Danton H. O’Day
University of Toronto
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Featured researches published by Danton H. O’Day.
Forensic Science International | 2003
Susey Kang; Nishma Kassam; Mona L. Gauthier; Danton H. O’Day
Estimation of post-mortem interval (PMI) remains an elusive issue in forensic investigations. In this study, we examined the possible use of calmodulin (CaM) binding proteins (CaMBPs) as indicators of PMI. Whole CaMBP populations from homogenized rat lung and rat skeletal muscle removed at 0, 24, 48 and 96 h post-mortem at 21 degrees C were detected by the calmodulin binding overlay technique (CaMBOT) using 35S-VU1-CaM and visualized by autoradiography. CaMBOT showed that, in both tissues, the CaMBP population remained relatively stable for up to 96 h post-mortem with the exception of a single approximately 200 kDa CaMBP that increased in 24 h post-mortem samples then showed decreasing amounts at subsequent times. Immunoblot analysis of the specific CaMBPs, Ca(2+)/CaM-dependent kinase II (CaMKII), calcineurin A (CNA), myristoylated alanine-rich C-kinase substrate (MARCKS) and inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) were done on lung tissue samples. CaMKII levels did not change appreciably over the 96 h PMI examined. In contrast to iNOS levels, which varied from sample to sample, CNA and MARCKS showed predictable patterns of change: the level of MARCKS decreased steadily in the 0-96 h post-mortem lung samples while CNA underwent a shift in mobility on SDS-PAGE by 24 h post-mortem before slowly decreasing in amount. The stability of CaMKII levels over 96 h was also seen in skeletal muscle tissue while CNA showed variable levels at 0, 48 and 96 h with the presence of the rapidly migrating band at 24 h. These patterns of change in CaMBPs provide some insight into the post-mortem changes in calmodulin-mediated signaling components in lung and skeletal muscle and support the further study of CNA and CaMKII as potential markers for estimating short- and long-term PMIs.
Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2003
Mona L. Gauthier; Cheryl Torretto; John Ly; Valerie Francescutti; Danton H. O’Day
Previous work has shown that phorbol esters modulate chemotaxis. Here, we demonstrate that PKC activation via phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA) treatment of MDA-MB-231 cells inhibits EGF-induced cell spreading, the initial event of motility and chemotaxis. Of five PKC isoforms (alpha,iota,lambda,delta,and epsilon) identified in this cell line, PMA treatment only induced PKCalpha translocation from the cytosol to the membrane, an event that correlated with the development of the rounded morphology. Cell recovery was linked to PKCalpha downregulation in part via the proteasome pathway since treatment with MG101 in the presence of PMA did not lead to PKCalpha degradation and cell recovery. Co-immunoprecipitation and immunolocalization demonstrated that EGF co-localized with PKCalpha and EGFR, however, PMA did not abrogate EGFR transactivation. This work suggests that PKCalpha is the primary target of PMA acting as a transient negative regulator of cell spreading and motility in MDA-MB-231 breast cancer cells.
Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2009
Robert J. Huber; Danton H. O’Day
Dictyostelium discoideum possesses more EGF-like (EGFL) domains than any other sequenced eukaryote. Here we show that a synthetic EGFL peptide (DdEGFL1) based upon an amino acid sequence from a cysteine-rich Dictyostelium protein, functions extracellularly to enhance random cell motility and cAMP-mediated chemotaxis in Dictyostelium by 625% and 85%, respectively, in strain NC4 and by 620% and 80% in strain AX3. Quinacrine inhibited peptide-enhanced random motility but not chemotaxis in strain AX3 providing evidence that PLA2 is the predominant regulator of this process. While LY294002 alone had no significant effect on either event, in combination with quinacrine it dramatically inhibited both processes suggesting that both PI3K and PLA2-mediated signaling are required for EGFL peptide-enhanced cell movement. DdEGFL1 also sustained the threonine phosphorylation of a 210kDa protein that is dephosphorylated during Dictyostelium starvation. Taken together, these results suggest an important role for certain EGFL peptides in Dictyostelium cell movement.
Histochemistry and Cell Biology | 2011
Andrew Catalano; Danton H. O’Day
The calmodulin-binding protein nucleomorphin isoform NumA1 is a nuclear number regulator in Dictyostelium that localizes to intra-nuclear patches adjacent to the nuclear envelope and to a lesser extent the nucleoplasm. Earlier studies have shown similar patches to be nucleoli but only three nucleolar proteins have been identified in Dictyostelium. Here, actinomycin-D treatment caused the loss of NumA1 localization, while calcium and calmodulin antagonists had no effect. In keeping with a nucleolar function, NumA1 moved out of the presumptive nucleoli during mitosis redistributing to areas within the nucleus, the spindle fibers, and centrosomal region before re-accumulating in the presumptive nucleoli at telophase. Together, these data verify NumA1 as a true nucleolar protein. Prior to this study, the dynamics of specific nucleolar proteins had not been determined during mitosis in Dictyostelium. FITC-conjugated peptides equivalent to presumptive nuclear localization signals within NumA1 localized to nucleoli indicating that they also act as nucleolar localization signals. To our knowledge, these represent the first precisely defined nucleolar localization signals as well as the first nuclear/nucleolar localization signals identified in Dictyostelium. Together, these results reveal that NumA1 is a true nucleolar protein and the only nucleolar calmodulin-binding protein identified in Dictyostelium. The possible use of nuclear/nucleolar localization signal-mediated drug targeting to nucleoli is discussed.
Journal of Alzheimer's Disease | 2015
Danton H. O’Day; Kristeen Eshak; Michael A. Myre
Abstract The small, calcium-sensor protein, calmodulin, is ubiquitously expressed and central to cell function in all cell types. Here the literature linking calmodulin to Alzheimer’s disease is reviewed. Several experimentally-verified calmodulin-binding proteins are involved in the formation of amyloid-β plaques including amyloid-β protein precursor, β-secretase, presenilin-1, and ADAM10. Many others possess potential calmodulin-binding domains that remain to be verified. Three calmodulin binding proteins are associated with the formation of neurofibrillary tangles: two kinases (CaMKII, CDK5) and one protein phosphatase (PP2B or calcineurin). Many of the genes recently identified by genome wide association studies and other studies encode proteins that contain putative calmodulin-binding domains but only a couple (e.g., APOE, BIN1) have been experimentally confirmed as calmodulin binding proteins. At least two receptors involved in calcium metabolism and linked to Alzheimer’s disease (mAchR; NMDAR) have also been identified as calmodulin-binding proteins. In addition to this, many proteins that are involved in other cellular events intimately associated with Alzheimer’s disease including calcium channel function, cholesterol metabolism, neuroinflammation, endocytosis, cell cycle events, and apoptosis have been tentatively or experimentally verified as calmodulin binding proteins. The use of calmodulin as a potential biomarker and as a therapeutic target is discussed.
Histochemistry and Cell Biology | 2011
Andrew Catalano; Yekaterina Poloz; Danton H. O’Day
Nucleomorphin (NumA1) is a nucleolar/nucleoplasmic protein linked to cell cycle in Dictyostelium. It interacts with puromycin-sensitive aminopeptidase A (PsaA) which in other organisms is a Zn2+-metallopeptidase thought to be involved in cell cycle progression and is involved in several human diseases. Here, we have shown that Dictyostelium PsaA contains domains characteristic of the M1 family of Zn2+-metallopeptidases: a GAMEN motif and a Zn2+-binding domain. PsaA colocalized with NumA1 in the nucleoplasm in vegetative cells and was also present to a lesser extent in the cytoplasm. The same localization pattern was observed in cells from slugs, however, in fruiting bodies PsaA was only detected in spore nuclei. During mitosis PsaA redistributed mainly throughout the cytoplasm. It possesses a functional nuclear localization signal (680RKRF683) necessary for nuclear entry. To our knowledge, this is the first nuclear localization signal identified in a Psa from any organism. Treatment with Ca2+ chelators or calmodulin antagonists indicated that neither Ca2+ nor calmodulin is involved in PsaA localization. These results are interpreted in terms of the inter-relationship between NumA1 and PsaA in cell function in Dictyostelium.
Peptides | 2012
Ina Nikolaeva; Robert J. Huber; Danton H. O’Day
A synthetic EGF-like (EGFL) peptide (DdEGFL1), equivalent to the first EGFL domain in the extracellular matrix protein CyrA, has previously been shown to enhance random cell motility and cAMP-mediated chemotaxis in Dictyostelium discoideum. However the role of DdEGFL1 as a potential chemoattractant had not been addressed. In this study, a micropipette assay and an under-agarose migration assay showed that DdEGFL1 is not a chemoattractant for Dictyostelium cells. A radial bioassay was used to show that DdEGFL1 does not significantly enhance folate-mediated chemotaxis in contrast to its chemokinetic effect during chemotaxis toward cAMP. However, DdEGFL1 was able to rescue chemotaxis toward folate when the pathway was inhibited by pharmacological agents that inhibit known components of the signaling cascade (e.g. phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase, phospholipase A2, tyrosine kinases, and calmodulin). These data suggest that DdEGFL1 may activate a novel motility pathway that when coupled with folic acid receptor activation, can maintain the normal migratory response to folic acid in vegetative cells. Together, this data provides new insight into the function of EGFL repeats during Dictyostelium chemotaxis and the existence of a novel motility pathway regulated by EGFL peptides and/or repeats in this model organism.
Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences | 2012
Robert J. Huber; Danton H. O’Day
Matricellular proteins interact with the extracellular matrix (ECM) and modulate cellular processes by binding to cell surface receptors and initiating intracellular signal transduction. Their association with the ECM and the ability of some members of this protein family to regulate cell motility have opened up new avenues of research to investigate their functions in normal and diseased cells. In this review, we summarize the research on CyrA, an ECM calmodulin-binding protein in Dictyostelium. CyrA is proteolytically cleaved into smaller EGF-like (EGFL) repeat containing cleavage products during development. The first EGFL repeat of CyrA binds to the cell surface and activates a novel signalling pathway that modulates cell motility in this model organism. The similarity of CyrA to the most well-characterized matricellular proteins in mammals allows it to be designated as the first matricellular protein identified in Dictyostelium.
Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2012
Danton H. O’Day; Robert J. Huber; Andres Suarez
The existence of extracellular calmodulin (CaM) has had a long and controversial history. CaM is a ubiquitous calcium-binding protein that has been found in every eukaryotic cell system. Calcium-free apo-CaM and Ca(2+)/CaM exert their effects by binding to and regulating the activity of CaM-binding proteins (CaMBPs). Most of the research done to date on CaM and its CaMBPs has focused on their intracellular functions. The presence of extracellular CaM is well established in a number of plants where it functions in proliferation, cell wall regeneration, gene regulation and germination. While CaM has been detected extracellularly in several animal species, including frog, rat, rabbit and human, its extracellular localization and functions are less well established. In contrast the study of extracellular CaM in eukaryotic microbes remains to be done. Here we show that CaM is constitutively expressed and secreted throughout asexual development in Dictyostelium where the presence of extracellular CaM dose-dependently inhibits cell proliferation but increases cAMP mediated chemotaxis. During development, extracellular CaM localizes within the slime sheath where it coexists with at least one CaMBP, the matricellular CaM-binding protein CyrA. Coupled with previous research, this work provides direct evidence for the existence of extracellular CaM in the Dictyostelium and provides insight into its functions in this model amoebozoan.
Cell Division | 2013
Andrew Catalano; Danton H. O’Day
BackgroundDuring mitosis most nucleolar proteins redistribute to other locales providing an opportunity to study the relationship between nucleolar protein localization and function. Dictyostelium is a model organism for the study of several fundamental biological processes and human diseases but only two nucleolar proteins have been studied during mitosis: NumA1 and Snf12. Both of them are linked to the cell cycle. To acquire a better understanding of nucleolar protein localization and dynamics in Dictyostelium we studied the nucleolar localization of two additional proteins during mitosis: Snf12-linked forkhead-associated kinase A (FhkA), which is involved in the cell cycle, and Ca2+-binding protein 4a (CBP4a), which is a binding partner of NumA1.MethodsPolyclonal antibodies were produced in-house. Cells were fixed and probed with either anti-FhkA or anti-CBP4a in order to determine cellular localization during interphase and throughout the stages of mitosis. Colocalization with DAPI nuclear stain allowed us to determine the location of the nucleus and nucleolus while colocalization with anti-α-tubulin allowed us to determine the cell cycle stage.ResultsHere we verify two novel nucleolar proteins, Rad53 homologue FhkA which localized around the edge of the nucleolus and CBP4a which was detected throughout the entire nucleolus. Treatment with the Ca2+ chelator BAPTA (5 mM) showed that the nucleolar localization of CBP4a is Ca2+-dependent. In response to actinomycin D (0.05 mg/mL) CBP4a disappeared from the nucleolus while FhkA protruded from the nucleus, eventually pinching off as cytoplasmic circles. FhkA and CBP4a redistributed differently during mitosis. FhkA redistributed throughout the entire cell and at the nuclear envelope region from prometaphase through telophase. In contrast, during prometaphase CBP4a relocated to many large, discrete “CBP4a islands” throughout the nucleoplasm. Two larger “CBP4a islands” were also detected specifically at the metaphase plate region.ConclusionsFhkA and CBP4a represent the sixth and seventh nucleolar proteins that have been verified to date in Dictyostelium and the third and fourth studied during mitosis. The protein-specific distributions of all of these nucleolar proteins during interphase and mitosis provide unique insight into nucleolar protein dynamics in this model organism setting the stage for future work.