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Dive into the research topics where Hana Hall is active.

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Featured researches published by Hana Hall.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2012

Cdc14 phosphatases preferentially dephosphorylate a subset of cyclin-dependent kinase (Cdk) sites containing phosphoserine.

Steven C. Bremmer; Hana Hall; Juan S. Martinez; Christie L. Eissler; Thomas H. Hinrichsen; Sandra Rossie; Laurie L. Parker; Mark C. Hall; Harry Charbonneau

Background: Cdc14 phosphatases help control mitosis by dephosphorylating sites (Ser/Thr-Pro) targeted by cyclin-dependent kinases (Cdks). Results: Cdc14 family phosphatases strongly prefer phosphoserine over phosphothreonine at Cdk sites. Conclusion: By discriminating among Cdk sites, Cdc14 may participate in setting the order and timing of Cdk substrate dephosphorylation. Significance: Mechanisms governing the timing of Cdk site dephosphorylation are crucial for proper coordination of late mitotic events. Mitotic cell division is controlled by cyclin-dependent kinases (Cdks), which phosphorylate hundreds of protein substrates responsible for executing the division program. Cdk inactivation and reversal of Cdk-catalyzed phosphorylation are universal requirements for completing and exiting mitosis and resetting the cell cycle machinery. Mechanisms that define the timing and order of Cdk substrate dephosphorylation remain poorly understood. Cdc14 phosphatases have been implicated in Cdk inactivation and are thought to be generally specific for Cdk-type phosphorylation sites. We show that budding yeast Cdc14 possesses a strong and unusual preference for phosphoserine over phosphothreonine at Pro-directed sites in vitro. Using serine to threonine substitutions in the Cdk consensus sites of the Cdc14 substrate Acm1, we demonstrate that phosphoserine specificity exists in vivo. Furthermore, it appears to be a conserved property of all Cdc14 family phosphatases. An invariant active site residue was identified that sterically restricts phosphothreonine binding and is largely responsible for phosphoserine selectivity. Optimal Cdc14 substrates also possessed a basic residue at the +3 position relative to the phosphoserine, whereas substrates lacking this basic residue were not effectively hydrolyzed. The intrinsic selectivity of Cdc14 may help establish the order of Cdk substrate dephosphorylation during mitotic exit and contribute to roles in other cellular processes.


Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2015

Dephosphorylation of Iqg1 by Cdc14 regulates cytokinesis in budding yeast

Daniel Patrick Miller; Hana Hall; Ryan Chaparian; Madison Mara; Mark C. Hall; Katie Shannon

To study how actomyosin ring assembly is regulated during the cell cycle, four perfect CDK sites were mutated in IQG1. Cells expressing the mutant IQG1 allele exhibited defects in myosin contraction and cytokinesis. The data show that Iqg1 is a substrate of the phosphatase Cdc14 and that changes in CDC14 expression affect actin ring formation.


Cell Cycle | 2012

Acm1 contributes to nuclear positioning by inhibiting Cdh1-substrate interactions

Juan S. Martinez; Hana Hall; Matthew D. Bartolowits; Mark C. Hall

The anaphase-promoting complex (APC) is tightly regulated during cell division, often by pseudosubstrate binding to its coactivators Cdh1 and Cdc20. Budding yeast Acm1 is a Cdh1 pseudosubstrate inhibitor whose biological function is unknown. We show here that cells lacking Acm1 have defects in nuclear positioning and spindle morphology during mitosis. However, Cdh1 substrates are not destabilized in the absence of Acm1 and expression of inactive Cdh1 mutants that retain substrate binding is sufficient for the acm1 phenotype. We conclude that Acm1 is not required to inhibit APCCdh1 activity but rather prevents untimely Cdh1-substrate interactions. We further provide evidence suggesting that the substrate primarily responsible for the acm1 phenotype is the bud neck-localized kinase, Hsl1. Our results imply that at least some coactivator-substrate interactions require regulation. Several unrelated APC pseudosubstrates have been identified in diverse eukaryotes and their ability to simultaneously inhibit enzymatic activity and substrate binding may partly explain why this regulatory mechanism has been selected repeatedly during evolution.


npj Aging and Mechanisms of Disease | 2017

Cytochrome b5 protects photoreceptors from light stress-induced lipid peroxidation and retinal degeneration

Xinping Chen; Hana Hall; Jeffrey Simpson; Walter D. Leon-Salas; Donald Ready; Vikki M. Weake

Lipid peroxides are generated by oxidative stress in cells, and contribute to ageing and neurodegenerative disease. The eye is at special risk for lipid peroxidation because photoreceptors possess amplified sensory membranes rich in peroxidation-susceptible polyunsaturated fatty acids. Light-induced lipid peroxidation in the retina contributes to retinal degeneration, and lipid peroxidation has been implicated in the progression of age-associated ocular diseases such as age-related macular degeneration (AMD). Here, we show that exposing Drosophila melanogaster to strong blue light induces oxidative stress including lipid peroxidation that results in retinal degeneration. Surprisingly, very young flies are resilient to this acute light stress, suggesting they possess endogenous neuroprotective mechanisms. While lipophilic antioxidants partially suppressed blue light-induced retinal degeneration in older flies, we find that overexpression of cytochrome b5 (Cyt-b5) completely suppressed both blue light-induced lipid peroxidation and retinal degeneration. Our data identify Cyt-b5 as a neuroprotective factor that targets light-induced oxidative damage, particularly lipid peroxidation. Cyt-b5 may function via supporting antioxidant recycling, thereby providing a strategy to prevent oxidative stress in ageing photoreceptors that would be synergistic with dietary antioxidant supplementation.Neuroscience: Vision is stressful for old fliesParadoxically, light is essential for vision, yet it also induces stress that damages the sensitive cells in the eye. Vikki Weake and her team at Purdue University examined how exposure to blue light causes damage to the retina in fruit flies. Blue light causes death of photoreceptors, the light-sensing neurons. Surprisingly, very young flies are resistant to blue light. Increasing levels of a single protein, Cytochrome-b5, mimicked youthful resilience in older flies. Cytochrome-b5 is central to an ancient cellular defense system that protects membranes from oxidative damage. With expansive sensory membranes containing specialized lipids, photoreceptors are especially sensitive to membrane lipid peroxidation, an emerging final common pathway for cell death in aging and disease. Research into preventing lipid peroxidation might help to develop therapies for age-related diseases such as age-related macular degeneration.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Timely activation of budding yeast APCCdh1 involves degradation of its inhibitor, Acm1, by an unconventional proteolytic mechanism.

Michael Melesse; Eunyoung Choi; Hana Hall; Michael J. Walsh; M. Ariel Geer; Mark C. Hall

Regulated proteolysis mediated by the ubiquitin proteasome system is a fundamental and essential feature of the eukaryotic cell division cycle. Most proteins with cell cycle-regulated stability are targeted for degradation by one of two related ubiquitin ligases, the Skp1-cullin-F box protein (SCF) complex or the anaphase-promoting complex (APC). Here we describe an unconventional cell cycle-regulated proteolytic mechanism that acts on the Acm1 protein, an inhibitor of the APC activator Cdh1 in budding yeast. Although Acm1 can be recognized as a substrate by the Cdc20-activated APC (APCCdc20) in anaphase, APCCdc20 is neither necessary nor sufficient for complete Acm1 degradation at the end of mitosis. An APC-independent, but 26S proteasome-dependent, mechanism is sufficient for complete Acm1 clearance from late mitotic and G1 cells. Surprisingly, this mechanism appears distinct from the canonical ubiquitin targeting pathway, exhibiting several features of ubiquitin-independent proteasomal degradation. For example, Acm1 degradation in G1 requires neither lysine residues in Acm1 nor assembly of polyubiquitin chains. Acm1 was stabilized though by conditional inactivation of the ubiquitin activating enzyme Uba1, implying some requirement for the ubiquitin pathway, either direct or indirect. We identified an amino terminal predicted disordered region in Acm1 that contributes to its proteolysis in G1. Although ubiquitin-independent proteasome substrates have been described, Acm1 appears unique in that its sensitivity to this mechanism is strictly cell cycle-regulated via cyclin-dependent kinase (Cdk) phosphorylation. As a result, Acm1 expression is limited to the cell cycle window in which Cdk is active. We provide evidence that failure to eliminate Acm1 impairs activation of APCCdh1 at mitotic exit, justifying its strict regulation by cell cycle-dependent transcription and proteolytic mechanisms. Importantly, our results reveal that strict cell-cycle expression profiles can be established independent of proteolysis mediated by the APC and SCF enzymes.


Aging Cell | 2018

Proper splicing contributes to visual function in the aging Drosophila eye

Rachel Stegeman; Hana Hall; Spencer E. Escobedo; Henry Chang; Vikki M. Weake

Changes in splicing patterns are a characteristic of the aging transcriptome; however, it is unclear whether these age‐related changes in splicing facilitate the progressive functional decline that defines aging. In Drosophila, visual behavior declines with age and correlates with altered gene expression in photoreceptors, including downregulation of genes encoding splicing factors. Here, we characterized the significance of these age‐regulated splicing‐associated genes in both splicing and visual function. To do this, we identified differential splicing events in either the entire eye or photoreceptors of young and old flies. Intriguingly, aging photoreceptors show differential splicing of a large number of visual function genes. In addition, as shown previously for aging photoreceptors, aging eyes showed increased accumulation of circular RNAs, which result from noncanonical splicing events. To test whether proper splicing was necessary for visual behavior, we knocked down age‐regulated splicing factors in photoreceptors in young flies and examined phototaxis. Notably, many of the age‐regulated splicing factors tested were necessary for proper visual behavior. In addition, knockdown of individual splicing factors resulted in changes in both alternative splicing at age‐spliced genes and increased accumulation of circular RNAs. Together, these data suggest that cumulative decreases in splicing factor expression could contribute to the differential splicing, circular RNA accumulation, and defective visual behavior observed in aging photoreceptors.


BMC Genomics | 2017

Transcriptome profiling of aging Drosophila photoreceptors reveals gene expression trends that correlate with visual senescence

Hana Hall; Patrick Medina; Daphne A. Cooper; Spencer E. Escobedo; Jeremiah Rounds; Kaelan J. Brennan; Christopher Vincent; Pedro Miura; Rebecca W. Doerge; Vikki M. Weake


Archive | 2018

Blue light induces a neuroprotective gene expression program in Drosophila photoreceptors - Supporting data for Hall and Ma et al. (2018)

Hana Hall; Jingqun Ma; Sudhanshu Shekhar; Walter D. Leon-Salas; Vikki M. Weake


Archive | 2018

Proper splicing contributes to visual function in the aging Drosophila eye - Supporting data for Stegeman et al. (2018)

Rachel Stegeman; Hana Hall; Spencer E. Escobedo; Henry Chang; Vikki M. Weake


BMC Neuroscience | 2018

Blue light induces a neuroprotective gene expression program in Drosophila photoreceptors

Hana Hall; Jingqun Ma; Sudhanshu Shekhar; Walter D. Leon-Salas; Vikki M. Weake

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