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Dive into the research topics where C. Jane McGlade is active.

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Featured researches published by C. Jane McGlade.


Developmental Cell | 2002

Attenuation of leptin action and regulation of obesity by protein tyrosine phosphatase 1B.

Alan Cheng; Noriko Uetani; Paul Daniel Simoncic; Vikas P. Chaubey; Ailsa Lee-Loy; C. Jane McGlade; Brian P. Kennedy; Michel L. Tremblay

Common obesity is primarily characterized by resistance to the actions of the hormone leptin. Mice deficient in protein tyrosine phosphatase 1B (PTP1B) are resistant to diabetes and diet-induced obesity, prompting us to further define the relationship between PTP1B and leptin in modulating obesity. Leptin-deficient (Lep(ob/ob)) mice lacking PTP1B exhibit an attenuated weight gain, a decrease in adipose tissue, and an increase in resting metabolic rate. Furthermore, PTP1B-deficient mice show an enhanced response toward leptin-mediated weight loss and suppression of feeding. Hypothalami from these mice also display markedly increased leptin-induced Stat3 phosphorylation. Finally, substrate-trapping experiments demonstrate that leptin-activated Jak2, but not Stat3 or the leptin receptor, is a substrate of PTP1B. These results suggest that PTP1B negatively regulates leptin signaling, and provide one mechanism by which it may regulate obesity.


Nature | 2002

Crumbs, the Drosophila homologue of human CRB1/RP12, is essential for photoreceptor morphogenesis

Milena Pellikka; Guy Tanentzapf; Madalena Pinto; Christian A. Smith; C. Jane McGlade; Donald F. Ready; Ulrich Tepass

The apical transmembrane protein Crumbs is a central regulator of epithelial apical–basal polarity in Drosophila. Loss-of-function mutations in the human homologue of Crumbs, CRB1 (RP12), cause recessive retinal dystrophies, including retinitis pigmentosa. Here we show that Crumbs and CRB1 localize to corresponding subdomains of the photoreceptor apical plasma membrane: the stalk of the Drosophila photoreceptor and the inner segment of mammalian photoreceptors. These subdomains support the morphogenesis and orientation of the photosensitive membrane organelles: rhabdomeres and outer segments, respectively. Drosophila Crumbs is required to maintain zonula adherens integrity during the rapid apical membrane expansion that builds the rhabdomere. Crumbs also regulates stalk development by stabilizing the membrane-associated spectrin cytoskeleton, a function mechanistically distinct from its role in epithelial apical–basal polarity. We propose that Crumbs is a central component of a molecular scaffold that controls zonula adherens assembly and defines the stalk as an apical membrane subdomain. Defects in such scaffolds may contribute to human CRB1-related retinal dystrophies.


Current Biology | 1999

The hematopoietic-specific adaptor protein Gads functions in T-cell signaling via interactions with the SLP-76 and LAT adaptors

Stanley K. Liu; Nan Fang; Gary A. Koretzky; C. Jane McGlade

BACKGROUND The adaptor protein Gads is a Grb2-related protein originally identified on the basis of its interaction with the tyrosine-phosphorylated form of the docking protein Shc. Gads protein expression is restricted to hematopoietic tissues and cell lines. Gads contains a Src homology 2 (SH2) domain, which has previously been shown to have a similar binding specificity to that of Grb2. Gads also possesses two SH3 domains, but these have a distinct binding specificity to those of Grb2, as Gads does not bind to known Grb2 SH3 domain targets. Here, we investigated whether Gads is involved in T-cell signaling. RESULTS We found that Gads is highly expressed in T cells and that the SLP-76 adaptor protein is a major Gads-associated protein in vivo. The constitutive interaction between Gads and SLP-76 was mediated by the carboxy-terminal SH3 domain of Gads and a 20 amino-acid proline-rich region in SLP-76. Gads also coimmunoprecipitated the tyrosine-phosphorylated form of the linker for activated T cells (LAT) adaptor protein following cross-linking of the T-cell receptor; this interaction was mediated by the Gads SH2 domain. Overexpression of Gads and SLP-76 resulted in a synergistic augmentation of T-cell signaling, as measured by activation of nuclear factor of activated T cells (NFAT), and this cooperation required a functional Gads SH2 domain. CONCLUSIONS These results demonstrate that Gads plays an important role in T-cell signaling via its association with SLP-76 and LAT. Gads may promote cross-talk between the LAT and SLP-76 signaling complexes, thereby coupling membrane-proximal events to downstream signaling pathways.


Current Biology | 2002

The T Cell Protein Tyrosine Phosphatase Is a Negative Regulator of Janus Family Kinases 1 and 3

Paul Daniel Simoncic; Ailsa Lee-Loy; Dwayne L. Barber; Michel L. Tremblay; C. Jane McGlade

BACKGROUND The immune response is regulated through a tightly controlled cytokine network. The counteracting balance between protein tyrosine kinase (PTK) and protein tyrosine phosphatase (PTP) activity regulates intracellular signaling in the immune system initiated by these extracellular polypeptides. Mice deficient for the T cell protein tyrosine phosphatase (TCPTP) display gross defects in the hematopoietic compartment, indicating a critical role for TCPTP in the regulation of immune homeostasis. To date, the molecular basis underlying this phenotype has not been reported. RESULTS We have identified two members of the Janus family of tyrosine kinases (JAKs), JAK1 and JAK3, as bona fide substrates of TCPTP. Inherent substrate specificity in the TCPTP-JAK interaction is demonstrated by the inability of other closely related PTP family members to form an in vivo interaction with the JAKs in hematopoietic cells. In keeping with a negative regulatory role for TCPTP in cytokine signaling, expression of TCPTP in T cells abrogated phosphorylation of STAT5 following interleukin (IL)-2 stimulation. TCPTP-deficient lymphocytes treated with IL-2 had increased levels of tyrosine-phosphorylated STAT5, and thymocytes treated with interferon (IFN)-alpha or IFN-gamma had increased tyrosine-phosphorylated STAT1. Hyperphosphorylation of JAK1 and elevated expression of iNOS was observed in IFN-gamma-treated, TCPTP-deficient, bone marrow-derived macrophages. CONCLUSIONS We have identified JAK1 and JAK3 as physiological substrates of TCPTP. These results indicate a negative regulatory role for TCPTP in cytokine signaling and provide insight into the molecular defect underlying the phenotype of TCPTP-deficient animals.


The EMBO Journal | 2007

aPKC-mediated phosphorylation regulates asymmetric membrane localization of the cell fate determinant Numb

Christian A. Smith; Kimberly M. Lau; Zohra Rahmani; Sascha E. Dho; Ye Min She; Donna M Berry; Eric Bonneil; Pierre Thibault; François Schweisguth; Roland Le Borgne; C. Jane McGlade

In Drosophila, the partition defective (Par) complex containing Par3, Par6 and atypical protein kinase C (aPKC) directs the polarized distribution and unequal segregation of the cell fate determinant Numb during asymmetric cell divisions. Unequal segregation of mammalian Numb has also been observed, but the factors involved are unknown. Here, we identify in vivo phosphorylation sites of mammalian Numb and show that both mammalian and Drosophila Numb interact with, and are substrates for aPKC in vitro. A form of mammalian Numb lacking two protein kinase C (PKC) phosphorylation sites (Numb2A) accumulates at the cell membrane and is refractory to PKC activation. In epithelial cells, mammalian Numb localizes to the basolateral membrane and is excluded from the apical domain, which accumulates aPKC. In contrast, Numb2A is distributed uniformly around the cell cortex. Mutational analysis of conserved aPKC phosphorylation sites in Drosophila Numb suggests that phosphorylation contributes to asymmetric localization of Numb, opposite to aPKC in dividing sensory organ precursor cells. These results suggest a model in which phosphorylation of Numb by aPKC regulates its polarized distribution in epithelial cells as well as during asymmetric cell divisions.


The EMBO Journal | 2002

LNX functions as a RING type E3 ubiquitin ligase that targets the cell fate determinant Numb for ubiquitin-dependent degradation

Jing Nie; Melanie A. McGill; Matt Dermer; Sascha E. Dho; Cheryl Wolting; C. Jane McGlade

LNX is a RING finger and PDZ domain containing protein that interacts with the cell fate determinant Numb. To investigate the function of LNX, we tested its RING finger domain for ubiquitin ligase activity. The isolated RING finger domain was able to function as an E2‐dependent, E3 ubiquitin ligase in vitro and mutation of a conserved cysteine residue within the RING domain abolished its activity, indicating that LNX is the first described PDZ domain‐containing member of the E3 ubiquitin ligase family. We have identified Numb as a substrate of LNX E3 activity in vitro and in vivo. In addition to the RING finger, a region of LNX, including the Numb PTB domain‐binding site and the first PDZ domain, is required for Numb ubiquitylation. Expression of wild‐type but not mutant LNX causes proteasome‐dependent degradation of Numb and can enhance Notch signalling. These results suggest that the levels of mammalian Numb protein and therefore, by extension, the processes of asymmetric cell division and cell fate determination may be regulated by ubiquitin‐dependent proteolysis.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009

Numb Regulates Post-endocytic Trafficking and Degradation of Notch1

Melanie A. McGill; Sascha E. Dho; Gerry Weinmaster; C. Jane McGlade

Notch is a transmembrane receptor that controls cell fate decisions during development and tissue homeostasis. Both activation and attenuation of the Notch signal are tightly regulated by endocytosis. The adaptor protein Numb acts as an inhibitor of Notch and is known to function within the intracellular trafficking pathways. However, a role for Numb in regulating Notch trafficking has not been defined. Here we show that mammalian Notch1 is constitutively internalized and trafficked to both recycling and late endosomal compartments, and we demonstrate that changes in Numb expression alter the dynamics of Notch1 trafficking. Overexpression of Numb promotes sorting of Notch1 through late endosomes for degradation, whereas depletion of Numb facilitates Notch1 recycling. Numb mutants that do not interact with the ubiquitin-protein isopeptide ligase, Itch, or that lack motifs important for interaction with endocytic proteins fail to promote Notch1 degradation. Our data suggest that Numb inhibits Notch1 activity by regulating post-endocytic sorting events that lead to Notch1 degradation.


Nature | 2009

Yurt, Coracle, Neurexin IV and the Na + ,K + -ATPase form a novel group of epithelial polarity proteins

Patrick Laprise; Kimberly M. Lau; Kathryn P. Harris; Nancy F. Silva-Gagliardi; Sarah M. Paul; Slobodan Beronja; Greg J. Beitel; C. Jane McGlade; Ulrich Tepass

The integrity of polarized epithelia is critical for development and human health. Many questions remain concerning the full complement and the function of the proteins that regulate cell polarity. Here we report that the Drosophila FERM proteins Yurt (Yrt) and Coracle (Cora) and the membrane proteins Neurexin IV (Nrx-IV) and Na+,K+-ATPase are a new group of functionally cooperating epithelial polarity proteins. This ‘Yrt/Cora group’ promotes basolateral membrane stability and shows negative regulatory interactions with the apical determinant Crumbs (Crb). Genetic analyses indicate that Nrx-IV and Na+,K+-ATPase act together with Cora in one pathway, whereas Yrt acts in a second redundant pathway. Moreover, we show that the Yrt/Cora group is essential for epithelial polarity during organogenesis but not when epithelial polarity is first established or during terminal differentiation. This property of Yrt/Cora group proteins explains the recovery of polarity in embryos lacking the function of the Lethal giant larvae (Lgl) group of basolateral polarity proteins. We also find that the mammalian Yrt orthologue EPB41L5 (also known as YMO1 and Limulus) is required for lateral membrane formation, indicating a conserved function of Yrt proteins in epithelial polarity.


Molecular Cell | 2003

Structural Basis for Specific Binding of the Gads SH3 Domain to an RxxK Motif-Containing SLP-76 Peptide:A Novel Mode of Peptide Recognition

Qin Liu; Donna M Berry; Piers Nash; Tony Pawson; C. Jane McGlade; Shawn S.-C. Li

The SH3 domain, which normally recognizes proline-rich sequences, has the potential to bind motifs with an RxxK consensus. To explore this novel specificity, we have determined the solution structure of the Gads T cell adaptor C-terminal SH3 domain in complex with an RSTK-containing peptide, representing its physiological binding site on the SLP-76 docking protein. The SLP-76 peptide engages four distinct binding pockets on the surface of the Gads SH3 domain and upon binding adopts a unique structure characterized by a right-handed 3(10) helix at the RSTK locus, in contrast to the left-handed polyproline type II helix formed by canonical proline-rich SH3 ligands. The structure, and supporting mutagenesis and peptide binding data, reveal a novel mode of ligand recognition by SH3 domains.


Current Biology | 2002

A high-affinity Arg-X-X-Lys SH3 binding motif confers specificity for the interaction between Gads and SLP-76 in T cell signaling.

Donna M Berry; Piers Nash; Stanley K. Liu; Tony Pawson; C. Jane McGlade

A critical event in T cell receptor (TCR)-mediated signaling is the recruitment of hematopoietic-specific adaptor proteins that collect and transmit signals downstream of the TCR. Gads, a member of the Grb2 family of SH2 and SH3 domain-containing adaptors, mediates the formation of a complex between LAT and SLP-76 that is essential for signal propagation from the TCR. Here we examine the binding specificity of the Gads and Grb2 SH3 domains using peptide arrays and find that a nonproline-based R-X-X-K motif found in SLP-76 binds to the Gads carboxy-terminal SH3 domain with high affinity (K(D) = 240 +/- 45 nM). The Grb2 C-terminal SH3 domain also binds this motif, but with a 40-fold lower affinity than Gads. Single point mutations in either the relevant R (237) or K (240) completely abrogated SLP-76 association with Gads in vivo and impaired SLP-76 function. A chimeric Grb2 protein, possessing the C-terminal SH3 domain of Gads, was able to partially substitute for Gads in signaling downstream of the T cell receptor. These results provide a molecular explanation for the specific role of Gads in T cell receptor signaling, and identify a discrete subclass of SH3 domains whose binding is dependent on a core R-X-X-K motif.

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