Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Derk D. Binns is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Derk D. Binns.


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

The lipodystrophy protein seipin is found at endoplasmic reticulum lipid droplet junctions and is important for droplet morphology

Kimberly M. Szymanski; Derk D. Binns; René Bartz; Nick V. Grishin; Wei Ping Li; Anil K. Agarwal; Abhimanyu Garg; Richard G. W. Anderson; Joel M. Goodman

Lipodystrophy is a disorder characterized by a loss of adipose tissue often accompanied by severe hypertriglyceridemia, insulin resistance, diabetes, and fatty liver. It can be inherited or acquired. The most severe inherited form is Berardinelli-Seip Congenital Lipodystrophy Type 2, associated with mutations in the BSCL2 gene. BSCL2 encodes seipin, the function of which has been entirely unknown. We now report the identification of yeast BSCL2/seipin through a screen to detect genes important for lipid droplet morphology. The absence of yeast seipin results in irregular lipid droplets often clustered alongside proliferated endoplasmic reticulum (ER); giant lipid droplets are also seen. Many small irregular lipid droplets are also apparent in fibroblasts from a BSCL2 patient. Human seipin can functionally replace yeast seipin, but a missense mutation in human seipin that causes lipodystrophy, or corresponding mutations in the yeast gene, render them unable to complement. Yeast seipin is localized in the ER, where it forms puncta. Almost all lipid droplets appear to be on the ER, and seipin is found at these junctions. Therefore, we hypothesize that seipin is important for droplet maintenance and perhaps assembly. In addition to detecting seipin, the screen identified 58 other genes whose deletions cause aberrant lipid droplets, including 2 genes encoding proteins known to activate lipin, a lipodystrophy locus in mice, and 16 other genes that are involved in endosomal–lysosomal trafficking. The genes identified in our screen should be of value in understanding the pathway of lipid droplet biogenesis and maintenance and the cause of some lipodystrophies.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2006

An intimate collaboration between peroxisomes and lipid bodies

Derk D. Binns; Tom Januszewski; Yue Chen; Justin Hill; Vladislav S. Markin; Yingming Zhao; Christopher Gilpin; Kent D. Chapman; Richard G. W. Anderson; Joel M. Goodman

Although peroxisomes oxidize lipids, the metabolism of lipid bodies and peroxisomes is thought to be largely uncoupled from one another. In this study, using oleic acid–cultured Saccharomyces cerevisiae as a model system, we provide evidence that lipid bodies and peroxisomes have a close physiological relationship. Peroxisomes adhere stably to lipid bodies, and they can even extend processes into lipid body cores. Biochemical experiments and proteomic analysis of the purified lipid bodies suggest that these processes are limited to enzymes of fatty acid β oxidation. Peroxisomes that are unable to oxidize fatty acids promote novel structures within lipid bodies (“gnarls”), which may be organized arrays of accumulated free fatty acids. However, gnarls are suppressed, and fatty acids are not accumulated in the absence of peroxisomal membranes. Our results suggest that the extensive physical contact between peroxisomes and lipid bodies promotes the coupling of lipolysis within lipid bodies with peroxisomal fatty acid oxidation.


Current Biology | 2002

Dynamin2 and Cortactin Regulate Actin Assembly and Filament Organization

Dorothy A. Schafer; Scott A. Weed; Derk D. Binns; Andrei V. Karginov; J. Thomas Parsons; John A. Cooper

The GTPase dynamin is required for endocytic vesicle formation. Dynamin has also been implicated in regulating the actin cytoskeleton, but the mechanism by which it does so is unclear. Through interactions via its proline-rich domain (PRD), dynamin binds several proteins, including cortactin, profilin, syndapin, and murine Abp1, that regulate the actin cytoskeleton. We investigated the interaction of dynamin2 and cortactin in regulating actin assembly in vivo and in vitro. When expressed in cultured cells, a dynamin2 mutant with decreased affinity for GTP decreased actin dynamics within the cortical actin network. Expressed mutants of cortactin that have decreased binding of Arp2/3 complex or dynamin2 also decreased actin dynamics. Dynamin2 influenced actin nucleation by purified Arp2/3 complex and cortactin in vitro in a biphasic manner. Low concentrations of dynamin2 enhanced actin nucleation by Arp2/3 complex and cortactin, and high concentrations were inhibitory. Dynamin2 promoted the association of actin filaments nucleated by Arp2/3 complex and cortactin with phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PIP2)-containing lipid vesicles. GTP hydrolysis altered the organization of the filaments and the lipid vesicles. We conclude that dynamin2, through an interaction with cortactin, regulates actin assembly and actin filament organization at membranes.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2011

The yeast lipin orthologue Pah1p is important for biogenesis of lipid droplets

Oludotun Adeyo; Patrick J. Horn; SungKyung Lee; Derk D. Binns; Anita S. Chandrahas; Kent D. Chapman; Joel M. Goodman

Pah1p promotes lipid droplet assembly independent of its role in triacylglycerol synthesis.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2001

A novel family of phosphatidylinositol 4-kinases conserved from yeast to humans.

Barbara Barylko; Stefan H. Gerber; Derk D. Binns; Nikolai Grichine; Mikhail Khvotchev; Thomas C. Südhof; Joseph P. Albanesi

Phosphatidylinositolpolyphosphates (PIPs) are centrally involved in many biological processes, ranging from cell growth and organization of the actin cytoskeleton to endo- and exocytosis. Phosphorylation of phosphatidylinositol at the D-4 position, an essential step in the biosynthesis of PIPs, appears to be catalyzed by two biochemically distinct enzymes. However, only one of these two enzymes has been molecularly characterized. We now describe a novel class of phosphatidylinositol 4-kinases that probably corresponds to the missing element in phosphatidylinositol metabolism. These kinases are highly conserved evolutionarily, but unrelated to previously characterized phosphatidylinositol kinases, and thus represent the founding members of a new family. The novel phosphatidylinositol 4-kinases, which are widely expressed in cells, only phosphorylate phosphatidylinositol, are potently inhibited by adenosine, but are insensitive to wortmannin or phenylarsine oxide. Although they lack an obvious transmembrane domain, they are strongly attached to membranes by palmitoylation. Our data suggest that independent pathways for phosphatidylinositol 4-phosphate synthesis emerged during evolution, possibly to allow tight temporal and spatial control over the production of this key signaling molecule.


Biochemistry | 2010

Seipin Is a Discrete Homooligomer

Derk D. Binns; SungKyung Lee; Christopher L. Hilton; Qiu Xing Jiang; Joel M. Goodman

Seipin is a transmembrane protein that resides in the endoplasmic reticulum and concentrates at junctions between the ER and cytosolic lipid droplets. Mutations in the human seipin gene, including the missense mutation A212P, lead to congenital generalized lipodystrophy (CGL), characterized by the lack of normal adipose tissue and accumulation of fat in liver and muscles. In both yeast and CGL patient fibroblasts, seipin is required for normal lipid droplet morphology; in its absence droplets appear to bud abnormally from the ER. Here we report the first purification and physical characterization of seipin. Yeast seipin is in a large discrete protein complex. Affinity purification demonstrated that seipin is the main if not exclusive protein in the complex. Detergent sucrose gradients in H(2)O, and D(2)O and gel filtration were used to determine the size of the seipin complex and account for detergent binding. Both seipin-myc13 (seipin fused to 13 tandem copies of the myc epitope) expressed from the endogenous promoter and overexpressed seipin-mCherry form ∼500 kDa proteins consisting of about 9 copies of seipin. The yeast orthologue of the human A212P allele forms only smaller complexes and is unstable; we hypothesize that this accounts for its null phenotype in humans. Seipin appears as a toroid by negative staining electron microscopy. We speculate that seipin plays at least a structural role in organizing droplets or in communication between droplets and ER.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2002

Structure of Human Nicotinamide/Nicotinic Acid Mononucleotide Adenylyltransferase BASIS FOR THE DUAL SUBSTRATE SPECIFICITY AND ACTIVATION OF THE ONCOLYTIC AGENT TIAZOFURIN

Tianjun Zhou; Oleg V. Kurnasov; Diana R. Tomchick; Derk D. Binns; Nick V. Grishin; Victor E. Marquez; Andrei L. Osterman; Hong Zhang

Nicotinamide/nicotinate mononucleotide (NMN/ NaMN)adenylyltransferase (NMNAT) is an indispensable enzyme in the biosynthesis of NAD+ and NADP+. Human NMNAT displays unique dual substrate specificity toward both NMN and NaMN, thus flexible in participating in both de novo and salvage pathways of NAD synthesis. Human NMNAT also catalyzes the rate-limiting step of the metabolic conversion of the anticancer agent tiazofurin to its active form tiazofurin adenine dinucleotide (TAD). The tiazofurin resistance is mainly associated with the low NMNAT activity in the cell. We have solved the crystal structures of human NMNAT in complex with NAD, deamido-NAD, and a non-hydrolyzable TAD analogue β-CH2-TAD. These complex structures delineate the broad substrate specificity of the enzyme toward both NMN and NaMN and reveal the structural mechanism for adenylation of tiazofurin nucleotide. The crystal structure of human NMNAT also shows that it forms a barrel-like hexamer with the predicted nuclear localization signal sequence located on the outside surface of the barrel, supporting its functional role of interacting with the nuclear transporting proteins. The results from the analytical ultracentrifugation studies are consistent with the formation of a hexamer in solution under certain conditions.


Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2015

Seipin performs dissectible functions in promoting lipid droplet biogenesis and regulating droplet morphology

Bethany R. Cartwright; Derk D. Binns; Christopher L. Hilton; Sungwon Han; Qiang Gao; Joel M. Goodman

Loss-of-function mutations in seipin cause severe lipodystrophy, yet seipins function in incompletely understood. Seipin is shown here to be important specifically for initiation of droplet formation, and a deletion mutant allows dissection of this function from maintenance of droplet morphology and vectorial droplet budding.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009

Palmitoylation Controls the Catalytic Activity and Subcellular Distribution of Phosphatidylinositol 4-Kinase IIα

Barbara Barylko; Yuntao S. Mao; Paweł Włodarski; Gwanghyun Jung; Derk D. Binns; Hui Qiao Sun; Helen L. Yin; Joseph P. Albanesi

Phosphatidylinositol 4-kinases play essential roles in cell signaling and membrane trafficking. They are divided into type II and III families, which have distinct structural and enzymatic properties and are essentially unrelated in sequence. Mammalian cells express two type II isoforms, phosphatidylinositol 4-kinase IIα (PI4KIIα) and IIβ (PI4KIIβ). Nearly all of PI4KIIα, and about half of PI4KIIβ, associates integrally with membranes, requiring detergent for solubilization. This tight membrane association is because of palmitoylation of a cysteine-rich motif, CCPCC, located within the catalytic domains of both type II isoforms. Deletion of this motif from PI4KIIα converts the kinase from an integral to a tightly bound peripheral membrane protein and abrogates its catalytic activity ( Barylko, B., Gerber, S. H., Binns, D. D., Grichine, N., Khvotchev, M., Sudhof, T. C., and Albanesi, J. P. (2001) J. Biol. Chem. 276, 7705-7708 ). Here we identify the first two cysteines in the CCPCC motif as the principal sites of palmitoylation under basal conditions, and we demonstrate the importance of the central proline for enzymatic activity, although not for membrane binding. We further show that palmitoylation is critical for targeting PI4KIIα to the trans-Golgi network and for enhancement of its association with low buoyant density membrane fractions, commonly termed lipid rafts. Replacement of the four cysteines in CCPCC with a hydrophobic residue, phenylalanine, substantially restores catalytic activity of PI4KIIα in vitro and in cells without restoring integral membrane binding. Although this FFPFF mutant displays a perinuclear distribution, it does not strongly co-localize with wild-type PI4KIIα and associates more weakly with lipid rafts.


Journal of Protein Chemistry | 1999

Correlation Between Self-Association Modes and GTPase Activation of Dynamin

Derk D. Binns; Barbara Barylko; Nikolai Grichine; Mark A. L. Atkinson; Michael K. Helms; David M. Jameson; John F. Eccleston; Joseph P. Albanesi

The GTPase activity of dynamin is obligatorily coupled, by a mechanism yet unknown, to the internalization of clathrin-coated endocytic vesicles. Dynamin oligomerizes in vitro and in vivo and both its mechanical and enzymatic activities appear to be mediated by this self-assembly. In this study we demonstrate that dynamin is characterized by a tetramer/monomer equilibrium with an equilibrium constant of 1.67 × 1017 M−3. Stopped-flow fluorescence experiments show that the association rate constant for 2′(3′)-O-N-methylanthraniloyl (mant)GTP is 7.0 × 10−5 M−1 s−1 and the dissociation rate constant is 2.1 s−1, whereas the dissociation rate constant for mantdeoxyGDP is 93 s−1. We also demonstrate the cooperativity of dynamin binding and GTPase activation on a microtubule lattice. Our results indicate that dynamin self-association is not a sufficient condition for the expression of maximal GTPase activity, which suggests that dynamin molecules must be in the proper conformation or orientation if they are to form an active oligomer.

Collaboration


Dive into the Derk D. Binns's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Joseph P. Albanesi

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Barbara Barylko

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Joel M. Goodman

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

David M. Jameson

University of Texas System

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Nick V. Grishin

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Helen L. Yin

University of Texas System

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Nikolai Grichine

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Paweł Włodarski

Medical University of Warsaw

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Christopher L. Hilton

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Diana R. Tomchick

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge