Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Chad D. Walls is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Chad D. Walls.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2013

Structural and Mechanistic Insights into LEOPARD Syndrome-Associated SHP2 Mutations

Zhi Hong Yu; Jie Xu; Chad D. Walls; Lan Chen; Sheng Zhang; Ruo-Yu Zhang; Li Wu; Lina Wang; Sijiu Liu; Zhong Yin Zhang

Background: The mechanism by which SHP2 mutations cause LEOPARD syndrome is poorly understood. Results: LEOPARD syndrome mutations impair SHP2 activity but increase its propensity for an open and active conformation. Conclusion: LEOPARD syndrome SHP2 mutants bind preferentially to upstream activators to prolong substrate turnover, thus engendering gain-of-function phenotypes. Significance: The study provides a framework for understanding how individual SHP2 mutations cause diseases. SHP2 is an allosteric phosphatase essential for growth factor-mediated Ras activation. Germ-line mutations in SHP2 cause clinically similar LEOPARD and Noonan syndromes, two of several autosomal-dominant conditions characterized by gain-of-function mutations in the Ras pathway. Interestingly, Noonan syndrome SHP2 mutants are constitutively active, whereas LEOPARD syndrome SHP2 mutants exhibit reduced phosphatase activity. How do catalytically impaired LEOPARD syndrome mutants engender gain-of-function phenotypes? Our study reveals that LEOPARD syndrome mutations weaken the intramolecular interaction between the N-SH2 and phosphatase domains, leading to a change in SHP2 molecular switching mechanism. Consequently, LEOPARD syndrome SHP2 mutants bind upstream activators preferentially and are hypersensitive to growth factor stimulation. They also stay longer with scaffolding adapters, thus prolonging substrate turnover, which compensates for the reduced phosphatase activity. The study provides a solid framework for understanding how individual SHP2 mutations cause diseases.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2008

Translational Control of C-terminal Src Kinase (Csk) Expression by PRL3 Phosphatase

Fubo Liang; Yong Luo; Yuanshu Dong; Chad D. Walls; Jiao Liang; Hao Yuan Jiang; Jeremy R. Sanford; Ronald C. Wek; Zhong Yin Zhang

Phosphatase of regenerating liver 3 (PRL3) is up-regulated in cancer metastases. However, little is known of PRL3-mediated cellular signaling pathways. We previously reported that elevated PRL3 expression increases Src kinase activity, which likely contributes to the increased tumorigenesis and metastasis potential of PRL3. PRL3-induced Src activation is proposed to be indirect through down-regulation of Csk, a negative regulator of Src. Given the importance of PRL3 in tumor metastasis and the role of Csk in controlling Src activity, we addressed the mechanism by which PRL3 mediates Csk down-regulation. PRL3 is shown to exert a negative effect on Csk protein synthesis, rather than regulation of Csk mRNA levels or protein turnover. Interestingly, the preferential decrease in Csk protein synthesis is a consequence of increased eIF2 phosphorylation resulting from PRL3 expression. Reduced Csk synthesis also occurs in response to cellular stress that induces eIF2 phosphorylation, indicating that this regulatory mechanism may occur in response to a wider spectrum of cellular conditions known to direct translational control. Thus, we have uncovered a previously uncharacterized role for PRL3 in the gene-specific translational control of Csk expression.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008

Seleninate in place of phosphate: Irreversible inhibition of protein tyrosine phosphatases

Mohannad Abdo; Sijiu Liu; Bo Zhou; Chad D. Walls; Li Wu; Spencer Knapp; Zhong Yin Zhang

A homotyrosine based seleninic acid irreversibly inhibits protein tyrosine phosphatases by forming a covalent selenosulfide linkage with the active site cysteine sulfhydryl specifically. The details of the event are revealed by model synthetic studies and by kinetic, mass spectrometric, and crystallographic characterization.


Biochemistry | 2014

Molecular basis of gain-of-function LEOPARD syndrome-associated SHP2 mutations.

Zhi Hong Yu; Ruo Yu Zhang; Chad D. Walls; Lan Chen; Sheng Zhang; Li Wu; Sijiu Liu; Zhong Yin Zhang

The Src homology 2 (SH2) domain-containing protein tyrosine phosphatase 2 (SHP2) is a critical signal transducer downstream of growth factors that promotes the activation of the RAS-ERK1/2 cascade. In its basal state, SHP2 exists in an autoinhibited closed conformation because of an intramolecular interaction between its N-SH2 and protein tyrosine phosphatase (PTP) domains. Binding to pTyr ligands present on growth factor receptors and adaptor proteins with its N-SH2 domain localizes SHP2 to its substrates and frees the active site from allosteric inhibition. Germline mutations in SHP2 are known to cause both Noonan syndrome (NS) and LEOPARD syndrome (LS), two clinically similar autosomal dominant developmental disorders. NS-associated SHP2 mutants display elevated phosphatase activity, while LS-associated SHP2 mutants exhibit reduced catalytic activity. A conundrum in how clinically similar diseases result from mutations to SHP2 that have opposite effects on this enzyme’s catalytic functionality exists. Here we report a comprehensive investigation of the kinetic, structural, dynamic, and biochemical signaling properties of the wild type as well as all reported LS-associated SHP2 mutants. The results reveal that LS-causing mutations not only affect SHP2 phosphatase activity but also induce a weakening of the intramolecular interaction between the N-SH2 and PTP domains, leading to mutants that are more readily activated by competing pTyr ligands. Our data also indicate that the residual phosphatase activity associated with the LS SHP2 mutant is required for enhanced ERK1/2 activation. Consequently, catalytically impaired SHP2 mutants could display gain-of-function properties because of their ability to localize to the vicinity of substrates for longer periods of time, thereby affording the opportunity for prolonged substrate turnover and sustained RAS-ERK1/2 activation.


Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2013

Phosphatase of Regenerating Liver 3 (PRL3) Provokes a Tyrosine Phosphoproteome to Drive Prometastatic Signal Transduction

Chad D. Walls; Anton Iliuk; Yunpeng Bai; Mu Wang; W. Andy Tao; Zhong Yin Zhang

Phosphatase of regenerating liver 3 (PRL3) is suspected to be a causative factor toward cellular metastasis when in excess. To date, the molecular basis for PRL3 function remains an enigma, making efforts at distilling a concerted mechanism for PRL3-mediated metastatic dissemination very difficult. We previously discovered that PRL3 expressing cells exhibit a pronounced increase in protein tyrosine phosphorylation. Here we take an unbiased mass spectrometry-based approach toward identifying the phosphoproteins exhibiting enhanced levels of tyrosine phosphorylation with a goal to define the “PRL3-mediated signaling network.” Phosphoproteomic data support intracellular activation of an extensive signaling network normally governed by extracellular ligand-activated transmembrane growth factor, cytokine, and integrin receptors in the PRL3 cells. Additionally, data implicate the Src tyrosine kinase as the major intracellular kinase responsible for “hijacking” this network and provide strong evidence that aberrant Src activation is a major consequence of PRL3 overexpression. Importantly, the data support a PDGF(α/β)-, Eph (A2/B3/B4)-, and Integrin (β1/β5)-receptor array as being the predominant network coordinator in the PRL3 cells, corroborating a PRL3-induced mesenchymal-state. Within this network, we find that tyrosine phosphorylation is increased on a multitude of signaling effectors responsible for Rho-family GTPase, PI3K-Akt, STAT, and ERK activation, linking observations made by the field as a whole under Src as a primary signal transducer. Our phosphoproteomic data paint the most comprehensive picture to date of how PRL3 drives prometastatic molecular events through Src activation.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Integrated analysis of global mRNA and protein expression data in HEK293 cells overexpressing PRL-1.

Carmen M. Dumaual; Boyd Steere; Chad D. Walls; Mu Wang; Zhong Yin Zhang; Stephen K. Randall

Background The protein tyrosine phosphatase PRL-1 represents a putative oncogene with wide-ranging cellular effects. Overexpression of PRL-1 can promote cell proliferation, survival, migration, invasion, and metastasis, but the underlying mechanisms by which it influences these processes remain poorly understood. Methodology To increase our comprehension of PRL-1 mediated signaling events, we employed transcriptional profiling (DNA microarray) and proteomics (mass spectrometry) to perform a thorough characterization of the global molecular changes in gene expression that occur in response to stable PRL-1 overexpression in a relevant model system (HEK293). Principal Findings Overexpression of PRL-1 led to several significant changes in the mRNA and protein expression profiles of HEK293 cells. The differentially expressed gene set was highly enriched in genes involved in cytoskeletal remodeling, integrin-mediated cell-matrix adhesion, and RNA recognition and splicing. In particular, members of the Rho signaling pathway and molecules that converge on this pathway were heavily influenced by PRL-1 overexpression, supporting observations from previous studies that link PRL-1 to the Rho GTPase signaling network. In addition, several genes not previously associated with PRL-1 were found to be significantly altered by its expression. Most notable among these were Filamin A, RhoGDIα, SPARC, hnRNPH2, and PRDX2. Conclusions and Significance This systems-level approach sheds new light on the molecular networks underlying PRL-1 action and presents several novel directions for future, hypothesis-based studies.


Methods of Molecular Biology | 2009

Activity-Based Protein Profiling of Protein Tyrosine Phosphatases

Chad D. Walls; Bo Zhou; Zhong Yin Zhang

The ability to accurately monitor the dynamics involved with the activity and state of a specific protein population in a complex biological system represents one of the major technological challenges in studying systems biology. Over the past several years a number of groups have attempted to spearhead this new frontier of systems biology by developing enzyme family-specific activity-based chemical probes linked to appropriate reporter groups that by nature only target and subsequently tag the active form of these enzymes. In this work, we will highlight the methods used to characterize activity-based probes as to their utility in biological contexts. Specifically, we will address activity-based protein profiling of the protein tyrosine phosphatases, a highly conserved enzyme family responsible for the phospho-tyrosine hydrolysis reaction, a ubiquitous reaction that is absolutely essential to the regulation of a myriad of cellular processes.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2005

Identification of serum N-acetylmuramoyl-l-alanine amidase as liver peptidoglycan recognition protein 2☆

Yinong Zhang; Leslie van der Fits; Jane S. A. Voerman; Marie José Melief; Jon D. Laman; Mu Wang; Haitao Wang; Minhui Wang; Xinna Li; Chad D. Walls; Dipika Gupta; Roman Dziarski


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2006

Direct detection of glycogenin reaction products during glycogen initiation.

Thomas D. Hurley; Chad D. Walls; John R. Bennett; Peter J. Roach; Mu Wang


Publisher | 2014

Molecular Basis of Gain-of-Function LEOPARD Syndrome-Associated SHP2 Mutations

Zhi-Hong Yu; Ruo-Yu Zhang; Chad D. Walls; Lan Chen; Sheng Zhang; Li Wu; Sijiu Liu; Zhong Yin Zhang

Collaboration


Dive into the Chad D. Walls's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Li Wu

Indiana University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Yunpeng Bai

Indiana University Bloomington

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge