He-Hsuan Hsiao
Max Planck Society
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Featured researches published by He-Hsuan Hsiao.
Journal of Virology | 2004
Jyh-Ming Tsai; Han Ching Wang; Jiann Horng Leu; He-Hsuan Hsiao; Andrew H.-J. Wang; Guang-Hsiung Kou; Chu Fang Lo
ABSTRACT White spot syndrome virus (WSSV) virions were purified from the hemolymph of experimentally infected crayfish Procambarus clarkii, and their proteins were separated by 8 to 18% gradient sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) to give a protein profile. The visible bands were then excised from the gel, and following trypsin digestion of the reduced and alkylated WSSV proteins in the bands, the peptide sequence of each fragment was determined by liquid chromatography-nano-electrospray ionization tandem mass spectrometry (LC-nanoESI-MS/MS) using a quadrupole/time-of-flight mass spectrometer. Comparison of the resulting peptide sequence data against the nonredundant database at the National Center for Biotechnology Information identified 33 WSSV structural genes, 20 of which are reported here for the first time. Since there were six other known WSSV structural proteins that could not be identified from the SDS-PAGE bands, there must therefore be a total of at least 39 (33 + 6) WSSV structural protein genes. Only 61.5% of the WSSV structural genes have a polyadenylation signal, and preliminary analysis by 3′ rapid amplification of cDNA ends suggested that some structural protein genes produced mRNA without a poly(A) tail. Microarray analysis showed that gene expression started at 2, 6, 8, 12, 18, 24, and 36 hpi for 7, 1, 4, 12, 9, 5, and 1 of the genes, respectively. Based on similarities in their time course expression patterns, a clustering algorithm was used to group the WSSV structural genes into four clusters. Genes that putatively had common or similar roles in the viral infection cycle tended to appear in the same cluster.
Journal of Cell Biology | 2011
Petranka Krumova; Erik Meulmeester; Manuel Garrido; Marilyn Tirard; He-Hsuan Hsiao; Guillaume Bossis; Henning Urlaub; Markus Zweckstetter; Sebastian Kügler; Frauke Melchior; Mathias Bähr; Jochen H. Weishaupt
Sumoylation of α-synuclein decreases its rate of aggregation and its deleterious effects in vitro and in vivo.
Cell Metabolism | 2010
Mathias Beller; Anna V. Bulankina; He-Hsuan Hsiao; Henning Urlaub; Herbert Jäckle; Ronald P. Kühnlein
Lipid droplets are intracellular organelles enriched in adipose tissue that govern the body fat stores of animals. In mammals, members of the evolutionarily conserved PERILIPIN protein family are associated with the lipid droplet surface and participate in lipid homeostasis. Here, we show that Drosophila mutants lacking the PERILIPIN PLIN1 are hyperphagic and suffer from adult-onset obesity. PLIN1 is a central and Janus-faced component of fat metabolism. It provides barrier function to storage lipid breakdown and acts as a key factor of stimulated lipolysis by modulating the access of proteins to the lipid droplet surface. It also shapes lipid droplet structure, transforming unilocular into multilocular fat cells. We generated flies devoid of all PERILIPIN family members and show that they exhibit impaired yet functional body fat regulation. Our data reveal the existence of a basal and possibly ancient lipid homeostasis system.
Molecular Cell | 2008
Xiao Luo; He-Hsuan Hsiao; Mikhail Bubunenko; Gert Weber; Donald L. Court; Max E. Gottesman; Henning Urlaub; Markus C. Wahl
Protein S10 is a component of the 30S ribosomal subunit and participates together with NusB protein in processive transcription antitermination. The molecular mechanisms by which S10 can act as a translation or a transcription factor are not understood. We used complementation assays and recombineering to delineate regions of S10 dispensable for antitermination, and determined the crystal structure of a transcriptionally active NusB-S10 complex. In this complex, S10 adopts the same fold as in the 30S subunit and is blocked from simultaneous association with the ribosome. Mass spectrometric mapping of UV-induced crosslinks revealed that the NusB-S10 complex presents an intermolecular, composite, and contiguous binding surface for RNAs containing BoxA antitermination signals. Furthermore, S10 overproduction complemented a nusB null phenotype. These data demonstrate that S10 and NusB together form a BoxA-binding module, that NusB facilitates entry of S10 into the transcription machinery, and that S10 represents a central hub in processive antitermination.
Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2009
He-Hsuan Hsiao; Erik Meulmeester; Benedikt T. C. Frank; Frauke Melchior; Henning Urlaub
Conjugation of small ubiquitin-like modifier (SUMO) to substrates is involved in a large number of cellular processes. Typically, SUMO is conjugated to lysine residues within a SUMO consensus site; however, an increasing number of proteins are sumoylated on non-consensus sites. To appreciate the functional consequences of sumoylation, the identification of SUMO attachment sites is of critical importance. Discovery of SUMO acceptor sites is usually performed by a laborious mutagenesis approach or using MS. In MS, identification of SUMO acceptor sites in higher eukaryotes is hampered by the large tryptic fragments of SUMO1 and SUMO2/3. MS search engines in combination with known databases lack the possibility to search MSMS spectra for larger modifications, such as sumoylation. Therefore, we developed a simple and straightforward database search tool (“ChopNSpice”) that successfully allows identification of SUMO acceptor sites from proteins sumoylated in vivo and in vitro. By applying this approach we identified SUMO acceptor sites in, among others, endogenous SUMO1, SUMO2, RanBP2, and Ubc9.
Structure | 2013
ShengQi Xiang; Vytautas Gapsys; Hai-Young Kim; Sergey Bessonov; He-Hsuan Hsiao; Sina Möhlmann; Volker Klaukien; Ralf Ficner; Stefan Becker; Henning Urlaub; Reinhard Lührmann; Bert L. de Groot; Markus Zweckstetter
Serine/arginine-rich (SR) proteins are important players in RNA metabolism and are extensively phosphorylated at serine residues in RS repeats. Here, we show that phosphorylation switches the RS domain of the serine/arginine-rich splicing factor 1 from a fully disordered state to a partially rigidified arch-like structure. Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy in combination with molecular dynamics simulations revealed that the conformational switch is restricted to RS repeats, critically depends on the phosphate charge state and strongly decreases the conformational entropy of RS domains. The dynamic switch also occurs in the 100 kDa SR-related protein hPrp28, for which phosphorylation at the RS repeat is required for spliceosome assembly. Thus, a phosphorylation-induced dynamic switch is common to the class of serine/arginine-rich proteins and provides a molecular basis for the functional redundancy of serine/arginine-rich proteins and the profound influence of RS domain phosphorylation on protein-protein and protein-RNA interactions.
Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2010
Marc Schneider; He-Hsuan Hsiao; Cindy L. Will; Régis Giet; Henning Urlaub; Reinhard Lührmann
Reversible protein phosphorylation has an essential role during pre-mRNA splicing. Here we identify two previously unidentified phosphoproteins in the human spliceosomal B complex, namely the pre-mRNA processing factors PRP6 and PRP31, both components of the U4/U6−U5 tri-small nuclear ribonucleoprotein (snRNP). We provide evidence that PRP6 and PRP31 are directly phosphorylated by human PRP4 kinase (PRP4K) concomitant with their incorporation into B complexes. Immunodepletion and complementation studies with HeLa splicing extracts revealed that active human PRP4K is required for the phosphorylation of PRP6 and PRP31 and for the assembly of stable, functional B complexes. Thus, the phosphorylation of PRP6 and PRP31 is likely to have a key role during spliceosome assembly. Our data provide new insights into the molecular mechanism by which PRP4K contributes to splicing. They further indicate that numerous phosphorylation events contribute to spliceosome assembly and, thus, that splicing can potentially be modulated at multiple regulatory checkpoints.
The EMBO Journal | 2011
Thomas Oellerich; Vanessa Bremes; Konstantin Neumann; Hanibal Bohnenberger; Kai Dittmann; He-Hsuan Hsiao; Michael Engelke; Tim Schnyder; Facundo D. Batista; Henning Urlaub; Jürgen Wienands
Spleen tyrosine kinase Syk and its substrate SLP65 (also called BLNK) are proximal signal transducer elements of the B‐cell antigen receptor (BCR). Yet, our understanding of signal initiation and processing is limited owing to the incomplete list of SLP65 interaction partners and our ignorance of their association kinetics. We have now determined and quantified the in vivo interactomes of SLP65 in resting and stimulated B cells by mass spectrometry. SLP65 orchestrated a complex signal network of about 30 proteins that was predominantly based on dynamic interactions. However, a stimulation‐independent and constant association of SLP65 with the Cbl‐interacting protein of 85 kDa (CIN85) was requisite for SLP65 phosphorylation and its inducible plasma membrane translocation. In the absence of a steady SLP65/CIN85 complex, BCR‐induced Ca2+ and NF‐κB responses were abrogated. Finally, live cell imaging and co‐immunoprecipitation experiments further confirmed that both SLP65 and CIN85 are key components of the BCR‐associated primary transducer module required for the onset and progression phases of BCR signal transduction.
Blood | 2013
Thomas Oellerich; Mark F. Oellerich; Michael Engelke; Silvia Münch; Sebastian Mohr; Marika Nimz; He-Hsuan Hsiao; Jasmin Corso; Jing Zhang; Hanibal Bohnenberger; Tobias Berg; Michael A. Rieger; Jürgen Wienands; Gesine Bug; Christian Brandts; Henning Urlaub; Hubert Serve
Spleen tyrosine kinase (Syk) induces cell survival and proliferation in a high proportion of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) blasts, but the underlying molecular events of Syk signaling have not been investigated. Proteomic techniques have allowed us to identify the multiprotein complex that is nucleated by constitutively active Syk in AML cells. This complex differs from the B-lymphoid Syk interactome with respect to several proteins, especially the integrin receptor Mac-1, the Fc-γ receptor I (FcγRI), and the transcription factors STAT3 and STAT5. We show in several AML cell line models that tonic signals derived from the Fc-γ chain lead to Syk-dependent activation of STAT3 and STAT5, which in turn induces cell survival and proliferation. Moreover, stimulation of Mac-1 or FcγRI intensifies the constitutive Syk-mediated STAT3/5 activation in AML cells, a scenario likely to take place in the bone marrow niche. In accordance with these findings, we observed that β2 integrins, including Mac-1, trigger proliferation of AML cells in an AML cell/stroma coculture model. Taken together, we identified an oncogenic integrin/Syk/STAT3/5 signaling axis that might serve as a therapeutic target of AML in the future.
Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2009
Thomas Oellerich; Mads Grønborg; Konstantin Neumann; He-Hsuan Hsiao; Henning Urlaub; Jürgen Wienands
Understanding intracellular signal transduction by cell surface receptors requires information about the precise order of relevant modifications on the early transducer elements. Here we introduce the B cell line DT40 and its genetically engineered variants as a model system to determine and functionally characterize post-translational protein modifications in general. This is accomplished by a customized strategy that combines mass spectrometric analyses of protein modifications with subsequent mutational studies. When applied to the B cell receptor (BCR)-proximal effector SLP-65, this approach uncovered a differential and highly dynamic engagement of numerous newly identified phospho-acceptor sites. Some of them serve as kinase substrates in resting cells and undergo rapid dephosphorylation upon BCR ligation. Stimulationinduced phosphorylation of SLP-65 can be early and transient, or early and sustained, or late. Functional elucidation of conspicuous phosphorylation at serine 170 in SLP-65 revealed a BCR-distal checkpoint for some but not all possible B cell responses. Our data show that SLP-65 phosphorylation acts upstream for signal initiation and also downstream during selective processing of the BCR signal. Such a phenomenon defines a receptor-specific signal integrator.