Fozia Ahmed
Johns Hopkins University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Fozia Ahmed.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2015
Deo R. Singh; Fozia Ahmed; Christopher King; Nisha Gupta; Matt Salotto; Elena B. Pasquale; Kalina Hristova
Background: The EphA2 receptor tyrosine kinase can promote cell migration and cancer malignancy in the absence of ligand binding. Results: We uncover a correlation between unliganded dimerization and tumorigenic signaling. Conclusion: EphA2 pro-tumorigenic signaling is likely mediated by the EphA2 monomer. Significance: A therapeutic strategy that aims at the stabilization of EphA2 dimers may be beneficial for the treatment of cancers linked to EphA2 overexpression. The EphA2 receptor tyrosine kinase promotes cell migration and cancer malignancy through a ligand- and kinase-independent distinctive mechanism that has been linked to high Ser-897 phosphorylation and low tyrosine phosphorylation. Here, we demonstrate that EphA2 forms dimers in the plasma membrane of HEK293T cells in the absence of ephrin ligand binding, suggesting that the current seeding mechanism model of EphA2 activation is incomplete. We also characterize a dimerization-deficient EphA2 mutant that shows enhanced ability to promote cell migration, concomitant with increased Ser-897 phosphorylation and decreased tyrosine phosphorylation compared with EphA2 wild type. Our data reveal a correlation between unliganded dimerization and tumorigenic signaling and suggest that EphA2 pro-tumorigenic activity is mediated by the EphA2 monomer. Thus, a therapeutic strategy that aims at the stabilization of EphA2 dimers may be beneficial for the treatment of cancers linked to EphA2 overexpression.
Biochemical Journal | 2015
Deo R. Singh; Qingqing Cao; Christopher King; Matt Salotto; Fozia Ahmed; Xiang Yang Zhou; Elena B. Pasquale; Kalina Hristova
Erythropoietin-producing hepatocellular carcinoma A3 (EphA3) can form dimers in the absence of ligand binding, which are stabilized by the sterile α-motif (SAM) domain. This challenges the current understanding of EphA3 activation events and establishes a new role for the EphA3 SAM domain in receptor-receptor interactions.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2017
Deo R. Singh; Fozia Ahmed; Michael D. Paul; Manasee Gedam; Elena B. Pasquale; Kalina Hristova
All members of the Eph receptor family of tyrosine kinases contain a SAM domain near the C terminus, which has been proposed to play a role in receptor homotypic interactions and/or interactions with binding partners. The SAM domain of EphA2 is known to be important for receptor function, but its contribution to EphA2 lateral interactions in the plasma membrane has not been determined. Here we use a FRET-based approach to directly measure the effect of the SAM domain on the stability of EphA2 dimers on the cell surface in the absence of ligand binding. We also investigate the functional consequences of EphA2 SAM domain deletion. Surprisingly, we find that the EphA2 SAM domain inhibits receptor dimerization and decreases EphA2 tyrosine phosphorylation. This role is dramatically different from the role of the SAM domain of the related EphA3 receptor, which we previously found to stabilize EphA3 dimers and increase EphA3 tyrosine phosphorylation in cells in the absence of ligand. Thus, the EphA2 SAM domain likely contributes to a unique mode of EphA2 interaction that leads to distinct signaling outputs.
Journal of Molecular Biology | 2017
Deo R. Singh; Fozia Ahmed; Sarvenaz Sarabipour; Kalina Hristova
Epithelial cadherin (Ecadherin) is responsible for the intercellular cohesion of epithelial tissues. It forms lateral clusters within adherens cell-cell junctions, but its association state outside these clusters is unknown. Here, we use a quantitative Forster resonance energy transfer (FRET) approach to show that Ecadherin forms constitutive dimers and that these dimers exist independently of the actin cytoskeleton or cytoplasmic proteins. The dimers are stabilized by intermolecular contacts that occur along the entire length of Ecadherin, with the intracellular domains having a surprisingly strong favorable contribution. We further show that Ecadherin mutations and calcium depletion induce structural alterations that propagate from the N terminus all the way to the C terminus, without destabilizing the dimeric state. These findings provide context for the interpretation of Ecadherin adhesion experiments. They also suggest that early events of adherens junction assembly involve interactions between from preformed Ecadherin dimers.
Oncology Reports | 2013
Fozia Ahmed; Takumi Shiraishi; Robert L. Vessella; Prakash Kulkarni
Biophysical Journal | 2018
Fozia Ahmed; Kalina Hristova
Biochemical Journal | 2018
Fozia Ahmed; Kalina Hristova
Biophysical Journal | 2017
Fozia Ahmed; Kalina Hristova
Biophysical Journal | 2017
Michael J. Paul; Fozia Ahmed; Kalina Hristova
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2016
Deo R. Singh; Fozia Ahmed; Matt Salloto; Kalina Hristova