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Dive into the research topics where Devrim Gozuacik is active.

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Featured researches published by Devrim Gozuacik.


Oncogene | 2004

Autophagy as a cell death and tumor suppressor mechanism.

Devrim Gozuacik; Adi Kimchi

Autophagy is characterized by sequestration of bulk cytoplasm and organelles in double or multimembrane autophagic vesicles, and their delivery to and subsequent degradation by the cells own lysosomal system. Autophagy has multiple physiological functions in multicellular organisms, including protein degradation and organelle turnover. Genes and proteins that constitute the basic machinery of the autophagic process were first identified in the yeast system and some of their mammalian orthologues have been characterized as well. Increasing lines of evidence indicate that these molecular mechanisms may be recruited by an alternative, caspase-independent form of programmed cell death, named autophagic type II cell death. In some settings, autophagy and apoptosis seem to be interconnected positively or negatively, introducing the concept of ‘molecular switches’ between them. Additionally, mitochondria may be central organelles integrating the two types of cell death. Malignant transformation is frequently associated with suppression of autophagy. The recent implication of tumor suppressors like Beclin 1, DAP-kinase and PTEN in autophagic pathways indicates a causative role for autophagy deficiencies in cancer formation. Autophagic cell death induction by some anticancer agents underlines the potential utility of its induction as a new cancer treatment modality.


Current Topics in Developmental Biology | 2007

Autophagy and Cell Death

Devrim Gozuacik; Adi Kimchi

Autophagy is a physiological and evolutionarily conserved phenomenon maintaining homeostatic functions like protein degradation and organelle turnover. It is rapidly upregulated under conditions leading to cellular stress, such as nutrient or growth factor deprivation, providing an alternative source of intracellular building blocks and substrates for energy generation to enable continuous cell survival. Yet accumulating data provide evidence that the autophagic machinery can be also recruited to kill cells under certain conditions generating a caspase-independent form of programed cell death (PCD), named autophagic cell death. Due to increasing interest in nonapoptotic PCD forms and the development of mammalian genetic tools to study autophagy, autophagic cell death has achieved major prominence, and is recognized now as a legitimate alternative death pathway to apoptosis. This chapter aims at summarizing the recent data in the field of autophagy signaling and autophagic cell death.


Oncogene | 2003

Hepatitis B virus-related insertional mutagenesis occurs frequently in human liver cancers and recurrently targets human telomerase gene

Patrizia Paterlini-Bréchot; Kenichi Saigo; Yoshiki Murakami; Mounia Chami; Devrim Gozuacik; Claude Mugnier; David Lagorce; Christian Bréchot

Integration of Hepatitis B Virus (HBV) DNA into liver cell DNA has been well established, but its implication in liver carcinogenesis is still being debated. In particular, insertion of the viral genome into cellular genes has been viewed as a rare event. By using HBV-Alu PCR, we have now isolated, from nine hepatocellular carcinomas, nine HBV-DNA integration sites showing that the viral genome mutates key regulatory cellular genes: neurotropic tyrosin receptor kinase 2 (NTRK2) gene, IL-1R-associated kinase 2 (IRAK2) gene, p42 mitogen-activated protein kinase 1 (p42MAPK1) gene, inositol 1,4,5-triphosphate receptor type 2 (IP3R2) gene, inositol 1,4,5-triphosphate receptor (IP3R) type 1 (IP3R1) gene, alpha 2,3 sialyltransferase (ST3GAL VI or SITA) gene, thyroid hormone uncoupling protein (TRUP) gene, EMX2-like gene, and human telomerase reverse transcriptase (hTERT) gene. This result brings to 15 the total number of genes targeted by HBV in a study of 22 human liver cancers. Overall, we found that both the inositol 1,4,5-triphosphate receptor gene and the telomerase gene were targeted by HBV in two different tumors. Thus, HBV frequently targets cellular genes involved in cell signalling and some of them may be preferential targets of the viral integration.


Cell Death & Differentiation | 2008

DAP-kinase is a mediator of endoplasmic reticulum stress-induced caspase activation and autophagic cell death

Devrim Gozuacik; Shani Bialik; Tal Raveh; Geraldine Mitou; Galit Shohat; H. Sabanay; Noboru Mizushima; Tamotsu Yoshimori; Adi Kimchi

Damage to endoplasmic reticulum (ER) homeostasis that cannot be corrected by the unfolded protein response activates cell death. Here, we identified death-associated protein kinase (DAPk) as an important component in the ER stress-induced cell death pathway. DAPk−/− mice are protected from kidney damage caused by injection of the ER stress-inducer tunicamycin. Likewise, the cell death response to ER stress-inducers is reduced in DAPk−/− primary fibroblasts. Both caspase activation and autophagy induction, events that are activated by ER stress and precede cell death, are significantly attenuated in the DAPk null cells. Notably, in this cellular setting, autophagy serves as a second cell killing mechanism that acts in concert with apoptosis, as the depletion of Atg5 or Beclin1 from fibroblasts significantly protected from ER stress-induced death when combined with caspase-3 depletion. We further show that ER stress promotes the catalytic activity of DAPk by causing dephosphorylation of an inhibitory autophosphorylation on Ser308 by a PP2A-like phosphatase. Thus, DAPk constitutes a critical integration point in ER stress signaling, transmitting these signals into two distinct directions, caspase activation and autophagy, leading to cell death.


Autophagy | 2006

DAPk Protein Family and Cancer

Devrim Gozuacik; Adi Kimchi

The Death-Associated Protein kinase (DAPk) family contains three closely related serine/threonine kinases, named DAPk, ZIPk and DRP-1, which display a high degree of homology in their catalytic domains. The recent discovery of protein-protein interactions and kinase/substrate relationships among these family members suggests that the three kinases may form multi-protein complexes capable of transmitting apoptotic or autophagic cell death signals in response to various cellular stresses including the misregulated expression of oncogenes in pre-malignant cells. Several lines of evidence indicate that the most studied member of the family, DAPk, has tumor and metastasis suppressor properties. Here we present an overview of the data connecting the DAPk family of proteins to cell death and malignant transformation and discuss the possible involvement of the autophagic cell death-inducing capacity of DAPk in its tumor suppressor activity.


Autophagy | 2012

miR-376b controls starvation and mTOR inhibition-related autophagy by targeting ATG4C and BECN1

Gozde Korkmaz; Carlos le Sage; Kumsal Ayse Tekirdag; Reuven Agami; Devrim Gozuacik

Macroautophagy (autophagy) is the major intracellular degradation pathway for long-lived proteins and organelles. It helps the cell to survive a spectrum of stressful conditions including starvation, growth factor deprivation and misfolded protein accumulation. Moreover, abnormalities of autophagy play a role in major health problems including cancer and neurodegenerative diseases. Yet, mechanisms controlling autophagic activity are not fully understood. Here, we describe hsa-miR-376b (miR-376b) as a new microRNA (miRNA) regulating autophagy. We showed that miR-376b expression attenuated starvation- and rapamycin-induced autophagy in MCF-7 and Huh-7 cells. We discovered autophagy proteins ATG4C and BECN1 (Beclin 1) as cellular targets of miR-376b. Indeed, upon miRNA overexpression, both mRNA and protein levels of ATG4C and BECN1 were decreased. miR-376b target sequences were present in the 3′ UTR of ATG4C and BECN1 mRNAs and introduction of mutations abolished their miR-376b responsiveness. Antagomir-mediated inactivation of the endogenous miR-376b led to an increase in ATG4C and BECN1 levels. Therefore, miR-376b controls autophagy by directly regulating intracellular levels of two key autophagy proteins, ATG4C and BECN1.


The EMBO Journal | 2005

The dependence receptor UNC5H2 mediates apoptosis through DAP-kinase

Fabien Llambi; Filipe Calheiros Lourenço; Devrim Gozuacik; Catherine Guix; Laurent Pays; Gabriel del Rio; Adi Kimchi; Patrick Mehlen

Netrin‐1 receptors UNC5H (UNC5H1–4) were originally proposed to mediate the chemorepulsive activity of netrin‐1 during axonal guidance processes. However, UNC5H receptors were more recently described as dependence receptors and, as such, able to trigger apoptosis in the absence of netrin‐1. They were also proposed as putative tumor suppressors. Here, we show that UNC5H2 physically interacts with the serine/threonine kinase death‐associated protein kinase (DAP‐kinase) both in cell culture and in embryonic mouse brains. This interaction occurs in part through the respective death domains of UNC5H2 and DAP‐kinase. Moreover, part of UNC5H2 proapoptotic activity occurs through this interaction because UNC5H2‐induced cell death is partly impaired in the presence of dominant‐negative mutants of DAP‐kinase or in DAP‐kinase mutant murine embryonic fibroblast cells. In the absence of netrin‐1, UNC5H2 reduces DAP‐kinase autophosphorylation on Ser308 and increases the catalytic activity of the kinase while netrin‐1 blocks UNC5H2‐dependent DAP‐kinase activation. Thus, the pair netrin‐1/UNC5H2 may regulate cell fate by controlling the proapoptotic kinase activity of DAP‐kinase.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2004

Death-Associated Protein Kinase Phosphorylates ZIP Kinase, Forming a Unique Kinase Hierarchy To Activate Its Cell Death Functions

Gidi Shani; Lea Marash; Devrim Gozuacik; Shani Bialik; Lior Teitelbaum; Galit Shohat; Adi Kimchi

ABSTRACT The death-associated protein (DAP) kinase family includes three protein kinases, DAP kinase, DAP kinase-related protein 1, and ZIP kinase, which display 80% amino acid identity within their catalytic domains and are functionally linked to common subcellular changes occurring during cell death, such as the process of membrane blebbing. Here we show physical and functional cross talk between DAP kinase and ZIP kinase. The two kinases display strong synergistic effects on cell death when coexpressed and physically bind each other via their catalytic domains. Furthermore, DAP kinase phosphorylates ZIP kinase at six specific sites within its extracatalytic C-terminal domain. ZIP kinase localizes to both the nucleus and the cytoplasm and fractionates as monomeric and trimeric forms. Significantly, modification of the DAP kinase phosphorylation sites influences both the localization and oligomerization status of ZIP kinase. A mutant ZIP kinase construct, in which the six serine/threonine residues were mutated to aspartic acid to mimic the phosphorylated state, was found predominantly in the cytoplasm as a trimer and possessed greater cell death-inducing potency. This suggests that DAP kinase and ZIP kinase function in a biochemical pathway in which DAP kinase activates the cellular function of ZIP kinase through phosphorylation, leading to amplification of death-promoting signals.


Autophagy | 2013

MIR181A regulates starvation- and rapamycin-induced autophagy through targeting of ATG5

Kumsal Ayse Tekirdag; Gozde Korkmaz; Deniz Gulfem Ozturk; Reuven Agami; Devrim Gozuacik

Macroautophagy (autophagy herein) is a cellular catabolic mechanism activated in response to stress conditions including starvation, hypoxia and misfolded protein accumulation. Abnormalities in autophagy were associated with pathologies including cancer and neurodegenerative diseases. Hence, elucidation of the signaling pathways controlling autophagy is of utmost importance. Recently we and others described microRNAs (miRNAs) as novel and potent modulators of the autophagic activity. Here, we describe MIR181A (hsa-miR-181a-1) as a new autophagy-regulating miRNA. We showed that overexpression of MIR181A resulted in the attenuation of starvation- and rapamycin-induced autophagy in MCF-7, Huh-7 and K562 cells. Moreover, antagomir-mediated inactivation of endogenous miRNA activity stimulated autophagy. We identified ATG5 as an MIR181A target. Indeed, ATG5 cellular levels were decreased in cells upon MIR181A overexpression and increased following the introduction of antagomirs. More importantly, overexpression of ATG5 from a miRNA-insensitive cDNA construct rescued autophagic activity in the presence of MIR181A. We also showed that the ATG5 3′ UTR contained functional MIR181A responsive sequences sensitive to point mutations. Therefore, MIR181A is a novel and important regulator of autophagy and ATG5 is a rate-limiting miRNA target in this effect.


Oncogene | 2001

Identification of human cancer-related genes by naturally occurring Hepatitis B Virus DNA tagging.

Devrim Gozuacik; Yoshiki Murakami; Kenichi Saigo; Mounia Chami; Claude Mugnier; David Lagorce; Takeshi Okanoue; Tetsuro Urashima; Christian Bréchot; Patrizia Paterlini-Bréchot

Proviral tagging has been used in animals as a powerful tool for cancer genetics. We show that a similar approach is possible in patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) infected by Hepatitis B Virus (HBV), a human pararetrovirus which may act by insertional mutagenesis. In this work, the HBV genome is used as a probe to identify cancer-related genes. By using HBV-Alu-PCR, we obtained 21 HBV/cellular DNA junctions from 18 different patients. In six of 21, we found the HBV DNA integrated into a cellular gene: (1) Sarco/Endoplasmic Reticulum Calcium ATPase1 Gene; (2) Thyroid Hormone Receptor Associated Protein 150 alpha Gene; (3) Human Telomerase Reverse Transcriptase Gene; (4) Minichromosome Maintenance Protein (MCM)-Related Gene; (5) FR7, a new gene expressed in human liver and cancer tissues; and (6) Nuclear Matrix Protein p84 Gene. Seven junctions contained unique cellular sequences. In the remaining eight, the HBV DNA was next to repetitive sequences, five of them of LINE1 type. The cellular genes targeted by HBV are key regulators of cell proliferation and viability. Our results show that studies on HBV-related HCCs allow to identify cellular genes involved in cancer. We therefore propose this approach as a valuable tool for functional cancer genomic studies in humans.

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Gozde Korkmaz

Netherlands Cancer Institute

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Adi Kimchi

Weizmann Institute of Science

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