Brady P. Culver
New York University
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Featured researches published by Brady P. Culver.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2012
Brady P. Culver; Jeffrey N. Savas; Sung K. Park; Jeong H. Choi; Shuqiu Zheng; Scott Zeitlin; John R. Yates; Naoko Tanese
Background: Differences in protein interactions between wild-type and mutant huntingtin are relevant to the disease. Results: Mutant huntingtin interacts with unique proteins and alters the subcellular context of some interactions shared with wild type. Conclusion: Mutant Huntington disease protein has loss-of-function and gain-of-function attributes. Significance: Results implicate understudied proteins and cellular/molecular processes that may contribute to the onset of the Huntington disease pathology. Huntington disease is a neurodegenerative disorder caused by a CAG repeat amplification in the gene huntingtin (HTT) that is reflected by a polyglutamine expansion in the Htt protein. Nearly 20 years of research have uncovered roles for Htt in a wide range of cellular processes, and many of these discoveries stemmed from the identification of Htt-interacting proteins. However, no study has employed an impartial and comprehensive strategy to identify proteins that differentially associate with full-length wild-type and mutant Htt in brain tissue, the most relevant sample source to the disease condition. We analyzed Htt affinity-purified complexes from wild-type and HTT mutant juvenile mouse brain from two different biochemical fractions by tandem mass spectrometry. We compared variations in protein spectral counts relative to Htt to identify those proteins that are the most significantly contrasted between wild-type and mutant Htt purifications. Previously unreported Htt interactions with Myo5a, Prkra (PACT), Gnb2l1 (RACK1), Rps6, and Syt2 were confirmed by Western blot analysis. Gene Ontology analysis of these and other Htt-associated proteins revealed a statistically significant enrichment for proteins involved in translation among other categories. Furthermore, Htt co-sedimentation with polysomes in cytoplasmic mouse brain extracts is dependent upon the presence of intact ribosomes. Finally, wild-type or mutant Htt overexpression inhibits cap-dependent translation of a reporter mRNA in an in vitro system. Cumulatively, these data support a new role for Htt in translation and provide impetus for further study into the link between protein synthesis and Huntington disease pathogenesis.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010
Jeffrey N. Savas; Bin Ma; Katrin Deinhardt; Brady P. Culver; Sophie Restituito; Ligang Wu; Joel G. Belasco; Moses V. Chao; Naoko Tanese
Regulated transport and local translation of mRNA in neurons are critical for modulating synaptic strength, maintaining proper neural circuitry, and establishing long term memory. Neuronal RNA granules are ribonucleoprotein particles that serve to transport mRNA along microtubules and control local protein synthesis in response to synaptic activity. Studies suggest that neuronal RNA granules share similar structures and functions with somatic P-bodies. We recently reported that the Huntington disease protein huntingtin (Htt) associates with Argonaute (Ago) and localizes to cytoplasmic P-bodies, which serve as sites of mRNA storage, degradation, and small RNA-mediated gene silencing. Here we report that wild-type Htt associates with Ago2 and components of neuronal granules and co-traffics with mRNA in dendrites. Htt was found to co-localize with RNA containing the 3′-untranslated region sequence of known dendritically targeted mRNAs. Knockdown of Htt in neurons caused altered localization of mRNA. When tethered to a reporter construct, Htt down-regulated reporter gene expression in a manner dependent on Ago2, suggesting that Htt may function to repress translation of mRNAs during transport in neuronal granules.
Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2009
Brady P. Culver; Janet B. Meehl; Thomas H. Giddings; Mark Winey
Cilia and flagella are structurally and functionally conserved organelles present in basal as well as higher eukaryotes. The assembly of cilia requires a microtubule based scaffold called a basal body. The ninefold symmetry characteristic of basal bodies and the structurally similar centriole is organized around a hub and spoke structure termed the cartwheel. To date, SAS-6 is one of the two clearly conserved components of the cartwheel. In some organisms, overexpression of SAS-6 causes the formation of supernumerary centrioles. We questioned whether the centriole assembly initiation capacity of SAS-6 is separate from or directly related to its structural role at the cartwheel. To address this question we used Tetrahymena thermophila, which expresses two SAS-6 homologues, TtSAS6a and TtSAS6b. Cells lacking either TtSAS6a or TtSAS6b are defective in new basal body assembly. TtSas6a localizes to all basal bodies equally, whereas TtSas6b is enriched at unciliated and assembling basal bodies. Interestingly, overexpression of TtSAS6b but not TtSAS6a, led to the assembly of clusters of new basal bodies in abnormal locations. Our data suggest a model where TtSAS6a and TtSAS6b have diverged such that TtSAS6a acts as a structural component of basal bodies, whereas TtSAS6b influences the location of new basal body assembly.
Scientific Reports | 2011
Bin Ma; Jeffrey N. Savas; Man Shan Yu; Brady P. Culver; Moses V. Chao; Naoko Tanese
Transport of mRNAs to diverse neuronal locations via RNA granules serves an important function in regulating protein synthesis within restricted sub-cellular domains. We recently detected the Huntingtons disease protein huntingtin (Htt) in dendritic RNA granules; however, the functional significance of this localization is not known. Here we report that Htt and the huntingtin-associated protein 1 (HAP1) are co-localized with the microtubule motor proteins, the KIF5A kinesin and dynein, during dendritic transport of β-actin mRNA. Live cell imaging demonstrated that β-actin mRNA is associated with Htt, HAP1, and dynein intermediate chain in cultured neurons. Reduction in the levels of Htt, HAP1, KIF5A, and dynein heavy chain by lentiviral-based shRNAs resulted in a reduction in the transport of β-actin mRNA. These findings support a role for Htt in participating in the mRNA transport machinery that also contains HAP1, KIF5A, and dynein.
Journal of Huntington's disease | 2016
Brady P. Culver; Josh DeClercq; Igor Dolgalev; Man Shan Yu; Bin Ma; Adriana Heguy; Naoko Tanese
Background: The Huntington’s disease (HD) protein huntingtin (Htt) plays a role in multiple cellular pathways. Deregulation of one or more of these pathways by the mutant Htt protein has been suggested to contribute to the disease pathogenesis. Our recent discovery-based proteomics studies have uncovered RNA binding proteins and translation factors associated with the endogenous Htt protein purified from mouse brains, suggesting a potential new role for Htt in RNA transport and translation. Objective: To investigate how Htt might affect RNA metabolism we set out to purify and analyze RNA associated with Htt. Methods: RNA was extracted from immunopurified Htt-containing protein complexes and analyzed by microarrays and RNA-Seq. Results: Surprisingly, the most enriched mRNA that co-purified with Htt was Htt mRNA itself. The association of Htt protein and Htt mRNA was detected independent of intact ribosomes suggesting that it is not an RNA undergoing translation. Furthermore, we identified the recently reported mis-spliced Htt mRNA encoding a truncated protein comprised of exon 1 and a portion of the downstream intron in the immunoprecipitates containing mutant Htt protein. We show that Htt protein co-localizes with Htt mRNA and that wild-type Htt reduces expression of a reporter construct harboring the Htt 3’ UTR. Conclusions: HD protein is found in a complex with its own mRNA and RNA binding proteins and translation factors. Htt may be involved in modulating its expression through post-transcriptional pathways. It is possible that Htt shares mechanistic properties similar to RNA binding proteins such as TDP-43 and FUS implicated in other neurodegenerative diseases.
Archive | 2012
Brady P. Culver; Naoko Tanese
This chapter will focus on the potential role that misregulation of post-transcriptional control of gene expression could have on the development or progression of Huntington’s disease (HD). Every cell in our bodies possesses the same genetic material, and yet every cell is not the same. We also all know that the tremendous diversity of biology present within each individual is accomplished through unique patterns of gene expression on a cell-by-cell basis. Of course the timing and amounts of gene expression also contribute to this diversity of phenotype and function. The complexity, however, goes even deeper. Within individual genes there is information to produce multiple different messenger RNAs and often multiple different proteins, each with different functional implications. We see then, that the multi-step process of gene expression using a number of genes only modestly greater than what is found in certain species of ciliates is capable of generating a being of vastly more complicated biology. With this complexity in mind, it is therefore possible that small defects at any of the steps of gene expression could have deleterious consequences on the identity, ability to appropriately respond to environmental cues, and on the survival of cells.
Journal of Cell Biology | 2007
Chandra L. Kilburn; Chad G. Pearson; Edwin P. Romijn; Janet B. Meehl; Thomas H. Giddings; Brady P. Culver; John R. Yates; Mark Winey
Molecular Neurodegeneration | 2010
Bin Ma; Brady P. Culver; Gabriele Baj; Enrico Tongiorgi; Moses V. Chao; Naoko Tanese
Developmental Cell | 2007
Chad G. Pearson; Brady P. Culver; Mark Winey
Journal of Cell Biology | 2007
Chandra L. Kilburn; Chad G. Pearson; Edwin P. Romijn; Janet B. Meehl; Thomas H. Giddings; Brady P. Culver; John R. Yates; Mark Winey