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Dive into the research topics where Huong Huynh is active.

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Featured researches published by Huong Huynh.


Nature Cell Biology | 2004

Control of vesicle fusion by a tyrosine phosphatase.

Huong Huynh; Nunzio Bottini; Scott Williams; Vera Cherepanov; Lucia Musumeci; Kan Saito; Shane Bruckner; Eric Vachon; Xiaodong Wang; Joshua Kruger; Chung-Wai Chow; Maurizio Pellecchia; Edvard Monosov; Peter A. Greer; William S. Trimble; Gregory P. Downey; Tomas Mustelin

The tyrosine phosphatase PTP-MEG2 is targeted by its amino-terminal Sec14p homology domain to the membrane of secretory vesicles. There it regulates vesicle size by promoting homotypic vesicle fusion by a mechanism that requires its catalytic activity. Here, we identify N-ethylmaleimide-sensitive factor (NSF), a key regulator of vesicle fusion, as a substrate for PTP-MEG2. PTP-MEG2 reduced the phosphotyrosine content of NSF and co-localized with NSF and syntaxin 6 in intact cells. Furthermore, endogenous PTP-MEG2 co-immunoprecipitated with endogenous NSF. Phosphorylation of NSF at Tyr 83, as well as an acidic substitution at the same site, increased its ATPase activity and prevented αSNAP binding. Conversely, expression of a Y83F mutant of NSF caused spontaneous fusion events. Our results suggest that the molecular mechanism by which PTP-MEG2 promotes secretory vesicle fusion involves the local release of NSF from a tyrosine-phosphorylated, inactive state. This represents a novel mechanism for localized regulation of NSF and the first demonstrated role for a protein tyrosine phosphatase in the regulated secretory pathway.


Journal of Immunology | 2002

Negative Feedback Regulation of the Tumor Suppressor PTEN by Phosphoinositide-Induced Serine Phosphorylation

Diana Birle; Nunzio Bottini; Scott Williams; Huong Huynh; Ian deBelle; Eileen D. Adamson; Tomas Mustelin

The PTEN tumor suppressor phosphatase directly counteracts the multiple functions of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase by removing phosphate from the D3 position of inositol phospholipids. Like many lymphomas and leukemias, the Jurkat T cell line lacks PTEN protein due to frame-shift mutations in both PTEN alleles and therefore survives in long-term cell culture. We report that PTEN reintroduced into Jurkat was highly phosphorylated on serines 380 and 385 in its C terminus, particularly the former site. Phosphate was also detected at Ser380 in PTEN in untransformed human T cells. Treatments that reduced the levels of D3-phospholipids in the cells resulted in reduced phosphorylation and accelerated degradation of PTEN. In contrast, expression of inactive PTEN-C124G or coexpression of a constitutively active protein kinase B led to increased phosphorylation and slower degradation of PTEN. These results suggest that PTEN normally is subjected to a feedback mechanism of regulation aimed at maintaining homeostatic levels of D3-phosphoinositides, which are crucial for T cell survival and activation.


Journal of Immunology | 2002

Enlargement of Secretory Vesicles by Protein Tyrosine Phosphatase PTP-MEG2 in Rat Basophilic Leukemia Mast Cells and Jurkat T Cells

Xiaodong Wang; Huong Huynh; Anette Gjörloff-Wingren; Edvard Monosov; Mats Stridsberg; Minoru Fukuda; Tomas Mustelin

Stimulus-induced secretion of bioactive polypeptides is a fundamental aspect of the immune system. Secretory proteins are synthesized in the endoplasmic reticulum and are transported through the Golgi apparatus to the trans-Golgi network, where they are sorted into transport vesicles that bud off and fuse into condensing vacuoles, which subsequently undergo an editing and concentration process to become mature secretory vesicles. In this study, we report that the PTP-MEG2 protein tyrosine phosphatase is located on these vesicles in mast cells. Expression of PTP-MEG2 caused a striking enlargement of these vesicles in both rat basophilic leukemia mast cells and Jurkat T leukemia cells into giant vesicles with diameters of up to several micrometers. The fused vesicles did not acquire markers for other compartments and were adjacent to the trans-Golgi network, contained carboxypeptidase E, chromogranin C, and IL-2, and had an electron-dense core typical of secretory vesicles. Expression of PTP-MEG2 also caused a reduction in the secretion of IL-2 from stimulated Jurkat cells. The effects of PTP-MEG2 on secretory vesicles required the catalytic activity of PTP-MEG2 and was rapidly reversed by pervanadate. We propose that PTP-MEG2 represents a novel connection between tyrosine dephosphorylation and the regulation of secretory vesicles in hematopoietic cells.


Journal of Immunology | 2003

Homotypic Secretory Vesicle Fusion Induced by the Protein Tyrosine Phosphatase MEG2 Depends on Polyphosphoinositides in T Cells

Huong Huynh; Xiaodong Wang; Weizhong Li; Nunzio Bottini; Scott Williams; Konstantina Nika; Hisamitsu Ishihara; Adam Godzik; Tomas Mustelin

Sec14p homology domains are found in a large number of proteins from plants, yeast, invertebrates, and higher eukaryotes. We report that the N-terminal Sec14p homology domain of the human protein tyrosine phosphatase PTP-MEG2 binds phosphatidylinositol-3,4,5-trisphosphate (PtdIns(3,4,5)P3) in vitro and colocalizes with this lipid on secretory vesicle membranes in intact cells. Point mutations that prevented PtdIns(3,4,5)P3 binding abrogated the capacity of PTP-MEG2 to induce homotypic secretory vesicle fusion in cells. Inhibition of cellular PtdIns(3,4,5)P3 synthesis also rapidly reversed the effect of PTP-MEG2 on secretory vesicles. Finally, we show that several different phosphoinositide kinases colocalize with PTP-MEG2, thus allowing for local synthesis of PtdIns(3,4,5)P3 in secretory vesicle membranes. We suggest that PTP-MEG2 through its Sec14p homology domain couples inositide phosphorylation to tyrosine dephosphorylation and the regulation of intracellular traffic of the secretory pathway in T cells.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2004

The Minimal Essential Core of a Cysteine-based Protein-tyrosine Phosphatase Revealed by a Novel 16-kDa VH1-like Phosphatase, VHZ

Andres Alonso; Stephen Burkhalter; Joanna Sasin; Lutz Tautz; Jori F. Bogetz; Huong Huynh; Meire C. D. Bremer; Leslie J. Holsinger; Adam Godzik; Tomas Mustelin

The smallest active protein-tyrosine phosphatase yet (only 16 kDa) is described here and given the name VHZ for VH1-like member Z because it belongs to the group of small Vaccinia virus VH1-related dual specific phosphatases exemplified by VHR, VHX, and VHY. Human VHZ is remarkably well conserved through evolution as it has species orthologs in frogs, fish, fly, and Archaea. The gene for VHZ, which we designate as DUSP25, is located on human chromosome 1q23.1 and consists of only two coding exons. VHZ is broadly expressed in tissues and cells, including resting blood lymphocytes, Jurkat T cells, HL-60, and RAMOS. In transfected cells, VHZ was located in the cytosol and in other cells also in the nucleoli. Endogenous VHZ showed a similar but more granular distribution. We show that VHZ is an active phosphatase and analyze its structure by computer modeling, which shows that in comparison with the 185-amino acid residue VHR, the 150-residue VHZ is a shortened version of VHR and contains the minimal set of secondary structure elements conserved in all known phosphatases from this class. The surface charge distribution of VHZ differs from that of VHR and is therefore unlikely to dephosphorylate mitogen-activated protein kinases. The remarkably high degree of conservation of VHZ through evolution may indicate a role in some ancient and fundamental physiological process.


FEBS Journal | 2005

Secretion of the mammalian Sec14p‐like phosphoinositide‐binding p45 protein

Maria Merkulova; Huong Huynh; V. V. Radchenko; Kan Saito; V. M. Lipkin; Tatiana Shuvaeva; Tomas Mustelin

Protein–lipid interactions are important for protein targeting, signal transduction, lipid transport, and the maintenance of cellular compartments and membranes. Specific lipid‐binding protein domains, such as PH, FYVE, PX, PHD, C2 and SEC14 homology domains, mediate interactions between proteins and specific phospholipids. We recently cloned a 45‐kDa protein from rat olfactory epithelium, which is homologous to the yeast Sec14p phosphatidylinositol (PtdIns) transfer protein and we report here that this protein binds to PtdIns(3,4,5)P3 and far weaker to less phosphorylated derivatives of PtdIns. Expression of the p45 protein in COS‐1 cells resulted in accumulation of the protein in secretory vesicles and in the extracellular space. The secreted material contained PtdIns(3,4,5)P3. Our findings are the first report of a Sec14p‐like protein involved in transport out of a cell and, to the best of our knowledge, inositol‐containing phospholipids have not previously been detected in the extracellular space. Our findings suggest that p45 and phosphoinositides may participate in the formation of the protective mucus on nasal epithelium.


Chemical Communications | 2005

Covalent decoration of multi-walled carbon nanotubes with silica nanoparticles

Massimo Bottini; Lutz Tautz; Huong Huynh; Edvard Monosov; Nunzio Bottini; Marcia I. Dawson; S. Bellucci; Tomas Mustelin


Molecular Immunology | 2004

Protein tyrosine phosphatases in T cell physiology.

Tomas Mustelin; Andres Alonso; Nunzio Bottini; Huong Huynh; Souad Rahmouni; Konstantina Nika; Christine Louis-dit-Sully; Lutz Tautz; Summanuna H. Togo; Shane Bruckner; Armando V. Mena-Duran; Anna Maria al-Khouri


Frontiers in Bioscience | 2002

Protein tyrosine phosphatases.

Tomas Mustelin; Gen-Sheng Feng; Nunzio Bottini; Andres Alonso; Natalya Kholod; Diana Birle; Joseph J. Merlo; Huong Huynh


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2004

VHY, a Novel Myristoylated Testis-restricted Dual Specificity Protein Phosphatase Related to VHX

Andres Alonso; Sonoko Narisawa; Jori F. Bogetz; Lutz Tautz; Radinka Hadzic; Huong Huynh; Scott Williams; Anette Gjörloff-Wingren; Meire C. D. Bremer; Leslie J. Holsinger; José Luis Millán; Tomas Mustelin

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Nunzio Bottini

La Jolla Institute for Allergy and Immunology

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Anette Gjörloff-Wingren

La Jolla Institute for Allergy and Immunology

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Gregory P. Downey

University of Colorado Boulder

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