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Dive into the research topics where Inés M. Antón is active.

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Featured researches published by Inés M. Antón.


Nature Cell Biology | 2001

N-WASP deficiency reveals distinct pathways for cell surface projections and microbial actin-based motility.

Scott B. Snapper; Fuminao Takeshima; Inés M. Antón; Ching-Hui Liu; Sheila M. Thomas; Deanna Nguyen; Darryll D. Dudley; Hunter Fraser; Daniel L. Purich; Marco Lopez-Ilasaca; Christoph Klein; Laurie Davidson; Roderick T. Bronson; Richard C. Mulligan; Fred Southwick; Raif S. Geha; Marcia B. Goldberg; Fred S. Rosen; John H. Hartwig; Frederick W. Alt

The Wiskott–Aldrich syndrome protein (WASP) family of molecules integrates upstream signalling events with changes in the actin cytoskeleton. N-WASP has been implicated both in the formation of cell-surface projections (filopodia) required for cell movement and in the actin-based motility of intracellular pathogens. To examine N-WASP function we have used homologous recombination to inactivate the gene encoding murine N-WASP. Whereas N-WASP-deficient embryos survive beyond gastrulation and initiate organogenesis, they have marked developmental delay and die before embryonic day 12. N-WASP is not required for the actin-based movement of the intracellular pathogen Listeria but is absolutely required for the motility of Shigella and vaccinia virus. Despite these distinct defects in bacterial and viral motility, N-WASP-deficient fibroblasts spread by using lamellipodia and can protrude filopodia. These results imply a crucial and non-redundant role for N-WASP in murine embryogenesis and in the actin-based motility of certain pathogens but not in the general formation of actin-containing structures.


Nature Cell Biology | 2001

WIP regulates N-WASP-mediated actin polymerization and filopodium formation.

Narcisa Martinez-Quiles; Rajat Rohatgi; Inés M. Antón; Miguel Medina; Stephen P. Saville; Hiroaki Miki; Hideki Yamaguchi; Tadaomi Takenawa; John H. Hartwig; Raif S. Geha; Narayanaswamy Ramesh

Induction of filopodia is dependent on activation of the small GTPase Cdc42 and on neural Wiskott–Aldrich-syndrome protein (N-WASP). Here we show that WASP-interacting protein (WIP) interacts directly with N-WASP and actin. WIP retards N-WASP/Cdc42-activated actin polymerization mediated by the Arp2/3 complex, and stabilizes actin filaments. Microinjection of WIP into NIH 3T3 fibroblasts induces filopodia; this is inhibited by microinjection of anti-N-WASP antibody. Microinjection of anti-WIP antibody inhibits induction of filopodia by bradykinin, by an active Cdc42 mutant (Cdc42(V12)) and by N-WASP. Our results indicate that WIP and N-WASP may act as a functional unit in filopodium formation, which is consistent with their role in actin-tail formation in cells infected with vaccinia virus or Shigella.


Immunity | 2002

WIP Deficiency Reveals a Differential Role for WIP and the Actin Cytoskeleton in T and B Cell Activation

Inés M. Antón; Miguel Angel de la Fuente; Tasha N. Sims; Sheryl Freeman; Narayanaswamy Ramesh; John H. Hartwig; Michael L. Dustin; Raif S. Geha

WIP stabilizes actin filaments and is important for filopodium formation. To define the role of WIP in immunity, we generated WIP-deficient mice. WIP(minus sign/minus sign) mice have normal lymphocyte development, but their T cells fail to proliferate, secrete IL-2, increase their F-actin content, polarize and extend protrusions following T cell receptor ligation, and are deficient in conjugate formation with superantigen-presenting B cells and anti-CD3 bilayers. In contrast, WIP-deficient B lymphocytes have enhanced proliferation and CD69 expression following B cell receptor ligation and mount normal antibody responses to T-independent antigens. Both WIP-deficient T and B cells show a profound defect in their subcortical actin filament networks. These results suggest that WIP is important for immunologic synapse formation and T cell activation.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1998

The Wiskott-Aldrich Syndrome Protein-interacting Protein (WIP) Binds to the Adaptor Protein Nck

Inés M. Antón; Wange Lu; Bruce J. Mayer; Narayanaswamy Ramesh; Raif S. Geha

Nck is a ubiquitous adaptor molecule composed of three Src homology 3 (SH3) domains followed by a single SH2 domain. Nck links, via its SH2 domain, tyrosine-phosphorylated receptors to effector proteins that contain SH3-binding proline-rich sequences. In this report, we demonstrate that recombinant Nck precipitates endogenous WIP, a novel proline-rich protein that interacts with the Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome protein (WASP), from BJAB cell lysates. Nck binds through its second SH3 domain to WIP, and Nck binds to WIP at a site (amino acids 321–415) that differs from the WASP-binding site (amino acids 416–488). WIP has been shown to associate with the actin polymerization regulatory protein profilin and to induce actin polymerization and cytoskeletal reorganization in lymphoid cells. We demonstrate the presence of profilin in Nck precipitates suggesting that Nck may couple extracellular signals to the cytoskeleton via its interaction with WIP and profilin.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

WIP is a chaperone for Wiskott–Aldrich syndrome protein (WASP)

Miguel Angel de la Fuente; Yoji Sasahara; Marco Calamito; Inés M. Antón; Abdallah Elkhal; Maria D. Gallego; Koduru Suresh; Katherine A. Siminovitch; Hans D. Ochs; Kenneth C. Anderson; Fred S. Rosen; Raif S. Geha; Narayanaswamy Ramesh

Wiskott–Aldrich syndrome protein (WASP) is in a complex with WASP-interacting protein (WIP). WASP levels, but not mRNA levels, were severely diminished in T cells from WIP−/− mice and were increased by introduction of WIP in these cells. The WASP binding domain of WIP was shown to protect WASP from degradation by calpain in vitro. Treatment with the proteasome inhibitors MG132 and bortezomib increased WASP levels in T cells from WIP−/− mice and in T and B lymphocytes from two WAS patients with missense mutations (R86H and T45M) that disrupt WIP binding. The calpain inhibitor calpeptin increased WASP levels in activated T and B cells from the WASP patients, but not in primary T cells from the patients or from WIP−/− mice. Despite its ability to increase WASP levels proteasome inhibition did not correct the impaired IL-2 gene expression and low F-actin content in T cells from the R86H WAS patient. These results demonstrate that WIP stabilizes WASP and suggest that it may also be important for its function.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2012

N-WASP coordinates the delivery and F-actin–mediated capture of MT1-MMP at invasive pseudopods

Xinzi Yu; Tobias Zech; Laura McDonald; Esther González; Ang Li; Iain R. Macpherson; Juliane P. Schwarz; Heather J. Spence; Kinga Futó; Paul Timpson; Colin Nixon; Yafeng Ma; Inés M. Antón; Balázs Visegrády; Robert H. Insall; Karin A. Oien; Karen Blyth; Jim C. Norman; Laura M. Machesky

N-WASP is critical for cancer cell invasion through its promotion of the trafficking and capture of MT1-MMP in invasive pseudopods.


Current Biology | 2006

WIP Regulates the Stability and Localization of WASP to Podosomes in Migrating Dendritic Cells

Hsiu-Chuan Chou; Inés M. Antón; Mark R. Holt; Claudia Curcio; Stefania Lanzardo; Austen Worth; Siobhan O. Burns; Adrian J. Thrasher; Gareth E. Jones; Yolanda Calle

Summary The Wiskott-Aldrich Syndrome protein (WASP) is an adaptor protein that is essential for podosome formation in hematopoietic cells [1]. Given that 80% of identified Wiskott-Aldrich Syndrome patients result from mutations in the binding site for WASP-interacting-protein (WIP) [2], we examined the possible role of WIP in the regulation of podosome architecture and cell motility in dendritic cells (DCs). Our results show that WIP is essential both for the formation of actin cores containing WASP and cortactin and for the organization of integrin and integrin-associated proteins in circular arrays, specific characteristics of podosome structure. We also found that WIP is essential for the maintenance of the high turnover of adhesions and polarity in DCs. WIP exerts these functions by regulating calpain-mediated cleavage of WASP and by facilitating the localization of WASP to sites of actin polymerization at podosomes. Taken together, our results indicate that WIP is critical for the regulation of both the stability and localization of WASP in migrating DCs and suggest that WASP and WIP operate as a functional unit to control DC motility in response to changes in the extracellular environment.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1999

The Human WASP-interacting Protein, WIP, Activates the Cell Polarity Pathway in Yeast

Gabriela Vaduva; Narcisa Martinez-Quiles; Inés M. Antón; Nancy C. Martin; Raif S. Geha; Anita K. Hopper; Narayanaswamy Ramesh

WIP, the Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome protein-interacting protein, is a human protein involved in actin polymerization and redistribution in lymphoid cells. The mechanism by which WIP reorganizes actin cytoskeleton is unknown. WIP is similar to yeast verprolin, an actin- and myosin-interacting protein required for polarized morphogenesis. To determine whether WIP and verprolin are functional homologues, we analyzed the function of WIP in yeast. WIP suppresses the growth defects of VRP1missense and null mutations as well as the defects in cytoskeletal organization and endocytosis observed in vrp1–1 cells. The ability of WIP to replace verprolin is dependent on its WH2 actin binding domain and a putative profilin binding domain. Immunofluorescence localization of WIP in yeast cells reveals a pattern consistent with its function at the cortical sites of growth. Thus, like verprolin, WIP functions in yeast to link the polarity development pathway and the actin cytoskeleton to generate cytoskeletal asymmetry. A role for WIP in cell polarity provides a framework for unifying, under a common paradigm, distinct molecular defects associated with immunodeficiencies like Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome.


Journal of Cell Science | 2003

WIP participates in actin reorganization and ruffle formation induced by PDGF

Inés M. Antón; Stephen P. Saville; Michael Byrne; Claudia Curcio; Narayanaswamy Ramesh; John H. Hartwig; Raif S. Geha

Platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) is a chemotactic factor for fibroblasts that triggers actin cytoskeleton reorganization by increasing the level of GTP-Rac, the activated form of a small Rho family GTPase. GTP-Rac induces membrane ruffling and lamellipodium formation that are required for adhesion, migration and macropinocytosis, among other functions. We have shown that WIP interacts with members of the Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome protein family and is essential for filopodium formation regulated by Cdc42 GTPase. In this report, we show that WIP participates in the actin reorganization that leads to ruffle formation. WIP overexpression in murine fibroblasts (3T3 cells) enhances ruffle formation in response to PDGF stimulation, as shown by immunofluorescence and electron and video microscopy. More importantly, microinjection of anti-WIP antibody or absence of WIP in murine fibroblasts results in decreased ruffle formation in response to PDGF treatment. Finally, overexpression of a modified form of WIP lacking the actin-binding site blocks PDGF-induced membrane ruffling. These data suggest a role for WIP in actin reorganization to form PDGF-induced ruffles. This is the first in vivo evidence in mammalian cells for a function of WIP dependent on its ability to bind actin.


Trends in Cell Biology | 1999

Waltzing with WASP

Narayanaswamy Ramesh; Inés M. Antón; Narcisa Martinez-Quiles; Raif S. Geha

Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome (WAS) is an inherited immune deficiency that is marked by eczema, bleeding and recurrent infections. The lymphocytes and platelets of WAS patients display cytoskeletal abnormalities, and their T lymphocytes show a diminished proliferative response to stimulation through the T-cell receptor-CD3 complex (TCR-CD3). The product of the WAS gene, WAS protein (WASP), binds to the small GTPase Cdc42. Small GTPases of the Rho family are crucial for the regulation of the actin-based cytoskeleton. WASP and its relative NWASP might play an important role in regulating the actin cytoskeleton. Since both WASP and NWASP have the potential to bind to multiple proteins, they might serve as a hub to coordinate the redistribution of many cellular signals to the actin cytoskeleton. In this review, the authors discuss the possible role of WASP/NWASP and of the newly described protein WIP, which interacts with WASP and NWASP, in coupling signals from the T-cell receptor to the actin-based cytoskeleton.

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Raif S. Geha

Boston Children's Hospital

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Luis Enjuanes

Spanish National Research Council

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Francisco Wandosell

Spanish National Research Council

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Cristian Smerdou

Spanish National Research Council

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John H. Hartwig

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Carlos Suñé

Spanish National Research Council

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Esther García

Spanish National Research Council

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