Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Catherine L. Day is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Catherine L. Day.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

Structural insights into the degradation of Mcl-1 induced by BH3 domains

Peter E. Czabotar; Erinna F. Lee; Mark F. van Delft; Catherine L. Day; Brian J. Smith; David C. S. Huang; W. Douglas Fairlie; Mark G. Hinds; Peter M. Colman

Apoptosis is held in check by prosurvival proteins of the Bcl-2 family. The distantly related BH3-only proteins bind to and antagonize them, thereby promoting apoptosis. Whereas binding of the BH3-only protein Noxa to prosurvival Mcl-1 induces Mcl-1 degradation by the proteasome, binding of another BH3-only ligand, Bim, elevates Mcl-1 protein levels. We compared the three-dimensional structures of the complexes formed between BH3 peptides of both Bim and Noxa, and we show that a discrete C-terminal sequence of the Noxa BH3 is necessary to instigate Mcl-1 degradation.


Cell Death & Differentiation | 2008

Structure of the MDM2/MDMX RING domain heterodimer reveals dimerization is required for their ubiquitylation in trans

Katrin Linke; Peter D. Mace; Clyde A. Smith; David L. Vaux; John Silke; Catherine L. Day

MDM2, a ubiquitin E3-ligase of the RING family, has a key role in regulating p53 abundance. During normal non-stress conditions p53 is targeted for degradation by MDM2. MDM2 can also target itself and MDMX for degradation. MDMX is closely related to MDM2 but the RING domain of MDMX does not possess intrinsic E3-ligase activity. Instead, MDMX regulates p53 abundance by modulating the levels and activity of MDM2. Dimerization, mediated by the conserved C-terminal RING domains of both MDM2 and MDMX, is critical to this activity. Here we report the crystal structure of the MDM2/MDMX RING domain heterodimer and map residues required for functional interaction with the E2 (UbcH5b). In both MDM2 and MDMX residues C-terminal to the RING domain have a key role in dimer formation. In addition we show that these residues are part of an extended surface that is essential for ubiquitylation in trans. This study provides a molecular basis for understanding how heterodimer formation leads to stabilization of MDM2, yet degradation of p53, and suggests novel targets for therapeutic intervention.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 1999

Solution structure of a baculoviral inhibitor of apoptosis (IAP) repeat.

Mark G. Hinds; Raymond S. Norton; David L. Vaux; Catherine L. Day

Members of the inhibitor of apoptosis (IAP) family of proteins are able to inhibit cell death following viral infection, during development or in cell lines in vitro. All IAP proteins bear one or more baculoviral IAP repeats (BIRs). Here we describe the solution structure of the third BIR domain from the mammalian IAP homolog B (MIHB /c- IAP-1). The BIR domain has a novel fold that is stabilized by zinc tetrahedrally coordinated by one histidine and three cysteine residues. The structure consists of a series of short α-helices and turns with the zinc packed in an unusually hydrophobic environment created by residues that are highly conserved among all BIRs.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009

TRAF2 Must Bind to Cellular Inhibitors of Apoptosis for Tumor Necrosis Factor (TNF) to Efficiently Activate NF-κB and to Prevent TNF-induced Apoptosis

James E. Vince; Delara Pantaki; Rebecca Feltham; Peter D. Mace; Stephanie M. Cordier; Anna C. Schmukle; Angelina J. Davidson; Bernard A. Callus; W. Wei-Lynn Wong; Ian E. Gentle; Holly Carter; Erinna F. Lee; Henning Walczak; Catherine L. Day; David L. Vaux; John Silke

Tumor necrosis factor (TNF) receptor-associated factor-2 (TRAF2) binds to cIAP1 and cIAP2 (cIAP1/2) and recruits them to the cytoplasmic domain of several members of the TNF receptor (TNFR) superfamily, including the TNF-TNFR1 ligand-receptor complex. Here, we define a cIAP1/2-interacting motif (CIM) within the TRAF-N domain of TRAF2, and we use TRAF2 CIM mutants to determine the role of TRAF2 and cIAP1/2 individually, and the TRAF2-cIAP1/2 interaction, in TNFR1-dependent signaling. We show that both the TRAF2 RING domain and the TRAF2 CIM are required to regulate NF-κB-inducing kinase stability and suppress constitutive noncanonical NF-κB activation. Conversely, following TNFR1 stimulation, cells bearing a CIM-mutated TRAF2 showed reduced canonical NF-κB activation and TNF-induced RIPK1 ubiquitylation. Remarkably, the RING domain of TRAF2 was dispensable for these functions. However, like the TRAF2 CIM, the RING domain of TRAF2 was required for protection against TNF-induced apoptosis. These results show that TRAF2 has anti-apoptotic signaling roles in addition to promoting NF-κB signaling and that efficient activation of NF-κB by TNFR1 requires the recruitment of cIAP1/2 by TRAF2.


Journal of Cell Science | 2003

The Bcl-2-regulated apoptotic pathway.

Simon N. Willis; Catherine L. Day; Mark G. Hinds; David C. S. Huang

Apoptosis (programmed cell death) is required for the removal of infected, damaged or unwanted cells and its disrupted regulation is implicated in cancer, autoimmunity and degenerative disorders. At the molecular level, multiple signaling pathways converge on a family of cysteine proteases (caspases


Cell Death & Differentiation | 2007

Bim, Bad and Bmf: intrinsically unstructured BH3-only proteins that undergo a localized conformational change upon binding to prosurvival Bcl-2 targets

Mark G. Hinds; Callum Smits; R Fredericks-Short; Joanna M. Risk; M Bailey; David C. S. Huang; Catherine L. Day

All BH3-only proteins, key initiators of programmed cell death, interact tightly with multiple binding partners and have sequences of low complexity, properties that are the hallmark of intrinsically unstructured proteins (IUPs). We show, using spectroscopic methods, that the BH3-only proteins Bim, Bad and Bmf are unstructured in the absence of binding partners. Detailed sequence analyses are consistent with this observation and suggest that most BH3-only proteins are unstructured. When Bim binds and inactivates prosurvival proteins, most residues remain disordered, only the BH3 element becomes structured, and the short α-helical molecular recognition element can be considered to behave as a ‘bead on a string’. Coupled folding and binding is typical of many IUPs that have important signaling roles, such as BH3-only proteins, as the inherent structural plasticity favors interaction with multiple targets. This understanding offers promise for the development of BH3 mimetics, as multiple modes of binding are tolerated.


Molecular Cell | 2009

Bak Activation for Apoptosis Involves Oligomerization of Dimers via Their α6 Helices

Grant Dewson; Tobias Kratina; Peter E. Czabotar; Catherine L. Day; Jerry M. Adams; Ruth M. Kluck

A pivotal step toward apoptosis is oligomerization of the Bcl-2 relative Bak. We recently reported that its oligomerization initiates by insertion of an exposed BH3 domain into the groove of another Bak monomer. We now report that the resulting BH3:groove dimers can be converted to the larger oligomers that permeabilize mitochondria by an interface between alpha6 helices. Cysteine residues placed in alpha6 could be crosslinked only after apoptotic signaling. Cysteines placed at both interfaces established that the BH3:groove dimer is symmetric and that the alpha6:alpha6 interface can link these dimers into homo-oligomers containing at least 18 Bak molecules. A putative zinc-binding site in alpha6 was not required to form the alpha6:alpha6 interface, and its mutation in full-length Bak did not affect Bak conformation, oligomerization, or function. We conclude that alpha6:alpha6 interaction occurs during Bak oligomerization and proapoptotic function, but we find no evidence that zinc binding to that interface regulates apoptosis.


The EMBO Journal | 2003

The structure of Bcl‐w reveals a role for the C‐terminal residues in modulating biological activity

Mark G. Hinds; Martin Lackmann; Gretchen Skea; Penny J. Harrison; David C. S. Huang; Catherine L. Day

Pro‐survival Bcl‐2‐related proteins, critical regulators of apoptosis, contain a hydrophobic groove targeted for binding by the BH3 domain of the pro‐apoptotic BH3‐only proteins. The solution structure of the pro‐survival protein Bcl‐w, presented here, reveals that the binding groove is not freely accessible as predicted by previous structures of pro‐survival Bcl‐2‐like molecules. Unexpectedly, the groove appears to be occluded by the C‐terminal residues. Binding and kinetic data suggest that the C‐terminal residues of Bcl‐w and Bcl‐xL modulate pro‐survival activity by regulating ligand access to the groove. Binding of the BH3‐only proteins, critical for cell death initiation, is likely to displace the hydrophobic C‐terminal region of Bcl‐w and Bcl‐xL. Moreover, Bcl‐w does not act only by sequestering the BH3‐only proteins. There fore, pro‐survival Bcl‐2‐like molecules probably control the activation of downstream effectors by a mechanism that remains to be elucidated.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2008

Structure of the BH3 Domains from the p53-Inducible BH3-Only Proteins Noxa and Puma in Complex with Mcl-1

Catherine L. Day; Callum Smits; F. Cindy Fan; Erinna F. Lee; W. Douglas Fairlie; Mark G. Hinds

Pro-survival proteins in the B-cell lymphoma-2 (Bcl-2) family have a defined specificity profile for their cell death-inducing BH3-only antagonists. Solution structures of myeloid cell leukaemia-1 (Mcl-1) in complex with the BH3 domains from Noxa and Puma, two proteins regulated by the tumour suppressor p53, show that they bind as amphipathic alpha-helices in the same hydrophobic groove of Mcl-1, using conserved residues for binding. Thermodynamic parameters for the interaction of Noxa, Puma and the related BH3 domains of Bmf, Bim, Bid and Bak with Mcl-1 were determined by calorimetry. These unstructured BH3 domains bind Mcl-1 with affinities that span 3 orders of magnitude, and binding is an enthalpically driven and entropy-enthalpy-compensated process. Alanine scanning analysis of Noxa demonstrated that only a subset of residues is required for interaction with Mcl-1, and these residues are localised to a short highly conserved sequence motif that defines the BH3 domain. Chemical shift mapping of Mcl-1:BH3 complexes showed that Mcl-1 engages all BH3 ligands in a similar way and that, in addition to changes in the immediate vicinity of the binding site, small molecule-wide structural adjustments accommodate ligand binding. Our studies show that unstructured peptides, such as the BH3 domains, behave like their structured counterparts and can bind tightly and selectively in an enthalpically driven process.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2008

Structures of the cIAP2 RING domain reveal conformational changes associated with ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme (E2) recruitment.

Peter D. Mace; Katrin Linke; Rebecca Feltham; Frances-Rose Schumacher; Clyde A. Smith; David L. Vaux; John Silke; Catherine L. Day

Inhibitor of apoptosis (IAP) proteins are key negative regulators of cell death that are highly expressed in many cancers. Cell death caused by antagonists that bind to IAP proteins is associated with their ubiquitylation and degradation. The RING domain at the C terminus of IAP proteins is pivotal. Here we report the crystal structures of the cIAP2 RING domain homodimer alone, and bound to the ubiquitin-conjugating (E2) enzyme UbcH5b. These structures show that small changes in the RING domain accompany E2 binding. By mutating residues at the E2-binding surface, we show that autoubiquitylation is required for regulation of IAP abundance. Dimer formation is also critical, and mutation of a single C-terminal residue abrogated dimer formation and E3 ligase activity was diminished. We further demonstrate that disruption of E2 binding, or dimerization, stabilizes IAP proteins against IAP antagonists in vivo.

Collaboration


Dive into the Catherine L. Day's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

David L. Vaux

Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

David C. S. Huang

Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

John Silke

University of Melbourne

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge