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Dive into the research topics where Herman Lambert is active.

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Featured researches published by Herman Lambert.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 1995

Modulation of Cellular Thermoresistance and Actin Filament Stability Accompanies Phosphorylation-Induced Changes in the Oligomeric Structure of Heat Shock Protein 27

Josée N. Lavoie; Herman Lambert; E Hickey; L A Weber; Jacques Landry

Phosphorylation of heat shock protein 27 (HSP27) can modulate actin filament dynamics in response to growth factors. During heat shock, HSP27 is phosphorylated at the same sites and by the same protein kinase as during mitogenic stimulation. This suggests that the same function of the protein may be activated during growth factor stimulation and the stress response. To determine the role of HSP27 phosphorylation in the heat shock response, several stable Chinese hamster cell lines that constitutively express various levels of the wild-type HSP27 (HU27 cells) or a nonphosphorylatable form of human HSP27 (HU27pm3 cells) were developed. In contrast to HU27 cells, which showed increased survival after heat shock, HU27pm3 cells showed only slightly enhanced survival. Evidence is presented that stabilization of microfilaments is a major target of the protective function of HSP27. In the HU27pm3 cells, the microfilaments were thermosensitized compared with those in the control cells, whereas wild-type HSP27 caused an increased stability of these structures in HU27 cells. HU27 but not HU27pm3 cells were highly resistant to cytochalasin D treatment compared with control cells. Moreover, in cells treated with cytochalasin D, wild-type HSP27 but not the phosphorylated form of HSP27 accelerated the reappearance of actin filaments. The mutations in human HSP27 had no effect on heat shock-induced change in solubility and cellular localization of the protein, indicating that phosphorylation was not involved in these processes. However, induction of HSP27 phosphorylation by stressing agents or mitogens caused a reduction in the multimeric size of the wild-type protein, an effect which was not observed with the mutant protein. We propose that early during stress, phosphorylation-induced conformational changes in the HSP27 oligomers regulate the activity of the protein at the level of microfilament dynamics, resulting in both enhanced stability and accelerated recovery of the filaments. The level of protection provided by HSP27 during heat shock may thus represent the contribution of better maintenance of actin filament integrity to overall cell survival.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2000

Inhibition of Daxx-mediated apoptosis by heat shock protein 27.

Steve J. Charette; Josée N. Lavoie; Herman Lambert; Jacques Landry

ABSTRACT Heat shock protein 27 (HSP27) confers cellular protection against a variety of cytotoxic stresses and also against physiological stresses associated with growth arrest or receptor-mediated apoptosis. Phosphorylation modulates the activity of HSP27 by causing a major change in the supramolecular organization of the protein, which shifts from oligomers to dimers. Here we show that phosphorylated dimers of HSP27 interact with Daxx, a mediator of Fas-induced apoptosis, preventing the interaction of Daxx with both Ask1 and Fas and blocking Daxx-mediated apoptosis. No such inhibition was observed with an HSP27 phosphorylation mutant that is only expressed as oligomers or when apoptosis was induced by transfection of a Daxx mutant lacking its HSP27 binding domain. HSP27 expression had no effect on Fas-induced FADD- and caspase-dependent apoptosis. However, HSP27 blocked Fas-induced translocation of Daxx from the nucleus to the cytoplasm and Fas-induced Daxx- and Ask1-dependent apoptosis. The observations revealed a new level of regulation of the Fas pathway and suggest a mechanism for the phosphorylation-dependent protective function of HSP27 during stress and differentiation.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1999

HSP27 Multimerization Mediated by Phosphorylation-sensitive Intermolecular Interactions at the Amino Terminus

Herman Lambert; Steve J. Charette; André F. Bernier; Alain Guimond; Jacques Landry

Distinct biochemical activities have been reported for small and large molecular complexes of heat shock protein 27 (HSP27), respectively. Using glycerol gradient ultracentrifugation and chemical cross-linking, we show here that Chinese hamster HSP27 is expressed in cells as homotypic multimers ranging from dimers up to 700-kDa oligomers. Treatments with arsenite, which induces phosphorylation on Ser15 and Ser90, provoked a major change in the size distribution of the complexes that shifted from oligomers to dimers. Ser90 phosphorylation was sufficient and necessary for causing this change in structure. Dimer formation was severely inhibited by replacing Ser90 with Ala90 but not by replacing Ser15 with Ala15. Using the yeast two-hybrid system, two domains were identified that were responsible for HSP27 intermolecular interactions. One domain was insensitive to phosphorylation and corresponded to the C-terminal α-crystallin domain. The other domain was sensitive to serine 90 phosphorylation and was located in the N-terminal region of the protein. Fusion of this N-terminal domain to firefly luciferase conferred luciferase with the capacity to form multimers that dissociated into monomers upon phosphorylation. A deletion within this domain of residues Arg5–Tyr23, which contains a WDPF motif found in most proteins of the small heat shock protein family, yielded a protein that forms only phosphorylation-insensitive dimers. We propose that HSP27 forms stable dimers through the α-crystallin domain. These dimers further multimerize through intermolecular interactions mediated by the phosphorylation-sensitive N-terminal domain.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2008

HspB8 Chaperone Activity toward Poly(Q)-containing Proteins Depends on Its Association with Bag3, a Stimulator of Macroautophagy

Serena Carra; Samuel J. Seguin; Herman Lambert; Jacques Landry

Mutations in HspB8, a member of the B group of heat shock proteins (Hsp), have been associated with human neuromuscular disorders. However, the exact function of HspB8 is not yet clear. We previously demonstrated that overexpression of HspB8 in cultured cells prevents the accumulation of aggregation-prone proteins such as the polyglutamine protein Htt43Q. Here we report that HspB8 forms a stable complex with Bag3 in cells and that the formation of this complex is essential for the activity of HspB8. Bag3 overexpression resulted in the accelerated degradation of Htt43Q, whereas Bag3 knockdown prevented HspB8-induced Htt43Q degradation. Additionally, depleting Bag3 caused a reduction in the endogenous levels of LC3-II, a key molecule involved in macroautophagy, whereas overexpressing Bag3 or HspB8 stimulated the formation LC3-II. These results suggested that the HspB8-Bag3 complex might stimulate the degradation of Htt43Q by macroautophagy. This was confirmed by the observation that treatments with macroautophagy inhibitors significantly decreased HspB8- and Bag3-induced degradation of Htt43Q. We conclude that the HspB8 activity is intrinsically dependent on Bag3, a protein that may facilitate the disposal of doomed proteins by stimulating macroautophagy.


Biochemical Journal | 2010

Identification of the key structural motifs involved in HspB8/HspB6-Bag3 interaction.

Margit Fuchs; Dominic J. Poirier; Samuel J. Seguin; Herman Lambert; Serena Carra; Steve J. Charette; Jacques Landry

The molecular chaperone HspB8 [Hsp (heat-shock protein) B8] is member of the B-group of Hsps. These proteins bind to unfolded or misfolded proteins and protect them from aggregation. HspB8 has been reported to form a stable molecular complex with the chaperone cohort protein Bag3 (Bcl-2-associated athanogene 3). In the present study we identify the binding regions in HspB8 and Bag3 crucial for their interaction. We present evidence that HspB8 binds to Bag3 through the hydrophobic groove formed by its strands beta4 and beta8, a region previously known to be responsible for the formation and stability of higher-order oligomers of many sHsps (small Hsps). Moreover, we demonstrate that two conserved IPV (Ile-Pro-Val) motifs in Bag3 mediate its binding to HspB8 and that deletion of these motifs suppresses HspB8 chaperone activity towards mutant Htt43Q (huntingtin exon 1 fragment with 43 CAG repeats). In addition, we show that Bag3 can bind to the molecular chaperone HspB6. The interaction between HspB6 and Bag3 requires the same regions that are involved in the HspB8-Bag3 association and HspB6-Bag3 promotes clearance of aggregated Htt43Q. Our findings suggest that the co-chaperone Bag3 might prevent the accumulation of denatured proteins by regulating sHsp activity and by targeting their substrate proteins for degradation. Interestingly, a mutation in one of Bag3 IPV motifs has recently been associated with the development of severe dominant childhood muscular dystrophy, suggesting a possible important physiological role for HspB-Bag3 complexes in this disease.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009

HspB8 Participates in Protein Quality Control by a Non-chaperone-like Mechanism That Requires eIF2α Phosphorylation

Serena Carra; Jeanette F. Brunsting; Herman Lambert; Jacques Landry; Harm H. Kampinga

Aggregation of mutated proteins is a hallmark of many neurodegenerative disorders, including Huntington disease. We previously reported that overexpression of the HspB8·Bag3 chaperone complex suppresses mutated huntingtin aggregation via autophagy. Classically, HspB proteins are thought to act as ATP-independent molecular chaperones that can bind unfolded proteins and facilitate their processing via the help of ATP-dependent chaperones such as the Hsp70 machine, in which Bag3 may act as a molecular link between HspB, Hsp70, and the ubiquitin ligases. However, here we show that HspB8 and Bag3 act in a non-canonical manner unrelated to the classical chaperone model. Rather, HspB8 and Bag3 induce the phosphorylation of the α-subunit of the translation initiator factor eIF2, which in turn causes a translational shut-down and stimulates autophagy. This function of HspB8·Bag3 does not require Hsp70 and also targets fully folded substrates. HspB8·Bag3 activity was independent of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress kinase PERK, demonstrating that its action is unrelated to ER stress and suggesting that it activates stress-mediated translational arrest and autophagy through a novel pathway.


FEBS Letters | 2003

The R1 subunit of herpes simplex virus ribonucleotide reductase has chaperone-like activity similar to Hsp27.

Stéphane Chabaud; Herman Lambert; A. Marie-Josée Sasseville; Hugo Lavoie; Claire Guilbault; Bernard Massie; Jacques Landry; Yves Langelier

HSV‐2 R1, the R1 subunit of herpes simplex virus (HSV) ribonucleotide reductase, protects cells against apoptosis. Here, we report the presence in HSV‐2 R1 of a stretch exhibiting similarity to the α‐crystallin domain of the small heat shock proteins, a domain known to be important for oligomerization and cytoprotective activities of these proteins. Also, the HSV‐2 R1 protein, which forms multimeric structures in the absence of nucleotide, displayed chaperone ability as good as Hsp27 in a thermal denaturation assay using citrate synthase. In contrast, mammalian R1, which does not contain an α‐crystallin domain, has neither chaperone nor anti‐apoptotic activity. Thus, we propose that the chaperone activity of HSV‐2 R1 could play an important role in viral pathogenesis.


Biochemical Journal | 2003

c-Myc potentiates the mitochondrial pathway of apoptosis by acting upstream of apoptosis signal-regulating kinase 1 (Ask1) in the p38 signalling cascade

Katia M Desbiens; Réna G. Deschesnes; Mireille M. Labrie; Yan Desfossés; Herman Lambert; Jacques Landry; Kerstin Bellmann

Cell transformation by growth-promoting oncoproteins renders cells extremely sensitive to apoptosis through an unknown mechanism affecting the mitochondrial pathway of apoptosis. We have shown previously that sensitization to apoptosis also correlated with the activation of the stress-activated protein kinase p38. In the present study, we investigated the role of p38 in c-Myc-dependent apoptosis induced by the anticancer agent cisplatin. Cisplatin treatment of Rat1 cells with deregulated expression of c-Myc resulted in nuclear fragmentation that was accompanied in all cells by the activation of Bax and the translocation of cytochrome c from the mitochondria to the cytoplasm. None of these features of apoptosis was induced in control Rat-1 cells. p38 was also activated by cisplatin only in cells with deregulated expression of c-Myc, but, in contrast with all features of apoptosis, this activation was not affected by Bcl-2. Remarkably, overexpression of an interfering mutant of the p38alpha isoform, but not p38beta, blocked cisplatin-induced Bax activation or cytochrome c release and nuclear fragmentation. Analysis of the kinase cascade upstream of p38 revealed a c-Myc-dependent activation by cisplatin of mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase (MKK) 3/6 and apoptosis signal-regulating kinase 1 (Ask1). Inhibition of Ask1 blocked p38 activation by cisplatin and all features of apoptosis. Several of these data were confirmed using other DNA-damaging agents. The findings indicated that c-Myc potentiation of the mitochondrial pathway of apoptosis results, at least in part, from a sensitization of Ask1 activation, allowing DNA-damaging agents to induce in cascade Ask1, p38alpha and Bax.


Journal of Immunological Methods | 2010

Protein quantification by chemiluminescent Western blotting: Elimination of the antibody factor by dilution series and calibration curve

Steve J. Charette; Herman Lambert; Philippe J. Nadeau; Jacques Landry

Quantification of chemiluminescent signals from a Western blot is routinely used to determine the increase or the decrease in protein expression or modification in cell or tissue extracts. However, although scientists readily agree that such a procedure is not quantitative, it is nonetheless used quantitatively in most publications without appropriate controls that would increase the accuracy of the measurement. Here we reexamined this aspect and found that the primary antibody itself influences the relation between the Western blot signal and the protein amount on the membrane. This relation is non-linear and varies from one antibody to another. In that context, we strongly encourage researchers to use dilution series and calibration curve when quantifying protein by Western blot using chemiluminescent signal.


FEBS Letters | 1999

Cloning and characterization of hGMEB1, a novel glucocorticoid modulatory element binding protein

Jimmy R. Thériault; Steve J. Charette; Herman Lambert; Jacques Landry

A 21‐bp element called glucocorticoid modulatory element (GME) modulates the glucocorticoid receptor‐mediated responses via the binding of an as yet poorly characterized trans‐acting complex of proteins containing the 88‐kDa GMEB1 and the 67‐kDa GMEB2. Using heat shock protein 27 (HSP27) as bait in the yeast two‐hybrid assay, we cloned a 1.83‐kb cDNA encoding a novel 573‐amino acid protein called human GMEB1 (hGMEB1). hGMEB1 possesses a KDWK domain, contains sequences almost identical (36/38) to three tryptic peptides of rat GMEB1 and shares 38% identity with rat GMEB2. hGMEB1 is ubiquitously expressed as a 85‐kDa protein in all cell lines and tissues examined. In vitro translated hGMEB1 bound specifically to GME oligonucleotides yielding a complex of similar size to the complex obtained using rat liver nuclear extracts. Both complexes were supershifted with an antibody specific to hGMEB1. Co‐immunoprecipitation experiments confirmed the in vivo interaction of HSP27 with hGMEB1.

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Serena Carra

University of Modena and Reggio Emilia

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