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Dive into the research topics where Harold A. Fisk is active.

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Featured researches published by Harold A. Fisk.


Cell | 2001

The mouse Mps1p-like kinase regulates centrosome duplication.

Harold A. Fisk; Mark Winey

The yeast Mps1p protein kinase acts in centrosome duplication and the spindle assembly checkpoint. We demonstrate here that a mouse Mps1p ortholog (esk, which we designate mMps1p) regulates centrosome duplication. Endogenous mMps1p and overexpressed GFP-mMps1p localize to centrosomes and kinetochores in mouse cells. Overexpression of GFP-mMps1p causes reduplication of centrosomes during S phase arrest. In contrast, a kinase-deficient mutant blocks centrosome duplication altogether. Control of centrosome duplication by mMps1p requires a known regulator of the process, Cdk2. Inhibition of Cdk2 prevents centrosome reduplication and destabilizes mMps1p, causing its subsequent loss from centrosomes, suggesting that Cdk2 promotes mMps1ps centrosome duplication function by regulating its stability during S phase. Thus, mMps1p, an in vitro Cdk2 substrate, regulates centrosome duplication jointly with Cdk2.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2003

Human Mps1 protein kinase is required for centrosome duplication and normal mitotic progression.

Harold A. Fisk; Christopher P. Mattison; Mark Winey

The mitotic spindle is essential for the maintenance of genetic stability, and in budding yeast its assembly and function depend on the Mps1 protein kinase. Mps1p is required for centrosome duplication and the spindle checkpoint. Several recent reports demonstrate that vertebrate Mps1 proteins regulate the spindle checkpoint, but reports conflict regarding their role in centrosome duplication. Here we provide multiple lines of evidence that the human Mps1 protein (hMps1) is required for centrosome duplication. A recently described rabbit polyclonal antibody against hMps1 specifically recognizes centrosomes in a variety of human cell types. Overexpression of a dominant-negative version of hMps1 (hMps1KD) can prevent centrosome duplication in a variety of cell types, and active hMps1 accelerates centrosome reduplication in U2OS cells. Finally, we demonstrate that disruption of hMps1 function with pools of hMps1-specific small interfering RNAs causes a pleiotropic phenotype resulting from the combination of severe mitotic abnormalities and failures in centrosome duplication. This approach demonstrates that hMps1 is required for centrosome duplication and for the normal progression of mitosis, and suggests that the threshold level of hMps1 function required for centrosome duplication is lower than that required for hMps1 mitotic functions.


Cancer Cell | 2012

Aberrant Overexpression of IL-15 Initiates Large Granular Lymphocyte Leukemia through Chromosomal Instability and DNA Hypermethylation

Anjali Mishra; Shujun Liu; Gregory H. Sams; Douglas P. Curphey; Ramasamy Santhanam; Laura J. Rush; Deanna Schaefer; Lauren G. Falkenberg; Laura Sullivan; Laura Jaroncyk; Xiaojuan Yang; Harold A. Fisk; Lai-Chu Wu; Christopher Hickey; Jason Claud Chandler; Yue Zhong Wu; Nyla A. Heerema; Kenneth K. Chan; Danilo Perrotti; Jianying Zhang; Pierluigi Porcu; Frederick Racke; Ramiro Garzon; Robert J. Lee; Guido Marcucci; Michael A. Caligiuri

How inflammation causes cancer is unclear. Interleukin-15 (IL-15) is a pro-inflammatory cytokine elevated in human large granular lymphocyte (LGL) leukemia. Mice overexpressing IL-15 develop LGL leukemia. Here, we show that prolonged in vitro exposure of wild-type (WT) LGL to IL-15 results in Myc-mediated upregulation of aurora kinases, centrosome aberrancies, and aneuploidy. Simultaneously, IL-15 represses miR-29b via induction of Myc/NF-κBp65/Hdac-1, resulting in Dnmt3b overexpression and DNA hypermethylation. All this is validated in human LGL leukemia. Adoptive transfer of WT LGL cultured with IL-15 led to malignant transformation in vivo. Drug targeting that reverses miR-29b repression cures otherwise fatal LGL leukemia. We show how excessive IL-15 initiates cancer and demonstrate effective drug targeting for potential therapy of human LGL leukemia.


Cell Cycle | 2004

A Field Guide to the Mps1 Family of Protein Kinases

Harold A. Fisk; Christopher P. Mattison; Mark Winey

Cell cycle events must be faithfully executed and properly integrated to ensure genetic stability. The Mps1 family of protein kinases has recently emerged as a critical regulator of genetic stability, because they regulate several processes central to mitotic fidelity. The spindle checkpoint monitors alignment of mitotic chromosomes, and centrosomes control cell cycle entry, mitotic spindle assembly, and cytokinesis. Several studies have shown that vertebrate orthologues of budding yeast Mps1p regulate the spindle checkpoint. More recently it has been demonstrated that human Mps1 is also required for centrosome duplication, normal mitotic progression, and cytokinesis.


Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2010

Mps1 Phosphorylation Sites Regulate the Function of Centrin 2 in Centriole Assembly

Ching-Hui Yang; Christopher Kasbek; Shubhra Majumder; Adlina Mohd Yusof; Harold A. Fisk

We show that while Centrin2 is dispensable for centriole assembly, it is an Mps1 substrate that stimulates canonical and aberrant centriole assembly by two different Mps1-dependent mechanisms, HsSas-6–dependent and –independent. Centrin2 phosphorylation is also required for the ability of Mps1 to drive production of mature centrioles.


Current Opinion in Cell Biology | 2002

Centrosomes and tumour suppressors.

Harold A. Fisk; Christopher P. Mattison; Mark Winey

Centrosomes are microtubule organising centres that act as spindle poles during mitosis. Recent work implicates centrosomes in many other processes, and shows that centrosome defects can cause genetic instability. Many regulators of mammalian centrosome function were predicted from studies of model systems. Surprisingly, some well-known tumour suppressors have recently been found at centrosomes, where they influence centrosome duplication and function, suggesting that control of centrosome function is central to genetic stability.


Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2010

Antizyme Restrains Centrosome Amplification by Regulating the Accumulation of Mps1 at Centrosomes

Christopher Kasbek; Ching-Hui Yang; Harold A. Fisk

The failure to degrade Mps1 at centrosomes causes centrosome overproduction, but the factors that target Mps1 for degradation are unknown. This study shows that antizyme, a mediator of ubiquitin-independent degradation, binds to Mps1 and modulates centrosomal Mps1 via the proteasome, revealing a role for Mps1 in procentriole assembly.


Cell Cycle | 2013

VDAC3 and Mps1 negatively regulate ciliogenesis.

Shubhra Majumder; Harold A. Fisk

Centrosomes serve to organize new centrioles in cycling cells, whereas in quiescent cells they assemble primary cilia. We have recently shown that the mitochondrial porin VDAC3 is also a centrosomal protein that is predominantly associated with the mother centriole and modulates centriole assembly by recruiting Mps1 to centrosomes. Here, we show that depletion of VDAC3 causes inappropriate ciliogenesis in cycling cells, while expression of GFP-VDAC3 suppresses ciliogenesis in quiescent cells. Mps1 also negatively regulates ciliogenesis, and the inappropriate ciliogenesis caused by VDAC3 depletion can be bypassed by targeting Mps1 to centrosomes independently of VDAC3. Thus, our data show that a VDAC3-Mps1 module at the centrosome promotes ciliary disassembly during cell cycle entry and suppresses cilia assembly in proliferating cells. Our data also suggests that VDAC3 might be a link between mitochondrial dysfunction and ciliopathies in mammalian cells.


Environmental and Molecular Mutagenesis | 2009

Mps1 as a link between centrosomes and genomic instability

Christopher Kasbek; Ching-Hui Yang; Harold A. Fisk

Centrosomes are microtubule‐organizing centers that must be precisely duplicated before mitosis. Centrosomes regulate mitotic spindle assembly, and the presence of excess centrosomes leads to the production of aberrant mitotic spindles which generate chromosome segregation errors. Many human tumors possess excess centrosomes that lead to the production of abnormal spindles in situ. In some tumors, these extra centrosomes appear before aneuploidy, suggesting that defects in centrosome duplication might promote genomic instability and tumorigenesis. The Mps1 protein kinase is required for centrosome duplication, and preventing the proteasome‐dependent degradation of Mps1 at centrosomes increases its local concentration and causes the production of excess centrosomes during a prolonged S‐phase. Here, we show that Mps1 degradation is misregulated in two tumor‐derived cell lines, and that the failure to appropriately degrade Mps1 correlates with the ability of these cells to produce extra centrosomes during a prolonged S‐phase. In the 21NT breast‐tumor derived cell line, a mutant Mps1 protein that is normally constitutively degraded can accumulate at centrosomes and perturb centrosome duplication, suggesting that these cells have a defect in the mechanisms that target Mps1 to the proteasome. In contrast, the U2OS osteosarcoma cell line expresses a nondegradable form of Mps1, which we show causes the dose‐dependent over duplication of centrioles even at very low levels of expression. Our data demonstrate that defects in Mps1 degradation can occur through multiple mechanisms, and suggest that Mps1 may provide a link between the control of centrosome duplication and genomic instability. Environ. Mol. Mutagen. 2009.


Cell Division | 2011

Centriole assembly and the role of Mps1: defensible or dispensable?

Amanda Pike; Harold A. Fisk

The Mps1 protein kinase is an intriguing and controversial player in centriole assembly. Originally shown to control duplication of the budding yeast spindle pole body, Mps1 is present in eukaryotes from yeast to humans, the nematode C. elegans being a notable exception, and has also been shown to regulate the spindle checkpoint and an increasing number of cellular functions relating to genomic stability. While its function in the spindle checkpoint appears to be both universally conserved and essential in most organisms, conservation of its originally described function in spindle pole duplication has proven controversial, and it is less clear whether Mps1 is essential for centrosome duplication outside of budding yeast. Recent studies of Mps1 have identified at least two distinct functions for Mps1 in centriole assembly, while simultaneously supporting the notion that Mps1 is dispensable for the process. However, the fact that at least one centrosomal substrate of Mps1 is conserved from yeast to humans down to the phosphorylation site, combined with evidence demonstrating the exquisite control exerted over centrosomal Mps1 levels suggest that the notion of being essential may not be the most important of distinctions.

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Mark Winey

University of Colorado Boulder

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Christopher P. Mattison

University of Colorado Boulder

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