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Dive into the research topics where Izhak Michaelevski is active.

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Featured researches published by Izhak Michaelevski.


Science Signaling | 2010

Signaling to transcription networks in the neuronal retrograde injury response.

Izhak Michaelevski; Yael Segal-Ruder; Meir Rozenbaum; Katalin F. Medzihradszky; Ophir Shalem; Giovanni Coppola; Shirley Horn-Saban; Keren Ben-Yaakov; Shachar Y. Dagan; Ida Rishal; Daniel H. Geschwind; Yitzhak Pilpel; Alma L. Burlingame; Mike Fainzilber

Robustness in nerve injury responses results from control of axon-to-soma signaling networks by multiple regulatory components. Calling In the Repair Crew The ability of a damaged neuron to regenerate depends on the initiation of a repair program in the cell body, so that the injured neuron switches from a “growth-as-normal” mode to an “injury-response” mode. Initiation of such a repair program depends in turn on the receipt by the cell body of injury signals from the lesion. Michaelevski et al. combined phosphoproteomic analyses of injured and uninjured rat sciatic nerve with microarray analyses of transcripts in the dorsal root ganglia to identify retrograde signaling networks implicated in activating the transcriptional response to axonal injury. Pharmacological manipulation of various protein kinases that appeared in many of these networks and were predicted to play a key role in affecting signaling network size and connectivity affected neurite outgrowth of cultured sensory neurons. Paradoxically, the combined manipulation of pairs of these kinases was sometimes less effective at affecting neurite outgrowth than manipulation of either alone—an observation that has substantial implications for development of appropriate therapies for treating nerve injury. Retrograde signaling from axon to soma activates intrinsic regeneration mechanisms in lesioned peripheral sensory neurons; however, the links between axonal injury signaling and the cell body response are not well understood. Here, we used phosphoproteomics and microarrays to implicate ~900 phosphoproteins in retrograde injury signaling in rat sciatic nerve axons in vivo and ~4500 transcripts in the in vivo response to injury in the dorsal root ganglia. Computational analyses of these data sets identified ~400 redundant axonal signaling networks connected to 39 transcription factors implicated in the sensory neuron response to axonal injury. Experimental perturbation of individual overrepresented signaling hub proteins, including Abl, AKT, p38, and protein kinase C, affected neurite outgrowth in sensory neurons. Paradoxically, however, combined perturbation of Abl together with other hub proteins had a reduced effect relative to perturbation of individual proteins. Our data indicate that nerve injury responses are controlled by multiple regulatory components, and suggest that network redundancies provide robustness to the injury response.


Neuron | 2016

A Systems-Level Analysis of the Peripheral Nerve Intrinsic Axonal Growth Program

Vijayendran Chandran; Giovanni Coppola; Homaira Nawabi; Takao Omura; Revital Versano; Eric A. Huebner; Alice Zhang; Michael Costigan; Ajay S. Yekkirala; Lee B. Barrett; Armin Blesch; Izhak Michaelevski; Jeremy Davis-Turak; Fuying Gao; Peter Langfelder; Steve Horvath; Zhigang He; Larry I. Benowitz; Mike Fainzilber; Mark H. Tuszynski; Clifford J. Woolf; Daniel H. Geschwind

The regenerative capacity of the injured CNS in adult mammals is severely limited, yet axons in the peripheral nervous system (PNS) regrow, albeit to a limited extent, after injury. We reasoned that coordinate regulation of gene expression in injured neurons involving multiple pathways was central to PNS regenerative capacity. To provide a framework for revealing pathways involved in PNS axon regrowth after injury, we applied a comprehensive systems biology approach, starting with gene expression profiling of dorsal root ganglia (DRGs) combined with multi-level bioinformatic analyses and experimental validation of network predictions. We used this rubric to identify a drug that accelerates DRG neurite outgrowth in vitro and optic nerve outgrowth in vivo by inducing elements of the identified network. The work provides a functional genomics foundation for understanding neural repair and proof of the power of such approaches in tackling complex problems in nervous system biology.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2003

Direct Interaction of Target SNAREs with the Kv2.1 Channel MODAL REGULATION OF CHANNEL ACTIVATION AND INACTIVATION GATING

Izhak Michaelevski; Dodo Chikvashvili; Sharon Tsuk; Dafna Singer-Lahat; Youhou Kang; Michal Linial; Herbert Y. Gaisano; Oded Fili; Ilana Lotan

Previously we suggested that interaction between voltage-gated K+ channels and protein components of the exocytotic machinery regulated transmitter release. This study concerns the interaction between the Kv2.1 channel, the prevalent delayed rectifier K+ channel in neuroendocrine and endocrine cells, and syntaxin 1A and SNAP-25. We recently showed in islet β-cells that the Kv2.1 K+ current is modulated by syntaxin 1A and SNAP-25. Here we demonstrate, using co-immunoprecipitation and immunocytochemistry analyses, the existence of a physical interaction in neuroendocrine cells between Kv2.1 and syntaxin 1A. Furthermore, using concomitant co-immunoprecipitation from plasma membranes and two-electrode voltage clamp analyses in Xenopus oocytes combined with in vitro binding analysis, we characterized the effects of these interactions on the Kv2.1 channel gating pertaining to the assembly/disassembly of the syntaxin 1A/SNAP-25 (target (t)-SNARE) complex. Syntaxin 1A alone binds strongly to Kv2.1 and shifts both activation and inactivation to hyperpolarized potentials. SNAP-25 alone binds weakly to Kv2.1 and probably has no effect by itself. Expression of SNAP-25 together with syntaxin 1A results in the formation of t-SNARE complexes, with consequent elimination of the effects of syntaxin 1A alone on both activation and inactivation. Moreover, inactivation is shifted to the opposite direction, toward depolarized potentials, and its extent and rate are attenuated. Based on these results we suggest that exocytosis in neuroendocrine cells is tuned by the dynamic coupling of the Kv2.1 channel gating to the assembly status of the t-SNARE complex.


Molecular Cell | 2012

A Mutually Inhibitory Feedback Loop between the 20S Proteasome and Its Regulator, NQO1

Oren Moscovitz; Peter Tsvetkov; Nimrod Hazan; Izhak Michaelevski; Hodaya Keisar; Gili Ben-Nissan; Yosef Shaul; Michal Sharon

NAD(P)H:quinone-oxidoreductase-1 (NQO1) is a cytosolic enzyme that catalyzes the reduction of various quinones using flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) as a cofactor. NQO1 has been also shown to rescue proteins containing intrinsically unstructured domains, such as p53 and p73, from degradation by the 20S proteasome through an unknown mechanism. Here, we studied the nature of interaction between NQO1 and the 20S proteasome. Our study revealed a double negative feedback loop between NQO1 and the 20S proteasome, whereby NQO1 prevents the proteolytic activity of the 20S proteasome and the 20S proteasome degrades the apo form of NQO1. Furthermore, we demonstrate, both in vivo and in vitro, that NQO1 levels are highly dependent on FAD concentration. These observations suggest a link between 20S proteolysis and the metabolic cellular state. More generally, the results may represent a regulatory mechanism by which associated cofactors dictate the stability of proteins, thus coordinating protein levels with the metabolic status.


Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2010

Axonal Transport Proteomics Reveals Mobilization of Translation Machinery to the Lesion Site in Injured Sciatic Nerve

Izhak Michaelevski; Katalin F. Medzihradszky; Aenoch Lynn; Alma L. Burlingame; Mike Fainzilber

Investigations of the molecular mechanisms underlying responses to nerve injury have highlighted the importance of axonal transport systems. To obtain a comprehensive view of the protein ensembles associated with axonal transport in injured axons, we analyzed the protein compositions of axoplasm concentrated at ligatures following crush injury of rat sciatic nerve. LC-MS/MS analyses of iTRAQ-labeled peptides from axoplasm distal and proximal to the ligation sites revealed protein ensembles transported in both anterograde and retrograde directions. Variability of replicates did not allow straightforward assignment of proteins to functional transport categories; hence, we performed principal component analysis and factor analysis with subsequent clustering to determine the most prominent injury-related transported proteins. This strategy circumvented experimental variability and allowed the extraction of biologically meaningful information from the quantitative neuroproteomics experiments. 299 proteins were highlighted by principal component analysis and factor analysis, 145 of which correlate with retrograde and 154 of which correlate with anterograde transport after injury. The analyses reveal extensive changes in both anterograde and retrograde transport proteomes in injured peripheral axons and emphasize the importance of RNA binding and translational machineries in the axonal response to injury.


Journal of Visualized Experiments | 2010

T-wave Ion Mobility-mass Spectrometry: Basic Experimental Procedures for Protein Complex Analysis

Izhak Michaelevski; Noam Kirshenbaum; Michal Sharon

Ion mobility (IM) is a method that measures the time taken for an ion to travel through a pressurized cell under the influence of a weak electric field. The speed by which the ions traverse the drift region depends on their size: large ions will experience a greater number of collisions with the background inert gas (usually N2) and thus travel more slowly through the IM device than those ions that comprise a smaller cross-section. In general, the time it takes for the ions to migrate though the dense gas phase separates them, according to their collision cross-section (Ω). Recently, IM spectrometry was coupled with mass spectrometry and a traveling-wave (T-wave) Synapt ion mobility mass spectrometer (IM-MS) was released. Integrating mass spectrometry with ion mobility enables an extra dimension of sample separation and definition, yielding a three-dimensional spectrum (mass to charge, intensity, and drift time). This separation technique allows the spectral overlap to decrease, and enables resolution of heterogeneous complexes with very similar mass, or mass-to-charge ratios, but different drift times. Moreover, the drift time measurements provide an important layer of structural information, as Ω is related to the overall shape and topology of the ion. The correlation between the measured drift time values and Ω is calculated using a calibration curve generated from calibrant proteins with defined cross-sections1. The power of the IM-MS approach lies in its ability to define the subunit packing and overall shape of protein assemblies at micromolar concentrations, and near-physiological conditions1. Several recent IM studies of both individual proteins2,3 and non-covalent protein complexes4-9, successfully demonstrated that protein quaternary structure is maintained in the gas phase, and highlighted the potential of this approach in the study of protein assemblies of unknown geometry. Here, we provide a detailed description of IMS-MS analysis of protein complexes using the Synapt (Quadrupole-Ion Mobility-Time-of-Flight) HDMS instrument (Waters Ltd; the only commercial IM-MS instrument currently available)10. We describe the basic optimization steps, the calibration of collision cross-sections, and methods for data processing and interpretation. The final step of the protocol discusses methods for calculating theoretical Ω values. Overall, the protocol does not attempt to cover every aspect of IM-MS characterization of protein assemblies; rather, its goal is to introduce the practical aspects of the method to new researchers in the field.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2002

Modulation of a Brain Voltage-gated K+ Channel by Syntaxin 1A Requires the Physical Interaction of Gβγ with the Channel

Izhak Michaelevski; Dodo Chikvashvili; Sharon Tsuk; Oded Fili; Martin J. Lohse; Dafna Singer-Lahat; Ilana Lotan

Recently we suggested that direct interactions between voltage-gated K+ channels and proteins of the exocytotic machinery, such as those observed between the Kv1.1/Kvβ channel, syntaxin 1A, and SNAP-25 may be involved in neurotransmitter release. Furthermore, we demonstrated that the direct interaction with syntaxin 1A enhances the fast inactivation of Kv1.1/Kvβ1.1 in oocytes. Here we show that G-protein βγ subunits play a crucial role in the enhancement of inactivation by syntaxin 1A. The effect caused by overexpression of syntaxin 1A is eliminated in the presence of chelators of endogenous βγ subunits in the whole cell and at the plasma membrane. Conversely, enhancement of inactivation caused by overexpression of β1γ2 subunits is eliminated upon knock-down of endogenous syntaxin or its scavenging at the plasma membrane. We further show that the N terminus of Kv1.1 binds brain synaptosomal and recombinant syntaxin 1A and concomitantly binds β1γ2; the binding of β1γ2 enhances that of syntaxin 1A. Taken together, we suggest a mechanism whereby syntaxin and G protein βγ subunits interact concomitantly with a Kv channel to regulate its inactivation.


Journal of Visualized Experiments | 2010

Analyzing large protein complexes by structural mass spectrometry.

Noam Kirshenbaum; Izhak Michaelevski; Michal Sharon

Living cells control and regulate their biological processes through the coordinated action of a large number of proteins that assemble themselves into an array of dynamic, multi-protein complexes1. To gain a mechanistic understanding of the various cellular processes, it is crucial to determine the structure of such protein complexes, and reveal how their structural organization dictates their function. Many aspects of multi-protein complexes are, however, difficult to characterize, due to their heterogeneous nature, asymmetric structure, and dynamics. Therefore, new approaches are required for the study of the tertiary levels of protein organization. One of the emerging structural biology tools for analyzing macromolecular complexes is mass spectrometry (MS)2-5. This method yields information on the complex protein composition, subunit stoichiometry, and structural topology. The power of MS derives from its high sensitivity and, as a consequence, low sample requirement, which enables examination of protein complexes expressed at endogenous levels. Another advantage is the speed of analysis, which allows monitoring of reactions in real time. Moreover, the technique can simultaneously measure the characteristics of separate populations co-existing in a mixture. Here, we describe a detailed protocol for the application of structural MS to the analysis of large protein assemblies. The procedure begins with the preparation of gold-coated capillaries for nanoflow electrospray ionization (nESI). It then continues with sample preparation, emphasizing the buffer conditions which should be compatible with nESI on the one hand, and enable to maintain complexes intact on the other. We then explain, step-by-step, how to optimize the experimental conditions for high mass measurements and acquire MS and tandem MS spectra. Finally, we chart the data processing and analyses that follow. Rather than attempting to characterize every aspect of protein assemblies, this protocol introduces basic MS procedures, enabling the performance of MS and MS/MS experiments on non-covalent complexes. Overall, our goal is to provide researchers unacquainted with the field of structural MS, with knowledge of the principal experimental tools.


Developmental Neurobiology | 2010

Axoplasm isolation from peripheral nerve.

Ida Rishal; Izhak Michaelevski; Meir Rozenbaum; Vera Shinder; Katalin F. Medzihradszky; Alma L. Burlingame; Mike Fainzilber

Localized changes in the composition of axonal cytoplasm (axoplasm) are critical for many biological processes, including axon guidance, responses to injury, neurite outgrowth, and axon‐glia interactions. Biochemical and molecular studies of these mechanisms have been heavily focused on in vitro systems because of the difficulty of obtaining subcellular extracts from mammalian tissues in vivo. As in vitro systems might not replicate the in vivo situation, reliable methods of axoplasm extraction from whole nerve would be helpful for mechanistic studies on axons. Here we develop and evaluate a new procedure for preparation of axoplasm from rat peripheral nerve, based on incubation of separated short segements of nerve fascicles in hypotonic medium to separate myelin and lyse nonaxonal structures, followed by extraction of the remaining axon‐enriched material. We show that this new procedure reduces serum and glial cell contamination and facilitates proteomic analyses of axonal contents.


Pflügers Archiv: European Journal of Physiology | 2008

VAMP2 interacts directly with the N terminus of Kv2.1 to enhance channel inactivation

Anatoli Lvov; Dodo Chikvashvili; Izhak Michaelevski; Ilana Lotan

Recently, we demonstrated that the Kv2.1 channel plays a role in regulated exocytosis of dense-core vesicles (DCVs) through direct interaction of its C terminus with syntaxin 1A, a plasma membrane soluble NSF attachment receptor (SNARE) component. We report here that Kv2.1 interacts with VAMP2, the vesicular SNARE partner that is also present at high concentration in neuronal plasma membrane. This is the first report of VAMP2 interaction with an ion channel. The interaction was demonstrated in brain membranes and characterized using electrophysiological and biochemical analyses in Xenopus oocytes combined with an in vitro binding analysis and protein modeling. Comparative study performed with wild-type and mutant Kv2.1, wild-type Kv1.5, and chimeric Kv1.5N/Kv2.1 channels revealed that VAMP2 enhanced the inactivation of Kv2.1, but not of Kv1.5, via direct interaction with the T1 domain of the N terminus of Kv2.1. Given the proposed role for surface VAMP2 in the regulation of the vesicle cycle and the important role for the sustained Kv2.1 current in the regulation of dendritic calcium entry during high-frequency stimulation, the interaction of VAMP2 with Kv2.1 N terminus may contribute, alongside with the interaction of syntaxin with Kv2.1 C terminus, to the activity dependence of DCV release.

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Mike Fainzilber

Weizmann Institute of Science

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Michal Sharon

Weizmann Institute of Science

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Anatoli Lvov

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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