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Dive into the research topics where Courtney Voss is active.

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Featured researches published by Courtney Voss.


Science Signaling | 2010

Loops Govern SH2 Domain Specificity by Controlling Access to Binding Pockets

Tomonori Kaneko; Haiming Huang; Bing Zhao; Lei Li; Huadong Liu; Courtney Voss; Chenggang Wu; Martin R. Schiller; Shawn S.-C. Li

Selective blocking of binding pockets by surface loops defines the specificity of a phosphotyrosine-binding domain. Picking the Right Partner Proteins often interact through motifs or protein domains. Although a particular class of domains generally recognizes a similar motif in their partners, such as the SH2 domain that recognizes proteins containing phosphorylated tyrosine residues, individual members of the domain family also exhibit specificity. Phosphorylation of tyrosine residues is involved in many cell regulatory processes, and particular SH2 domain–containing proteins interact with specific partner proteins upon their phosphorylation. Kaneko et al. address the question of how a particular SH2 domain knows to which phosphorylated tyrosine–containing protein it should bind. In other words, how do the structurally similar SH2 domains exhibit selectivity for particular sequences even though they all contain phosphorylated tyrosine? By examining crystal and solution structures, the authors found that, in addition to a binding pocket for the phosphorylated tyrosine, SH2 domains had three other binding pockets and that loops, which are variable regions of the SH2 domain, controlled the accessibility of these other binding pockets to specify selectivity. With information about the rules governing binding pocket accessibility, the authors switched SH2 domain specificity by engineering key mutations into the loops. Not only does their work suggest a paradigm for understanding the origin of SH2 domain specificity, it also shows that specificity can be engineered, which may be important for rational design of SH2-specific inhibitors and antibodies. Cellular functions require specific protein-protein interactions that are often mediated by modular domains that use binding pockets to engage particular sequence motifs in their partners. Yet, how different members of a domain family select for distinct sequence motifs is not fully understood. The human genome encodes 120 Src homology 2 (SH2) domains (in 110 proteins), which mediate protein-protein interactions by binding to proteins with diverse phosphotyrosine (pTyr)-containing sequences. The structure of the SH2 domain of BRDG1 bound to a peptide revealed a binding pocket that was blocked by a loop residue in most other SH2 domains. Analysis of 63 SH2 domain structures suggested that the SH2 domains contain three binding pockets, which exhibit selectivity for the three positions after the pTyr in a peptide, and that SH2 domain loops defined the accessibility and shape of these pockets. Despite sequence variability in the loops, we identified conserved structural features in the loops of SH2 domains responsible for controlling access to these surface pockets. We engineered new loops in an SH2 domain that altered specificity as predicted. Thus, selective blockage of binding subsites or pockets by surface loops provides a molecular basis by which the diverse modes of ligand recognition by the SH2 domain may have evolved and provides a framework for engineering SH2 domains and designing SH2-specific inhibitors.


Molecular Cell | 2013

A Method for Systematic Mapping of Protein Lysine Methylation Identifies Functions for HP1β in DNA Damage Response

Huadong Liu; Marek Galka; Eiichiro Mori; Xuguang Liu; Yu Fen Lin; Ran Wei; Paula Pittock; Courtney Voss; Gurpreet K. Dhami; Xing Li; Masaaki Miyaji; Gilles A. Lajoie; Benjamin P C Chen; ShawnShun Cheng Li

Lysine methylation occurs on both histone and nonhistone proteins. However, our knowledge on the prevalence and function of nonhistone protein methylation is poor. We describe an approach that combines peptide array, bioinformatics, and mass spectrometry to systematically identify lysine methylation sites and map methyllysine-driven protein-protein interactions. Using this approach, we identified a high-confidence and high-resolution interactome of the heterochromatin protein 1β (HP1β) and uncovered, simultaneously, numerous methyllysine sites on nonhistone proteins. We found that HP1β binds to DNA-dependent protein kinase catalytic subunit (DNA-PKcs) and regulates its localization to double-strand breaks (DSBs) during DNA damage response (DDR). Mutation of the methylation sites in DNA-PKcs or depletion of HP1β in cells caused defects in DDR. Furthermore, we showed that the methylation of DNA-PKcs and many other proteins in the HP1β interactome undergoes large changes in response to DNA damage, indicating that Lys methylation is a highly dynamic posttranslational modification.


Science Signaling | 2012

Superbinder SH2 Domains Act as Antagonists of Cell Signaling.

Tomonori Kaneko; Haiming Huang; Xuan Cao; Xing Li; Chengjun Li; Courtney Voss; Sachdev S. Sidhu; Shawn S.-C. Li

Engineered SH2 domains with high affinity for phosphorylated tyrosine inhibit cell signaling downstream of receptor tyrosine kinases. Higher Affinity Inhibits Signaling The interaction of peptide motifs and peptide-binding domains is critical for cell signaling. Kaneko et al. generated mutant Src homology 2 (SH2) domains with unnaturally high affinities for phosphotyrosine peptide motifs, which they called “superbinders.” Crystal structures of a superbinder bound to a peptide with a phosphotyrosine revealed a two-part mode of binding, with the mutated residues forming an additional interaction surface for the phosphorylated tyrosine that was not present in wild-type, ligand-bound SH2 domains. Expressing these superbinder SH2 domains in mammalian cells inhibited epidermal growth factor receptor signaling and cell growth, suggesting that these domains may be effective tools for limiting aberrant phosphotyrosine-mediated signaling associated with disease. Protein-ligand interactions mediated by modular domains, which often play important roles in regulating cellular functions, are generally of moderate affinities. We examined the Src homology 2 (SH2) domain, a modular domain that recognizes phosphorylated tyrosine (pTyr) residues, to investigate how the binding affinity of a modular domain for its ligand influences the structure and cellular function of the protein. We used the phage display method to perform directed evolution of the pTyr-binding residues in the SH2 domain of the tyrosine kinase Fyn and identified three amino acid substitutions that critically affected binding. We generated three SH2 domain triple-point mutants that were “superbinders” with much higher affinities for pTyr-containing peptides than the natural domain. Crystallographic analysis of one of these superbinders revealed that the superbinder SH2 domain recognized the pTyr moiety in a bipartite binding mode: A hydrophobic surface encompassed the phenyl ring, and a positively charged site engaged the phosphate. When expressed in mammalian cells, the superbinder SH2 domains blocked epidermal growth factor receptor signaling and inhibited anchorage-independent cell proliferation, suggesting that pTyr superbinders might be explored for therapeutic applications and useful as biological research tools. Although the SH2 domain fold can support much higher affinity for its ligand than is observed in nature, our results suggest that natural SH2 domains are not optimized for ligand binding but for specificity and flexibility, which are likely properties important for their function in signaling and regulatory processes.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Differential regulation of the activity of deleted in liver cancer 1 (DLC1) by tensins controls cell migration and transformation

Xuan Cao; Courtney Voss; Bing Zhao; Tomonori Kaneko; Shawn S.-C. Li

The epithelial growth factor receptor plays an important role in cell migration and cancer metastasis, but the underlying molecular mechanism is not fully understood. We show here that differential regulation of the rhodopsin-GTPase-activating (Rho-GAP) activity of deleted in liver cancer 1 (DLC1) by tensin3 and COOH-terminal tensin-like protein (cten) controls EGF-driven cell migration and transformation. Tensin3 binds DLC1 through its actin-binding domain, a region that is missing in cten, and thereby releases an autoinhibitory interaction between the sterile alpha motif and Rho-GAP domains of DLC1. Consequently, tensin3, but not cten, promotes the activation of DLC1, which, in turn, leads to inactivation of RhoA and decreased cell migration. Depletion of endogenous tensin3, but not cten, augmented the formation of actin stress fibers and focal adhesions and enhanced cell motility. These effects were, however, ablated by an inhibitor of the Rho-associated protein kinase. Importantly, activation of DLC1 by tensin3 or its actin-binding domain drastically reduced the anchorage-independent growth of transformed cells. Our study therefore links dynamic regulation of tensin family members by EGF to Rho-GAP through DLC1 and suggests that the tensin-DLC1-RhoA signaling axis plays an important role in tumorigenesis and cancer metastasis, and may be explored for cancer intervention.


Molecular Cell | 2013

Dynamic methylation of Numb by Set8 regulates its binding to p53 and apoptosis.

Gurpreet K. Dhami; Huadong Liu; Marek Galka; Courtney Voss; Ran Wei; Kimberly Muranko; Tomonori Kaneko; Sean P. Cregan; Lin Li; Shawn S.-C. Li

Although Numb exhibits its tumor-suppressive function in breast cancer in part by binding to and stabilizing p53, it is unknown how the Numb-p53 interaction is regulated in cells. We found that Numb is methylated in its phosphotyrosine-binding (PTB) domain by the lysine methyltransferase Set8. Moreover, methylation uncouples Numb from p53, resulting in increased p53 ubiquitination and degradation. While Numb promotes apoptosis in a p53-dependent manner, the apoptotic function is abolished when Numb is methylated by Set8 or the Lys methylation sites in Numb are mutated. Conversely, the Numb-p53 interaction and Numb-mediated apoptosis are significantly enhanced by depletion of Set8 from cancer cells or by treating the cells with doxorubicin, a chemotherapeutic drug that causes a reduction in the mRNA and protein levels of Set8. Our work identifies the Set8-Numb-p53 signaling axis as an important regulatory pathway for apoptosis and suggests a therapeutic strategy by targeting Numb methylation.


Journal of Proteome Research | 2010

Systematic Identification of Methyllysine-Driven Interactions for Histone and Nonhistone Targets

Huadong Liu; Marek Galka; Aimee N. Iberg; Zezhou Wang; Lei Li; Courtney Voss; Xinfeng Jiang; Gilles A. Lajoie; Zhiping Huang; Mark T. Bedford; Shawn S.-C. Li

An important issue in epigenetic research is to understand how the numerous methylation marks associated with histone and certain nonhistone proteins are recognized and interpreted by the hundreds of chromatin-binding modules (CBMs) in a cell to control chromatin state, gene expression, and other cellular functions. We have assembled a peptide chip that represents known and putative lysine methylation marks on histones and p53 and probed the chip for binding to a group of CBMs to obtain a comprehensive interaction network mediated by lysine methylation. Interactions revealed by the peptide array screening were validated by in-solution binding assays. This study not only recapitulated known interactions but also uncovered new ones. A novel heterochromatin protein 1 beta (HP1β) chromodomain-binding site on histone H3, H3K23me, was discovered from the peptide array screen and subsequently verified by mass spectrometry. Data from peptide pull-down and colocalization in cells suggest that, besides the H3K9me mark, H3K23me may play a role in facilitating the recruitment of HP1β to the heterochromatin. Extending the peptide array and mass spectrometric approach presented here to more histone marks and CBMs would eventually afford a comprehensive specificity and interaction map to aid epigenetic studies.


Proteome Science | 2011

Evaluation of three high abundance protein depletion kits for umbilical cord serum proteomics

Bin Liu; Fang-hua Qiu; Courtney Voss; Yun Xu; Ming-zhe Zhao; Yan-xin Wu; Jing Nie; Zi-lian Wang

BackgroundHigh abundance protein depletion is a major challenge in the study of serum/plasma proteomics. Prior to this study, most commercially available kits for depletion of highly abundant proteins had only been tested and evaluated in adult serum/plasma, while the depletion efficiency on umbilical cord serum/plasma had not been clarified. Structural differences between some adult and fetal proteins (such as albumin) make it likely that depletion approaches for adult and umbilical cord serum/plasma will be variable. Therefore, the primary purposes of the present study are to investigate the efficiencies of several commonly-used commercial kits during high abundance protein depletion from umbilical cord serum and to determine which kit yields the most effective and reproducible results for further proteomics research on umbilical cord serum.ResultsThe immunoaffinity based kits (PROTIA-Sigma and 5185-Agilent) displayed higher depletion efficiency than the immobilized dye based kit (PROTBA-Sigma) in umbilical cord serum samples. Both the PROTIA-Sigma and 5185-Agilent kit maintained high depletion efficiency when used three consecutive times. Depletion by the PROTIA-Sigma Kit improved 2DE gel quality by reducing smeared bands produced by the presence of high abundance proteins and increasing the intensity of other protein spots. During image analysis using the identical detection parameters, 411 ± 18 spots were detected in crude serum gels, while 757 ± 43 spots were detected in depleted serum gels. Eight spots unique to depleted serum gels were identified by MALDI- TOF/TOF MS, seven of which were low abundance proteins.ConclusionsThe immunoaffinity based kits exceeded the immobilized dye based kit in high abundance protein depletion of umbilical cord serum samples and dramatically improved 2DE gel quality for detection of trace biomarkers.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Altered Protein Expression in Gestational Diabetes Mellitus Placentas Provides Insight into Insulin Resistance and Coagulation/Fibrinolysis Pathways

Bin Liu; Yun Xu; Courtney Voss; Fang-hua Qiu; Ming-zhe Zhao; Yong-dong Liu; Jing Nie; Zilian Wang

Objective To investigate the placental proteome differences between pregnant women complicated with gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) and those with normal glucose tolerance (NGT). Methods We used two-dimensional electrophoresis (2DE) to separate and compare placental protein levels from GDM and NGT groups. Differentially expressed proteins between the two groups were identified by MALDI-TOF/TOF mass spectrometry and further confirmed by Western blotting. The mRNA levels of related proteins were measured by realtime RT-PCR. Immunohistochemistry (IHC) was performed to examine the cellular location of the proteins expressed in placenta villi. Results Twenty-one protein spots were differentially expressed between GDM and NGT placenta villi in the tested samples, fifteen of which were successfully identified by mass spectrometry. The molecular functions of these differentially expressed proteins include blood coagulation, signal transduction, anti-apoptosis, ATP binding, phospholipid binding, calcium ion binding, platelet activation, and tryptophan-tRNA ligase activity. Both protein and mRNA levels of Annexin A2, Annexin A5 and 14-3-3 protein ζ/δ were up-regulated, while the expression of the Ras-related protein Rap1A was down-regulated in the GDM placenta group. Conclusion Placenta villi derived from GDM pregnant women exhibit significant proteome differences compared to those of NGT mothers. The identified differentially expressed proteins are mainly associated with the development of insulin resistance, transplacental transportation of glucose, hyperglucose-mediated coagulation and fibrinolysis disorders in the GDM placenta villi.


Nature Communications | 2015

A phosphorylation switch controls the spatiotemporal activation of Rho GTPases in directional cell migration

Xuan Cao; Tomonori Kaneko; Jenny S. Li; An-Dong Liu; Courtney Voss; Shawn S.-C. Li

Although cell migration plays a central role in development and disease, the underlying molecular mechanism is not fully understood. Here we report that a phosphorylation-mediated molecular switch comprising deleted in liver cancer 1 (DLC1), tensin-3 (TNS3), phosphatase and tensin homologue (PTEN) and phosphoinositide-3-kinase (PI3K) controls the spatiotemporal activation of the small GTPases, Rac1 and RhoA, thereby initiating directional cell migration induced by growth factors. On epidermal growth factor (EGF) or platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) stimulation, TNS3 and PTEN are phosphorylated at specific Thr residues, which trigger the rearrangement of the TNS3–DLC1 and PTEN–PI3K complexes into the TNS3–PI3K and PTEN–DLC1 complexes. Subsequently, the TNS3–PI3K complex translocates to the leading edge of a migrating cell to promote Rac1 activation, whereas PTEN–DLC1 translocates to the posterior for localized RhoA activation. Our work identifies a core signalling mechanism by which an external motility stimulus is coupled to the spatiotemporal activation of Rac1 and RhoA to drive directional cell migration.


Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2015

A Comprehensive Immunoreceptor Phosphotyrosine-based Signaling Network Revealed by Reciprocal Protein–Peptide Array Screening

Huadong Liu; Lei Li; Courtney Voss; Feng Wang; Juewen Liu; Shawn S.-C. Li

Cells of the immune system communicate with their environment through immunoreceptors. These receptors often harbor intracellular tyrosine residues, which, when phosphorylated upon receptor activation, serve as docking sites to recruit downstream signaling proteins containing the Src Homology 2 (SH2) domain. A systematic investigation of interactions between the SH2 domain and the immunoreceptor tyrosine-based regulatory motifs (ITRM), including inhibitory (ITIM), activating (ITAM), or switching (ITSM) motifs, is critical for understanding cellular signal transduction and immune function. Using the B cell inhibitory receptor CD22 as an example, we developed an approach that combines reciprocal or bidirectional phosphopeptide and SH2 domain array screens with in-solution binding assays to identify a comprehensive SH2-CD22 interaction network. Extending this approach to 194 human ITRM sequences and 78 SH2 domains led to the identification of a high-confidence immunoreceptor interactome containing 1137 binary interactions. Besides recapitulating many previously reported interactions, our study uncovered numerous novel interactions. The resulting ITRM-SH2 interactome not only helped to fill many gaps in the immune signaling network, it also allowed us to associate different SH2 domains to distinct immune functions. Detailed analysis of the NK cell ITRM-mediated interactions led to the identification of a network nucleated by the Vav3 and Fyn SH2 domains. We showed further that these SH2 domains have distinct functions in cytotoxicity. The bidirectional protein-peptide array approach described herein may be applied to the numerous other peptide-binding modules to identify potential protein–protein interactions in a systematic and reliable manner.

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Shawn S.-C. Li

University of Western Ontario

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Huadong Liu

University of Western Ontario

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Tomonori Kaneko

University of Western Ontario

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Lei Li

University of Western Ontario

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Xing Li

University of Western Ontario

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Xuan Cao

University of Western Ontario

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Kouji Tamori

University of Western Ontario

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Tetsuo Fukuta

University of Western Ontario

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Tomonori Shiotani

University of Western Ontario

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Bin Liu

Sun Yat-sen University

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