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Dive into the research topics where Eigen R. Peralta is active.

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Featured researches published by Eigen R. Peralta.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

Ceramide starves cells to death by downregulating nutrient transporter proteins

Garret G. Guenther; Eigen R. Peralta; Kimberly Romero Rosales; Susan Y. Wong; Leah J. Siskind; Aimee L. Edinger

Ceramide induces cell death in response to many stimuli. Its mechanism of action, however, is not completely understood. Ceramide induces autophagy in mammalian cells maintained in rich media and nutrient permease downregulation in yeast. These observations suggested to us that ceramide might kill mammalian cells by limiting cellular access to extracellular nutrients. Consistent with this proposal, physiologically relevant concentrations of ceramide produced a profound and specific downregulation of nutrient transporter proteins in mammalian cells. Blocking ceramide-induced nutrient transporter loss or supplementation with the cell-permeable nutrient, methyl pyruvate, reversed ceramide-dependent toxicity. Conversely, cells became more sensitive to ceramide when nutrient stress was increased by acutely limiting extracellular nutrients, inhibiting autophagy, or deleting AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK). Observations that ceramide can trigger either apoptosis or caspase-independent cell death may be explained by this model. We found that methyl pyruvate (MP) also protected cells from ceramide-induced, nonapoptotic death consistent with the idea that severe bioenergetic stress was responsible. Taken together, these studies suggest that the cellular metabolic state is an important arbiter of the cellular response to ceramide. In fact, increasing nutrient demand by incubating cells in high levels of growth factor sensitized cells to ceramide. On the other hand, gradually adapting cells to tolerate low levels of extracellular nutrients completely blocked ceramide-induced death. In sum, these results support a model where ceramide kills cells by inducing intracellular nutrient limitation subsequent to nutrient transporter downregulation.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010

Differential effects of TBC1D15 and mammalian Vps39 on Rab7 activation state, lysosomal morphology, and growth factor dependence.

Eigen R. Peralta; Brent C. Martin; Aimee L. Edinger

The small GTPase Rab7 promotes fusion events between late endosomes and lysosomes. Rab7 activity is regulated by extrinsic signals, most likely via effects on its guanine nucleotide exchange factor (GEF) or GTPase-activating protein (GAP). Based on their homology to the yeast proteins that regulate the Ypt7 GTP binding state, TBC1D15, and mammalian Vps39 (mVps39) have been suggested to function as the Rab7 GAP and GEF, respectively. We developed an effector pull-down assay to test this model. TBC1D15 functioned as a Rab7 GAP in cells, reducing Rab7 binding to its effector protein RILP, fragmenting the lysosome, and conferring resistance to growth factor withdrawal-induced cell death. In a cellular context, TBC1D15 GAP activity was selective for Rab7. TBC1D15 overexpression did not inhibit transferrin internalization or recycling, Rab7-independent processes that require Rab4, Rab5, and Rab11 activation. TBC1D15 was thus renamed Rab7-GAP. Contrary to expectations for a Rab7 GEF, mVps39 induced lysosomal clustering without increasing Rab7 GTP binding. Moreover, a dominant-negative mVps39 mutant fragmented the lysosome and promoted growth factor independence without decreasing Rab7-GTP levels. These findings suggest that a protein other than mVps39 serves as the Rab7 GEF. In summary, although only TBC1D15/Rab7-GAP altered Rab7-GTP levels, both Rab7-GAP and mVps39 regulate lysosomal morphology and play a role in maintaining growth factor dependence.


Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2009

Rab7 Activation by Growth Factor Withdrawal Contributes to the Induction of Apoptosis

Kimberly Romero Rosales; Eigen R. Peralta; Garret G. Guenther; Susan Y. Wong; Aimee L. Edinger

The Rab7 GTPase promotes membrane fusion reactions between late endosomes and lysosomes. In previous studies, we demonstrated that Rab7 inactivation blocks growth factor withdrawal-induced cell death. These results led us to hypothesize that growth factor withdrawal activates Rab7. Here, we show that growth factor deprivation increased both the fraction of Rab7 that was associated with cellular membranes and the percentage of Rab7 bound to guanosine triphosphate (GTP). Moreover, expressing a constitutively GTP-bound mutant of Rab7, Rab7-Q67L, was sufficient to trigger cell death even in the presence of growth factors. This activated Rab7 mutant was also able to reverse the growth factor-independent cell survival conferred by protein kinase C (PKC) delta inhibition. PKCdelta is one of the most highly induced proteins after growth factor withdrawal and contributes to the induction of apoptosis. To evaluate whether PKCdelta regulates Rab7, we first examined lysosomal morphology in cells with reduced PKCdelta activity. Consistent with a potential role as a Rab7 activator, blocking PKCdelta function caused profound lysosomal fragmentation comparable to that observed when Rab7 was directly inhibited. Interestingly, PKCdelta inhibition fragmented the lysosome without decreasing Rab7-GTP levels. Taken together, these results suggest that Rab7 activation by growth factor withdrawal contributes to the induction of apoptosis and that Rab7-dependent fusion reactions may be targeted by signaling pathways that limit growth factor-independent cell survival.


Biochemical Journal | 2011

Sphingolipid-based drugs selectively kill cancer cells by down-regulating nutrient transporter proteins

Kimberly Romero Rosales; Gurpreet Singh; Kevin Wu; Jie Chen; Matthew R. Janes; Michael B. Lilly; Eigen R. Peralta; Leah J. Siskind; Michael Bennett; David A. Fruman; Aimee L. Edinger

Cancer cells are hypersensitive to nutrient limitation because oncogenes constitutively drive glycolytic and TCA (tricarboxylic acid) cycle intermediates into biosynthetic pathways. As the anaplerotic reactions that replace these intermediates are fueled by imported nutrients, the cancer cells ability to generate ATP becomes compromised under nutrient-limiting conditions. In addition, most cancer cells have defects in autophagy, the catabolic process that provides nutrients from internal sources when external nutrients are unavailable. Normal cells, in contrast, can adapt to the nutrient stress that kills cancer cells by becoming quiescent and catabolic. In the present study we show that FTY720, a water-soluble sphingolipid drug that is effective in many animal cancer models, selectively starves cancer cells to death by down-regulating nutrient transporter proteins. Consistent with a bioenergetic mechanism of action, FTY720 induced homoeostatic autophagy. Cells were protected from FTY720 by cell-permeant nutrients or by reducing nutrient demand, but blocking apoptosis was ineffective. Importantly, AAL-149, a FTY720 analogue that lacks FTY720s dose-limiting toxicity, also triggered transporter loss and killed patient-derived leukaemias while sparing cells isolated from normal donors. As they target the metabolic profile of cancer cells rather than specific oncogenic mutations, FTY720 analogues such as AAL-149 should be effective against many different tumour types, particularly in combination with drugs that inhibit autophagy.


Autophagy | 2009

Ceramide-induced starvation triggers homeostatic autophagy

Eigen R. Peralta; Aimee L. Edinger

Autophagy is triggered by ceramide, a sphingolipid that regulates diverse cellular processes including survival, differentiation, and senescence. Both ceramide and autophagy play important, but incompletely understood, roles in type 2 diabetes and cancer. We reasoned that defining the connection between ceramide and autophagy might provide important insight into these highly prevalent diseases. Our recently published work demonstrates that ceramide-induced autophagy is a homeostatic response to starvation caused by nutrient transporter down-regulation. Preventing nutrient transporter loss or supplementation with transporter-independent nutrients protects cells from ceramide-induced death and delays the onset of autophagy. Thus, we propose a model where ceramide kills cells by inducing acute and severe intracellular nutrient limitation. Consistent with this idea, AMPK-deficient cells that are less able to deal with bioenergetic stress are also more sensitive to ceramide than wild-type cells. Our observation that gradually adapting cells to tolerate low levels of extracellular nutrients confers striking resistance to ceramide toxicity further supports this model. These results highlight the value of measuring nutrient transporter expression in cells undergoing protective autophagy. In addition, this novel mechanism for ceramide-induced cell death suggests new approaches to studying and treating multiple human diseases.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2004

MicroRNA-143 Regulates Adipocyte Differentiation

Christine Esau; Xiaolin Kang; Eigen R. Peralta; Elaine Hanson; Eric G. Marcusson; Lingamanaidu V. Ravichandran; Yingqing Sun; Seongjoon Koo; Ranjan J. Perera; Ravi Jain; Nicholas M. Dean; Susan M. Freier; C. Frank Bennett; Bridget Lollo; Richard H. Griffey


Oligonucleotides | 2005

Transfection Protocol for Antisense Oligonucleotides Affects Uniformity of Transfection in Cell Culture and Efficiency of mRNA Target Reduction

Chantal A. Reed; Eigen R. Peralta; Lisa M. Wenrich; Charlene A. Wong; C. Frank Bennett; Susan M. Freier; Bridget Lollo


Archive | 2010

Differential Effects of TBC1D15 and Mammalian Vps39 on Rab7 Activation State, Lysosomal Morphology, and Growth

Eigen R. Peralta; Brent C. Martin; Aimee L. Edinger


Archive | 2004

Composés oligomères et compositions à utiliser dans la modulation de miARNs

Christine Esau; Eric E. Swayze; Ravi Jain; Balkrishen Bhat; Eigen R. Peralta; Bridget Lollo; C. Frank Bennett; Susan M. Freier; Richard H. Griffey; Brenda F. Baker; Timothy A. Vickers; Eric G. Marcusson; Erich Koller


Archive | 2004

Oligomerverbindungen und Zusammensetzungen zur Verwendung bei der Modulation kleiner nichtkodierender RNAs

Christine Esau; Eric E. Swayze; Ravi Jain; Balkrishen Bhat; Eigen R. Peralta; Bridget Lollo; C. Frank Bennett; Susan M. Freier; Richard H. Griffey; Brenda F. Baker; Timothy A. Vickers; Eric G. Marcusson; Erich Koller

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