Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Gary P. Newnam is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Gary P. Newnam.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2002

Huntingtin toxicity in yeast model depends on polyglutamine aggregation mediated by a prion-like protein Rnq1

Anatoli B. Meriin; Xiaoqian Zhang; Xiangwei He; Gary P. Newnam; Yury O. Chernoff; Michael Y. Sherman

The cause of Huntingtons disease is expansion of polyglutamine (polyQ) domain in huntingtin, which makes this protein both neurotoxic and aggregation prone. Here we developed the first yeast model, which establishes a direct link between aggregation of expanded polyQ domain and its cytotoxicity. Our data indicated that deficiencies in molecular chaperones Sis1 and Hsp104 inhibited seeding of polyQ aggregates, whereas ssa1, ssa2, and ydj1–151 mutations inhibited expansion of aggregates. The latter three mutants strongly suppressed the polyQ toxicity. Spontaneous mutants with suppressed aggregation appeared with high frequency, and in all of them the toxicity was relieved. Aggregation defects in these mutants and in sis1–85 were not complemented in the cross to the hsp104 mutant, demonstrating an unusual type of inheritance. Since Hsp104 is required for prion maintenance in yeast, this suggested a role for prions in polyQ aggregation and toxicity. We screened a set of deletions of nonessential genes coding for known prions and related proteins and found that deletion of the RNQ1 gene specifically suppressed aggregation and toxicity of polyQ. Curing of the prion form of Rnq1 from wild-type cells dramatically suppressed both aggregation and toxicity of polyQ. We concluded that aggregation of polyQ is critical for its toxicity and that Rnq1 in its prion conformation plays an essential role in polyQ aggregation leading to the toxicity.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 1999

Antagonistic Interactions between Yeast Chaperones Hsp104 and Hsp70 in Prion Curing

Gary P. Newnam; Renee D. Wegrzyn; Susan Lindquist; Yury O. Chernoff

ABSTRACT The maintenance of [PSI], a prion-like form of the yeast release factor Sup35, requires a specific concentration of the chaperone protein Hsp104: either deletion or overexpression of Hsp104 will cure cells of [PSI]. A major puzzle of these studies was that overexpression of Hsp104 alone, from a heterologous promoter, cures cells of [PSI] very efficiently, yet the natural induction of Hsp104 with heat shock, stationary-phase growth, or sporulation does not. These observations pointed to a mechanism for protecting the genetic information carried by the [PSI] element from vicissitudes of the environment. Here, we show that simultaneous overexpression of Ssa1, a protein of the Hsp70 family, protects [PSI] from curing by overexpression of Hsp104. Ssa1 protein belongs to the Ssa subfamily, members of which are normally induced with Hsp104 during heat shock, stationary-phase growth, and sporulation. At the molecular level, excess Ssa1 prevents a shift of Sup35 protein from the insoluble (prion) to the soluble (cellular) state in the presence of excess Hsp104. Overexpression of Ssa1 also increases nonsense suppression by [PSI] when Hsp104 is expressed at its normal level. In contrast,hsp104 deletion strains lose [PSI] even in the presence of overproduced Ssa1. Overproduction of the unrelated chaperone protein Hsp82 (Hsp90) neither cured [PSI] nor antagonized the [PSI]-curing effect of overproduced Hsp104. Our results suggest it is the interplay between Hsp104 and Hsp70 that allows the maintenance of [PSI] under natural growth conditions.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 1999

Evidence for a Protein Mutator in Yeast: Role of the Hsp70-Related Chaperone Ssb in Formation, Stability, and Toxicity of the [PSI] Prion

Yury O. Chernoff; Gary P. Newnam; Jaijit Kumar; Kim D. Allen; Amy D. Zink

ABSTRACT Propagation of the yeast protein-based non-Mendelian element [PSI], a prion-like form of the release factor Sup35, was shown to be regulated by the interplay between chaperone proteins Hsp104 and Hsp70. While overproduction of Hsp104 protein cures cells of [PSI], overproduction of the Ssa1 protein of the Hsp70 family protects [PSI] from the curing effect of Hsp104. Here we demonstrate that another protein of the Hsp70 family, Ssb, previously implicated in nascent polypeptide folding and protein turnover, exhibits effects on [PSI] which are opposite those of Ssa. Ssb overproduction increases, while Ssb depletion decreases, [PSI] curing by the overproduced Hsp104. Both spontaneous [PSI] formation and [PSI] induction by overproduction of the homologous or heterologous Sup35 protein are increased significantly in the strain lacking Ssb. This is the first example when inactivation of an unrelated cellular protein facilitates prion formation. Ssb is therefore playing a role in protein-based inheritance, which is analogous to the role played by the products of mutator genes in nucleic acid-based inheritance. Ssb depletion also decreases toxicity of the overproduced Sup35 and causes extreme sensitivity to the [PSI]-curing chemical agent guanidine hydrochloride. Our data demonstrate that various members of the yeast Hsp70 family have diverged from each other in regard to their roles in prion propagation and suggest that Ssb could serve as a proofreading component of the enzymatic system, which prevents formation of prion aggregates.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2001

Mechanism of Prion Loss after Hsp104 Inactivation in Yeast

Renee D. Wegrzyn; Kavita P. Bapat; Gary P. Newnam; Amy D. Zink; Yury O. Chernoff

ABSTRACT In vivo propagation of [PSI+], an aggregation-prone prion isoform of the yeast release factor Sup35 (eRF3), has previously been shown to require intermediate levels of the chaperone protein Hsp104. Here we perform a detailed study on the mechanism of prion loss after Hsp104 inactivation. Complete or partial inactivation of Hsp104 was achieved by the following approaches: deleting the HSP104 gene; modifying theHSP104 promoter that results in low level of its expression; and overexpressing the dominant-negative ATPase-inactive mutant HSP104 allele. In contrast to guanidine-HCl, an agent blocking prion proliferation, Hsp104 inactivation induced relatively rapid loss of [PSI +] and another candidate yeast prion, [PIN +]. Thus, the previously hypothesized mechanism of prion dilution in cell divisions due to the blocking of prion proliferation is not sufficient to explain the effect of Hsp104 inactivation. The [PSI +] response to increased levels of another chaperone, Hsp70-Ssa, depends on whether the Hsp104 activity is increased or decreased. A decrease of Hsp104 levels or activity is accompanied by a decrease in the number of Sup35PSI+aggregates and an increase in their size. This eventually leads to accumulation of huge agglomerates, apparently possessing reduced prion forming capability and representing dead ends of the prion replication cycle. Thus, our data confirm that the primary function of Hsp104 in prion propagation is to disassemble prion aggregates and generate the small prion seeds that initiate new rounds of prion propagation (possibly assisted by Hsp70-Ssa).


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2006

Modulation of Prion Formation, Aggregation, and Toxicity by the Actin Cytoskeleton in Yeast

Elena E. Ganusova; Laura Ozolins; Srishti Bhagat; Gary P. Newnam; Renee D. Wegrzyn; Michael Y. Sherman; Yury O. Chernoff

ABSTRACT Self-perpetuating protein aggregates transmit prion diseases in mammals and heritable traits in yeast. De novo prion formation can be induced by transient overproduction of the corresponding prion-forming protein or its prion domain. Here, we demonstrate that the yeast prion protein Sup35 interacts with various proteins of the actin cortical cytoskeleton that are involved in endocytosis. Sup35-derived aggregates, generated in the process of prion induction, are associated with the components of the endocytic/vacuolar pathway. Mutational alterations of the cortical actin cytoskeleton decrease aggregation of overproduced Sup35 and de novo prion induction and increase prion-related toxicity in yeast. Deletion of the gene coding for the actin assembly protein Sla2 is lethal in cells containing the prion isoforms of both Sup35 and Rnq1 proteins simultaneously. Our data are consistent with a model in which cytoskeletal structures provide a scaffold for generation of large aggregates, resembling mammalian aggresomes. These aggregates promote prion formation. Moreover, it appears that the actin cytoskeleton also plays a certain role in counteracting the toxicity of the overproduced potentially aggregating proteins.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2005

Modulation of prion-dependent polyglutamine aggregation and toxicity by chaperone proteins in the yeast model

Kavita Gokhale; Gary P. Newnam; Michael Y. Sherman; Yury O. Chernoff

In yeast, aggregation and toxicity of the expanded polyglutamine fragment of human huntingtin strictly depend on the presence of the endogenous self-perpetuating aggregated proteins (prions), which contain glutamine/asparagine-rich domains. Some chaperones of the Hsp100/70/40 complex, modulating propagation of yeast prions, were also reported to influence polyglutamine aggregation in yeast, but it was not clear whether they do it directly or via affecting prions. Our data show that although some chaperone alterations indeed act on polyglutamines via curing endogenous prions, other alterations decrease size and ameliorate toxicity of polyglutamine aggregates without affecting prion propagation. Therefore, the role of yeast chaperones in polyglutamine aggregation and toxicity is not restricted only to their effects on the endogenous prions. Moreover, chaperone interactions with prion and polyglutamine aggregates appear to be of a highly specific nature. One and the same chaperone alteration, substitution A503V in the middle region of the chaperone Hsp104, exhibited opposite effects on one of the endogenous prions ([PSI+], the prion form of Sup35) and on polyglutamines, increasing aggregate size and toxicity in the former case and decreasing them in the latter case. On the other hand, different members of a single chaperone family exhibited opposite effects on one and the same type of aggregates: excess of the Hsp40 chaperone Ydj1 increased polyglutamine aggregate size and toxicity, whereas excess of the other Hsp40 chaperone, Sis1, decreased them. As many stress-defense proteins are conserved between yeast and mammals, these data shed light on possible mechanisms modulating polyglutamine aggregation and toxicity in mammalian cells.


The EMBO Journal | 2001

Yeast prion protein derivative defective in aggregate shearing and production of new 'seeds'.

Andrey S. Borchsenius; Renee D. Wegrzyn; Gary P. Newnam; S. G. Inge-Vechtomov; Yury O. Chernoff

According to the nucleated polymerization model, in vivo prion proliferation occurs via dissociation (shearing) of the huge prion polymers into smaller oligomeric ‘seeds’, initiating new rounds of prion replication. Here, we identify the deletion derivative of yeast prion protein Sup35 (Sup35‐Δ22/69) that is specifically defective in aggregate shearing and ‘seed’ production. This derivative, [PSI+], previously thought to be unable to turn into a prion state, in fact retains the ability to form a prion ([PSI+]Δ22/69) that can be maintained in selective conditions and transmitted by cytoplasmic infection (cytoduction), but which is mitotically unstable in non‐selective conditions. Moreover, the full‐size Sup35 prion ‘seeded’ by [PSI+]Δ22/69 retains its mitotic stability defect. The [PSI+]Δ22/69 cells contain more Sup35 protein in the insoluble fraction and form larger Sup35 aggregates compared with the conventional [PSI+] cells. Moderate excess of Hsp104 disaggregase increases transmission of the [PSI+]Δ22/69 prion, while excess Hsp70‐Ssa chaperone antagonizes it, opposite to their effects on conventional [PSI+]. Our results shed light on the mechanisms determining the differences between transmissible prions and non‐transmissible protein aggregates.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2011

Destabilization and recovery of a yeast prion after mild heat shock

Gary P. Newnam; Jennifer L. Birchmore; Yury O. Chernoff

Yeast prion [PSI(+)] is a self-perpetuating amyloid of the translational termination factor Sup35. Although [PSI(+)] propagation is modulated by heat shock proteins (Hsps), high temperature was previously reported to have little or no effect on [PSI(+)]. Our results show that short-term exposure of exponentially growing yeast culture to mild heat shock, followed by immediate resumption of growth, leads to [PSI(+)] destabilization, sometimes persisting for several cell divisions after heat shock. Prion loss occurring in the first division after heat shock is preferentially detected in a daughter cell, indicating the impairment of prion segregation that results in asymmetric prion distribution between a mother cell and a bud. Longer heat shock or prolonged incubation in the absence of nutrients after heat shock led to [PSI(+)] recovery. Both prion destabilization and recovery during heat shock depend on protein synthesis. Maximal prion destabilization coincides with maximal imbalance between Hsp104 and other Hsps such as Hsp70-Ssa. Deletions of individual SSA genes increase prion destabilization and/or counteract recovery. The dynamics of prion aggregation during destabilization and recovery are consistent with the notion that efficient prion fragmentation and segregation require a proper balance between Hsp104 and other (e.g., Hsp70-Ssa) chaperones. In contrast to heat shock, [PSI(+)] destabilization by osmotic stressors does not always depend on cell proliferation and/or protein synthesis, indicating that different stresses may impact the prion via different mechanisms. Our data demonstrate that heat stress causes asymmetric prion distribution in a cell division and confirm that the effects of Hsps on prions are physiologically relevant.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

Prion species barrier between the closely related yeast proteins is detected despite coaggregation

Buxin Chen; Gary P. Newnam; Yury O. Chernoff

Prions are self-perpetuating and, in most cases, aggregation-prone protein isoforms that transmit neurodegenerative diseases in mammals and control heritable traits in yeast. Prion conversion requires a very high level of identity of the interacting protein sequences. Decreased transmission of the prion state between divergent proteins is termed “species barrier” and was thought to occur because of the inability of divergent prion proteins to coaggregate. Species barrier can be overcome in cross-species infections, e.g., from “mad cows” to humans. We studied the counterparts of yeast prion protein Sup35, originated from three different species of the Saccharomyces sensu stricto group and exhibiting the range of prion domain divergence that overlaps with the range of divergence observed among distant mammalian species. All three proteins were capable of forming a prion in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, although prions formed by heterologous proteins were usually less stable than the endogenous S. cerevisiae prion. Heterologous Sup35 proteins coaggregated in the S. cerevisiae cells. However, in vivo cross-species prion conversion was decreased and in vitro polymerization was cross-inhibited in at least some heterologous combinations, thus demonstrating the existence of prion species barrier. Moreover, the barrier between the S. cerevisiae protein and its Saccharomyces paradoxus and Saccharomyces bayanus counterparts was asymmetric both in vivo and in vitro. Our data show that a decreased cross-species prion transmission does not necessarily correlate with a lack of cross-species coaggregation, suggesting that species-specificity of prion transmission is controlled at the level of conformational transition rather than coaggregation.


Current Genetics | 2006

Prion variant maintained only at high levels of the Hsp104 disaggregase

Andrey S. Borchsenius; Susanne Müller; Gary P. Newnam; S. G. Inge-Vechtomov; Yury O. Chernoff

The yeast prion [PSI+] is a self-perpetuating aggregated isoform of the translation termination factor Sup35. [PSI+] propagation is promoted by moderate levels and antagonized by high levels of the chaperone Hsp104. In agreement with the model postulating that excess Hsp104 acts on [PSI+] by disaggregating prion polymers, we show that an increase in Sup35 levels, accompanied by an increase in size of prion aggregates, also partially protects [PSI+] from elimination by excess Hsp104. Despite retention of [PSI+], excess Hsp104 decreases toxicity of overproduced Sup35 in [PSI+] strains. A heritable variant of [PSI+], which has been isolated and is maintained only in the presence of increased levels of Hsp104, is characterized by an abnormally large aggregate size, and exhibits an altered response to overproduction of the Hsp70 chaperone Ssa1. These features resemble the previously described prion generated by a deletion derivative of Sup35, but are not associated with any sequence alteration and are controlled exclusively at the protein level. Our data provide a proof of the existence of conditionally stable prion variants maintained only at altered levels of Hsps, that could in principle be beneficial if the normal cellular function of a prion protein becomes detrimental to the cell in such conditions.

Collaboration


Dive into the Gary P. Newnam's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Renee D. Wegrzyn

Georgia Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Kim D. Allen

Georgia Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Amy D. Zink

Georgia Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Andrey S. Borchsenius

Georgia Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Andrey V. Romanyuk

Georgia Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Buxin Chen

Georgia Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge