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Dive into the research topics where Gary Loughran is active.

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Featured researches published by Gary Loughran.


Current Biology | 1998

Apparent caspase independence of programmed cell death in Dictyostelium

R.A. Olie; Françoise Durrieu; S. Cornillon; Gary Loughran; Julian D. Gross; William C. Earnshaw; Pierre Golstein

During normal development, cell elimination [1,2] occurs by programmed cell death (PCD) [3], of which apoptosis [4] is the best known morphological type. Activation of cysteine proteases termed caspases [5] is required in many instances of animal PCD [6-9], but its role outside the animal kingdom is as yet unknown. PCD occurs during developmental stages in the slime mold Dictyostelium discoideum [10,11]. Under favorable conditions, Dictyostelium multiplies as a unicellular organism. Upon starvation, a pathway involving aggregation, differentiation and morphogenesis induces the formation of a multicellular fungus-like structure called a sorocarp [12], consisting mainly of spores and stalk cells, the latter being a result of cell death. Dictyostelium cell death is similar to classical apoptosis in that some cytoplasmic and chromatin condensation occurs but differs from apoptosis because it involves massive vacuolisation and, interestingly, lacks DNA fragmentation [11]. We examined whether caspase activity is required for Dictyostelium cell death. We found that caspase inhibitors did not affect cell death, although some caspase inhibitors that did not inhibit cell death impaired other stages in development and could block affinity-labelling of soluble extracts of Dictyostelium cells with an activated caspase-specific reagent. The simplest interpretation of these results is that in Dictyostelium, whether or not caspase-like molecules exist and are required for some developmental steps, caspase activation is not required for cell death itself.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

Initiation context modulates autoregulation of eukaryotic translation initiation factor 1 (eIF1)

Ivaylo Ivanov; Gary Loughran; Matthew S. Sachs; John F. Atkins

The central feature of standard eukaryotic translation initiation is small ribosome subunit loading at the 5′ cap followed by its 5′ to 3′ scanning for a start codon. The preferred start is an AUG codon in an optimal context. Elaborate cellular machinery exists to ensure the fidelity of start codon selection. Eukaryotic initiation factor 1 (eIF1) plays a central role in this process. Here we show that the translation of eIF1 homologs in eukaryotes from diverse taxa involves initiation from an AUG codon in a poor context. Using human eIF1 as a model, we show that this poor context is necessary for an autoregulatory negative feedback loop in which a high level of eIF1 inhibits its own translation, establishing that variability in the stringency of start codon selection is used for gene regulation in eukaryotes. We show that the stringency of start codon selection (preferential utilization of optimal start sites) is increased to a surprising degree by overexpressing eIF1. The capacity for the cellular level of eIF1 to impact initiation through the variable stringency of initiation codon selection likely has significant consequences for the proteome in eukaryotes.


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

uORFs with unusual translational start codons autoregulate expression of eukaryotic ornithine decarboxylase homologs

Ivaylo Ivanov; Gary Loughran; John F. Atkins

In a minority of eukaryotic mRNAs, a small functional upstream ORF (uORF), often performing a regulatory role, precedes the translation start site for the main product(s). Here, conserved uORFs in numerous ornithine decarboxylase homologs are identified from yeast to mammals. Most have noncanonical evolutionarily conserved start codons, the main one being AUU, which has not been known as an initiator for eukaryotic chromosomal genes. The AUG-less uORF present in mouse antizyme inhibitor, one of the ornithine decarboxylase homologs in mammals, mediates polyamine-induced repression of the downstream main ORF. This repression is part of an autoregulatory circuit, and one of its sensors is the AUU codon, which suggests that translation initiation codon identity is likely used for regulation in eukaryotes.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2014

Evidence of efficient stop codon readthrough in four mammalian genes

Gary Loughran; Ming Yuan Chou; Ivaylo Ivanov; Irwin Jungreis; Manolis Kellis; Anmol M. Kiran; Pavel V. Baranov; John F. Atkins

Stop codon readthrough is used extensively by viruses to expand their gene expression. Until recent discoveries in Drosophila, only a very limited number of readthrough cases in chromosomal genes had been reported. Analysis of conserved protein coding signatures that extend beyond annotated stop codons identified potential stop codon readthrough of four mammalian genes. Here we use a modified targeted bioinformatic approach to identify a further three mammalian readthrough candidates. All seven genes were tested experimentally using reporter constructs transfected into HEK-293T cells. Four displayed efficient stop codon readthrough, and these have UGA immediately followed by CUAG. Comparative genomic analysis revealed that in the four readthrough candidates containing UGA-CUAG, this motif is conserved not only in mammals but throughout vertebrates with the first six of the seven nucleotides being universally conserved. The importance of the CUAG motif was confirmed using a systematic mutagenesis approach. One gene, OPRL1, encoding an opiate receptor, displayed extremely efficient levels of readthrough (∼31%) in HEK-293T cells. Signals both 5′ and 3′ of the OPRL1 stop codon contribute to this high level of readthrough. The sequence UGA-CUA alone can support 1.5% readthrough, underlying its importance.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2012

Stringency of start codon selection modulates autoregulation of translation initiation factor eIF5

Gary Loughran; Matthew S. Sachs; John F. Atkins; Ivaylo Ivanov

An AUG in an optimal nucleotide context is the preferred translation initiation site in eukaryotic cells. Interactions among translation initiation factors, including eIF1 and eIF5, govern start codon selection. Experiments described here showed that high intracellular eIF5 levels reduced the stringency of start codon selection in human cells. In contrast, high intracellular eIF1 levels increased stringency. High levels of eIF5 induced translation of inhibitory upstream open reading frames (uORFs) in eIF5 mRNA that initiate with AUG codons in conserved poor contexts. This resulted in reduced translation from the downstream eIF5 start codon, indicating that eIF5 autoregulates its own synthesis. As with eIF1, which is also autoregulated through translation initiation, features contributing to eIF5 autoregulation show deep evolutionary conservation. The results obtained provide the basis for a model in which auto- and cross-regulation of eIF5 and eIF1 translation establish a regulatory feedback loop that would stabilize the stringency of start codon selection.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010

Heme-binding Protein HRG-1 Is Induced by Insulin-like Growth Factor I and Associates with the Vacuolar H+-ATPase to Control Endosomal pH and Receptor Trafficking

Katie O'Callaghan; Verónica Ayllón; Jean O'Keeffe; Yanru Wang; Orla T. Cox; Gary Loughran; Michael Forgac; Rosemary O'Connor

Endocytosis and trafficking of receptors and nutrient transporters are dependent on an acidic intra-endosomal pH that is maintained by the vacuolar H+-ATPase (V-ATPase) proton pump. V-ATPase activity has also been associated with cancer invasiveness. Here, we report on a new V-ATPase-associated protein, which we identified in insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) receptor-transformed cells, and which was separately identified in Caenorhabditis elegans as HRG-1, a member of a family of heme-regulated genes. We found that HRG-1 is present in endosomes but not in lysosomes, and it is trafficked to the plasma membrane upon nutrient withdrawal in mammalian cells. Suppression of HRG-1 with small interfering RNA causes impaired endocytosis of transferrin receptor, decreased cell motility, and decreased viability of HeLa cells. HRG-1 interacts with the c subunit of the V-ATPase and enhances V-ATPase activity in isolated yeast vacuoles. Endosomal acidity and V-ATPase assembly are decreased in cells with suppressed HRG-1, whereas transferrin receptor endocytosis is enhanced in cells that overexpress HRG-1. Cellular uptake of a fluorescent heme analogue is enhanced by HRG-1 in a V-ATPase-dependent manner. Our findings indicate that HRG-1 regulates V-ATPase activity, which is essential for endosomal acidification, heme binding, and receptor trafficking in mammalian cells. Thus, HRG-1 may facilitate tumor growth and cancer progression.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2016

Ribosomal frameshifting and transcriptional slippage: From genetic steganography and cryptography to adventitious use.

John F. Atkins; Gary Loughran; Pramod R Bhatt; Andrew E. Firth; Pavel V. Baranov

Genetic decoding is not ‘frozen’ as was earlier thought, but dynamic. One facet of this is frameshifting that often results in synthesis of a C-terminal region encoded by a new frame. Ribosomal frameshifting is utilized for the synthesis of additional products, for regulatory purposes and for translational ‘correction’ of problem or ‘savior’ indels. Utilization for synthesis of additional products occurs prominently in the decoding of mobile chromosomal element and viral genomes. One class of regulatory frameshifting of stable chromosomal genes governs cellular polyamine levels from yeasts to humans. In many cases of productively utilized frameshifting, the proportion of ribosomes that frameshift at a shift-prone site is enhanced by specific nascent peptide or mRNA context features. Such mRNA signals, which can be 5′ or 3′ of the shift site or both, can act by pairing with ribosomal RNA or as stem loops or pseudoknots even with one component being 4 kb 3′ from the shift site. Transcriptional realignment at slippage-prone sequences also generates productively utilized products encoded trans-frame with respect to the genomic sequence. This too can be enhanced by nucleic acid structure. Together with dynamic codon redefinition, frameshifting is one of the forms of recoding that enriches gene expression.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

Ribosomal frameshifting into an overlapping gene in the 2B-encoding region of the cardiovirus genome

Gary Loughran; Andrew E. Firth; John F. Atkins

The genus Cardiovirus (family Picornaviridae) currently comprises the species Encephalomyocarditis virus (EMCV) and Theilovirus. Cardioviruses have a positive-sense, single-stranded RNA genome that encodes a large polyprotein (L-1ABCD-2ABC-3ABCD) that is cleaved to produce approximately 12 mature proteins. We report on a conserved ORF that overlaps the 2B-encoding sequence of EMCV in the +2 reading frame. The ORF is translated as a 128–129 amino acid transframe fusion (2B*) with the N-terminal 11–12 amino acids of 2B, via ribosomal frameshifting at a conserved GGUUUUY motif. Mutations that knock out expression of 2B* result in a small-plaque phenotype. Curiously, although theilovirus sequences lack a long ORF in the +2 frame at this genomic location, they maintain a conserved GGUUUUU motif just downstream of the 2A-2B junction, and a highly localized peak in conservation at polyprotein-frame synonymous sites suggests that theiloviruses also utilize frameshifting here, albeit into a very short +2-frame ORF. Unlike previous cases of programmed -1 frameshifting, here frameshifting is modulated by virus infection, thus suggesting a novel regulatory role for frameshifting in these viruses.


Oncogene | 2005

Gene expression profiles in cells transformed by overexpression of the IGF-I receptor

Gary Loughran; Merei Huigsloot; Patrick A. Kiely; Loraine M. Smith; Suzanne Floyd; Verónica Ayllón; Rosemary O'Connor

To identify genes associated with insulin-like growth factor-I receptor (IGF-IR)-mediated cellular transformation, we isolated genes that are differentially expressed in R− cells (derived from the IGF-IR knockout mouse) and R+ cells (R− cells that overexpress the IGF-IR). From these, 45 genes of known function were expressed at higher levels in R+ cells and 22 were expressed at higher levels in R− cells. Differential expression was confirmed by Northern blot analysis of R+ and R− cells. Genes expressed more abundantly in R+ cells are associated with (1) tumour growth and metastasis including, βigH3, mts1, igfbp5 protease, and mystique; (2) cell division, including cyclin A1 and cdk1; (3) signal transduction, including pkcδbp and lmw-ptp; and (4) metabolism including ATPase H+ transporter and ferritin. In MCF-7 cells IGF-I induced expression of two genes, lasp-1 and mystique, which could contribute to metastasis. Lasp-1 expression required activity of the PI3-kinase signalling pathway. Mystique was highly expressed in metastatic but not in androgen-dependent prostate cancer cell lines and Mystique overexpression in MCF-7 cells promoted cell migration and invasion. We conclude that genes identified in this screen may mediate IGF-IR function in cancer progression.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2017

Insights into the mechanisms of eukaryotic translation gained with ribosome profiling

Dmitry E. Andreev; Patrick B. F. O'Connor; Gary Loughran; Sergey E. Dmitriev; Pavel V. Baranov; Ivan N. Shatsky

The development of Ribosome Profiling (RiboSeq) has revolutionized functional genomics. RiboSeq is based on capturing and sequencing of the mRNA fragments enclosed within the translating ribosome and it thereby provides a ‘snapshot’ of ribosome positions at the transcriptome wide level. Although the method is predominantly used for analysis of differential gene expression and discovery of novel translated ORFs, the RiboSeq data can also be a rich source of information about molecular mechanisms of polypeptide synthesis and translational control. This review will focus on how recent findings made with RiboSeq have revealed important details of the molecular mechanisms of translation in eukaryotes. These include mRNA translation sensitivity to drugs affecting translation initiation and elongation, the roles of upstream ORFs in response to stress, the dynamics of elongation and termination as well as details of intrinsic ribosome behavior on the mRNA after translation termination. As the RiboSeq method is still at a relatively early stage we will also discuss the implications of RiboSeq artifacts on data interpretation.

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Ivaylo Ivanov

Georgia State University

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Ioanna Tzani

University College Cork

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Ivaylo P. Ivanov

National Institutes of Health

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