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Dive into the research topics where Gary LeRoy is active.

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Featured researches published by Gary LeRoy.


Cell | 1998

The Dermatomyositis-Specific Autoantigen Mi2 Is a Component of a Complex Containing Histone Deacetylase and Nucleosome Remodeling Activities

Yi Zhang; Gary LeRoy; Hans-Peter Seelig; William S. Lane; Danny Reinberg

Histone acetylation and deacetylation were found to be catalyzed by structurally distinct, multisubunit complexes that mediate, respectively, activation and repression of transcription. ATP-dependent nucleosome remodeling, mediated by different multisubunit complexes, was thought to be involved only in transcription activation. Here we report the isolation of a protein complex that contains both histone deacetylation and ATP-dependent nucleosome remodeling activities. The complex contains the histone deacetylases HDAC1/2, histone-binding proteins, the dermatomyositis-specific autoantigen Mi2beta, a polypeptide related to the metastasis-associated protein 1, and a novel polypeptide of 32 kDa. Patients with dermatomyositis have a high rate of malignancy. The finding that Mi2beta exists in a complex containing histone deacetylase and nucleosome remodeling activities suggests a role for chromatin reorganization in cancer metastasis.


Cell | 1998

FACT, a Factor that Facilitates Transcript Elongation through Nucleosomes

George Orphanides; Gary LeRoy; Chun Hsiang Chang; Donal S. Luse; Danny Reinberg

The requirements for transcriptional activation by RNA polymerase II were examined using chromatin templates assembled in vitro and a transcription system composed of the human general transcription factors and RNA polymerase II. Activator-induced, energy-dependent chromatin remodeling promoted efficient preinitiation complex formation and transcription initiation, but was not sufficient for productive transcription. Polymerases that initiated transcription on remodeled chromatin templates encountered a block to transcription proximal to the promoter. Entry into productive transcription required an accessory factor present in HeLa cell nuclear extract, FACT (facilitates chromatin transcription), which we have purified. FACT acts subsequent to transcription initiation to release RNA polymerase II from a nucleosome-induced block to productive transcription. The biochemical properties and polypeptide composition of FACT suggest that it is a novel protein factor that facilitates transcript elongation through nucleosomes.


Cell | 2012

Asymmetrically Modified Nucleosomes

Philipp Voigt; Gary LeRoy; William J. Drury; Barry M. Zee; Jinsook Son; David B. Beck; Nicolas L. Young; Benjamin A. Garcia; Danny Reinberg

Mononucleosomes, the basic building blocks of chromatin, contain two copies of each core histone. The associated posttranslational modifications regulate essential chromatin-dependent processes, yet whether each histone copy is identically modified in vivo is unclear. We demonstrate that nucleosomes in embryonic stem cells, fibroblasts, and cancer cells exist in both symmetrically and asymmetrically modified populations for histone H3 lysine 27 di/trimethylation (H3K27me2/3) and H4K20me1. Further, we obtained direct physical evidence for bivalent nucleosomes carrying H3K4me3 or H3K36me3 along with H3K27me3, albeit on opposite H3 tails. Bivalency at target genes was resolved upon differentiation of ES cells. Polycomb repressive complex 2-mediated methylation of H3K27 was inhibited when nucleosomes contain symmetrically, but not asymmetrically, placed H3K4me3 or H3K36me3. These findings uncover a potential mechanism for the incorporation of bivalent features into nucleosomes and demonstrate how asymmetry might set the stage to diversify functional nucleosome states.


Molecular Cell | 2008

The Double Bromodomain Proteins Brd2 and Brd3 Couple Histone Acetylation to Transcription

Gary LeRoy; Brenden Rickards; S. J. Flint

Posttranslational histone modifications are crucial for the modulation of chromatin structure and regulation of transcription. Bromodomains present in many chromatin-associated proteins recognize acetylated lysines in the unstructured N-terminal regions of histones. Here, we report that the double bromodomain proteins Brd2 and Brd3 associate preferentially in vivo with hyperacetylated chromatin along the entire lengths of transcribed genes. Brd2- and Brd3-associated chromatin is significantly enriched in H4K5, H4K12, and H3K14 acetylation and contains relatively little dimethylated H3K9. Both Brd2 and Brd3 allowed RNA polymerase II to transcribe through nucleosomes in a defined transcription system. Such activity depended on specific histone H4 modifications known to be recognized by the Brd proteins. We also demonstrate that Brd2 has intrinsic histone chaperone activity and is required for transcription of the cyclin D1 gene in vivo. These data identify proteins that render nucleosomes marked by acetylation permissive to the passage of elongating RNA polymerase II.


Nature | 2010

The histone variant macroH2A suppresses melanoma progression through regulation of CDK8

Avnish Kapoor; Matthew S. Goldberg; Lara K. Cumberland; Kajan Ratnakumar; Miguel F. Segura; Patrick O. Emanuel; Silvia Menendez; Chiara Vardabasso; Gary LeRoy; Claudia I. Vidal; David Polsky; Iman Osman; Benjamin A. Garcia; Eva Hernando; Emily Bernstein

Cancer is a disease consisting of both genetic and epigenetic changes. Although increasing evidence demonstrates that tumour progression entails chromatin-mediated changes such as DNA methylation, the role of histone variants in cancer initiation and progression currently remains unclear. Histone variants replace conventional histones within the nucleosome and confer unique biological functions to chromatin. Here we report that the histone variant macroH2A (mH2A) suppresses tumour progression of malignant melanoma. Loss of mH2A isoforms, histone variants generally associated with condensed chromatin and fine-tuning of developmental gene expression programs, is positively correlated with increasing malignant phenotype of melanoma cells in culture and human tissue samples. Knockdown of mH2A isoforms in melanoma cells of low malignancy results in significantly increased proliferation and migration in vitro and growth and metastasis in vivo. Restored expression of mH2A isoforms rescues these malignant phenotypes in vitro and in vivo. We demonstrate that the tumour-promoting function of mH2A loss is mediated, at least in part, through direct transcriptional upregulation of CDK8. Suppression of CDK8, a colorectal cancer oncogene, inhibits proliferation of melanoma cells, and knockdown of CDK8 in cells depleted of mH2A suppresses the proliferative advantage induced by mH2A loss. Moreover, a significant inverse correlation between mH2A and CDK8 expression levels exists in melanoma patient samples. Taken together, our results demonstrate that mH2A is a critical component of chromatin that suppresses the development of malignant melanoma, a highly intractable cutaneous neoplasm.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010

In Vivo Residue-specific Histone Methylation Dynamics

Barry M. Zee; Rebecca S. Levin; Bo Xu; Gary LeRoy; Ned S. Wingreen; Benjamin A. Garcia

Methylation of specific histone residues is capable of both gene activation and silencing. Despite vast work on the function of methylation, most studies either present a static snapshot of methylation or fail to assign kinetic information to specific residues. Using liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry on a high-resolution mass spectrometer and heavy methyl-SILAC labeling, we studied site-specific histone lysine and arginine methylation dynamics. The detection of labeled intermediates within a methylation state revealed that mono-, di-, and trimethylated residues generally have progressively slower rates of formation. Furthermore, methylations associated with active genes have faster rates than methylations associated with silent genes. Finally, the presence of both an active and silencing mark on the same peptide results in a slower rate of methylation than the presence of either mark alone. Here we show that quantitative proteomic approaches such as this can determine the dynamics of multiple methylated residues, an understudied portion of histone biology.


Cancer Cell | 2012

Phosphoglycerate Mutase 1 Coordinates Glycolysis and Biosynthesis to Promote Tumor Growth

Taro Hitosugi; Lu Zhou; Shannon Elf; Jun Fan; Hee Bum Kang; Jae Ho Seo; Changliang Shan; Qing Dai; Liang Zhang; Jianxin Xie; Ting Lei Gu; Peng Jin; Maša Alečković; Gary LeRoy; Yibin Kang; Jessica Sudderth; Ralph J. DeBerardinis; Chi Hao Luan; Georgia Z. Chen; Susan Muller; Dong M. Shin; Taofeek K. Owonikoko; Sagar Lonial; Martha Arellano; Hanna Jean Khoury; Fadlo R. Khuri; Benjamin H. Lee; Keqiang Ye; Titus J. Boggon; Sumin Kang

It is unclear how cancer cells coordinate glycolysis and biosynthesis to support rapidly growing tumors. We found that the glycolytic enzyme phosphoglycerate mutase 1 (PGAM1), commonly upregulated in human cancers due to loss of TP53, contributes to biosynthesis regulation in part by controlling intracellular levels of its substrate, 3-phosphoglycerate (3-PG), and product, 2-phosphoglycerate (2-PG). 3-PG binds to and inhibits 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase in the oxidative pentose phosphate pathway (PPP), while 2-PG activates 3-phosphoglycerate dehydrogenase to provide feedback control of 3-PG levels. Inhibition of PGAM1 by shRNA or a small molecule inhibitor PGMI-004A results in increased 3-PG and decreased 2-PG levels in cancer cells, leading to significantly decreased glycolysis, PPP flux and biosynthesis, as well as attenuated cell proliferation and tumor growth.


Nature Communications | 2013

MacroH2A histone variants act as a barrier upon reprogramming towards pluripotency

Alexandre Gaspar-Maia; Zulekha A. Qadeer; Dan Hasson; Kajan Ratnakumar; N. Adrian Leu; Gary LeRoy; Shichong Liu; Carl Costanzi; David Valle-Garcia; Christoph Schaniel; Ihor R. Lemischka; Benjamin A. Garcia; John R. Pehrson; Emily Bernstein

The chromatin template imposes an epigenetic barrier during the process of somatic cell reprogramming. Here, using fibroblasts derived from macroH2A double knockout mice we show that these histone variants act cooperatively as a barrier to induced pluripotency. Through manipulation of macroH2A isoforms, we further demonstrate that macroH2A2 is the predominant barrier to reprogramming. Genomic analyses reveal that macroH2A1 and macroH2A2, together with H3K27me3, co-occupy pluripotency genes in wild type fibroblasts. In particular, we find macroH2A isoforms to be highly enriched at target genes of the K27me3 demethylase, Utx, which are reactivated early in iPS reprogramming. Finally, while macroH2A double knockout induced pluripotent cells are able to differentiate properly in vitro and in vivo, such differentiated cells retain the ability to return to a stem-like state. Therefore, we propose that macroH2A isoforms provide a redundant silencing layer or terminal differentiation ‘lock’ at critical pluripotency genes that presents as an epigenetic barrier when differentiated cells are challenged to reprogram.


Journal of Proteome Research | 2009

One-Pot Shotgun Quantitative Mass Spectrometry Characterization of Histones

Mariana D. Plazas-Mayorca; Barry M. Zee; Nicolas L. Young; Ian M. Fingerman; Gary LeRoy; Scott D. Briggs; Benjamin A. Garcia

Despite increasing applications of mass spectrometry (MS) to characterize post-translational modifications (PTMs) on histone proteins, most existing protocols are not properly suited to robustly measure them in a high-throughput quantitative manner. In this work, we expand on current protocols and describe improved methods for quantitative Bottom Up characterization of histones and their PTMs with comparable sensitivity but much higher throughput than standard MS approaches. This is accomplished by first bypassing off-line fractionation of histone proteins and working directly with total histones from a typical nuclei acid extraction. Next, using a chemical derivatization procedure that is combined with stable-isotope labeling in a two-step process, we can quantitatively compare samples using nanoLC-MS/MS. We show that our method can successfully detect 17 combined H2A/H2B variants and over 25 combined histone H3 and H4 PTMs in a single MS experiment. We test our method by quantifying differentially expressed histone PTMs from wild-type yeast and a methyltransferase knockout strain. This improved methodology establishes that time and sample consuming off-line HPLC or SDS-PAGE purification of individual histone variants prior to MS interrogation as commonly performed is not strictly required. Our protocol significantly streamlines the analysis of histone PTMs and will allow for studies of differentially expressed PTMs between multiple samples during biologically relevant processes in a rapid and quantitative fashion.


Nature Chemical Biology | 2010

Combinatorial profiling of chromatin binding modules reveals multisite discrimination

Adam L. Garske; Samuel S. Oliver; Elise K. Wagner; Catherine A. Musselman; Gary LeRoy; Benjamin A. Garcia; Tatiana G. Kutateladze; John M. Denu

Specific interactions between post-translational modifications (PTMs) and chromatin-binding proteins are central to the idea of a ‘histone code’. Here, a 5000-member, PTM-randomized, combinatorial peptide library based on the N-terminus of histone H3 was utilized to interrogate multi-site specificity of six chromatin-binding modules, which read the methylation status of K4. We found that T3 phosphorylation, R2 methylation, and T6 phosphorylation are critical additional PTMs that modulate the ability to recognize and bind histone H3. Notably, phosphorylation of T6 yielded the most varied effect on protein binding, suggesting an important regulatory mechanism for readers of the H3 tail. Mass spectrometry and antibody-based evidence indicate that this previously uncharacterized modification exists on native H3, and NMR analysis of ING2 revealed the structural basis for discrimination. These investigations reveal a continuum of binding affinities in which multi-site PTM recognition involves both switch- and rheostat-like properties, yielding graded effects that depend on the inherent ‘reader’ specificity.

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Barry M. Zee

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Nicolas L. Young

Baylor College of Medicine

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Emily Bernstein

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Kajan Ratnakumar

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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