Daniel Coutandin
Goethe University Frankfurt
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Featured researches published by Daniel Coutandin.
Cold Spring Harbor Perspectives in Biology | 2010
Volker Dötsch; Francesca Bernassola; Daniel Coutandin; Eleonora Candi; Gerry Melino
p73 and p63 are two homologs of the tumor suppressive transcription factor p53. Given the high degree of structural similarity shared by the p53 family members, p73 and p63 can bind and activate transcription from the majority of the p53-responsive promoters. Besides overlapping functions shared with p53 (i.e., induction of apoptosis in response to cellular stress), the existence of extensive structural variability within the family determines unique roles for p63 and p73. Their crucial and specific functions in controlling development and differentiation are well exemplified by the p63 and p73 knockout mouse phenotypes. Here, we describe the contribution of p63 and p73 to human pathology with emphasis on their roles in tumorigenesis and development.
Cell | 2011
Gregor B. Deutsch; Elisabeth M. Zielonka; Daniel Coutandin; Tobias A. Weber; Birgit Schäfer; Jens Hannewald; Laura M. Luh; Florian Durst; Mohamed Ibrahim; Jan Hoffmann; Frank H. Niesen; Aycan Sentürk; Hana Kunkel; Bernd Brutschy; Enrico Schleiff; Stefan Knapp; Amparo Acker-Palmer; Manuel Grez; Frank McKeon; Volker Dötsch
Summary TAp63α, a homolog of the p53 tumor suppressor, is a quality control factor in the female germline. Remarkably, already undamaged oocytes express high levels of the protein, suggesting that TAp63αs activity is under tight control of an inhibitory mechanism. Biochemical studies have proposed that inhibition requires the C-terminal transactivation inhibitory domain. However, the structural mechanism of TAp63α inhibition remains unknown. Here, we show that TAp63α is kept in an inactive dimeric state. We reveal that relief of inhibition leads to tetramer formation with ∼20-fold higher DNA affinity. In vivo, phosphorylation-triggered tetramerization of TAp63α is not reversible by dephosphorylation. Furthermore, we show that a helix in the oligomerization domain of p63 is crucial for tetramer stabilization and competes with the transactivation domain for the same binding site. Our results demonstrate how TAp63α is inhibited by complex domain-domain interactions that provide the basis for regulating quality control in oocytes.
Cell Death & Differentiation | 2009
Daniel Coutandin; Frank Löhr; Frank H. Niesen; Teppei Ikeya; Tobias A. Weber; Birgit Schäfer; Zielonka Em; Alex N. Bullock; Yang A; Peter Güntert; Stefan Knapp; McKeon F; Ou Hd; Dötsch
p73 and p63, the two ancestral members of the p53 family, are involved in neurogenesis, epithelial stem cell maintenance and quality control of female germ cells. The highly conserved oligomerization domain (OD) of tumor suppressor p53 is essential for its biological functions, and its structure was believed to be the prototype for all three proteins. However, we report that the ODs of p73 and p63 differ from the OD of p53 by containing an additional α-helix that is not present in the structure of the p53 OD. Deletion of this helix causes a dissociation of the OD into dimers; it also causes conformational instability and reduces the transcriptional activity of p73. Moreover, we show that ODs of p73 and p63 strongly interact and that a large number of different heterotetramers are supported by the additional helix. Detailed analysis shows that the heterotetramer consisting of two homodimers is thermodynamically more stable than the two homotetramers. No heterooligomerization between p53 and the p73/p63 subfamily was observed, supporting the notion of functional orthogonality within the p53 family.
Cell Death & Differentiation | 2013
Laura M. Luh; Sebastian Kehrloesser; Gregor B. Deutsch; Jakob Gebel; Daniel Coutandin; Birgit Schäfer; Massimiliano Agostini; Gerry Melino; Volker Dötsch
The proteins p73 and p63 are members of the p53 protein family and are involved in important developmental processes. Their high sequence identity with the tumor suppressor p53 has suggested that they act as tumor suppressors as well. While p63 has a crucial role in the maintenance of epithelial stem cells and in the quality control of oocytes without a clear role as a tumor suppressor, p73′s tumor suppressor activity is well documented. In a recent study we have shown that the transcriptional activity of TAp63α, the isoform responsible for the quality control in oocytes, is regulated by its oligomeric state. The protein forms an inactive, dimeric and compact conformation in resting oocytes, while the detection of DNA damage leads to the formation of an active, tetrameric and open conformation. p73 shows a high sequence identity to p63, including those domains that are crucial in stabilizing its inactive state, thus suggesting that p73’s activity might be regulated by its oligomeric state as well. Here, we have investigated the oligomeric state of TAp73α by size exclusion chromatography and detailed domain interaction mapping, and show that in contrast to p63, TAp73α is a constitutive open tetramer. However, its transactivation potential depends on the cellular background and the promoter context. These results imply that the regulation of p73′s transcriptional activity might be more closely related to p53 than to p63.
eLife | 2016
Daniel Coutandin; Christian Osterburg; Ratnesh Kumar Srivastav; Manuela Sumyk; Sebastian Kehrloesser; Jakob Gebel; Marcel Tuppi; Jens Hannewald; Birgit Schäfer; E. Salah; Sebastian Mathea; Uta Müller-Kuller; James Doutch; Manuel Grez; Stefan Knapp; Volker Dötsch
Mammalian oocytes are arrested in the dictyate stage of meiotic prophase I for long periods of time, during which the high concentration of the p53 family member TAp63α sensitizes them to DNA damage-induced apoptosis. TAp63α is kept in an inactive and exclusively dimeric state but undergoes rapid phosphorylation-induced tetramerization and concomitant activation upon detection of DNA damage. Here we show that the TAp63α dimer is a kinetically trapped state. Activation follows a spring-loaded mechanism not requiring further translation of other cellular factors in oocytes and is associated with unfolding of the inhibitory structure that blocks the tetramerization interface. Using a combination of biophysical methods as well as cell and ovary culture experiments we explain how TAp63α is kept inactive in the absence of DNA damage but causes rapid oocyte elimination in response to a few DNA double strand breaks thereby acting as the key quality control factor in maternal reproduction. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.13909.001
Journal of Cell Science | 2017
Jakob Gebel; Marcel Tuppi; Katharina Krauskopf; Daniel Coutandin; Susanne Pitzius; Sebastian Kehrloesser; Christian Osterburg; Volker Dötsch
ABSTRACT Germ cells are totipotent and, in principle, immortal as they are the source for new germ cells in each generation. This very special role requires tight quality control systems. The p53 protein family constitutes one of the most important quality surveillance systems in cells. Whereas p53 has become famous for its role as the guardian of the genome in its function as the most important somatic tumor suppressor, p63 has been nicknamed ‘guardian of the female germ line’. p63 is strongly expressed in resting oocytes and responsible for eliminating those that carry DNA double-strand breaks. The third family member, p73, acts later during oocyte and embryo development by ensuring correct assembly of the spindle assembly checkpoint. In addition to its role in the female germ line, p73 regulates cell-cell contacts between developing sperm cells and supporting somatic cells in the male germ line. Here, we review the involvement of the p53 protein family in the development of germ cells with a focus on quality control in the female germ line and discuss medical implications for cancer patients. Summary: Members of the p53 protein family have important roles in quality control processes within germ cells. We discuss these roles, in particular that of p63 and its molecular control mechanisms.
Cell Death & Differentiation | 2016
Jakob Gebel; Laura M. Luh; Daniel Coutandin; Christian Osterburg; Frank Löhr; Birgit Schäfer; Ann-Sophie Frombach; Manuela Sumyk; Lena Buchner; T. Krojer; E. Salah; Sebastian Mathea; Peter Güntert; Stefan Knapp; Volker Dötsch
Members of the p53 tumor-suppressor family are expressed as multiple isoforms. Isoforms with an N-terminal transactivation domain are transcriptionally active, while those ones lacking this domain often inhibit the transcriptional activity of other family members. In squamous cell carcinomas, the high expression level of ΔNp63α inhibits the tumor-suppressor function of TAp73β. This can in principle be due to blocking of the promoter or by direct interaction between both proteins. p63 and p73 can hetero-oligomerize through their tetramerization domains and a hetero-tetramer consisting of two p63 and two p73 molecules is thermodynamically more stable than both homo-tetramers. Here we show that cells expressing both p63 and p73 exist in mouse epidermis and hair follicle and that hetero-tetramer complexes can be detected by immunoprecipitation in differentiating keratinocytes. Through structure determination of the hetero-tetramer, we reveal why this hetero-tetramer is the thermodynamically preferred species. We have created mutants that exclusively form either hetero-tetramers or homo-tetramers, allowing to investigate the function of these p63/p73 hetero-tetramers. Using these tools, we show that inhibition of TAp73β in squamous cell carcinomas is due to promoter squelching and not direct interaction.
Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2018
Marcel Tuppi; Sebastian Kehrloesser; Daniel Coutandin; Valerio Rossi; Laura M. Luh; Alexander Strubel; Katharina Hötte; Meike Hoffmeister; Birgit Schäfer; Tiago De Oliveira; Florian R. Greten; Ernst H. K. Stelzer; Stefan Knapp; Massimo De Felici; Christian Behrends; Francesca Gioia Klinger; Volker Dötsch
The survival rate of cancer patients is steadily increasing, owing to more efficient therapies. Understanding the molecular mechanisms of chemotherapy-induced premature ovarian insufficiency (POI) could identify targets for prevention of POI. Loss of the primordial follicle reserve is the most important cause of POI, with the p53 family member p63 being responsible for DNA-damage-induced apoptosis of resting oocytes. Here, we provide the first detailed mechanistic insight into the activation of p63, a process that requires phosphorylation by both the priming kinase CHK2 and the executioner kinase CK1 in mouse primordial follicles. We further describe the structural changes induced by phosphorylation that enable p63 to adopt its active tetrameric conformation and demonstrate that previously discussed phosphorylation by c-Abl is not involved in this process. Inhibition of CK1 rescues primary oocytes from doxorubicin and cisplatin-induced apoptosis, thus uncovering a new target for the development of fertoprotective therapies.p63 activation in response to DNA damage leads to oocyte death and loss of fertility in women receiving chemotherapy. Activation requires sequential phosphorylation by CHK2 and CK1 kinases, and inhibition of these kinases rescues oocytes from apoptosis induced by chemotherapy.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010
Daniel Coutandin; Horng Der Ou; Frank Löhr; Volker Dötsch
One of the basic principles that nature uses in evolution is to recycle successful concepts and create new functions by modifying existing units. This conservatism in evolution has resulted in an astonishingly high sequence identity of genes, even between evolutionarily distant species such as the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans and Homo sapiens. The recycling of successful concepts in conjunction with gene duplication events has also led to the existence of highly homologous proteins within the genome of many species. Often, these homologous proteins show similar, yet distinct functions that, in combination with their individual tissue distribution, define their specific physiological role. One prominent example is the p53 protein family, which consists of p53, p63, and p73. Recent advances in understanding the specific biological functions of these members have shed some light onto the evolution of this crucial protein family, from a germ line-specific quality-control factor to a somatic tumor suppressor. Furthermore, structures of the oligomerization domains of the mammalian paralogs, p53 and p73, and invertebrate orthologs, CEP-1 and DMP53, have delineated evolutionary changes and revealed that the oligomerization domain of p53 lacks additional stabilizing structural elements present in all other p53 family members. This suggests that p53 is the most recent evolutionary member of this protein family and predicts a mechanism for p53 activation.
Cell Cycle | 2011
Gregor B. Deutsch; Elisabeth M. Zielonka; Daniel Coutandin; Volker Dötsch