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Dive into the research topics where Ingrid E. Wertz is active.

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Featured researches published by Ingrid E. Wertz.


Cell | 2008

Ubiquitin chain editing revealed by polyubiquitin linkage-specific antibodies.

Kim Newton; Marissa L. Matsumoto; Ingrid E. Wertz; Donald S. Kirkpatrick; Jennie R. Lill; Jenille Tan; Debra L. Dugger; Nathaniel C. Gordon; Sachdev S. Sidhu; Frederic A. Fellouse; Laszlo Komuves; Dorothy French; Ronald E. Ferrando; Cynthia Lam; Deanne M. Compaan; Christine Yu; Ivan Bosanac; Sarah G. Hymowitz; Robert F. Kelley; Vishva M. Dixit

Posttranslational modification of proteins with polyubiquitin occurs in diverse signaling pathways and is tightly regulated to ensure cellular homeostasis. Studies employing ubiquitin mutants suggest that the fate of polyubiquitinated proteins is determined by which lysine within ubiquitin is linked to the C terminus of an adjacent ubiquitin. We have developed linkage-specific antibodies that recognize polyubiquitin chains joined through lysine 63 (K63) or 48 (K48). A cocrystal structure of an anti-K63 linkage Fab bound to K63-linked diubiquitin provides insight into the molecular basis for specificity. We use these antibodies to demonstrate that RIP1, which is essential for tumor necrosis factor-induced NF-kappaB activation, and IRAK1, which participates in signaling by interleukin-1beta and Toll-like receptors, both undergo polyubiquitin editing in stimulated cells. Both kinase adaptors initially acquire K63-linked polyubiquitin, while at later times K48-linked polyubiquitin targets them for proteasomal degradation. Polyubiquitin editing may therefore be a general mechanism for attenuating innate immune signaling.


Nature | 2011

Sensitivity to antitubulin chemotherapeutics is regulated by MCL1 and FBW7

Ingrid E. Wertz; Saritha Kusam; Cynthia Lam; Toru Okamoto; Wendy Sandoval; Daniel J. Anderson; Elizabeth Helgason; James A. Ernst; Mike Eby; Jinfeng Liu; Lisa D. Belmont; Joshua S. Kaminker; Karen O’Rourke; Kanan Pujara; Pawan Bir Kohli; Adam R. Johnson; Mark L. Chiu; Jennie R. Lill; Peter K. Jackson; Wayne J. Fairbrother; Somasekar Seshagiri; Mary J. C. Ludlam; Kevin G. Leong; Erin C. Dueber; Heather Maecker; David C. S. Huang; Vishva M. Dixit

Microtubules have pivotal roles in fundamental cellular processes and are targets of antitubulin chemotherapeutics. Microtubule-targeted agents such as Taxol and vincristine are prescribed widely for various malignancies, including ovarian and breast adenocarcinomas, non-small-cell lung cancer, leukaemias and lymphomas. These agents arrest cells in mitosis and subsequently induce cell death through poorly defined mechanisms. The strategies that resistant tumour cells use to evade death induced by antitubulin agents are also unclear. Here we show that the pro-survival protein MCL1 (ref. 3) is a crucial regulator of apoptosis triggered by antitubulin chemotherapeutics. During mitotic arrest, MCL1 protein levels decline markedly, through a post-translational mechanism, potentiating cell death. Phosphorylation of MCL1 directs its interaction with the tumour-suppressor protein FBW7, which is the substrate-binding component of a ubiquitin ligase complex. The polyubiquitylation of MCL1 then targets it for proteasomal degradation. The degradation of MCL1 was blocked in patient-derived tumour cells that lacked FBW7 or had loss-of-function mutations in FBW7, conferring resistance to antitubulin agents and promoting chemotherapeutic-induced polyploidy. Additionally, primary tumour samples were enriched for FBW7 inactivation and elevated MCL1 levels, underscoring the prominent roles of these proteins in oncogenesis. Our findings suggest that profiling the FBW7 and MCL1 status of tumours, in terms of protein levels, messenger RNA levels and genetic status, could be useful to predict the response of patients to antitubulin chemotherapeutics.


Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology | 2011

Ubiquitylation in apoptosis: a post-translational modification at the edge of life and death

Domagoj Vucic; Vishva M. Dixit; Ingrid E. Wertz

The proper regulation of apoptosis is essential for the survival of multicellular organisms. Furthermore, excessive apoptosis can contribute to neurodegenerative diseases, anaemia and graft rejection, and diminished apoptosis can lead to autoimmune diseases and cancer. It has become clear that the post-translational modification of apoptotic proteins by ubiquitylation regulates key components in cell death signalling cascades. For example, ubiquitin E3 ligases, such as MDM2 (which ubiquitylates p53) and inhibitor of apoptosis (IAP) proteins, and deubiquitinases, such as A20 and ubiquitin-specific protease 9X (USP9X) (which regulate the ubiquitylation and degradation of receptor-interacting protein 1 (RIP1) and myeloid leukaemia cell differentiation 1 (MCL1), respectively), have important roles in apoptosis. Therapeutic agents that target apoptotic regulatory proteins, including those that are part of the ubiquitin–proteasome system, might afford clinical benefits.


Cold Spring Harbor Perspectives in Biology | 2010

Signaling to NF-κB: Regulation by Ubiquitination

Ingrid E. Wertz; Vishva M. Dixit

The NF-kappaB pathway is a ubiquitous stress response that activates the NF-kappaB family of transcription factors. Antigen receptors, receptors of the innate immune system, and certain intracellular stressors are potent activators of this pathway. The transcriptional program that is activated is both antiapoptotic and highly proinflammatory. Indeed, any compromise in engagement of the pathway results in immunodeficiency, whereas constitutive activation generates a sustained inflammatory response that may promote malignancy. As such, NF-kappaB activation is under tight regulation by a number of post-translational modifications, including phosphorylation and ubiquitination. This article attempts to synthesize our current knowledge regarding the regulation of NF-kappaB signaling by ubiquitination, specifically highlighting the biochemical basis for both positive and negative feedback loops that function in unison to generate coordinated signals that are essential for the viability of metazoan animals.


Nature Reviews Cancer | 2010

A20: from ubiquitin editing to tumour suppression

Sarah G. Hymowitz; Ingrid E. Wertz

Clinicians have suspected for hundreds of years that chronic activation of the immune system contributes to the development of cancer. However, the molecular mechanisms that mediate this precarious interplay are only now being elucidated. Recent reports have identified A20 as a crucial tumour suppressor in various lymphomas. A20 is a ubiquitin-editing enzyme that attenuates the activity of proximal signalling complexes at pro-inflammatory receptors. In this Review we summarize the evidence linking chronic inflammation with tumorigenesis and consider how A20 modulates inflammatory signalling cascades, thereby providing a mechanism to explain how deregulation of ubiquitylation can promote tumorigenesis.


Nature | 2011

COP1 is a tumour suppressor that causes degradation of ETS transcription factors

Alberto C. Vitari; Kevin G. Leong; Kim Newton; Cindy Yee; Karen O’Rourke; Jinfeng Liu; Lilian Phu; Rajesh Vij; Ronald E. Ferrando; Suzana S. Couto; Sankar Mohan; Ajay Pandita; Jo-Anne Hongo; David Arnott; Ingrid E. Wertz; Wei-Qiang Gao; Dorothy French; Vishva M. Dixit

The proto-oncogenes ETV1, ETV4 and ETV5 encode transcription factors in the E26 transformation-specific (ETS) family, which includes the most frequently rearranged and overexpressed genes in prostate cancer. Despite being critical regulators of development, little is known about their post-translational regulation. Here we identify the ubiquitin ligase COP1 (also known as RFWD2) as a tumour suppressor that negatively regulates ETV1, ETV4 and ETV5. ETV1, which is mutated in prostate cancer more often, was degraded after being ubiquitinated by COP1. Truncated ETV1 encoded by prostate cancer translocation TMPRSS2:ETV1 lacks the critical COP1 binding motifs and was 50-fold more stable than wild-type ETV1. Almost all patient translocations render ETV1 insensitive to COP1, implying that this confers a selective advantage to prostate epithelial cells. Indeed, COP1 deficiency in mouse prostate elevated ETV1 and produced increased cell proliferation, hyperplasia, and early prostate intraepithelial neoplasia. Combined loss of COP1 and PTEN enhanced the invasiveness of mouse prostate adenocarcinomas. Finally, rare human prostate cancer samples showed hemizygous loss of the COP1 gene, loss of COP1 protein, and elevated ETV1 protein while lacking a translocation event. These findings identify COP1 as a tumour suppressor whose downregulation promotes prostatic epithelial cell proliferation and tumorigenesis.


Nature | 2016

Phosphorylation and linear ubiquitin direct A20 inhibition of inflammation

Ingrid E. Wertz; Kim Newton; Dhaya Seshasayee; Saritha Kusam; Cynthia Lam; Juan Zhang; Nataliya Popovych; Elizabeth Helgason; Allyn J. Schoeffler; Surinder Jeet; Nandhini Ramamoorthi; Lorna Kategaya; Robert J. Newman; Keisuke Horikawa; Debra L. Dugger; Wendy Sandoval; Susmith Mukund; Anuradha Zindal; Flavius Martin; Clifford Quan; Jeffrey Tom; Wayne J. Fairbrother; Michael J. Townsend; Søren Warming; Jason DeVoss; Jinfeng Liu; Erin C. Dueber; Patrick Caplazi; Wyne P. Lee; Christopher C. Goodnow

Inactivation of the TNFAIP3 gene, encoding the A20 protein, is associated with critical inflammatory diseases including multiple sclerosis, rheumatoid arthritis and Crohn’s disease. However, the role of A20 in attenuating inflammatory signalling is unclear owing to paradoxical in vitro and in vivo findings. Here we utilize genetically engineered mice bearing mutations in the A20 ovarian tumour (OTU)-type deubiquitinase domain or in the zinc finger-4 (ZnF4) ubiquitin-binding motif to investigate these discrepancies. We find that phosphorylation of A20 promotes cleavage of Lys63-linked polyubiquitin chains by the OTU domain and enhances ZnF4-mediated substrate ubiquitination. Additionally, levels of linear ubiquitination dictate whether A20-deficient cells die in response to tumour necrosis factor. Mechanistically, linear ubiquitin chains preserve the architecture of the TNFR1 signalling complex by blocking A20-mediated disassembly of Lys63-linked polyubiquitin scaffolds. Collectively, our studies reveal molecular mechanisms whereby A20 deubiquitinase activity and ubiquitin binding, linear ubiquitination, and cellular kinases cooperate to regulate inflammation and cell death.


Cytokine & Growth Factor Reviews | 2008

Ubiquitin-mediated regulation of TNFR1 signaling

Ingrid E. Wertz; Vishva M. Dixit

Ubiquitin ligase enzymes promote substrate protein ubiquitination, a post-translational modification whereby the 76-amino acid protein ubiquitin is covalently bound to substrate proteins. Ubiquitination may target substrates for proteasomal degradation or regulate substrate function in a degradation-independent manner. Ubiquitination is reversible, and this is achieved by de-ubiquitinase enzymes [Jackson PK, Eldridge AG, Freed E, et al. The lore of the RINGs: substrate recognition and catalysis by ubiquitin ligases. Trends Cell Biol 2000;10(October (10)):429-39]. The first identified target of ubiquitination in the Tumor Necrosis Factor Receptor 1 (TNFR1) signaling cascade was Inhibitor of NF-kappaB (I-kappaB), which sequesters Nuclear Factors at kappa-chain promoters in B-cells (NF-kappaB) transcription factors in the cytosol. Following TNF-alpha stimulation, I-kappaB is ubiquitinated and subsequently degraded by the proteasome, permitting NF-kappaB transcriptional activity [Glickman MH, Ciechanover A. The ubiquitin-proteasome proteolytic pathway: destruction for the sake of construction. Physiol Rev 2002;82(April (2)):373-428]. Since this seminal finding, it is now evident that nearly every step of TNFR1 signaling is regulated by ubiquitination. In this review, we will summarize the ubiquitin/proteasome system and discuss the ubiquitin-mediated regulation of TNFR1 signaling.


Nature Chemical Biology | 2013

Conformational stabilization of ubiquitin yields potent and selective inhibitors of USP7.

Yingnan Zhang; Lijuan Zhou; Lionel Rouge; Aaron H. Phillips; Cynthia Lam; Peter Liu; Wendy Sandoval; Elizabeth Helgason; Jeremy Murray; Ingrid E. Wertz; Jacob E. Corn

Protein conformation and function are often inextricably linked, such that the states a protein adopts define its enzymatic activity or its affinity for various partners. Here we combine computational design with macromolecular display to isolate functional conformations of ubiquitin that tightly bind the catalytic core of the oncogenic ubiquitin-specific protease 7 (USP7) deubiquitinase. Structural and biochemical characterization of these ubiquitin variants suggest that remodeled backbone conformations and core packing poise these molecules for stronger interactions, leading to potent and specific inhibition of enzymatic activity. A ubiquitin variant expressed in human tumor cell lines binds and inhibits endogenous USP7, thereby enhancing Mdm2 proteasomal turnover and stabilizing p53. In sum, we have developed an approach to rationally target macromolecular libraries toward the remodeling of protein conformation, shown that engineering of ubiquitin conformation can greatly increase its interaction with deubiquitinases and developed powerful tools to probe the cellular role of USP7.


Biochemical Journal | 2015

DUBs, the regulation of cell identity and disease

Johanna Heideker; Ingrid E. Wertz

The post-translational modification of proteins with ubiquitin represents a complex signalling system that co-ordinates essential cellular functions, including proteolysis, DNA repair, receptor signalling and cell communication. DUBs (deubiquitinases), the enzymes that disassemble ubiquitin chains and remove ubiquitin from proteins, are central to this system. Reflecting the complexity and versatility of ubiquitin signalling, DUB activity is controlled in multiple ways. Although several lines of evidence indicate that aberrant DUB function may promote human disease, the underlying molecular mechanisms are often unclear. Notwithstanding, considerable interest in DUBs as potential drug targets has emerged over the past years. The future success of DUB-based therapy development will require connecting the basic science of DUB function and enzymology with drug discovery. In the present review, we discuss new insights into DUB activity regulation and their links to disease, focusing on the role of DUBs as regulators of cell identity and differentiation, and discuss their potential as emerging drug targets.

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