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Dive into the research topics where Jemma L. Webber is active.

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Featured researches published by Jemma L. Webber.


The EMBO Journal | 2010

Coordinated regulation of autophagy by p38α MAPK through mAtg9 and p38IP

Jemma L. Webber; Sharon A. Tooze

Autophagy, a lysosomal degradation pathway, is essential for homeostasis, development, neurological diseases, and cancer. Regulation of autophagy in human disease is not well understood. Atg9 is a transmembrane protein required for autophagy, and it has been proposed that trafficking of Atg9 may regulate autophagy. Mammalian Atg9 traffics between the TGN and endosomes in basal conditions, and newly formed autophagosomes in response to signals inducing autophagy. We identified p38IP as a new mAtg9 interactor and showed that this interaction is regulated by p38α MAPK. p38IP is required for starvation‐induced mAtg9 trafficking and autophagosome formation. Manipulation of p38IP and p38α alters mAtg9 localization, suggesting p38α regulates, through p38IP, the starvation‐induced mAtg9 trafficking to forming autophagosomes. Furthermore, we show that p38α is a negative regulator of both basal autophagy and starvation‐induced autophagy, and suggest that this regulation may be through a direct competition with mAtg9 for binding to p38IP. Our results provide evidence for a link between the MAPK pathway and the control of autophagy through mAtg9 and p38IP.


FEBS Letters | 2010

New insights into the function of Atg9

Jemma L. Webber; Sharon A. Tooze

Autophagy is a lysosomal degradation pathway that is essential for cellular homeostasis. Identification of more than 30 autophagy related proteins including a multi‐spanning membrane protein, Atg9, has increased our understanding of the molecular mechanisms involved in autophagy. Atg9 is required for autophagy in several eukaryotic organisms although its function is unknown. Recently, we identified a novel interacting partner of mAtg9, p38 MAPK interacting protein, p38IP. We summarise recent data on the role of Atg9 trafficking in yeast and mammalian autophagy and discuss the role of p38IP and p38 MAPK in regulation of mAtg9 trafficking and autophagy.


Autophagy | 2007

Atg9 Trafficking in Mammalian Cells

Jemma L. Webber; Andrew J. Young; Sharon A. Tooze

The molecular mechanisms of autophagy have been best characterized in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, where a number of proteins have been identified to be essential for this degradative pathway. ATG (autophagy-related) proteins localize to a unique compartment, the pre-autophagosomal structure (PAS). Isolation membranes are suggested to originate from the PAS, enwrapping cytoplasmic components to form a double membrane autophagosome, which then fuses with the vacuole. Although many Atg proteins have been identified, the source of the PAS membrane in yeast is unknown. Identification of the source of the PAS in yeast has been hindered due to the transient association of Atg proteins with forming autophagosomes. Likewise, in mammalian cells, it is not known if a PAS equivalent exists or if the formation of autophagosomes occurs from numerous membrane sources. The identification of stably associated markers would allow us to address this question further. Thus, characterization of the only transmembrane autophagy protein so far identified, Atg9, may aid in the search for the source of the PAS. Recent data from our lab suggests that mammalian Atg9 (mAtg9) traffics between the Golgi and endosomes, and suggests an involvement of the Golgi complex in the autophagic pathway. Here we address the implications of our model with regard to membrane trafficking events in mammalian cells after starvation. Addendum to: Starvation and ULK1-Dependent Cycling of Mammalian Atg9 Between the TGN and Andosomes A.R.J. Young, E.Y.W. Chan, X.W. Hu, R. Köchl, S.G. Crawshaw, S. High, D.W. Hailey, J. Lippincott-Schwartz and S.A. Tooze J Cell Sci 2006; 119:3888-900


Iubmb Life | 2010

Trafficking and Signaling in Mammalian Autophagy

Sharon A. Tooze; Harold B.J. Jefferies; Eyal Kalie; Andrea Longatti; Fiona E. McAlpine; Nicole C. McKnight; Andrea Orsi; Hannah E.J. Polson; Minoo Razi; Deborah J. Robinson; Jemma L. Webber

Macroautophagy, here called autophagy, is literally a “self‐eating” catabolic process, which is evolutionarily conserved. Autophagy is initiated by cellular stress pathways, resulting in the sequestration or engulfment of cytosolic proteins, membranes, and organelles in a double membrane structure that fuses with endosomes and lysosomes, thus delivering the sequestered material for degradation. Autophagy is implicated in a number of human diseases, many of which can either be characterized by an imbalance in protein, organelle, or cellular homeostasis, ultimately resulting in an alteration of the autophagic response. Here, we will review the recent progress made in understanding the induction of autophagy, with emphasis on the contributions from our laboratory.


Genetics | 2013

The Relationship between Long-range Chromatin Occupancy and Polymerization of the Drosophila ETS Family Transcriptional Repressor Yan

Jemma L. Webber; Jie Zhang; Lauren Cote; Pavithra Vivekanand; Xiaochun Ni; Jie Zhou; Nicolas Nègre; Richard W. Carthew; Kevin P. White; Ilaria Rebay

ETS family transcription factors are evolutionarily conserved downstream effectors of Ras/MAPK signaling with critical roles in development and cancer. In Drosophila, the ETS repressor Yan regulates cell proliferation and differentiation in a variety of tissues; however, the mechanisms of Yan-mediated repression are not well understood and only a few direct target genes have been identified. Yan, like its human ortholog TEL1, self-associates through an N-terminal sterile α-motif (SAM), leading to speculation that Yan/TEL1 polymers may spread along chromatin to form large repressive domains. To test this hypothesis, we created a monomeric form of Yan by recombineering a point mutation that blocks SAM-mediated self-association into the yan genomic locus and compared its genome-wide chromatin occupancy profile to that of endogenous wild-type Yan. Consistent with the spreading model predictions, wild-type Yan-bound regions span multiple kilobases. Extended occupancy patterns appear most prominent at genes encoding crucial developmental regulators and signaling molecules and are highly conserved between Drosophila melanogaster and D. virilis, suggesting functional relevance. Surprisingly, although occupancy is reduced, the Yan monomer still makes extensive multikilobase contacts with chromatin, with an overall pattern similar to that of wild-type Yan. Despite its near-normal chromatin recruitment, the repressive function of the Yan monomer is significantly impaired, as evidenced by elevated target gene expression and failure to rescue a yan null mutation. Together our data argue that SAM-mediated polymerization contributes to the functional output of the active Yan repressive complexes that assemble across extended stretches of chromatin, but does not directly mediate recruitment to DNA or chromatin spreading.


Autophagy | 2010

Regulation of autophagy by p38α MAPK

Jemma L. Webber

Autophagy is induced in mammalian cells by nutrient deprivation, which acts through repression of the protein kinase mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) and may involve other unknown mechanisms. Mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKs), and in particular p38 MAPK, are implicated in amino acid signalling. Furthermore, the extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) and p38 regulate autophagy in response to various stimuli. However, the molecular mechanisms of p38 regulation of autophagy are still widely unknown. Our recent data suggest that p38α MAPK negatively regulates the interaction of mAtg9 and a novel mAtg9 binding partner, p38IP, to control the levels of autophagy induced in response to starvation.


Developmental Biology | 2014

A comparative study of Pointed and Yan expression reveals new complexity to the transcriptional networks downstream of receptor tyrosine kinase signaling.

Jean François Boisclair Lachance; Nicolás Peláez; Justin J. Cassidy; Jemma L. Webber; Ilaria Rebay; Richard W. Carthew

The biochemical regulatory network downstream of receptor tyrosine kinase (RTK) signaling is controlled by two opposing ETS family members: the transcriptional activator Pointed (Pnt) and the transcriptional repressor Yan. A bistable switch model has been invoked to explain how pathway activation can drive differentiation by shifting the system from a high-Yan/low-Pnt activity state to a low-Yan/high-Pnt activity state. Although the model explains yan and pnt loss-of-function phenotypes in several different cell types, how Yan and Pointed protein expression dynamics contribute to these and other developmental transitions remains poorly understood. Toward this goal we have used a functional GFP-tagged Pnt transgene (Pnt-GFP) to perform a comparative study of Yan and Pnt protein expression throughout Drosophila development. Consistent with the prevailing model of the Pnt-Yan network, we found numerous instances where Pnt-GFP and Yan adopt a mutually exclusive pattern of expression. However we also observed many examples of co-expression. While some co-expression occurred in cells where RTK signaling is presumed low, other co-expression occurred in cells with high RTK signaling. The instances of co-expressed Yan and Pnt-GFP in tissues with high RTK signaling cannot be explained by the current model, and thus they provide important contexts for future investigation of how context-specific differences in RTK signaling, network topology, or responsiveness to other signaling inputs, affect the transcriptional response.


Genes & Development | 2013

3D chromatin interactions organize Yan chromatin occupancy and repression at the even-skipped locus

Jemma L. Webber; Jie Zhang; Aaron Mitchell-Dick; Ilaria Rebay

Long-range integration of transcriptional inputs is critical for gene expression, yet the mechanisms remain poorly understood. We investigated the molecular determinants that confer fidelity to expression of the heart identity gene even-skipped (eve). Targeted deletion of regions bound by the repressor Yan defined two novel enhancers that contribute repressive inputs to stabilize tissue-specific output from a third enhancer. Deletion of any individual enhancer reduced Yan occupancy at the other elements, impacting eve expression, cell fate specification, and cardiac function. These long-range interactions may be stabilized by three-dimensional chromatin contacts that we detected between the elements. Our work provides a new paradigm for chromatin-level integration of general repressive inputs with specific patterning information to achieve robust gene expression.


Genes & Development | 2018

Cooperative recruitment of Yan via a high-affinity ETS supersite organizes repression to confer specificity and robustness to cardiac cell fate specification

Jean-François Boisclair Lachance; Jemma L. Webber; Lu Hong; Aaron R. Dinner; Ilaria Rebay

Cis-regulatory modules (CRMs) are defined by unique combinations of transcription factor-binding sites. Emerging evidence suggests that the number, affinity, and organization of sites play important roles in regulating enhancer output and, ultimately, gene expression. Here, we investigate how the cis-regulatory logic of a tissue-specific CRM responsible for even-skipped (eve) induction during cardiogenesis organizes the competing inputs of two E-twenty-six (ETS) members: the activator Pointed (Pnt) and the repressor Yan. Using a combination of reporter gene assays and CRISPR-Cas9 gene editing, we suggest that Yan and Pnt have distinct syntax preferences. Not only does Yan prefer high-affinity sites, but an overlapping pair of such sites is necessary and sufficient for Yan to tune Eve expression levels in newly specified cardioblasts and block ectopic Eve induction and cell fate specification in surrounding progenitors. Mechanistically, the efficient Yan recruitment promoted by this high-affinity ETS supersite not only biases Yan-Pnt competition at the specific CRM but also organizes Yan-repressive complexes in three dimensions across the eve locus. Taken together, our results uncover a novel mechanism by which differential interpretation of CRM syntax by a competing repressor-activator pair can confer both specificity and robustness to developmental transitions.


Development | 2018

Collaborative repressive action of the antagonistic ETS transcription factors Pointed and Yan fine-tunes gene expression to confer robustness in Drosophila

Jemma L. Webber; Jie Zhang; Alex Massey; Nicelio Sanchez-Luege; Ilaria Rebay

ABSTRACT The acquisition of cellular identity during development depends on precise spatiotemporal regulation of gene expression, with combinatorial interactions between transcription factors, accessory proteins and the basal transcription machinery together translating complex signaling inputs into appropriate gene expression outputs. The opposing repressive and activating inputs of the Drosophila ETS family transcription factors Yan and Pointed orchestrate numerous cell fate transitions downstream of receptor tyrosine kinase signaling, providing one of the premier systems for studying this process. Current models describe the differentiative transition as a switch from Yan-mediated repression to Pointed-mediated activation of common target genes. We describe here a new layer of regulation whereby Yan and Pointed co-occupy regulatory elements to repress gene expression in a coordinated manner, with Pointed being unexpectedly required for the genome-wide occupancy of both Yan and the co-repressor Groucho. Using even skipped as a test-case, synergistic genetic interactions between Pointed, Groucho, Yan and components of the RNA polymerase II pausing machinery suggest that Pointed integrates multiple scales of repressive regulation to confer robustness. We speculate that this mechanism may be used broadly to fine-tune the expression of many genes crucial for development. Summary: Recruitment of the transcriptional repressor Yan and the co-repressor Groucho by the transcriptional activator Pointed confers precision and robustness to the gene expression dynamics that drive developmental cell fate transitions.

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Jie Zhang

University of Chicago

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Andrea Longatti

Scripps Research Institute

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Fiona E. McAlpine

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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