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Dive into the research topics where Anthony Orvedahl is active.

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Featured researches published by Anthony Orvedahl.


Cell Host & Microbe | 2010

Autophagy Protects against Sindbis Virus Infection of the Central Nervous System

Anthony Orvedahl; Sarah MacPherson; Rhea Sumpter; Zsolt Tallóczy; Zhongju Zou; Beth Levine

Autophagy functions in antiviral immunity. However, the ability of endogenous autophagy genes to protect against viral disease in vertebrates remains to be causally established. Here, we report that the autophagy gene Atg5 function is critical for protection against lethal Sindbis virus (SIN) infection of the mouse central nervous system. Inactivating Atg5 in SIN-infected neurons results in delayed clearance of viral proteins, increased accumulation of the cellular p62 adaptor protein, and increased cell death in neurons, but the levels of viral replication remain unaltered. In vitro, p62 interacts with SIN capsid protein, and genetic knockdown of p62 blocks the targeting of viral capsid to autophagosomes. Moreover, p62 or autophagy gene knockdown increases viral capsid accumulation and accelerates virus-induced cell death without affecting virus replication. These results suggest a function for autophagy in mammalian antiviral defense: a cell-autonomous mechanism in which p62 adaptor-mediated autophagic viral protein clearance promotes cell survival.


Nature | 2011

Image-Based Genome-Wide siRNA Screen Identifies Selective Autophagy Factors

Anthony Orvedahl; Rhea Sumpter; Guanghua Xiao; Aylwin Ng; Zhongju Zou; Yi Tang; Masahiro Narimatsu; Christopher Gilpin; Qihua Sun; Michael G. Roth; Christian V. Forst; Jeffrey L. Wrana; Ying Zhang; Katherine Luby-Phelps; Ramnik J. Xavier; Yang Xie; Beth Levine

Selective autophagy involves the recognition and targeting of specific cargo, such as damaged organelles, misfolded proteins, or invading pathogens for lysosomal destruction. Yeast genetic screens have identified proteins required for different forms of selective autophagy, including cytoplasm-to-vacuole targeting, pexophagy and mitophagy, and mammalian genetic screens have identified proteins required for autophagy regulation. However, there have been no systematic approaches to identify molecular determinants of selective autophagy in mammalian cells. Here, to identify mammalian genes required for selective autophagy, we performed a high-content, image-based, genome-wide small interfering RNA screen to detect genes required for the colocalization of Sindbis virus capsid protein with autophagolysosomes. We identified 141 candidate genes required for viral autophagy, which were enriched for cellular pathways related to messenger RNA processing, interferon signalling, vesicle trafficking, cytoskeletal motor function and metabolism. Ninety-six of these genes were also required for Parkin-mediated mitophagy, indicating that common molecular determinants may be involved in autophagic targeting of viral nucleocapsids and autophagic targeting of damaged mitochondria. Murine embryonic fibroblasts lacking one of these gene products, the C2-domain containing protein, SMURF1, are deficient in the autophagosomal targeting of Sindbis and herpes simplex viruses and in the clearance of damaged mitochondria. Moreover, SMURF1-deficient mice accumulate damaged mitochondria in the heart, brain and liver. Thus, our study identifies candidate determinants of selective autophagy, and defines SMURF1 as a newly recognized mediator of both viral autophagy and mitophagy.


Cell | 2011

RalB and the Exocyst Mediate the Cellular Starvation Response by Direct Activation of Autophagosome Assembly

Brian O. Bodemann; Anthony Orvedahl; Tzuling Cheng; Rosalyn Ram; Yi Hung Ou; Etienne Formstecher; Mekhala Maiti; C. Clayton Hazelett; Eric M. Wauson; Maria Balakireva; Jacques Camonis; Charles Yeaman; Beth Levine; Michael A. White

The study of macroautophagy in mammalian cells has described induction, vesicle nucleation, and membrane elongation complexes as key signaling intermediates driving autophagosome biogenesis. How these components are recruited to nascent autophagosomes is poorly understood, and although much is known about signaling mechanisms that restrain autophagy, the nature of positive inductive signals that can promote autophagy remain cryptic. We find that the Ras-like small G protein, RalB, is localized to nascent autophagosomes and is activated on nutrient deprivation. RalB and its effector Exo84 are required for nutrient starvation-induced autophagocytosis, and RalB activation is sufficient to promote autophagosome formation. Through direct binding to Exo84, RalB induces the assembly of catalytically active ULK1 and Beclin1-VPS34 complexes on the exocyst, which are required for isolation membrane formation and maturation. Thus, RalB signaling is a primary adaptive response to nutrient limitation that directly engages autophagocytosis through mobilization of the core vesicle nucleation machinery.


Cell Death & Differentiation | 2009

Eating the enemy within: autophagy in infectious diseases

Anthony Orvedahl; Beth Levine

Autophagy is emerging as a central component of antimicrobial host defense against diverse viral, bacterial, and parasitic infections. In addition to pathogen degradation, autophagy has other functions during infection such as innate and adaptive immune activation. As an important host defense pathway, microbes have also evolved mechanisms to evade, subvert, or exploit autophagy. Additionally, some fungal pathogens harness autophagy within their own cells to promote pathogenesis. This review will highlight our current understanding of autophagy in infection, focusing on the most recent advances in the field, and will discuss the potential implications of these studies in the design of anti-infective therapeutics.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

Vibrio parahaemolyticus orchestrates a multifaceted host cell infection by induction of autophagy, cell rounding, and then cell lysis

Dara L. Burdette; Melanie L. Yarbrough; Anthony Orvedahl; Christopher Gilpin; Kim Orth

The bacterial pathogen Vibrio parahaemolyticus utilizes a type III secretion system to cause death of host cells within hours of infection. We report that cell death is completely independent of apoptosis and occurs by a mechanism in which injection of multiple type III effectors causes induction of autophagy, cell rounding, and the subsequent release of cellular contents. Autophagy is detected by the appearance of lipidated light chain 3 (LC3) and by increases in punctae and vacuole formation. Electron microscopy reveals the production of early autophagic vesicles during infection. Consistent with phosphoinositide 3 (PI3) kinase playing a role in autophagy, treatment of infected cells with a PI3 kinase inhibitor attenuates autophagy in infected cells. Because many effectors are injected during a V. parahaemolyticus infection, it is not surprising that the presence of a sole PI3 kinase inhibitor does not prevent inevitable host-cell death. Our studies reveal an infection paradigm whereby an extracellular pathogen uses its type III secretion system to cause at least three parallel events that eventually result in the proinflammatory death of an infected host cell.


Cellular Microbiology | 2008

Autophagy and viral neurovirulence

Anthony Orvedahl; Beth Levine

As terminally differentiated vital cells, neurons may be specialized to fight viral infections without undergoing cellular self‐destruction. The cellular lysosomal degradation pathway, autophagy, is emerging as one such mechanism of neuronal antiviral defence. Autophagy has diverse physiological functions, such as cellular adaptation to stress, routine organelle and protein turnover, and innate immunity against intracellular pathogens, including viruses. Most of the in vivo evidence for an antiviral role of autophagy is related to viruses that specifically target neurons, including the prototype alphavirus, Sindbis virus, and the α‐herpesvirus, herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV‐1). In the case of HSV‐1, viral evasion of autophagy is essential for lethal encephalitis. As basal autophagy is important in preventing neurodegeneration, and induced autophagy is important in promoting cellular survival during stress, viral antagonism of autophagy in neurons may lead to neuronal dysfunction and/or neuronal cell death. This review provides background information on the roles of autophagy in immunity and neuroprotection, and then discusses the relationships between autophagy and viral neurovirulence.


Autophagy | 2008

Viral evasion of autophagy.

Anthony Orvedahl; Beth Levine

Autophagy is an evolutionarily ancient pathway for survival during different forms of cellular stress, including infection with viruses and other intracellular pathogens. Autophagy may protect against viral infection through degradation of viral components (xenophagy), by promoting the survival or death of infected cells, through delivery of Toll-like receptor (TLR) ligands to endosomes to activate innate immunity, or by feeding antigens to MHC class II compartments to activate adaptive immunity. Given this integral role of autophagy in innate and adaptive antiviral immunity, selective pressure likely promoted the emergence of escape mechanisms by pathogenic viruses. This review will briefly summarize the current understanding of autophagy as an antiviral pathway, and then discuss strategies that viruses may utilize to evade this host defense mechanism.


Current Topics in Microbiology and Immunology | 2009

Autophagy in Mammalian Antiviral Immunity

Anthony Orvedahl; Beth Levine

Autophagy plays diverse roles in cellular adaptation to stress and promotes vital housekeeping functions by recycling unused or damaged organelles and proteins. As an innate immune defense pathway, autophagy also protects against infection with diverse pathogens, including viruses. Autophagy combats infections with both RNA and DNA viruses, and may function by degrading viral components, by promoting the survival of virally infected cells, and/or by activating innate and adaptive immunity. Viruses have evolved counter-mechanisms to evade host autophagy in order to promote their own survival. This chapter will highlight recent advances and unanswered questions relating to autophagy in mammalian antiviral immunity.


Autophagy | 2007

2007 Keystone Symposium on Autophagy in Health and Disease

Congcong He; Anthony Orvedahl

The first Keystone Symposium on Autophagy in Health and Disease was held in Monterey, a scenic city on the Pacific coast in central California, April 15-20, 2007. The symposium brought together approximately 280 participants, from basic researchers to physicians and journalists. The meeting was composed of a joint keynote session with the meeting “Apoptotic and Non-Apoptotic Cell Death Pathways”, and eight plenary sessions, covering the molecular mechanisms of autophagy and many emerging concepts and functions of autophagy in organelle degradation, physiological regulation, cell death and survival, and disease. Three afternoon workshops focused on short talks selected from the posters, and a special discussion session led by experts dealt with techniques and concerns regarding experimental detection of autophagy. The symposium highlighted autophagy as a potential therapeutic target in a wide range of diseases, including cancer, microbial infection, myopathies and neurodegenerative disorders.


Cell Host & Microbe | 2007

HSV-1 ICP34.5 Confers Neurovirulence by Targeting the Beclin 1 Autophagy Protein

Anthony Orvedahl; Diane E. Alexander; Zsolt Tallóczy; Qihua Sun; Yongjie Wei; Wei Zhang; Dennis K. Burns; David A. Leib; Beth Levine

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Beth Levine

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Rhea Sumpter

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Zhongju Zou

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Christopher Gilpin

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Guanghua Xiao

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Katherine Luby-Phelps

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Qihua Sun

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Yang Xie

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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