Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Caroline Lambrecht is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Caroline Lambrecht.


FEBS Journal | 2013

The biogenesis of active protein phosphatase 2A holoenzymes: a tightly regulated process creating phosphatase specificity

Ward Sents; Elitsa Ivanova; Caroline Lambrecht; Dorien Haesen; Veerle Janssens

Protein phosphatase type 2A (PP2A) enzymes constitute a large family of Ser/Thr phosphatases with multiple functions in cellular signaling and physiology. The composition of heterotrimeric PP2A holoenzymes, resulting from the combinatorial assembly of a catalytic C subunit, a structural A subunit, and regulatory B‐type subunit, provides the essential determinants for substrate specificity, subcellular targeting, and fine‐tuning of phosphatase activity, largely explaining why PP2A is functionally involved in so many diverse physiological processes, sometimes in seemingly opposing ways. In this review, we highlight how PP2A holoenzyme biogenesis and enzymatic activity are controlled by a sophisticatedly coordinated network of five PP2A modulators, consisting of α4, phosphatase 2A phosphatase activator (PTPA), leucine carboxyl methyl transferase 1 (LCMT1), PP2A methyl esterase 1 (PME‐1) and, potentially, target of rapamycin signaling pathway regulator‐like 1 (TIPRL1), which serve to prevent promiscuous phosphatase activity until the holoenzyme is completely assembled. Likewise, these modulators may come into play when PP2A holoenzymes are disassembled following particular cellular stresses. Malfunctioning of these cellular control mechanisms contributes to human disease. The potential therapeutic benefits or pitfalls of interfering with these regulatory mechanisms will be briefly discussed.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

Mice lacking phosphatase PP2A subunit PR61/B’δ (Ppp2r5d) develop spatially restricted tauopathy by deregulation of CDK5 and GSK3β

Justin Vijay Louis; Ellen Martens; Peter Borghgraef; Caroline Lambrecht; Ward Sents; Sari Longin; Karen Zwaenepoel; R. Pijnenborg; Isabelle Landrieu; Guy Lippens; Birgit Ledermann; Jürgen Götz; Fred Van Leuven; Jozef Goris; Veerle Janssens

Functional diversity of protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A) enzymes mainly results from their association with distinct regulatory subunits. To analyze the functions of one such holoenzyme in vivo, we generated mice lacking PR61/B’δ (B56δ), a subunit highly expressed in neural tissues. In PR61/B’δ-null mice the microtubule-associated protein tau becomes progressively phosphorylated at pathological epitopes in restricted brain areas, with marked immunoreactivity for the misfolded MC1-conformation but without neurofibrillary tangle formation. Behavioral tests indicated impaired sensorimotor but normal cognitive functions. These phenotypical characteristics were further underscored in PR61/B’δ-null mice mildly overexpressing human tau. PR61/B’δ-containing PP2A (PP2AT61δ) poorly dephosphorylates tau in vitro, arguing against a direct dephosphorylation defect. Rather, the activity of glycogen synthase kinase-3β, a major tau kinase, was found increased, with decreased phosphorylation of Ser-9, a putative cyclin-dependent kinase 5 (CDK5) target. Accordingly, CDK5 activity is decreased, and its cellular activator p35, strikingly absent in the affected brain areas. As opposed to tau, p35 is an excellent PP2AT61δ substrate. Our data imply a nonredundant function for PR61/B’δ in phospho-tau homeostasis via an unexpected spatially restricted mechanism preventing p35 hyperphosphorylation and its subsequent degradation.


Methods of Molecular Biology | 2013

Structure, regulation, and pharmacological modulation of PP2A phosphatases.

Caroline Lambrecht; Dorien Haesen; Ward Sents; Elitsa Ivanova; Veerle Janssens

Protein phosphatases of the type 2A family (PP2A) represent a major fraction of cellular Ser/Thr phosphatase activity in any given human tissue. In this review, we describe how the holoenzymic nature of PP2A and the existence of several distinct PP2A composing subunits allow for the generation of multiple structurally and functionally different PP2A complexes, explaining why PP2A is involved in the regulation of so many diverse cell biological and physiological processes. Moreover, in human disease, most notably in several cancers and Alzheimers Disease, PP2A expression and/or activity have been found significantly decreased, underscoring its important functions as a major tumor suppressor and tau phosphatase. Hence, several recent preclinical studies have demonstrated that pharmacological restoration of PP2A activity, as well as pharmacological PP2A inhibition, under certain conditions, may be of significant future therapeutic value.


The EMBO Journal | 2012

Cacnb4 directly couples electrical activity to gene expression, a process defective in juvenile epilepsy

Abir Tadmouri; Shigeki Kiyonaka; Maud Barbado; Matthieu Rousset; Katell Fablet; Seishiro Sawamura; Eloi Bahembera; Karin Pernet-Gallay; Christophe Arnoult; Takafumi Miki; Karin Sadoul; Sylvie Gory-Fauré; Caroline Lambrecht; Florian Lesage; Satoshi Akiyama; Saadi Khochbin; Sylvain Baulande; Veerle Janssens; Annie Andrieux; Ricardo E. Dolmetsch; Michel Ronjat; Yasuo Mori; Michel De Waard

Calcium current through voltage‐gated calcium channels (VGCC) controls gene expression. Here, we describe a novel signalling pathway in which the VGCC Cacnb4 subunit directly couples neuronal excitability to transcription. Electrical activity induces Cacnb4 association to Ppp2r5d, a regulatory subunit of PP2A phosphatase, followed by (i) nuclear translocation of Cacnb4/Ppp2r5d/PP2A, (ii) association with the tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) gene promoter through the nuclear transcription factor thyroid hormone receptor alpha (TRα), and (iii) histone binding through association of Cacnb4 with HP1γ concomitantly with Ser10 histone H3 dephosphorylation by PP2A. This signalling cascade leads to TH gene repression by Cacnb4 and is controlled by the state of interaction between the SH3 and guanylate kinase (GK) modules of Cacnb4. The human R482X CACNB4 mutation, responsible for a form of juvenile myoclonic epilepsy, prevents association with Ppp2r5 and nuclear targeting of the complex by altering Cacnb4 conformation. These findings demonstrate that an intact VGCC subunit acts as a repressor recruiting platform to control neuronal gene expression.


Cancer Research | 2017

PP2A Inactivation Mediated by PPP2R4 Haploinsufficiency Promotes Cancer Development

Ward Sents; Bob Meeusen; Petar Kalev; Enrico Radaelli; Xavier Sagaert; Eline Miermans; Dorien Haesen; Caroline Lambrecht; Mieke Dewerchin; Peter Carmeliet; Jukka Westermarck; Anna Sablina; Veerle Janssens

Protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A) complexes counteract many oncogenic kinase pathways. In cancer cells, PP2A function can be compromised by several mechanisms, including sporadic mutations in its scaffolding A and regulatory B subunits or more frequently through overexpression of cellular PP2A inhibitors. Here, we identify a novel genetic mechanism by which PP2A function is recurrently affected in human cancer, involving haploinsufficiency of PPP2R4, a gene encoding the cellular PP2A activator PTPA. Notably, up to 70% of cancer patients showed a heterozygous deletion or missense mutations in PPP2R4 Cancer-associated PTPA mutants exhibited decreased abilities to bind the PP2A-C subunit or activate PP2A and failed to reverse the tumorigenic phenotype induced by PTPA suppression, indicating they function as null alleles. In Ppp2r4 gene-trapped (gt) mice showing residual PTPA expression, total PP2A activity and methylation were reduced, selectively affecting specific PP2A holoenzymes. Both PTPAgt/gt and PTPA+/gt mice showed higher rates of spontaneous tumors, mainly hematologic malignancies and hepatocellular adenomas and carcinomas. These tumors exhibited increased c-Myc phosphorylation and increased Wnt or Hedgehog signaling. We observed a significant reduction in lifespan in PTPA+/gt mice compared with wild-type mice. In addition, chemical-induced skin carcinogenesis was accelerated in PTPA+/gt compared with wild-type mice. Our results provide evidence for PPP2R4 as a haploinsufficient tumor suppressor gene, defining a high-penetrance genetic mechanism for PP2A inhibition in human cancer. Cancer Res; 77(24); 6825-37. ©2017 AACR.


Oncogene | 2018

Loss of protein phosphatase 2A regulatory subunit B56δ promotes spontaneous tumorigenesis in vivo

Caroline Lambrecht; Louis Libbrecht; Xavier Sagaert; Patrick Pauwels; Yana Hoorne; Jonathan Crowther; Justin Vijay Louis; Ward Sents; Anna Sablina; Veerle Janssens

Protein Phosphatase 2A (PP2A) enzymes counteract diverse kinase-driven oncogenic pathways and their function is frequently impaired in cancer. PP2A inhibition is indispensable for full transformation of human cells, but whether loss of PP2A is sufficient for tumorigenesis in vivo has remained elusive. Here, we describe spontaneous tumor development in knockout mice for Ppp2r5d, encoding the PP2A regulatory B56δ subunit. Several primary tumors were observed, most commonly, hematologic malignancies and hepatocellular carcinomas (HCCs). Targeted immunoblot and immunohistochemistry analysis of the HCCs revealed heterogeneous activation of diverse oncogenic pathways known to be suppressed by PP2A-B56. RNA sequencing analysis unveiled, however, a common role for oncogenic c-Myc activation in the HCCs, independently underscored by c-Myc Ser62 hyperphosphorylation. Upstream of c-Myc, GSK-3β Ser9 hyperphosphorylation occurred both in the HCCs and non-cancerous B56δ-null livers. Thus, uncontrolled c-Myc activity due to B56δ-driven GSK-3β inactivation is the likely tumor predisposing factor. Our data provide the first compelling mouse genetics evidence sustaining the tumor suppressive activity of a single PP2A holoenzyme, constituting the final missing incentive for full clinical development of PP2A as cancer biomarker and therapy target.


Biomedical Research-tokyo | 2012

Cellular inhibitors of Protein Phosphatase PP2A in cancer.

Dorien Haesen; Ward Sents; Elitsa Ivanova; Caroline Lambrecht; Veerle Janssens


Archive | 2015

The role of PP2A PR61/B’δ, CIP2A and c-Myc in hepatocyte growth

Yana Hoorne; Caroline Lambrecht; Anna Lipsanen; Jonathan Crowther; Dorien Haesen; Anna Sablina; Jukka Westermarck; Veerle Janssens


Archive | 2014

PPP2R4 is a novel haploinsufficient human tumor suppressor gene

Ward Sents; Peter Kalev; Xavier Sagaert; Enrico Radaelli; Eline Miermans; Teemu D. Laajala; Dorien Haesen; Yana Hoorne; Caroline Lambrecht; Mieke Dewerchin; Peter Carmeliet; Jukka Westermarck; Anna Sablina; Veerle Janssens


Archive | 2013

PTPA (PPP2R4) as a novel candidate tumor suppressor: evidence from PTPA-deficient mice and human tumors

Ward Sents; Peter Kalev; Xavier Sagaert; Eline Miermans; Eli Ivanova; Dorien Haesen; Caroline Lambrecht; Mieke Dewerchin; Peter Carmeliet; Anna Sablina; Veerle Janssens

Collaboration


Dive into the Caroline Lambrecht's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Veerle Janssens

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ward Sents

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Justin Vijay Louis

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Dorien Haesen

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Etienne Waelkens

The Catholic University of America

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jozef Goris

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Elitsa Ivanova

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Louis Libbrecht

Ghent University Hospital

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Chantal Mathieu

Université libre de Bruxelles

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Gabriela B Ferreira

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge