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Dive into the research topics where Judit Villén is active.

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Featured researches published by Judit Villén.


Nature Methods | 2013

Global analysis of phosphorylation and ubiquitylation cross-talk in protein degradation

Danielle L. Swaney; Pedro Beltrao; Lea M. Starita; Ailan Guo; John Rush; Stanley Fields; Nevan J. Krogan; Judit Villén

Cross-talk between different types of post-translational modifications on the same protein molecule adds specificity and combinatorial logic to signal processing, but it has not been characterized on a large-scale basis. We developed two methods to identify protein isoforms that are both phosphorylated and ubiquitylated in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, identifying 466 proteins with 2,100 phosphorylation sites co-occurring with 2,189 ubiquitylation sites. We applied these methods quantitatively to identify phosphorylation sites that regulate protein degradation via the ubiquitin-proteasome system. Our results demonstrate that distinct phosphorylation sites are often used in conjunction with ubiquitylation and that these sites are more highly conserved than the entire set of phosphorylation sites. Finally, we investigated how the phosphorylation machinery can be regulated by ubiquitylation. We found evidence for novel regulatory mechanisms of kinases and 14-3-3 scaffold proteins via proteasome-independent ubiquitylation.


Molecular Cell | 2014

mRNA destabilization is the dominant effect of mammalian microRNAs by the time substantial repression ensues.

Stephen W. Eichhorn; Huili Guo; Sean Edward McGeary; Ricard A. Rodriguez-Mias; Chanseok Shin; Daehyun Baek; Shu-hao Hsu; Kalpana Ghoshal; Judit Villén; David P. Bartel

MicroRNAs (miRNAs) regulate target mRNAs through a combination of translational repression and mRNA destabilization, with mRNA destabilization dominating at steady state in the few contexts examined globally. Here, we extend the global steady-state measurements to additional mammalian contexts and find that regardless of the miRNA, cell type, growth condition, or translational state, mRNA destabilization explains most (66%->90%) miRNA-mediated repression. We also determine the relative dynamics of translational repression and mRNA destabilization for endogenous mRNAs as a miRNA is induced. Although translational repression occurs rapidly, its effect is relatively weak, such that by the time consequential repression ensues, the effect of mRNA destabilization dominates. These results imply that consequential miRNA-mediated repression is largely irreversible and provide other insights into the nature of miRNA-mediated regulation. They also simplify future studies, dramatically extending the known contexts and time points for which monitoring mRNA changes captures most of the direct miRNA effects.


Cell Reports | 2015

The Proteomic Landscape of Triple-Negative Breast Cancer

Robert T. Lawrence; Elizabeth M. Perez; Daniel Hernández; Chris P. Miller; Kelsey M. Haas; Hanna Y. Irie; Su-In Lee; Anthony Blau; Judit Villén

Triple-negative breast cancer is a heterogeneous disease characterized by poor clinical outcomes and a shortage of targeted treatment options. To discover molecular features of triple-negative breast cancer, we performed quantitative proteomics analysis of twenty human-derived breast cell lines and four primary breast tumors to a depth of more than 12,000 distinct proteins. We used this data to identify breast cancer subtypes at the protein level and demonstrate the precise quantification of biomarkers, signaling proteins, and biological pathways by mass spectrometry. We integrated proteomics data with exome sequence resources to identify genomic aberrations that affect protein expression. We performed a high-throughput drug screen to identify protein markers of drug sensitivity and understand the mechanisms of drug resistance. The genome and proteome provide complementary information that, when combined, yield a powerful engine for therapeutic discovery. This resource is available to the cancer research community to catalyze further analysis and investigation.


Molecular metabolism | 2014

Genetic inhibition of hepatic acetyl-CoA carboxylase activity increases liver fat and alters global protein acetylation

Jenny D.Y. Chow; Robert T. Lawrence; Marin E. Healy; John E. Dominy; Jason A. Liao; David S. Breen; Frances L. Byrne; Brandon M. Kenwood; Carolin Lackner; Saeko Okutsu; Valeria R. Mas; Stephen H. Caldwell; Jose L. Tomsig; Gregory J. Cooney; Pere Puigserver; Nigel Turner; David E. James; Judit Villén; Kyle L. Hoehn

Lipid deposition in the liver is associated with metabolic disorders including fatty liver disease, type II diabetes, and hepatocellular cancer. The enzymes acetyl-CoA carboxylase 1 (ACC1) and ACC2 are powerful regulators of hepatic fat storage; therefore, their inhibition is expected to prevent the development of fatty liver. In this study we generated liver-specific ACC1 and ACC2 double knockout (LDKO) mice to determine how the loss of ACC activity affects liver fat metabolism and whole-body physiology. Characterization of LDKO mice revealed unexpected phenotypes of increased hepatic triglyceride and decreased fat oxidation. We also observed that chronic ACC inhibition led to hyper-acetylation of proteins in the extra-mitochondrial space. In sum, these data reveal the existence of a compensatory pathway that protects hepatic fat stores when ACC enzymes are inhibited. Furthermore, we identified an important role for ACC enzymes in the regulation of protein acetylation in the extra-mitochondrial space.


The EMBO Journal | 2014

E2~Ub conjugates regulate the kinase activity of Shigella effector OspG during pathogenesis

Jonathan N. Pruneda; F. Donelson Smith; Angela Daurie; Danielle L. Swaney; Judit Villén; John D. Scott; Andrew W. Stadnyk; Isolde Le Trong; Ronald E. Stenkamp; Rachel E. Klevit; John R. Rohde; Peter S. Brzovic

Pathogenic bacteria introduce effector proteins directly into the cytosol of eukaryotic cells to promote invasion and colonization. OspG, a Shigella spp. effector kinase, plays a role in this process by helping to suppress the host inflammatory response. OspG has been reported to bind host E2 ubiquitin‐conjugating enzymes activated with ubiquitin (E2~Ub), a key enzyme complex in ubiquitin transfer pathways. A co‐crystal structure of the OspG/UbcH5c~Ub complex reveals that complex formation has important ramifications for the activity of both OspG and the UbcH5c~Ub conjugate. OspG is a minimal kinase domain containing only essential elements required for catalysis. UbcH5c~Ub binding stabilizes an active conformation of the kinase, greatly enhancing OspG kinase activity. In contrast, interaction with OspG stabilizes an extended, less reactive form of UbcH5c~Ub. Recognizing conserved E2 features, OspG can interact with at least ten distinct human E2s~Ub. Mouse oral infection studies indicate that E2~Ub conjugates act as novel regulators of OspG effector kinase function in eukaryotic host cells.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012

Affinity-Based Probes Based on Type II Kinase Inhibitors

Pratistha Ranjitkar; B. Gayani K. Perera; Daniel L. Swaney; Sanjay B. Hari; Eric T. Larson; Ratika Krishnamurty; Ethan A. Merritt; Judit Villén; Dustin J. Maly

Protein kinases are key components of most mammalian signal transduction networks and are therapeutically relevant drug targets. Efforts to study protein kinase function would benefit from new technologies that are able to profile kinases in complex proteomes. Here, we describe active site-directed probes for profiling kinases in whole cell extracts and live cells. These probes contain general ligands that stabilize a specific inactive conformation of the ATP-binding sites of protein kinases, as well as trifluoromethylphenyl diazirine and alkyne moieties that allow covalent modification and enrichment of kinases, respectively. A diverse group of serine/threonine and tyrosine kinases were identified as specific targets of these probes in whole cell extracts. In addition, a number of kinase targets were selectively labeled in live cells. Our chemical proteomics approach should be valuable for interrogating protein kinase active sites in physiologically relevant environments.


EMBO Reports | 2015

Phosphorylation of ubiquitin at Ser65 affects its polymerization, targets, and proteome‐wide turnover

Danielle L. Swaney; Ricard A. Rodriguez-Mias; Judit Villén

Ubiquitylation is an essential post‐translational modification that regulates numerous cellular processes, most notably protein degradation. Ubiquitin can itself be phosphorylated at nearly every serine, threonine, and tyrosine residue. However, the effect of this modification on ubiquitin function is largely unknown. Here, we characterized the effects of phosphorylation of yeast ubiquitin at serine 65 in vivo and in vitro. We find this post‐translational modification to be regulated under oxidative stress, occurring concomitantly with the restructuring of the ubiquitin landscape into a highly polymeric state. Phosphomimetic mutation of S65 recapitulates the oxidative stress phenotype, causing a dramatic accumulation of ubiquitylated proteins and a proteome‐wide reduction of protein turnover rates. Importantly, this mutation impacts ubiquitin chain disassembly, chain linkage distribution, ubiquitin interactions, and substrate targeting. These results demonstrate that phosphorylation is an additional mode of ubiquitin regulation with broad implications in cellular physiology.


Nature Methods | 2016

Plug-and-play analysis of the human phosphoproteome by targeted high-resolution mass spectrometry

Robert T. Lawrence; Brian C. Searle; Ariadna Llovet; Judit Villén

Systematic approaches to studying cellular signaling require phosphoproteomic techniques that reproducibly measure the same phosphopeptides across multiple replicates, conditions, and time points. Here we present a method to mine information from large-scale, heterogeneous phosphoproteomics data sets to rapidly generate robust targeted mass spectrometry (MS) assays. We demonstrate the performance of our method by interrogating the IGF-1/AKT signaling pathway, showing that even rarely observed phosphorylation events can be consistently detected and precisely quantified.


Science | 2016

Evolution of protein phosphorylation across 18 fungal species

Studer Ra; Rodriguez-Mias Ra; Haas Km; Hsu Ji; Viéitez C; Carme Solé; Danielle L. Swaney; Stanford Lb; Ivan Liachko; Böttcher R; Maitreya J. Dunham; de Nadal E; Francesc Posas; Pedro Beltrao; Judit Villén

Phosphorylation and fungal evolution Phosphorylation after transcription modifies the activity of proteins. To understand how phosphorylation sites have evolved, Studer et al. studied a range of fungal species (see the Perspective by Matalon et al.). Only a few sites were apparently present in the common ancestor of all 18 species investigated. Evolutionary age appeared to predict the potential functional importance of specific conserved phosphosites. Science, this issue p. 229; see also p. 176 Phosphorylation in fungal proteins offers an understanding of evolutionary constraints acting on posttranscriptional modification. Living organisms have evolved protein phosphorylation, a rapid and versatile mechanism that drives signaling and regulates protein function. We report the phosphoproteomes of 18 fungal species and a phylogenetic-based approach to study phosphosite evolution. We observe rapid divergence, with only a small fraction of phosphosites conserved over hundreds of millions of years. Relative to recently acquired phosphosites, ancient sites are enriched at protein interfaces and are more likely to be functionally important, as we show for sites on H2A1 and eIF4E. We also observe a change in phosphorylation motif frequencies and kinase activities that coincides with the whole-genome duplication event. Our results provide an evolutionary history for phosphosites and suggest that rapid evolution of phosphorylation can contribute strongly to phenotypic diversity.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2014

Lipin 2 binds phosphatidic acid by the electrostatic hydrogen bond switch mechanism independent of phosphorylation

James M. Eaton; Sankeerth Takkellapati; Robert T. Lawrence; Kelley E. McQueeney; Salome Boroda; Garrett R. Mullins; Samantha G. Sherwood; Brian N. Finck; Judit Villén; Thurl E. Harris

Background: Lipin 2 is a phosphatidic acid phosphatase (PAP) responsible for DAG formation at the ER membrane during lipogenesis. Results: A combination of biochemical approaches is used to characterize lipin 2 phosphatase activity and regulation. Conclusion: The electrostatic charge of PA regulates activity, but phosphorylation does not. Significance: These findings demonstrate differential regulation of PAP activity within the lipin family. Lipin 2 is a phosphatidic acid phosphatase (PAP) responsible for the penultimate step of triglyceride synthesis and dephosphorylation of phosphatidic acid (PA) to generate diacylglycerol. The lipin family of PA phosphatases is composed of lipins 1–3, which are members of the conserved haloacid dehalogenase superfamily. Although genetic alteration of LPIN2 in humans is known to cause Majeed syndrome, little is known about the biochemical regulation of its PAP activity. Here, in an attempt to gain a better general understanding of the biochemical nature of lipin 2, we have performed kinetic and phosphorylation analyses. We provide evidence that lipin 2, like lipin 1, binds PA via the electrostatic hydrogen bond switch mechanism but has a lower rate of catalysis. Like lipin 1, lipin 2 is highly phosphorylated, and we identified 15 phosphosites. However, unlike lipin 1, the phosphorylation of lipin 2 is not induced by insulin signaling nor is it sensitive to inhibition of the mammalian target of rapamycin. Importantly, phosphorylation of lipin 2 does not negatively regulate either membrane binding or PAP activity. This suggests that lipin 2 functions as a constitutively active PA phosphatase in stark contrast to the high degree of phosphorylation-mediated regulation of lipin 1. This knowledge of lipin 2 regulation is important for a deeper understanding of how the lipin family functions with respect to lipid synthesis and, more generally, as an example of how the membrane environment around PA can influence its effector proteins.

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Kelsey M. Haas

University of Washington

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Pedro Beltrao

University of California

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