP1B catalytic domain has modest preference for acidic residues on both sides of pY, is highly active toward multiply phosphorylated peptides, but disfavors basic residues at any position, a Gly at the pY-1 position, or a Pro at the pY+1 position. By contrast, SHP-1 and SHP-2 share similar but much narrower substrate specificities, with a strong preference for acidic and aromatic hydrophobic amino acids on both sides of the pY residue. An efficient SHP-1/2 substrate generally contains two or more acidic residues on the N-terminal side and one or more acidic residues on the C-terminal side of pY but no basic residues. Subtle differences exist between SHP-1 and SHP-2 in that SHP-1 has a stronger preference for acidic residues at the pY-1 and pY+1 positions and the two SHPs prefer acidic residues at different positions N-terminal to pY. A survey of the known protein substrates of PTP1B, SHP-1, and SHP-2 shows an excellent agreement between the in vivo dephosphorylation pattern and the in vitro specificity profiles derived from library screening. These results suggest that different PTPs have distinct sequence specificity profiles and the intrinsic activity/specificity of the PTP domain is an important determinant of the enzymes in vivo substrate specificity.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006

Sequence Specificity of SHP-1 and SHP-2 Src Homology 2 Domains CRITICAL ROLES OF RESIDUES BEYOND THE pY+3 POSITION

Diana Imhof; Anne-Sophie Wavreille; Andreas May; Martin Zacharias; Susheela Tridandapani; Dehua Pei

A combinatorial phosphotyrosyl (pY) peptide library was screened to determine the amino acid preferences at the pY+4 to pY+6 positions for the four SH2 domains of protein-tyrosine phosphatases SHP-1 and SHP-2. Individual binding sequences selected from the library were resynthesized and their binding affinities and specificities to various SH2 domains were further evaluated by SPR studies, stimulation of SHP-1 and SHP-2 phosphatase activity, and in vitro pulldown assays. These studies reveal that binding of a pY peptide to the N-SH2 domain of SHP-2 is greatly enhanced by a large hydrophobic residue (Trp, Tyr, Met, or Phe) at the pY+4 and/or pY+5 positions, whereas binding to SHP-1 N-SH2 domain is enhanced by either hydrophobic or positively charged residues (Arg, Lys, or His) at these positions. Similar residues at the pY+4 to pY+6 positions are also preferred by SHP-1 and SHP-2 C-SH2 domains, although their influence on the overall binding affinities is much smaller compared with the N-SH2 domains. A structural model was generated to qualitatively interpret the contribution of the pY+4 and pY+5 residues to the overall binding affinity. Examination of pY motifs from known SHP-1 and SHP-2-binding proteins shows that many of the pY motifs contain a hydrophobic or positively charged residue(s) at the pY+4 and pY+5 positions.


ACS Combinatorial Science | 2008

Cyclic peptidyl inhibitors of Grb2 and tensin SH2 domains identified from combinatorial libraries.

Yanyan Zhang; Shanggen Zhou; Anne-Sophie Wavreille; James DeWille; Dehua Pei

Cyclic peptides provide attractive lead compounds for drug discovery and excellent molecular probes in biomedical research. In this work, a novel method has been developed for the high-throughput synthesis, screening, and identification of cyclic peptidyl ligands against macromolecular targets. Support-bound cyclic phosphotyrosyl peptide libraries containing randomized amino acid sequences and different ring sizes (theoretical diversity of 3.2 x 10(6)) were synthesized and screened against the SH2 domains of Grb2 and tensin. Potent, selective inhibitors were identified from the libraries and were generally more effective than the corresponding linear peptides. One of the inhibitors selected against the Grb2 SH2 domain inhibited human breast cancer cell growth and disrupted actin filaments. This method should be applicable to the development of cyclic peptidyl inhibitors against other protein domains, enzymes, and receptors.


Biochemistry | 2009

The SH2 domains of inositol polyphosphate 5-phosphatases SHIP1 and SHIP2 have similar ligand specificity but different binding kinetics.

Yanyan Zhang; Anne-Sophie Wavreille; Andrew R. Kunys; Dehua Pei

SH2 domain-containing inositol 5-phosphatases 1 (SHIP1) and 2 (SHIP2) are structurally similar proteins that catalyze the degradation of lipid secondary messenger phosphatidylinositol 3,4,5-triphosphate to produce phosphatidylinositol 3,4-diphosphate. Despite their high sequence identity (51%), SHIP1 and SHIP2 share little overlap in their in vivo functions. In this work, the sequence specificity of the SHIP2 SH2 domain was systematically defined through the screening of a combinatorial pY peptide library. Comparison of its specificity profile with that of the SHIP1 SH2 domain showed that the two SH2 domains have similar specificities, both recognizing pY peptides of the consensus sequence pY[S/Y][L/Y/M][L/M/I/V], although there are also subtle differences such as the tolerance of an arginine at the pY + 1 position by the SHIP2 but not SHIP1 SH2 domain. Surface plasmon resonance analysis of their interaction with various pY peptides suggested that the two domains have similar binding affinities but dramatically different binding kinetics, with the SHIP1 SH2 domain having fast association and dissociation rates while the SHIP2 domain showing apparent slow-binding behavior. Site-directed mutagenesis and kinetic studies indicated that the SHIP2 SH2 domain exists as a mixture of two conformational isomers. The major, inactive isomer apparently contains two cis peptidyl-prolyl bonds at positions 88 and 105, whereas the minor, active isomer has both proline residues in their trans configuration. Cis-trans isomerization of the peptidyl-prolyl bonds may provide a potential mechanism for regulating the interaction between SHIP2 and pY proteins. These data suggest that a combination of tissue distribution, specificity, and kinetic differences is likely responsible for their in vivo functional differences.


Molecular BioSystems | 2007

Reverse interactomics: decoding protein–protein interactions with combinatorial peptide libraries

Dehua Pei; Anne-Sophie Wavreille

Identification of binding partners is the crucial first step towards understanding the biological function of a protein. Many protein-protein interactions occur via modular domains that recognize short peptide motifs in their target proteins. Here we describe a chemical/bioinformatics approach for predicting the binding partners of modular domains. The optimal binding motif(s) of a protein domain is identified by screening a combinatorial peptide library. The resulting consensus sequence is used to search protein and genomic databases for potential binding proteins, which are subsequently confirmed (or disproved) by conventional protein binding assays (e.g. pull-down and co-immunoprecipitation).


PLOS ONE | 2011

LyGDI, a Novel SHIP-Interacting Protein, Is a Negative Regulator of FcγR-Mediated Phagocytosis

Payal Mehta; Anne-Sophie Wavreille; Steven E. Justiniano; Rachel L. Marsh; Jianhua Yu; Richard W. Burry; David Jarjoura; Timothy D. Eubank; Michael A. Caligiuri; Jonathan P. Butchar; Susheela Tridandapani

SHIP and SHIP-2 are inositol phosphatases that regulate FcγR-mediated phagocytosis through catalytic as well as non-catalytic mechanisms. In this study we have used two-dimensional fluorescence difference gel electrophoresis (DIGE) analysis to identify downstream signaling proteins that uniquely associate with SHIP or SHIP-2 upon FcγR clustering in human monocytes. We identified LyGDI as a binding partner of SHIP, associating inducibly with the SHIP/Grb2/Shc complex. Immunodepletion and competition experiments with recombinant SHIP domains revealed that Grb2 and the proline-rich domain of SHIP were necessary for SHIP-LyGDI association. Functional studies in primary human monocytes showed that LyGDI sequesters Rac in the cytosol, preventing it from localizing to the membrane. Consistent with this, suppression of LyGDI expression resulted in significantly enhanced FcγR-mediated phagocytosis.


Organic Letters | 2008

Synthesis of 3,5-difluorotyrosine-containing peptides: application in substrate profiling of protein tyrosine phosphatases.

Bhaskar Gopishetty; Lige Ren; Tiffany M. Waller; Anne-Sophie Wavreille; Miguel Lopez; Amit Thakkar; Jinge Zhu; Dehua Pei

Fully protected 3,5-difluorotyrosine (F2Y), Fmoc-F2Y(tBu)-OH, is efficiently prepared by a chemoenzymatic process and incorporated into individual peptides and combinatorial peptide libraries. The F2Y-containing peptides display kinetic properties toward protein tyrosine phosphatases (PTPs) similar to their corresponding tyrosine-containing counterparts but are resistant to tyrosinase action. These properties make F2Y a useful tyrosine surrogate during peptide library screening for optimal PTP substrates.


Biochemistry | 2005

Decoding protein-protein interactions through combinatorial chemistry : sequence specificity of SHP-1, SHP-2, and SHIP SH2 domains

Michael C. Sweeney; Anne-Sophie Wavreille; Junguk Park; Jonathan P. Butchar; Susheela Tridandapani; Dehua Pei


Biochemistry | 2003

S-Ribosylhomocysteinase (LuxS) Is a Mononuclear Iron Protein†

Jinge Zhu; Eric Dizin; Xubo Hu; Anne-Sophie Wavreille; Junguk Park; Dehua Pei


Methods | 2007

Defining SH2 domain and PTP specificity by screening combinatorial peptide libraries

Anne-Sophie Wavreille; Mathieu Garaud; Yanyan Zhang; Dehua Pei

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Dehua Pei

Ohio State University

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Jinge Zhu

Ohio State University

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