Elaine V. Hill
University of Bristol
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Featured researches published by Elaine V. Hill.
Science | 2005
J. Kirsty Millar; Benjamin S. Pickard; Shaun Mackie; Rachel James; Sheila Christie; Sebastienne R. Buchanan; M. Pat Malloy; Jennifer E. Chubb; Elaine Huston; George S. Baillie; Pippa A. Thomson; Elaine V. Hill; Nicholas J. Brandon; Jean-Christophe Rain; L. Miguel Camargo; Paul J. Whiting; Miles D. Houslay; Douglas Blackwood; Walter J. Muir; David J. Porteous
The disrupted in schizophrenia 1 (DISC1) gene is a candidate susceptibility factor for schizophrenia, but its mechanistic role in the disorder is unknown. Here we report that the gene encoding phosphodiesterase 4B (PDE4B) is disrupted by a balanced translocation in a subject diagnosed with schizophrenia and a relative with chronic psychiatric illness. The PDEs inactivate adenosine 3′,5′-monophosphate (cAMP), a second messenger implicated in learning, memory, and mood. We show that DISC1 interacts with the UCR2 domain of PDE4B and that elevation of cellular cAMP leads to dissociation of PDE4B from DISC1 and an increase in PDE4B activity. We propose a mechanistic model whereby DISC1 sequesters PDE4B in resting cells and releases it in an activated state in response to elevated cAMP.
The EMBO Journal | 2001
Kimberly L. Dodge; Samone Khouangsathiene; Michael S. Kapiloff; Robert Mouton; Elaine V. Hill; Miles D. Houslay; Lorene K. Langeberg; John D. Scott
Spatiotemporal regulation of protein kinase A (PKA) activity involves the manipulation of compartmentalized cAMP pools. Now we demonstrate that the muscle‐selective A‐kinase anchoring protein, mAKAP, maintains a cAMP signaling module, including PKA and the rolipram‐inhibited cAMP‐specific phosphodiesterase (PDE4D3) in heart tissues. Functional analyses indicate that tonic PDE4D3 activity reduces the activity of the anchored PKA holoenzyme, whereas kinase activation stimulates mAKAP‐associated phosphodiesterase activity. Disruption of PKA–mAKAP interaction prevents this enhancement of PDE4D3 activity, suggesting that the proximity of both enzymes in the mAKAP signaling complex forms a negative feedback loop to restore basal cAMP levels.
The EMBO Journal | 2000
Elaine V. Hill; Mairi Clarke; Francis A. Barr
The Rab6‐binding kinesin, Rab6‐KIFL, was identified in a two‐hybrid screen for proteins that interact with Rab6, a small GTPase involved in membrane traffic through the Golgi apparatus. We find that Rab6‐KIFL accumulates in mitotic cells where it localizes to the midzone of the spindle during anaphase, and to the cleavage furrow and midbody during telophase. Overexpression of Rab6‐KIFL causes a cell division defect resulting in cell death. Microinjection of antibodies to Rab6‐KIFL results in the cells becoming binucleate after one cell cycle, and time‐lapse microscopy reveals that this is due to a defect in cleavage furrow formation and thus cytokinesis. These data show that endogenous Rab6‐KIFL functions in cell division during cleavage furrow formation and cytokinesis, in addition to its previously described role in membrane traffic.
The Journal of Neuroscience | 2007
H. Murdoch; Shaun Mackie; D.M. Collins; Elaine V. Hill; G.B. Bolger; E. Klussmann; David J. Porteous; J. K. Millar; Houslay
Disrupted-in-schizophrenia 1 (DISC1) is a genetic susceptibility factor for schizophrenia and related severe psychiatric conditions. DISC1 is a multifunctional scaffold protein that is able to interact with several proteins, including the independently identified schizophrenia risk factor phosphodiesterase-4B (PDE4B). Here we report that the 100 kDa full-length DISC1 isoform (fl-DISC1) can bind members of each of the four gene, cAMP-specific PDE4 family. Elevation of intracellular cAMP levels, so as to activate protein kinase A, caused the release of PDE4D3 and PDE4C2 isoforms from fl-DISC1 while not affecting binding of PDE4B1 and PDE4A5 isoforms. Using a peptide array strategy, we show that PDE4D3 binds fl-DISC1 through two regions found in common with PDE4B isoforms, the interaction of which is supplemented because of the presence of additional PDE4B-specific binding sites. We propose that the additional binding sites found in PDE4B1 underpin its resistance to release during cAMP elevation. We identify, for the first time, a functional distinction between the 100 kDa long DISC1 isoform and the short 71 kDa isoform. Thus, changes in the expression pattern of DISC1 and PDE4 isoforms offers a means to reprogram their interaction and to determine whether the PDE4 sequestered by DISC1 is released after cAMP elevation. The PDE4B-specific binding sites encompass point mutations in mouse Disc1 that confer phenotypes related to schizophrenia and depression and that affect binding to PDE4B. Thus, genetic variation in DISC1 and PDE4 that influence either isoform expression or docking site functioning may directly affect psychopathology.
Frontiers in Immunology | 2013
T. H. Sky Ng; Graham J. Britton; Elaine V. Hill; Johan Verhagen; Bronwen R. Burton; David C. Wraith
Since the discovery of interleukin-10 (IL-10) in the 1980s, a large body of work has led to its recognition as a pleiotropic immunomodulatory cytokine that affects both the innate and adaptive immune systems. IL-10 is produced by a wide range of cell types, but for the purposes of this review we shall focus on IL-10 secreted by CD4+ T cells. Here we describe the importance of IL-10 as a mediator of suppression used by both FoxP3+ and FoxP3− T regulatory cells. Moreover, we discuss the molecular events leading to the induction of IL-10 secretion in T helper cell subsets, where it acts as a pivotal negative feedback mechanism. Finally we discuss how a greater understanding of this principle has allowed for the design of more efficient, antigen-specific immunotherapy strategies to exploit this natural phenomenon clinically.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008
Elaine Huston; Martin J. Lynch; Ahmed Mohamed; Daniel M. Collins; Elaine V. Hill; Ruth MacLeod; Eberhard Krause; George S. Baillie; Miles D. Houslay
We identify a compartmentalized signaling system that identifies a functional role for the GTP exchange factor, exchange protein activated by cAMP (EPAC) coupled to Rap2 in the nucleus. In this system, cAMP regulates the nuclear/cytoplasmic trafficking of DNA-dependent protein kinase (DNA-PK), a critical kinase that acts to repair double-stranded breaks (DSBs) in damaged DNA and to phosphorylate the cell survival kinase, PKB/Akt. Intersecting regulatory inputs for cAMP employ EPAC to transduce positive effects, namely the Rap2-dependent nuclear exit and activation of DNA-PK, whereas protein kinase A (PKA) provides the negative input by antagonizing these actions. We identify this as a compartmentalized regulatory system where modulation of cAMP input into the stimulatory, EPAC and inhibitory, PKA intersecting arms is provided by spatially discrete, cAMP degradation systems. The distribution of DNA-PK between nuclear and cytoplasmic compartments can thus potentially be influenced by relative inputs of cAMP signaling through the EPAC and PKA pathways. Through this signaling system EPAC activation can thereby impact on the Ser-473 phosphorylation status of PKB/Akt and the repair of etoposide-induced DSBs.
Biochemical Journal | 2011
Kirsty F. MacKenzie; Derek A. Wallace; Elaine V. Hill; Diana F. Anthony; David Henderson; Daniel M. Houslay; J. Simon C. Arthur; George S. Baillie; Miles D. Houslay
cAMP-specific PDE (phosphodiesterase) 4 isoforms underpin compartmentalized cAMP signalling in mammalian cells through targeting to specific signalling complexes. Their importance is apparent as PDE4 selective inhibitors exert profound anti-inflammatory effects and act as cognitive enhancers. The p38 MAPK (mitogen-activated protein kinase) signalling cascade is a key signal transduction pathway involved in the control of cellular immune, inflammatory and stress responses. In the present study, we show that PDE4A5 is phosphorylated at Ser147, within the regulatory UCR1 (ultraconserved region 1) domain conserved among PDE4 long isoforms, by MK2 (MAPK-activated protein kinase 2, also called MAPKAPK2). Phosphorylation by MK2, although not altering PDE4A5 activity, markedly attenuates PDE4A5 activation through phosphorylation by protein kinase A. This modification confers the amplification of intracellular cAMP accumulation in response to adenylate cyclase activation by attenuating a major desensitization system to cAMP. Such reprogramming of cAMP accumulation is recapitulated in wild-type primary macrophages, but not MK2/3-null macrophages. Phosphorylation by MK2 also triggers a conformational change in PDE4A5 that attenuates PDE4A5 interaction with proteins whose binding involves UCR2, such as DISC1 (disrupted in schizophrenia 1) and AIP (aryl hydrocarbon receptor-interacting protein), but not the UCR2-independent interacting scaffold protein β-arrestin. Long PDE4 isoforms thus provide a novel node for cross-talk between the cAMP and p38 MAPK signalling systems at the level of MK2.
Biochemical Journal | 2013
Yang Liu; Yu-Chiang Lai; Elaine V. Hill; Donatienne Tyteca; Sarah Carpentier; Ada Ingvaldsen; Didier Vertommen; Louise Lantier; Marc Foretz; Franck Dequiedt; Pierre J. Courtoy; Christophe Erneux; Benoit Viollet; Peter R. Shepherd; Jeremy M. Tavaré; Jørgen Jensen; Mark H. Rider
PIKfyve (FYVE domain-containing phosphatidylinositol 3-phosphate 5-kinase), the lipid kinase that phosphorylates PtdIns3P to PtdIns(3,5)P2, has been implicated in insulin-stimulated glucose uptake. We investigated whether PIKfyve could also be involved in contraction/AMPK (AMP-activated protein kinase)-stimulated glucose uptake in skeletal muscle. Incubation of rat epitrochlearis muscles with YM201636, a selective PIKfyve inhibitor, reduced contraction- and AICAriboside (5-amino-4-imidazolecarboxamide riboside)-stimulated glucose uptake. Consistently, PIKfyve knockdown in C2C12 myotubes reduced AICAriboside-stimulated glucose transport. Furthermore, muscle contraction increased PtdIns(3,5)P2 levels and PIKfyve phosphorylation. AMPK phosphorylated PIKfyve at Ser307 both in vitro and in intact cells. Following subcellular fractionation, PIKfyve recovery in a crude intracellular membrane fraction was increased in contracting versus resting muscles. Also in opossum kidney cells, wild-type, but not S307A mutant, PIKfyve was recruited to endosomal vesicles in response to AMPK activation. We propose that PIKfyve activity is required for the stimulation of skeletal muscle glucose uptake by contraction/AMPK activation. PIKfyve is a new AMPK substrate whose phosphorylation at Ser307 could promote PIKfyve translocation to endosomes for PtdIns(3,5)P2 synthesis to facilitate GLUT4 (glucose transporter 4) translocation.
Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2010
Elaine V. Hill; Claire A. Hudson; Didier Vertommen; Mark H. Rider; Jeremy M. Tavaré
PIKfyve is a protein and lipid kinase that plays an important role in membrane trafficking, including TGN to endosome retrograde sorting and in insulin-stimulated translocation of the GLUT4 glucose transporter from intracellular storage vesicles to the plasma membrane. We have previously demonstrated that PIKfyve is phosphorylated in response to insulin in a PI3-kinase and protein kinase B (PKB)-dependent manner. However, it has been implied that this was not due to direct phosphorylation of PIKfyve by PKB, but as a result of an insulin-induced PIKfyve autophosphorylation event. Here we demonstrate that purified PIKfyve is phosphorylated in vitro by a recombinant active PKB on two separate serine residues, S318 and S105, which flank the N-terminal FYVE domain of the protein. Only S318, however, becomes phosphorylated in intact cells stimulated with insulin. We further demonstrate that S318 is phosphorylated in response to hyperosmotic stress in a PI3-kinase- and PKB-independent manner. Importantly, the effects of insulin and sorbitol were not prevented by the presence of an ATP-competitive PIKfyve inhibitor (YM20163) or in a mutant PIKfyve lacking both lipid and protein kinase activity. Our results confirm, therefore, that PIKfyve is directly phosphorylated by PKB on a single serine residue in response to insulin and are not due to autophosphorylation of the enzyme. We further reveal that two stimuli known to promote glucose uptake in cells, both stimulate phosphorylation of PIKfyve on S318 but via distinct signal transduction pathways.
European Journal of Immunology | 2015
Elaine V. Hill; T. H. Sky Ng; Bronwen R. Burton; Charly M. Oakley; Karim Malik; David C. Wraith
The serine/threonine kinase glycogen synthase kinase‐3 (GSK3) plays an important role in balancing pro‐ and anti‐inflammatory cytokines. We have examined the role of GSK3 in production of IL‐10 by subsets of CD4+ T helper cells. Treatment of naive murine CD4+ T cells with GSK3 inhibitors did not affect their production of IL‐10. However, treatment of Th1 and Th2 cells with GSK3 inhibitors dramatically increased production of IL‐10. GSK3 inhibition also led to upregulation of IL‐10 among Th1, Th2, and Th17 subsets isolated from human blood. The encephalitogenic potential of GSK3 inhibitor treated murine Th1 cells was significantly reduced in adoptive transfer experiments by an IL‐10‐dependent mechanism. Analysis of the murine IL‐10 promoter in response to inhibition of GSK3 in Th1 cells showed modification to a transcriptionally active state indicated by changes in histone H3 acetylation and methylation. Additionally, GSK3 inhibition increased expression of the transcription factors c‐Maf, Nfil3, and GATA3, correlating with the increase in IL‐10. These findings are important in the context of autoimmune disease since they show that it is possible to reprogram disease‐causing cells through GSK3 inhibition.