Jessica Hudson
University of Sussex
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Featured researches published by Jessica Hudson.
Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2008
Elaine M. Taylor; Alice C. Copsey; Jessica Hudson; Susanne Vidot; Alan R. Lehmann
ABSTRACT The SMC protein complexes play important roles in chromosome dynamics. The function of the SMC5-6 complex remains unclear, though it is involved in resolution of different DNA structures by recombination. We have now identified and characterized the four non-SMC components of the human complex and in particular demonstrated that the MAGEG1 protein is part of this complex. MAGE proteins play important but as yet undefined roles in carcinogenesis, apoptosis, and brain development. We show that, with the exception of the SUMO ligase hMMS21/hNSE2, depletion of any of the components results in degradation of all the other components. Depletion also confers sensitivity to methyl methanesulfonate. Several of the components are modified by sumoylation and ubiquitination.
Nature Communications | 2012
Jessica Hudson; Shih-Chieh Chiang; Owen S. Wells; Chris Rookyard; Sherif F. El-Khamisy
Breaking and sealing one strand of DNA is an inherent feature of chromosome metabolism to overcome torsional barriers. Failure to reseal broken DNA strands results in protein-linked DNA breaks, causing neurodegeneration in humans. This is typified by defects in tyrosyl DNA phosphodiesterase 1 (TDP1), which removes stalled topoisomerase 1 peptides from DNA termini. Here we show that TDP1 is a substrate for modification by the small ubiquitin-like modifier SUMO. We purify SUMOylated TDP1 from mammalian cells and identify the SUMOylation site as lysine 111. While SUMOylation exhibits no impact on TDP1 catalytic activity, it promotes its accumulation at sites of DNA damage. A TDP1 SUMOylation-deficient mutant displays a reduced rate of repair of chromosomal single-strand breaks arising from transcription-associated topoisomerase 1 activity or oxidative stress. These data identify a role for SUMO during single-strand break repair, and suggest a mechanism for protecting the nervous system from genotoxic stress.
PLOS ONE | 2011
Jessica Hudson; Katerina Bednarova; Lucie Kozáková; Chunyan Liao; Marc Guérineau; Rita Colnaghi; Susanne Vidot; Jaromír Marek; Sreenivas Reddy Bathula; Alan R. Lehmann; Jan Paleček
Background The SMC5-6 protein complex is involved in the cellular response to DNA damage. It is composed of 6–8 polypeptides, of which Nse1, Nse3 and Nse4 form a tight sub-complex. MAGEG1, the mammalian ortholog of Nse3, is the founding member of the MAGE (melanoma-associated antigen) protein family and Nse4 is related to the EID (E1A-like inhibitor of differentiation) family of transcriptional repressors. Methodology/Principal Findings Using site-directed mutagenesis, protein-protein interaction analyses and molecular modelling, we have identified a conserved hydrophobic surface on the C-terminal domain of Nse3 that interacts with Nse4 and identified residues in its N-terminal domain that are essential for interaction with Nse1. We show that these interactions are conserved in the human orthologs. Furthermore, interaction of MAGEG1, the mammalian ortholog of Nse3, with NSE4b, one of the mammalian orthologs of Nse4, results in transcriptional co-activation of the nuclear receptor, steroidogenic factor 1 (SF1). In an examination of the evolutionary conservation of the Nse3-Nse4 interactions, we find that several MAGE proteins can interact with at least one of the NSE4/EID proteins. Conclusions/Significance We have found that, despite the evolutionary diversification of the MAGE family, the characteristic hydrophobic surface shared by all MAGE proteins from yeast to humans mediates its binding to NSE4/EID proteins. Our work provides new insights into the interactions, evolution and functions of the enigmatic MAGE proteins.
Cell Reports | 2018
Chunyan Liao; Ryan D. D. Beveridge; Jessica Hudson; Jacob Parker; Shih-Chieh Chiang; Swagat Ray; Mohamed E. Ashour; Ian Sudbery; Mark J. Dickman; Sherif F. El-Khamisy
Summary Genomic damage can feature DNA-protein crosslinks whereby their acute accumulation is utilized to treat cancer and progressive accumulation causes neurodegeneration. This is typified by tyrosyl DNA phosphodiesterase 1 (TDP1), which repairs topoisomerase-mediated chromosomal breaks. Although TDP1 levels vary in multiple clinical settings, the mechanism underpinning this variation is unknown. We reveal that TDP1 is controlled by ubiquitylation and identify UCHL3 as the deubiquitylase that controls TDP1 proteostasis. Depletion of UCHL3 increases TDP1 ubiquitylation and turnover rate and sensitizes cells to TOP1 poisons. Overexpression of UCHL3, but not a catalytically inactive mutant, suppresses TDP1 ubiquitylation and turnover rate. TDP1 overexpression in the topoisomerase therapy-resistant rhabdomyosarcoma is driven by UCHL3 overexpression. In contrast, UCHL3 is downregulated in spinocerebellar ataxia with axonal neuropathy (SCAN1), causing elevated levels of TDP1 ubiquitylation and faster turnover rate. These data establish UCHL3 as a regulator of TDP1 proteostasis and, consequently, a fine-tuner of protein-linked DNA break repair.
Archive | 2014
Susanne Vidot; Alan R. Lehmann; Elaine M. Taylor; Alice C. Copsey; Jessica Hudson
Archive | 2013
Lucie Bozděchová; Kateřina Zábrady; Jessica Hudson; Marc Guérineau; Alan R. Lehmann; Jan Paleček
Archive | 2012
Lucie Bozděchová; Jessica Hudson; Kateřina Zábrady; Marc Guérineau; Jan Paleček
Archive | 2011
Marc Guérineau; Zdeněk Kříž; Lucie Bozděchová; Kateřina Zábrady; Sreenivas Reddy Bathula; Jessica Hudson; R. Alan Lehmann; Jan Paleček
Archive | 2010
Lucie Kozáková; Kateřina Bednářová; Jessica Hudson; Marc Guérineau; Chunyan Liao; Rita Colnaghi; Jaromír Marek; Susanne Vidot; Alan R. Lehmann; Jan Paleček
Archive | 2010
Jan Paleček; Kateřina Bednářová; Jessica Hudson; Lucie Kozáková; Marc Guérineau; Chunyan Liao; Rita Colnaghi; Jaromír Marek; Susanne Vidot; Alan R. Lehmann