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Dive into the research topics where Joao A. Paulo is active.

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Featured researches published by Joao A. Paulo.


Cell | 2015

The BioPlex Network: A Systematic Exploration of the Human Interactome

Edward L. Huttlin; Lily Ting; Raphael J. Bruckner; Fana Gebreab; Melanie P. Gygi; John Szpyt; Stanley Tam; Gabriela Zarraga; Greg Colby; Kurt Baltier; Rui Dong; Virginia Guarani; Laura Pontano Vaites; Alban Ordureau; Ramin Rad; Brian K. Erickson; Martin Wühr; Joel M. Chick; Bo Zhai; Deepak Kolippakkam; Julian Mintseris; Robert A. Obar; Tim Harris; Spyros Artavanis-Tsakonas; Mathew E. Sowa; Pietro De Camilli; Joao A. Paulo; J. Wade Harper; Steven P. Gygi

Protein interactions form a network whose structure drives cellular function and whose organization informs biological inquiry. Using high-throughput affinity-purification mass spectrometry, we identify interacting partners for 2,594 human proteins in HEK293T cells. The resulting network (BioPlex) contains 23,744 interactions among 7,668 proteins with 86% previously undocumented. BioPlex accurately depicts known complexes, attaining 80%-100% coverage for most CORUM complexes. The network readily subdivides into communities that correspond to complexes or clusters of functionally related proteins. More generally, network architecture reflects cellular localization, biological process, and molecular function, enabling functional characterization of thousands of proteins. Network structure also reveals associations among thousands of protein domains, suggesting a basis for examining structurally related proteins. Finally, BioPlex, in combination with other approaches, can be used to reveal interactions of biological or clinical significance. For example, mutations in the membrane protein VAPB implicated in familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis perturb a defined community of interactors.


Molecular Cell | 2015

The PINK1-PARKIN Mitochondrial Ubiquitylation Pathway Drives a Program of OPTN/NDP52 Recruitment and TBK1 Activation to Promote Mitophagy

Jin-Mi Heo; Alban Ordureau; Joao A. Paulo; Jesse Rinehart; J. Wade Harper

Damaged mitochondria are detrimental to cellular homeostasis. One mechanism for removal of damaged mitochondria involves the PINK1-PARKIN pathway, which poly-ubiquitylates damaged mitochondria to promote mitophagy. We report that assembly of ubiquitin chains on mitochondria triggers autophagy adaptor recruitment concomitantly with activation of the TBK1 kinase, which physically associates with OPTN, NDP52, and SQSTM1. TBK1 activation in HeLa cells requires OPTN and NDP52 and OPTN ubiquitin chain binding. In addition to the known role of S177 phosphorylation in OPTN on ATG8 recruitment, TBK1-dependent phosphorylation on S473 and S513 promotes ubiquitin chain binding in vitro as well as TBK1 activation, OPTN mitochondrial retention, and efficient mitophagy in vivo. These data reveal a self-reinforcing positive feedback mechanism that coordinates TBK1-dependent autophagy adaptor phosphorylation with the assembly of ubiquitin chains on mitochondria to facilitate efficient mitophagy, and mechanistically links genes mutated in Parkinsons disease and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis in a common selective autophagy pathway.


Cell Metabolism | 2015

Detection and Quantitation of Circulating Human Irisin by Tandem Mass Spectrometry.

Mark P. Jedrychowski; Christiane D. Wrann; Joao A. Paulo; Kaitlyn K. Gerber; John Szpyt; Matthew M. Robinson; K. Sreekumaran Nair; Steven P. Gygi; Bruce M. Spiegelman

Exercise provides many health benefits, including improved metabolism, cardiovascular health, and cognition. We have shown previously that FNDC5, a type I transmembrane protein, and its circulating form, irisin, convey some of these benefits in mice. However, recent reports questioned the existence of circulating human irisin both because human FNDC5 has a non-canonical ATA translation start and because of claims that many human irisin antibodies used in commercial ELISA kits lack required specificity. In this paper we have identified and quantitated human irisin in plasma using mass spectrometry with control peptides enriched with heavy stable isotopes as internal standards. This precise state-of-the-art method shows that human irisin is mainly translated from its non-canonical start codon and circulates at ∼ 3.6 ng/ml in sedentary individuals; this level is increased to ∼ 4.3 ng/ml in individuals undergoing aerobic interval training. These data unequivocally demonstrate that human irisin exists, circulates, and is regulated by exercise.


Nature | 2017

Architecture of the human interactome defines protein communities and disease networks

Edward L. Huttlin; Raphael J. Bruckner; Joao A. Paulo; Joe R. Cannon; Lily Ting; Kurt Baltier; Greg Colby; Fana Gebreab; Melanie P. Gygi; Hannah Parzen; John Szpyt; Stanley Tam; Gabriela Zarraga; Laura Pontano-Vaites; Sharan Swarup; Anne E. White; Devin K. Schweppe; Ramin Rad; Brian K. Erickson; Robert A. Obar; K. G. Guruharsha; Kejie Li; Spyros Artavanis-Tsakonas; Steven P. Gygi; J. Wade Harper

The physiology of a cell can be viewed as the product of thousands of proteins acting in concert to shape the cellular response. Coordination is achieved in part through networks of protein–protein interactions that assemble functionally related proteins into complexes, organelles, and signal transduction pathways. Understanding the architecture of the human proteome has the potential to inform cellular, structural, and evolutionary mechanisms and is critical to elucidating how genome variation contributes to disease. Here we present BioPlex 2.0 (Biophysical Interactions of ORFeome-derived complexes), which uses robust affinity purification–mass spectrometry methodology to elucidate protein interaction networks and co-complexes nucleated by more than 25% of protein-coding genes from the human genome, and constitutes, to our knowledge, the largest such network so far. With more than 56,000 candidate interactions, BioPlex 2.0 contains more than 29,000 previously unknown co-associations and provides functional insights into hundreds of poorly characterized proteins while enhancing network-based analyses of domain associations, subcellular localization, and co-complex formation. Unsupervised Markov clustering of interacting proteins identified more than 1,300 protein communities representing diverse cellular activities. Genes essential for cell fitness are enriched within 53 communities representing central cellular functions. Moreover, we identified 442 communities associated with more than 2,000 disease annotations, placing numerous candidate disease genes into a cellular framework. BioPlex 2.0 exceeds previous experimentally derived interaction networks in depth and breadth, and will be a valuable resource for exploring the biology of incompletely characterized proteins and for elucidating larger-scale patterns of proteome organization.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015

Defining roles of PARKIN and ubiquitin phosphorylation by PINK1 in mitochondrial quality control using a ubiquitin replacement strategy

Alban Ordureau; Jin-Mi Heo; David M. Duda; Joao A. Paulo; Jennifer L. Olszewski; David Yanishevski; Jesse Rinehart; Brenda A. Schulman; J. Wade Harper

Significance PINK1 protein kinase and PARKIN UB ligase are mutated in inherited forms of Parkinson’s disease and several cancers. Thus, it is of great significance to understand normal functions that could be disrupted in disease. A role for PARKIN and PINK1 is in mediating autophagy of damaged mitochondria (mitophagy) through polyubiquitylation of numerous mitochondrial outer membrane proteins in a reaction that involves phosphorylation of both PARKIN and ubiquitin (UB) by PINK1. The mechanism remains unclear, however, due to challenges in defining individual steps in the pathway. Here, we use a UB replacement system to elucidate steps in the pathway that require PARKIN and/or UB phosphorylation by PINK1 and provide evidence of a PINK1- and UB-driven feed-forward mechanism important for efficient mitochondrial ubiquitylation and mitophagy. The PTEN-induced putative kinase protein 1 (PINK1) and ubiquitin (UB) ligase PARKIN direct damaged mitochondria for mitophagy. PINK1 promotes PARKIN recruitment to the mitochondrial outer membrane (MOM) for ubiquitylation of MOM proteins with canonical and noncanonical UB chains. PINK1 phosphorylates both Ser65 (S65) in the UB-like domain of PARKIN and the conserved Ser in UB itself, but the temporal sequence and relative importance of these events during PARKIN activation and mitochondria quality control remain poorly understood. Using “UBS65A-replacement,” we find that PARKIN phosphorylation and activation, and ubiquitylation of Lys residues on a cohort of MOM proteins, occur similarly irrespective of the ability of the UB-replacement to be phosphorylated on S65. In contrast, polyubiquitin (poly-UB) chain synthesis, PARKIN retention on the MOM, and mitophagy are reduced in UBS65A-replacement cells. Analogous experiments examining roles of individual UB chain linkage types revealed the importance of K6 and K63 chain linkages in mitophagy, but phosphorylation of K63 chains by PINK1 did not enhance binding to candidate mitophagy receptors optineurin (OPTN), sequestosome-1 (p62), and nuclear dot protein 52 (NDP52) in vitro. Parallel reaction monitoring proteomics of total mitochondria revealed the absence of p-S65-UB when PARKIN cannot build UB chains, and <0.16% of the monomeric UB pool underwent S65 phosphorylation upon mitochondrial damage. Combining p-S65-UB and p-S65-PARKIN in vitro showed accelerated transfer of nonphosphorylated UB to PARKIN itself, its substrate mitochondrial Rho GTPase (MIRO), and UB. Our data further define a feed-forward mitochondrial ubiquitylation pathway involving PARKIN activation upon phosphorylation, UB chain synthesis on the MOM, UB chain phosphorylation, and further PARKIN recruitment and enzymatic amplification via binding to phosphorylated UB chains.


Science | 2015

A forward genetic screen identifies erythrocyte CD55 as essential for Plasmodium falciparum invasion

Elizabeth S. Egan; Rays H. Y. Jiang; Mischka A. Moechtar; Natasha S. Barteneva; Michael P. Weekes; Luis Nobre; Steven P. Gygi; Joao A. Paulo; Charles Frantzreb; Yoshihiko Tani; Junko Takahashi; Seishi Watanabe; Jonathan M. Goldberg; Aditya S. Paul; Carlo Brugnara; David E. Root; Roger Wiegand; John G. Doench; Manoj T. Duraisingh

A way to dissect malarias secrets Malaria has exerted a strong selective force on the human genome. However, efforts to identify host susceptibility factors have been hindered by the absence of a nucleus in red blood cells. Egan et al. developed an approach involving blood stem cells to discover host factors critical for Plasmodium falciparum infection of red blood cells. The authors identified an essential host receptor for parasite invasion that could provide a target for malaria therapeutics. Science, this issue p. 711 A screening approach reveals host factors critical for human malaria parasite invasion of red blood cells. Efforts to identify host determinants for malaria have been hindered by the absence of a nucleus in erythrocytes, which precludes genetic manipulation in the cell in which the parasite replicates. We used cultured red blood cells derived from hematopoietic stem cells to carry out a forward genetic screen for Plasmodium falciparum host determinants. We found that CD55 is an essential host factor for P. falciparum invasion. CD55-null erythrocytes were refractory to invasion by all isolates of P. falciparum because parasites failed to attach properly to the erythrocyte surface. Thus, CD55 is an attractive target for the development of malaria therapeutics. Hematopoietic stem cell–based forward genetic screens may be valuable for the identification of additional host determinants of malaria pathogenesis.


eLife | 2015

QIL1 is a novel mitochondrial protein required for MICOS complex stability and cristae morphology

Virginia Guarani; Elizabeth M. McNeill; Joao A. Paulo; Edward L. Huttlin; Florian Fröhlich; Steven P. Gygi; David Van Vactor; J. Wade Harper

The mitochondrial contact site and cristae junction (CJ) organizing system (MICOS) dynamically regulate mitochondrial membrane architecture. Through systematic proteomic analysis of human MICOS, we identified QIL1 (C19orf70) as a novel conserved MICOS subunit. QIL1 depletion disrupted CJ structure in cultured human cells and in Drosophila muscle and neuronal cells in vivo. In human cells, mitochondrial disruption correlated with impaired respiration. Moreover, increased mitochondrial fragmentation was observed upon QIL1 depletion in flies. Using quantitative proteomics, we show that loss of QIL1 resulted in MICOS disassembly with the accumulation of a MIC60-MIC19-MIC25 sub-complex and degradation of MIC10, MIC26, and MIC27. Additionally, we demonstrated that in QIL1-depleted cells, overexpressed MIC10 fails to significantly restore its interaction with other MICOS subunits and SAMM50. Collectively, our work uncovers a previously unrecognized subunit of the MICOS complex, necessary for CJ integrity, cristae morphology, and mitochondrial function and provides a resource for further analysis of MICOS architecture. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.06265.001


Embo Molecular Medicine | 2013

Urine proteomics for discovery of improved diagnostic markers of Kawasaki disease

Alex Kentsis; Andrew Shulman; Saima Ahmed; Eileen Brennan; Michael C. Monuteaux; Youngho Lee; Susan C. Lipsett; Joao A. Paulo; Fatma Dedeoglu; Robert C. Fuhlbrigge; Richard G. Bachur; Gary Bradwin; Moshe Arditi; Robert P. Sundel; Jane W. Newburger; Hanno Steen; Susan Kim

Kawasaki disease (KD) is a systemic vasculitis of unknown etiology. Absence of definitive diagnostic markers limits the accuracy of clinical evaluations of suspected KD with significant increases in morbidity. In turn, incomplete understanding of its molecular pathogenesis hinders the identification of rational targets needed to improve therapy. We used high‐accuracy mass spectrometry proteomics to analyse over 2000 unique proteins in clinical urine specimens of patients with KD. We discovered that urine proteomes of patients with KD, but not those with mimicking conditions, were enriched for markers of cellular injury such as filamin and talin, immune regulators such as complement regulator CSMD3, immune pattern recognition receptor muclin, and immune cytokine protease meprin A. Significant elevations of filamin C and meprin A were detected in both the serum and urine in two independent cohorts of patients with KD, comprised of a total of 236 patients. Meprin A and filamin C exhibited superior diagnostic performance as compared to currently used markers of disease in a blinded case‐control study of 107 patients with suspected KD, with receiver operating characteristic areas under the curve of 0.98 (95% confidence intervals [CI] of 0.97–1 and 0.95–1, respectively). Notably, meprin A was enriched in the coronary artery lesions of a mouse model of KD. In all, urine proteome profiles revealed novel candidate molecular markers of KD, including filamin C and meprin A that exhibit excellent diagnostic performance. These disease markers may improve the diagnostic accuracy of clinical evaluations of children with suspected KD, lead to the identification of novel therapeutic targets, and allow the development of a biological classification of Kawasaki disease.


Proteomics | 2015

Effects of MEK inhibitors GSK1120212 and PD0325901 in vivo using 10‐plex quantitative proteomics and phosphoproteomics

Joao A. Paulo; Fiona E. McAllister; Robert A. Everley; Sean A. Beausoleil; Alexander S. Banks; Steven P. Gygi

Multiplexed isobaric tag based quantitative proteomics and phosphoproteomics strategies can comprehensively analyze drug treatments effects on biological systems. Given the role of mitogen‐activated protein/extracellular signal‐regulated kinase (MEK) signaling in cancer and mitogen‐activated protein kinase (MAPK)‐dependent diseases, we sought to determine if this pathway could be inhibited safely by examining the downstream molecular consequences. We used a series of tandem mass tag 10‐plex experiments to analyze the effect of two MEK inhibitors (GSK1120212 and PD0325901) on three tissues (kidney, liver, and pancreas) from nine mice. We quantified ∼6000 proteins in each tissue, but significant protein‐level alterations were minimal with inhibitor treatment. Of particular interest was kidney tissue, as edema is an adverse effect of these inhibitors. From kidney tissue, we enriched phosphopeptides using titanium dioxide (TiO2) and quantified 10 562 phosphorylation events. Further analysis by phosphotyrosine peptide immunoprecipitation quantified an additional 592 phosphorylation events. Phosphorylation motif analysis revealed that the inhibitors decreased phosphorylation levels of proline‐x‐serine‐proline (PxSP) and serine‐proline (SP) sites, consistent with extracellular‐signal‐regulated kinase (ERK) inhibition. The MEK inhibitors had the greatest decrease on the phosphorylation of two proteins, Barttin and Slc12a3, which have roles in ion transport and fluid balance. Further studies will provide insight into the effect of these MEK inhibitors with respect to edema and other adverse events in mouse models and human patients.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2014

TIMMDC1/C3orf1 Functions as a Membrane-Embedded Mitochondrial Complex I Assembly Factor through Association with the MCIA Complex

Virginia Guarani; Joao A. Paulo; Bo Zhai; Edward L. Huttlin; Steven P. Gygi; J. Wade Harper

ABSTRACT Complex I (CI) of the electron transport chain, a large membrane-embedded NADH dehydrogenase, couples electron transfer to the release of protons into the mitochondrial inner membrane space to promote ATP production through ATP synthase. In addition to being a central conduit for ATP production, CI activity has been linked to neurodegenerative disorders, including Parkinsons disease. CI is built in a stepwise fashion through the actions of several assembly factors. We employed interaction proteomics to interrogate the molecular associations of 15 core subunits and assembly factors previously linked to human CI deficiency, resulting in a network of 101 proteins and 335 interactions (edges). TIMMDC1, a predicted 4-pass membrane protein, reciprocally associated with multiple members of the MCIA CI assembly factor complex and core CI subunits and was localized in the mitochondrial inner membrane, and its depletion resulted in reduced CI activity and cellular respiration. Quantitative proteomics demonstrated a role for TIMMDC1 in assembly of membrane-embedded and soluble arms of the complex. This study defines a new membrane-embedded CI assembly factor and provides a resource for further analysis of CI biology.

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Hanno Steen

Boston Children's Hospital

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Vivek Kadiyala

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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