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Dive into the research topics where Eric S. Witze is active.

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Featured researches published by Eric S. Witze.


Nature Methods | 2007

Mapping protein post-translational modifications with mass spectrometry

Eric S. Witze; William M. Old; Katheryn A. Resing; Natalie G. Ahn

Post-translational modifications of proteins control many biological processes, and examining their diversity is critical for understanding mechanisms of cell regulation. Mass spectrometry is a fundamental tool for detecting and mapping covalent modifications and quantifying their changes. Modern approaches have made large-scale experiments possible, screening complex mixtures of proteins for alterations in chemical modifications. By profiling protein chemistries, biologists can gain deeper insight into biological control. The aim of this review is introduce biologists to current strategies in mass spectrometry–based proteomics that are used to characterize protein post-translational modifications, noting strengths and shortcomings of various approaches.


Science | 2008

Wnt5a Control of Cell Polarity and Directional Movement by Polarized Redistribution of Adhesion Receptors

Eric S. Witze; Elizabeth S. Litman; Gretchen M. Argast; Randall T. Moon; Natalie G. Ahn

Mechanisms by which Wnt pathways integrate the organization of receptors, organelles, and cytoskeletal proteins to confer cell polarity and directional cell movement are incompletely understood. We show that acute responses to Wnt5a involve recruitment of actin, myosin IIB, Frizzled 3, and melanoma cell adhesion molecule into an intracellular structure in a melanoma cell line. In the presence of a chemokine gradient, this Wnt-mediated receptor–actin–myosin polarity (W-RAMP) structure accumulates asymmetrically at the cell periphery, where it triggers membrane contractility and nuclear movement in the direction of membrane retraction. The process requires endosome trafficking, is associated with multivesicular bodies, and is regulated by Wnt5a through the small guanosine triphosphatases Rab4 and RhoB. Thus, cell-autonomous mechanisms allow Wnt5a to control cell orientation, polarity, and directional movement in response to positional cues from chemokine gradients.


Molecular Cell | 2009

Functional Proteomics Identifies Targets of Phosphorylation by B-Raf Signaling in Melanoma

William M. Old; John B. Shabb; Stephane Houel; Hong Wang; Kasey L. Couts; Chia-Yu Yen; Elizabeth S. Litman; Carrie H. Croy; Karen Meyer-Arendt; Jose G. Miranda; Robert Brown; Eric S. Witze; Rebecca E. Schweppe; Katheryn A. Resing; Natalie G. Ahn

Melanoma and other cancers harbor oncogenic mutations in the protein kinase B-Raf, which leads to constitutive activation and dysregulation of MAP kinase signaling. In order to elucidate molecular determinants responsible for B-Raf control of cancer phenotypes, we present a method for phosphoprotein profiling, using negative ionization mass spectrometry to detect phosphopeptides based on their fragment ion signature caused by release of PO(3)(-). The method provides an alternative strategy for phosphoproteomics, circumventing affinity enrichment of phosphopeptides and isotopic labeling of samples. Ninety phosphorylation events were regulated by oncogenic B-Raf signaling, based on their responses to treating melanoma cells with MKK1/2 inhibitor. Regulated phosphoproteins included known signaling effectors and cytoskeletal regulators. We investigated MINERVA/FAM129B, a target belonging to a protein family with unknown category and function, and established the importance of this protein and its MAP kinase-dependent phosphorylation in controlling melanoma cell invasion into three-dimensional collagen matrix.


Nature | 2003

Suppression of CED-3-independent apoptosis by mitochondrial βNAC in Caenorhabditis elegans

Tim Bloss; Eric S. Witze; Joel H. Rothman

To ensure cell survival, it is essential that the ubiquitous pro-apoptotic machinery is kept quiescent. As death is irreversible, cells must continually integrate developmental information with regulatory inputs to control the switch between repressing and activating apoptosis. Inappropriate activation or suppression of apoptosis can lead to degenerative pathologies or tumorigenesis, respectively. Here we report that Caenorhabditis elegans inhibitor of cell death-1 (ICD-1) is necessary and sufficient to prevent apoptosis. Loss of ICD-1 leads to inappropriate apoptosis in developing and differentiated cells in various tissues. Although this apoptosis requires CED-4, it occurs independently of CED-3—the caspase essential for developmental apoptosis—showing that these core pro-apoptotic proteins have separable roles. Overexpressing ICD-1 inhibits the apoptosis of cells that are normally programmed to die. ICD-1 is the β-subunit of the nascent polypeptide-associated complex (βNAC) and contains a putative caspase-cleavage site and caspase recruitment domain. It localizes primarily to mitochondria, underscoring the role of mitochondria in coordinating apoptosis. Human βNAC is a caspase substrate that is rapidly eliminated in dying cells, suggesting that ICD-1 apoptosis-suppressing activity may be inactivated by caspases.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2012

PERK Utilizes Intrinsic Lipid Kinase Activity To Generate Phosphatidic Acid, Mediate Akt Activation, and Promote Adipocyte Differentiation

Ekaterina Bobrovnikova-Marjon; Dariusz Pytel; Matthew J. Riese; Laura Pontano Vaites; N. Singh; Gary A. Koretzky; Eric S. Witze; J. A. Diehl

ABSTRACT The endoplasmic reticulum (ER) resident PKR-like kinase (PERK) is necessary for Akt activation in response to ER stress. We demonstrate that PERK harbors intrinsic lipid kinase, favoring diacylglycerol (DAG) as a substrate and generating phosphatidic acid (PA). This activity of PERK correlates with activation of mTOR and phosphorylation of Akt on Ser473. PERK lipid kinase activity is regulated in a phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K) p85α-dependent manner. Moreover, PERK activity is essential during adipocyte differentiation. Because PA and Akt regulate many cellular functions, including cellular survival, proliferation, migratory responses, and metabolic adaptation, our findings suggest that PERK has a more extensive role in insulin signaling, insulin resistance, obesity, and tumorigenesis than previously thought.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2013

DNMT1 Is Regulated by ATP-Citrate Lyase and Maintains Methylation Patterns during Adipocyte Differentiation

Tatiana Londoño Gentile; Chao Lu; Peter M. Lodato; Sarah Tse; Scott H. Olejniczak; Eric S. Witze; Craig B. Thompson; Kathryn E. Wellen

ABSTRACT During adipocyte differentiation, significant epigenomic changes occur in association with the implementation of the adipogenic program. We have previously shown that histone acetylation increases during differentiation in a manner dependent on acetyl coenzyme A (acetyl-CoA) production by the enzyme ATP-citrate lyase (ACL). Whether ACL regulates nuclear targets in addition to histones during differentiation is not clear. In this study, we report that DNA methyltransferase 1 (DNMT1) levels in adipocytes are controlled in part by ACL and that silencing of DNMT1 can accelerate adipocyte differentiation. DNMT1 gene expression is induced early in 3T3-L1 adipocyte differentiation during mitotic clonal expansion and is critical for maintenance of DNA and histone H3K9 methylation patterns during this period. In the absence of DNMT1, adipocyte-specific gene expression and lipid accumulation occur precociously. Later in differentiation, DNMT1 levels decline in an ACL-dependent manner. ACL-mediated suppression of DNMT1 occurs at least in part by promoting expression of microRNA 148a (miR-148a), which represses DNMT1. Ectopic expression of miR-148a accelerates differentiation under standard conditions and can partially rescue a hypermethylation-mediated differentiation block. The data suggest a role for DNMT1 in modulating the timing of differentiation and describe a novel ACL-miR-148a-dependent mechanism for regulating DNMT1 during adipogenesis.


Developmental Cell | 2013

Wnt5a Directs Polarized Calcium Gradients by Recruiting Cortical Endoplasmic Reticulum to the Cell Trailing Edge

Eric S. Witze; Mary Katherine Connacher; Stephane Houel; Michael P. Schwartz; Mary K. Morphew; Leah Reid; David B. Sacks; Kristi S. Anseth; Natalie G. Ahn

Wnt5a directs the assembly of the Wnt-receptor-actin-myosin-polarity (WRAMP) structure, which integrates cell-adhesion receptors with F-actin and myosin to form a microfilament array associated with multivesicular bodies (MVBs). The WRAMP structure is polarized to the cell posterior, where it directs tail-end membrane retraction, driving forward translocation of the cell body. Here we define constituents of the WRAMP proteome, including regulators of microfilament and microtubule dynamics, protein interactions, and enzymatic activity. IQGAP1, a scaffold for F-actin nucleation and crosslinking, is necessary for WRAMP structure formation, potentially bridging microfilaments and MVBs. Vesicle coat proteins, including coatomer-I subunits, localize to and are required for the WRAMP structure. Electron microscopy and live imaging demonstrate movement of the ER to the WRAMP structure and plasma membrane, followed by elevation of intracellular Ca2+. Thus, Wnt5a controls directional movement by recruiting cortical ER to mobilize a rear-directed, localized Ca2+ signal, activating actomyosin contraction and adhesion disassembly for membrane retraction.


PLOS ONE | 2013

A Quantitative Comparison of Human HT-1080 Fibrosarcoma Cells and Primary Human Dermal Fibroblasts Identifies a 3D Migration Mechanism with Properties Unique to the Transformed Phenotype

Michael P. Schwartz; Robert Rogers; Samir P. Singh; Justin Y. Lee; Samuel G. Loveland; Justin T. Koepsel; Eric S. Witze; Sara I. Montanez-Sauri; Kyung Eun Sung; Emi Y. Tokuda; Yasha Sharma; Lydia M. Everhart; Eric H. Nguyen; Muhammad H. Zaman; David J. Beebe; Natalie G. Ahn; William L. Murphy; Kristi S. Anseth

Here, we describe an engineering approach to quantitatively compare migration, morphologies, and adhesion for tumorigenic human fibrosarcoma cells (HT-1080s) and primary human dermal fibroblasts (hDFs) with the aim of identifying distinguishing properties of the transformed phenotype. Relative adhesiveness was quantified using self-assembled monolayer (SAM) arrays and proteolytic 3-dimensional (3D) migration was investigated using matrix metalloproteinase (MMP)-degradable poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) hydrogels (“synthetic extracellular matrix” or “synthetic ECM”). In synthetic ECM, hDFs were characterized by vinculin-containing features on the tips of protrusions, multipolar morphologies, and organized actomyosin filaments. In contrast, HT-1080s were characterized by diffuse vinculin expression, pronounced β1-integrin on the tips of protrusions, a cortically-organized F-actin cytoskeleton, and quantitatively more rounded morphologies, decreased adhesiveness, and increased directional motility compared to hDFs. Further, HT-1080s were characterized by contractility-dependent motility, pronounced blebbing, and cortical contraction waves or constriction rings, while quantified 3D motility was similar in matrices with a wide range of biochemical and biophysical properties (including collagen) despite substantial morphological changes. While HT-1080s were distinct from hDFs for each of the 2D and 3D properties investigated, several features were similar to WM239a melanoma cells, including rounded, proteolytic migration modes, cortical F-actin organization, and prominent uropod-like structures enriched with β1-integrin, F-actin, and melanoma cell adhesion molecule (MCAM/CD146/MUC18). Importantly, many of the features observed for HT-1080s were analogous to cellular changes induced by transformation, including cell rounding, a disorganized F-actin cytoskeleton, altered organization of focal adhesion proteins, and a weakly adherent phenotype. Based on our results, we propose that HT-1080s migrate in synthetic ECM with functional properties that are a direct consequence of their transformed phenotype.


Current Biology | 2002

Cell fusion: an EFFicient sculptor.

Eric S. Witze; Joel H. Rothman

Mutations in the eff-1 gene of Caenorhabditis elegans, which prevent all cell-cell fusions in the nematodes epidermis, have revealed developmental roles for cell fusion. An extracellular fusogen-like domain in EFF-1 suggests it might direct the fusion of lipid bilayers.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2015

Protein Depalmitoylation Is Induced by Wnt5a and Promotes Polarized Cell Behavior.

Wei Wang; Kristin B. Runkle; Samantha Terkowski; Rachel I. Ekaireb; Eric S. Witze

Background: Wnt5a signaling induces asymmetric localization of the melanoma cell adhesion molecules (MCAM). Results: Wnt5a promotes MCAM depalmitoylation and point mutations in MCAM that block palmitoylation are sufficient to cause asymmetric MCAM localization. Conclusion: Wnt5a induces polarized MCAM localization by promoting MCAM depalmitoylation. Significance: These results reveal a mechanism for Wnt5a-induced polarized cell behavior. Wnt5a signaling regulates polarized cell behavior, but the downstream signaling events that promote cell polarity are not well understood. Our results show that Wnt5a promotes depalmitoylation of the melanoma cell adhesion molecule (MCAM) at cysteine 590. Mutation of Cys-590 to glycine is sufficient to polarize MCAM localization, similar to what is observed with Wnt5a stimulation. Inhibition of the depalmitoylating enzyme APT1 blocks Wnt5a-induced depalmitoylation, asymmetric MCAM localization, and cell invasion. Directly altering expression of the basal protein palmitoylation machinery is sufficient to promote cell invasion. Additionally, cancer mutations in palmitoyltransferases decrease MCAM palmitoylation and have impaired ability to suppress cell invasion. Our results provide evidence that Wnt5a induces protein depalmitoylation, which promotes polarized protein localization and cell invasion.

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Natalie G. Ahn

University of Colorado Boulder

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Kristin B. Runkle

University of Pennsylvania

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Wei Wang

University of California

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Elizabeth S. Litman

University of Colorado Boulder

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Ewa Stypulkowski

University of Pennsylvania

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Katheryn A. Resing

University of Colorado Boulder

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Kristi S. Anseth

University of Colorado Boulder

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Michael P. Schwartz

University of Colorado Boulder

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Akriti Kharbanda

University of Pennsylvania

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