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Dive into the research topics where Avinash Persaud is active.

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Featured researches published by Avinash Persaud.


Science | 2013

A strategy for modulation of enzymes in the ubiquitin system.

Andreas Ernst; George V. Avvakumov; Jiefei Tong; Yihui Fan; Yanling Zhao; Philipp Alberts; Avinash Persaud; John R. Walker; Ana-Mirela Neculai; Dante Neculai; Andrew Vorobyov; Pankaj Garg; Linda G. Beatty; Pak-Kei Chan; Yu-Chi Juang; Marie-Claude Landry; Christina Yeh; Elton Zeqiraj; Konstantina Karamboulas; Abdellah Allali-Hassani; Masoud Vedadi; Mike Tyers; Jason Moffat; Frank Sicheri; Laurence Pelletier; Daniel Durocher; Brian Raught; Daniela Rotin; Jianhua Yang; Michael F. Moran

Modifying Deubiquitinases Protein ubiquitination is a widespread mechanism for cellular regulation, and new regulators are valuable research tools and may help to generate therapeutic small molecules. Ernst et al. (p. 590, published online 3 January) used known crystal structures to roughly define the interaction domain between a ubiquitin-specific protease and a ubiquitinated substrate and then screened ubiquitin variants with changes in these residues to find variants that acted as potent and specific regulators that could modify ubiquitin pathway regulation in cells. A technique for developing specific and potent enzyme inhibitors is validated on enzymes of the ubiquitin‑proteasome system. The ubiquitin system regulates virtually all aspects of cellular function. We report a method to target the myriad enzymes that govern ubiquitination of protein substrates. We used massively diverse combinatorial libraries of ubiquitin variants to develop inhibitors of four deubiquitinases (DUBs) and analyzed the DUB-inhibitor complexes with crystallography. We extended the selection strategy to the ubiquitin conjugating (E2) and ubiquitin ligase (E3) enzymes and found that ubiquitin variants can also enhance enzyme activity. Last, we showed that ubiquitin variants can bind selectively to ubiquitin-binding domains. Ubiquitin variants exhibit selective function in cells and thus enable orthogonal modulation of specific enzymatic steps in the ubiquitin system.


Molecular Systems Biology | 2009

Comparison of substrate specificity of the ubiquitin ligases Nedd4 and Nedd4‐2 using proteome arrays

Avinash Persaud; Philipp Alberts; Eva Amsen; Xuejian Xiong; James D. Wasmuth; Zachary Saadon; Chris Fladd; John Parkinson; Daniela Rotin

Target recognition by the ubiquitin system is mediated by E3 ubiquitin ligases. Nedd4 family members are E3 ligases comprised of a C2 domain, 2–4 WW domains that bind PY motifs (L/PPxY) and a ubiquitin ligase HECT domain. The nine Nedd4 family proteins in mammals include two close relatives: Nedd4 (Nedd4‐1) and Nedd4L (Nedd4‐2), but their global substrate recognition or differences in substrate specificity are unknown. We performed in vitro ubiquitylation and binding assays of human Nedd4‐1 and Nedd4‐2, and rat‐Nedd4‐1, using protein microarrays spotted with ∼8200 human proteins. Top hits (substrates) for the ubiquitylation and binding assays mostly contain PY motifs. Although several substrates were recognized by both Nedd4‐1 and Nedd4‐2, others were specific to only one, with several Tyr kinases preferred by Nedd4‐1 and some ion channels by Nedd4‐2; this was subsequently validated in vivo. Accordingly, Nedd4‐1 knockdown or knockout in cells led to sustained signalling via some of its substrate Tyr kinases (e.g. FGFR), suggesting Nedd4‐1 suppresses their signalling. These results demonstrate the feasibility of identifying substrates and deciphering substrate specificity of mammalian E3 ligases.


Nature Cell Biology | 2014

Rsp5/Nedd4 is the main ubiquitin ligase that targets cytosolic misfolded proteins following heat stress

Nancy N. Fang; Gerard T. Chan; Mang Zhu; Sophie A. Comyn; Avinash Persaud; Raymond J. Deshaies; Daniela Rotin; Joerg Gsponer; Thibault Mayor

The heat-shock response is a complex cellular program that induces major changes in protein translation, folding and degradation to alleviate toxicity caused by protein misfolding. Although heat shock has been widely used to study proteostasis, it remained unclear how misfolded proteins are targeted for proteolysis in these conditions. We found that Rsp5 and its mammalian homologue Nedd4 are important E3 ligases responsible for the increased ubiquitylation induced by heat stress. We determined that Rsp5 ubiquitylates mainly cytosolic misfolded proteins upon heat shock for proteasome degradation. We found that ubiquitylation of heat-induced substrates requires the Hsp40 co-chaperone Ydj1 that is further associated with Rsp5 upon heat shock. In addition, ubiquitylation is also promoted by PY Rsp5-binding motifs found primarily in the structured regions of stress-induced substrates, which can act as heat-induced degrons. Our results support a bipartite recognition mechanism combining direct and chaperone-dependent ubiquitylation of misfolded cytosolic proteins by Rsp5.


Nature Communications | 2015

LAPTM4b recruits the LAT1-4F2hc Leu transporter to lysosomes and promotes mTORC1 activation

Ruth Milkereit; Avinash Persaud; Liviu Vanoaica; Adriano Guetg; François Verrey; Daniela Rotin

Mammalian target of rapamycin 1 (mTORC1), a master regulator of cellular growth, is activated downstream of growth factors, energy signalling and intracellular essential amino acids (EAAs) such as Leu. mTORC1 activation occurs at the lysosomal membrane, and involves V-ATPase stimulation by intra-lysosomal EAA (inside-out activation), leading to activation of the Ragulator, RagA/B-GTP and mTORC1 via Rheb-GTP. How Leu enters the lysosomes is unknown. Here we identified the lysosomal protein LAPTM4b as a binding partner for the Leu transporter, LAT1-4F2hc (SLC7A5-SLAC3A2). We show that LAPTM4b recruits LAT1-4F2hc to lysosomes, leading to uptake of Leu into lysosomes, and is required for mTORC1 activation via V-ATPase following EAA or Leu stimulation. These results demonstrate a functional Leu transporter at the lysosome, and help explain the inside-out lysosomal activation of mTORC1 by Leu/EAA.


The EMBO Journal | 2011

Nedd4-1 binds and ubiquitylates activated FGFR1 to control its endocytosis and function

Avinash Persaud; Philipp Alberts; Madeline Hayes; Sebastian Guettler; Ian D. Clarke; Frank Sicheri; Peter Dirks; Brian Ciruna; Daniela Rotin

Fibroblast growth factor receptor 1 (FGFR1) has critical roles in cellular proliferation and differentiation during animal development and adult homeostasis. Here, we show that human Nedd4 (Nedd4‐1), an E3 ubiquitin ligase comprised of a C2 domain, 4 WW domains, and a Hect domain, regulates endocytosis and signalling of FGFR1. Nedd4‐1 binds directly to and ubiquitylates activated FGFR1, by interacting primarily via its WW3 domain with a novel non‐canonical sequence (non‐PY motif) on FGFR1. Deletion of this recognition motif (FGFR1‐Δ6) abolishes Nedd4‐1 binding and receptor ubiquitylation, and impairs endocytosis of activated receptor, as also observed upon Nedd4‐1 knockdown. Accordingly, FGFR1‐Δ6, or Nedd4‐1 knockdown, exhibits sustained FGF‐dependent receptor Tyr phosphorylation and downstream signalling (activation of FRS2α, Akt, Erk1/2, and PLCγ). Expression of FGFR1‐Δ6 in human embryonic neural stem cells strongly promotes FGF2‐dependent neuronal differentiation. Furthermore, expression of this FGFR1‐Δ6 mutant in zebrafish embryos disrupts anterior neuronal patterning (head development), consistent with excessive FGFR1 signalling. These results identify Nedd4‐1 as a key regulator of FGFR1 endocytosis and signalling during neuronal differentiation and embryonic development.


Molecular Cell | 2016

System-Wide Modulation of HECT E3 Ligases with Selective Ubiquitin Variant Probes

Wei Zhang; Kuen Phon Wu; Maria A. Sartori; Hari B. Kamadurai; Alban Ordureau; Chong Jiang; Peter Y. Mercredi; Ryan Murchie; Jicheng Hu; Avinash Persaud; Manjeet Mukherjee; Nan Li; Anne Doye; John R. Walker; Yi Sheng; Zhenyue Hao; Yanjun Li; Kevin R. Brown; Emmanuel Lemichez; Junjie Chen; Yufeng Tong; J. Wade Harper; Jason Moffat; Daniela Rotin; Brenda A. Schulman; Sachdev S. Sidhu

HECT-family E3 ligases ubiquitinate protein substrates to control virtually every eukaryotic process and are misregulated in numerous diseases. Nonetheless, understanding of HECT E3s is limited by a paucity of selective and potent modulators. To overcome this challenge, we systematically developed ubiquitin variants (UbVs) that inhibit or activate HECT E3s. Structural analysis of 6 HECT-UbV complexes revealed UbV inhibitors hijacking the E2-binding site and activators occupying a ubiquitin-binding exosite. Furthermore, UbVs unearthed distinct regulation mechanisms among NEDD4 subfamily HECTs and proved useful for modulating therapeutically relevant targets of HECT E3s in cells and intestinal organoids, and in a genetic screen that identified a role for NEDD4L in regulating cell migration. Our work demonstrates versatility of UbVs for modulating activity across an E3 family, defines mechanisms and provides a toolkit for probing functions of HECT E3s, and establishes a general strategy for systematic development of modulators targeting families of signaling proteins.


Science Signaling | 2014

Tyrosine phosphorylation of NEDD4 activates its ubiquitin ligase activity

Avinash Persaud; Philipp Alberts; Sara Mari; Jiefei Tong; Ryan Murchie; Elena Maspero; Frozan Safi; Michael F. Moran; Simona Polo; Daniela Rotin

The receptor tyrosine kinases FGFR1 and EGFR promote phosphorylation of the ubiquitin ligase NEDD4, leading to activation of its catalytic activity. Phosphorylation Activates NEDD4 NEDD4 is an E3 ubiquitin ligase that promotes the endocytosis and degradation of receptor tyrosine kinases, such as the fibroblast growth factor (FGF) receptor (FGFR) and the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR). Persaud et al. found that in primary cells and cancer cell lines, ligand-bound FGFR or EGFR stimulated the phosphorylation of NEDD4, which prevented an autoinhibitory interaction within NEDD4, thereby promoting the autoubiquitylation of NEDD4 and the ubiquitylation of NEDD4 substrates, including FGFR. Expressing a nonphosphorylatable form of NEDD4 in cells reduced FGF-induced endocytosis and degradation of FGFR, leading to sustained FGF signaling and enhanced cell growth and suggesting a feedback mechanism in the regulation of FGFR and EGFR. Ligand binding to the receptor tyrosine kinase fibroblast growth factor (FGF) receptor 1 (FGFR1) causes dimerization and activation by transphosphorylation of tyrosine residues in the kinase domain. FGFR1 is ubiquitylated by the E3 ligase NEDD4 (also known as NEDD4-1), which promotes FGFR1 internalization and degradation. Although phosphorylation of FGFR1 is required for NEDD4-dependent endocytosis, NEDD4 directly binds to a nonphosphorylated region of FGFR1. We found that activation of FGFR1 led to activation of c-Src kinase–dependent tyrosine phosphorylation of NEDD4, enhancing the ubiquitin ligase activity of NEDD4. Using mass spectrometry, we identified several FGF-dependent phosphorylated tyrosines in NEDD4, including Tyr43 in the C2 domain and Tyr585 in the HECT domain. Mutating these tyrosines to phenylalanine to prevent phosphorylation inhibited FGF-dependent NEDD4 activity and FGFR1 endocytosis and enhanced cell proliferation. Mutating the tyrosines to glutamic acid to mimic phosphorylation enhanced NEDD4 activity. Moreover, the NEDD4 C2 domain bound the HECT domain, and the presence of phosphomimetic mutations inhibited this interaction, suggesting that phosphorylation of NEDD4 relieves an inhibitory intra- or intermolecular interaction. Accordingly, activation of FGFR1 was not required for activation of NEDD4 that lacked its C2 domain. Activation of c-Src by epidermal growth factor (EGF) also promoted tyrosine phosphorylation and enhanced the activity of NEDD4. Thus, we identified a feedback mechanism by which receptor tyrosine kinases promote catalytic activation of NEDD4 and that may represent a mechanism of receptor crosstalk.


The EMBO Journal | 2017

Ubiquitylation‐dependent oligomerization regulates activity of Nedd4 ligases

Ilan Attali; William Tobelaim; Avinash Persaud; Khatereh Motamedchaboki; Kobi Simpson-Lavy; Bayan Mashahreh; Olga Levin-Kravets; Tal Keren-Kaplan; Inbar Pilzer; Martin Kupiec; Reuven Wiener; Dieter A. Wolf; Daniela Rotin; Gali Prag

Ubiquitylation controls protein function and degradation. Therefore, ubiquitin ligases need to be tightly controlled. We discovered an evolutionarily conserved allosteric restraint mechanism for Nedd4 ligases and demonstrated its function with diverse substrates: the yeast soluble proteins Rpn10 and Rvs167, and the human receptor tyrosine kinase FGFR1 and cardiac IKS potassium channel. We found that a potential trimerization interface is structurally blocked by the HECT domain α1‐helix, which further undergoes ubiquitylation on a conserved lysine residue. Genetic, bioinformatics, biochemical and biophysical data show that attraction between this α1‐conjugated ubiquitin and the HECT ubiquitin‐binding patch pulls the α1‐helix out of the interface, thereby promoting trimerization. Strikingly, trimerization renders the ligase inactive. Arginine substitution of the ubiquitylated lysine impairs this inactivation mechanism and results in unrestrained FGFR1 ubiquitylation in cells. Similarly, electrophysiological data and TIRF microscopy show that NEDD4 unrestrained mutant constitutively downregulates the IKS channel, thus confirming the functional importance of E3‐ligase autoinhibition.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Protein tyrosine phosphatase σ targets apical junction complex proteins in the intestine and regulates epithelial permeability

Ryan Murchie; Conghui Guo; Avinash Persaud; Aleixo M. Muise; Daniela Rotin

Significance Polymorphisms in the protein tyrosine phosphatase (PTP)σ (PTPRS) gene were previously shown to be associated with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), and PTPσ knockout mice exhibit an intestinal IBD phenotype, but how PTPσ is involved in IBD is unknown. Our studies here show that PTPσ knockout mice exhibit a leaky intestinal epithelium that may explain the observed IBD phenotype. We further identify the junctional protein ezrin as an in vivo intestinal substrate for PTPσ and identify specific tyrosine phosphorylation sites on ezrin that are targeted by PTPσ, leading to removal of ezrin from its plasma membrane localization. These studies help explain the role of PTPσ in IBD. Protein tyrosine phosphatase (PTP)σ (PTPRS) was shown previously to be associated with susceptibility to inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). PTPσ−/− mice exhibit an IBD-like phenotype in the intestine and show increased susceptibility to acute models of murine colitis. However, the function of PTPσ in the intestine is uncharacterized. Here, we show an intestinal epithelial barrier defect in the PTPσ−/− mouse, demonstrated by a decrease in transepithelial resistance and a leaky intestinal epithelium that was determined by in vivo tracer analysis. Increased tyrosine phosphorylation was observed at the plasma membrane of epithelial cells lining the crypts of the small bowel and colon of the PTPσ−/− mouse, suggesting the presence of PTPσ substrates in these regions. Using mass spectrometry, we identified several putative PTPσ intestinal substrates that were hyper–tyrosine-phosphorylated in the PTPσ−/− mice relative to wild type. Among these were proteins that form or regulate the apical junction complex, including ezrin. We show that ezrin binds to and is dephosphorylated by PTPσ in vitro, suggesting it is a direct PTPσ substrate, and identified ezrin-Y353/Y145 as important sites targeted by PTPσ. Moreover, subcellular localization of the ezrin phosphomimetic Y353E or Y145 mutants were disrupted in colonic Caco-2 cells, similar to ezrin mislocalization in the colon of PTPσ−/− mice following induction of colitis. Our results suggest that PTPσ is a positive regulator of intestinal epithelial barrier, which mediates its effects by modulating epithelial cell adhesion through targeting of apical junction complex-associated proteins (including ezrin), a process impaired in IBD.


Methods of Molecular Biology | 2011

Use of proteome arrays to globally identify substrates for E3 ubiquitin ligases.

Avinash Persaud; Daniela Rotin

Ubiquitin-protein ligases (E3s) are responsible for target recognition and subsequent modification of selected substrates within the ubiquitin proteasomal system (UPS). Substrates of this pathway are covalently modified by the attachment of ubiquitin usually onto Lys residues. As a result, these modified proteins can be targeted for degradation, endocytosis, protein sorting, subnuclear trafficking, or other fates. Despite the advancements in understanding the underlying mechanisms of the ubiquitin system, the substrates of most E3 enzymes remain largely unknown. Here, we describe the development of a high-throughput method to identify in vitro substrates for E3 ligases on a global proteomic scale. The enzymatic activity (ubiquitylation) and binding of ubiquitin ligases to their substrates are performed using protein (proteome) microarrays as the experimental platform, and using Nedd4/Rsp5 family members as examples of HECT E3 ligases. The in vitro ubiquitylation and binding substrates identified in these screens can provide invaluable insight into the cellular pathways in which E3 ligases participate.

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