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Dive into the research topics where Kathleen A. Boyle is active.

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Featured researches published by Kathleen A. Boyle.


Journal of Virology | 2001

The A20R Protein Is a Stoichiometric Component of the Processive Form of Vaccinia Virus DNA Polymerase

Nancy Klemperer; William McDonald; Kathleen A. Boyle; Beth Unger; Paula Traktman

ABSTRACT In vitro analysis of the catalytic DNA polymerase encoded by vaccinia virus has demonstrated that it is innately distributive, catalyzing the addition of <10 nucleotides per primer-template binding event in the presence of 8 mM MgCl2 or 40 mM NaCl (W. F. McDonald and P. Traktman, J. Biol. Chem. 269:31190–31197, 1994). In contrast, cytoplasmic extracts isolated from vaccinia virus-infected cells contain a highly processive form of DNA polymerase, able to catalyze the replication of a 7-kb template per binding event under similar conditions. To study this holoenzyme, we were interested in purifying and characterizing the vaccinia virus processivity factor (VPF). Our previous studies indicated that VPF is expressed early after infection and has a native molecular mass of ∼48 kDa (W. F. McDonald, N. Klemperer, and P. Traktman, Virology 234:168–175, 1997). Using these criteria, we established a six-step chromatographic purification procedure, in which a prominent ∼45-kDa band was found to copurify with processive polymerase activity. This species was identified as the product of the A20 gene. By use of recombinant viruses that direct the overexpression of A20 and/or the DNA polymerase, we verified the physical interaction between the two proteins in coimmunoprecipitation experiments. We also demonstrated that simultaneous overexpression of A20 and the DNA polymerase leads to a specific and robust increase in levels of processive polymerase activity. Taken together, we conclude that the A20 gene encodes a component of the processive DNA polymerase complex. Genetic data that further support this conclusion are presented in the accompanying report, which documents that temperature-sensitive mutants with lesions in the A20 gene have a DNA− phenotype that correlates with a deficit in processive polymerase activity (A. Punjabi et al, J. Virol. 75:12308–12318, 2001).


Cancer Research | 2016

Mitochondria-Targeted Analogues of Metformin Exhibit Enhanced Antiproliferative and Radiosensitizing Effects in Pancreatic Cancer Cells

Gang Cheng; Jacek Zielonka; Olivier Ouari; Marcos Lopez; Donna McAllister; Kathleen A. Boyle; C.S. Barrios; James Weber; Bryon D. Johnson; Micael Hardy; Michael B. Dwinell; B. Kalyanaraman

Metformin (Met) is an approved antidiabetic drug currently being explored for repurposing in cancer treatment based on recent evidence of its apparent chemopreventive properties. Met is weakly cationic and targets the mitochondria to induce cytotoxic effects in tumor cells, albeit not very effectively. We hypothesized that increasing its mitochondria-targeting potential by attaching a positively charged lipophilic substituent would enhance the antitumor activity of Met. In pursuit of this question, we synthesized a set of mitochondria-targeted Met analogues (Mito-Mets) with varying alkyl chain lengths containing a triphenylphosphonium cation (TPP(+)). In particular, the analogue Mito-Met10, synthesized by attaching TPP(+) to Met via a 10-carbon aliphatic side chain, was nearly 1,000 times more efficacious than Met at inhibiting cell proliferation in pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC). Notably, in PDAC cells, Mito-Met10 potently inhibited mitochondrial complex I, stimulating superoxide and AMPK activation, but had no effect in nontransformed control cells. Moreover, Mito-Met10 potently triggered G1 cell-cycle phase arrest in PDAC cells, enhanced their radiosensitivity, and more potently abrogated PDAC growth in preclinical mouse models, compared with Met. Collectively, our findings show how improving the mitochondrial targeting of Met enhances its anticancer activities, including aggressive cancers like PDAC in great need of more effective therapeutic options. Cancer Res; 76(13); 3904-15. ©2016 AACR.


Journal of Virology | 2007

Biochemical and genetic analysis of the vaccinia virus d5 protein: Multimerization-dependent ATPase activity is required to support viral DNA replication.

Kathleen A. Boyle; Lisa Arps; Paula Traktman

ABSTRACT The vaccinia virus-encoded D5 protein is an essential ATPase involved in viral DNA replication. We have expanded the genotypic and phenotypic analysis of six temperature-sensitive (ts) D5 mutants (Cts17, Cts24, Ets69, Dts6389 [also referred to as Dts38], Dts12, and Dts56) and shown that at nonpermissive temperature all of the tsD5 viruses exhibit a dramatic reduction in DNA synthesis and virus production. For Cts17 and Cts24, this restriction reflects the thermolability of the D5 proteins. The Dts6389, Dts12, and Dts56 D5 proteins become insoluble at 39.7°C, while the Ets69 D5 protein remains stable and soluble and retains the ability to oligomerize and hydrolyze ATP when synthesized at 39.7°C. To investigate which structural features of D5 are important for its biological and biochemical activities, we generated targeted mutations in invariant residues positioned within conserved domains found within D5. Using a transient complementation assay that assessed the ability of D5 variants to sustain ongoing DNA synthesis during nonpermissive Cts24 infections, only a wtD5 allele supported DNA synthesis. Alleles of D5 containing targeted mutations within the Walker A or B domains, the superfamily III helicase motif C, or the AAA+ motif lacked biological competency. Furthermore, purified preparations of these variant proteins revealed that they all were defective in ATP hydrolysis. Multimerization of D5 appeared to be a prerequisite for enzymatic activity and required the Walker B domain, the AAA+ motif, and a region located upstream of the catalytic core. Finally, although multimerization and enzymatic activity are necessary for the biological competence of D5, they are not sufficient.


Journal of Virology | 2004

Members of a novel family of mammalian protein kinases complement the DNA-negative phenotype of a vaccinia virus ts mutant defective in the B1 kinase.

Kathleen A. Boyle; Paula Traktman

ABSTRACT Temperature-sensitive (ts) mutants of vaccinia virus defective in the B1 kinase demonstrate a conditionally lethal defect in DNA synthesis. B1 is the prototypic member of a new family of protein kinases (vaccinia virus-related kinases, or VRK) that possess distinctive B1-like sequence features within their catalytic motifs (R. J. Nichols and P. Traktman, J. Biol. Chem., in press). Given the striking sequence similarity between B1 and the VRK enzymes, we proposed that they might share overlapping substrate specificity. We therefore sought to determine whether the human and mouse VRK1 enzymes (hVRK1 and mVRK1, respectively) could complement a B1 deficiency in vivo. Recombinant ts2 viruses expressing hVRK1, mVRK1, or wild-type B1 were able to synthesize viral DNA at high temperature, but those expressing the more distantly related human casein kinase 1α2 could not. Complementation required the enzymatic activity of hVRK1, since a catalytically inactive allele of hVRK1 was unable to confer a temperature-insensitive phenotype. Interestingly, rescue of viral DNA synthesis was not coupled to the ability to phosphorylate H5, the only virus-encoded protein shown to be a B1 substrate in vivo. Expression of hVRK1 during nonpermissive ts2 infections restored virus production and plaque formation, whereas expression of mVRK1 resulted in an intermediate level of rescue. Taken together, these observations indicate that enzymatically active cellular VRK1 kinases can perform the function(s) of B1 required for genome replication, most likely due to overlapping specificity for cellular and/or viral substrates.


Journal of Virology | 2001

Clustered Charge-to-Alanine Mutagenesis of the Vaccinia Virus A20 Gene: Temperature-Sensitive Mutants Have a DNA-Minus Phenotype and Are Defective in the Production of Processive DNA Polymerase Activity

Almira S. Punjabi; Kathleen A. Boyle; Joseph DeMasi; Olivera Grubisha; Beth Unger; Marilyn Khanna; Paula Traktman

ABSTRACT Although the vaccinia virus DNA polymerase is inherently distributive, a highly processive form of the enzyme exists within the cytoplasm of infected cells (W. F. McDonald, N. Klemperer, and P. Traktman, Virology 234:168–175, 1997). In the accompanying report we outline the purification of the 49-kDa A20 protein as a stoichiometric component of the processive polymerase complex (N. Klemperer, W. McDonald, K. Boyle, B. Unger, and P. Traktman, J. Virol. 75:12298–12307, 2001). To complement this biochemical analysis, we undertook a genetic approach to the analysis of the structure and function of the A20 protein. Here we report the application of clustered charge-to-alanine mutagenesis of the A20 gene. Eight mutant viruses containing altered A20 alleles were isolated using this approach; two of these, tsA20-6 andtsA20-ER5, have tight temperature-sensitive phenotypes. At the nonpermissive temperature, neither virus forms macroscopic plaques and the yield of infectious virus is <1% of that obtained at the permissive temperature. Both viruses show a profound defect in the accumulation of viral DNA at the nonpermissive temperature, although both the A20 protein and DNA polymerase accumulate to wild-type levels. Cytoplasmic extracts prepared from cells infected with thetsA20 viruses show a defect in processive polymerase activity; they are unable to direct the formation of RFII product using a singly primed M13 template. In sum, these data indicate that the A20 protein plays an essential role in the viral life cycle and that viruses with A20 lesions exhibit a DNA− phenotype that is correlated with a loss in processive polymerase activity as assayed in vitro. The vaccinia virus A20 protein can, therefore, be considered a new member of the family of proteins (E9, B1, D4, and D5) with essential roles in vaccinia virus DNA replication.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011

Evaluation of the Role of the Vaccinia Virus Uracil DNA Glycosylase and A20 Proteins as Intrinsic Components of the DNA Polymerase Holoenzyme

Kathleen A. Boyle; Eleni S. Stanitsa; Matthew D. Greseth; Jill K. Lindgren; Paula Traktman

The vaccinia virus DNA polymerase is inherently distributive but acquires processivity by associating with a heterodimeric processivity factor comprised of the viral A20 and D4 proteins. D4 is also an enzymatically active uracil DNA glycosylase (UDG). The presence of an active repair protein as an essential component of the polymerase holoenzyme is a unique feature of the replication machinery. We have shown previously that the A20-UDG complex has a stoichiometry of ∼1:1, and our data suggest that A20 serves as a bridge between polymerase and UDG. Here we show that conserved hydrophobic residues in the N′ terminus of A20 are important for its binding to UDG. Our data argue against the assembly of D4 into higher order multimers, suggesting that the processivity factor does not form a toroidal ring around the DNA. Instead, we hypothesize that the intrinsic, processive DNA scanning activity of UDG tethers the holoenzyme to the DNA template. The inclusion of UDG as an essential holoenzyme component suggests that replication and base excision repair may be coupled. Here we show that the DNA polymerase can utilize dUTP as a substrate in vitro. Moreover, uracil moieties incorporated into the nascent strand during holoenzyme-mediated DNA synthesis can be excised by the viral UDG present within this holoenzyme, leaving abasic sites. Finally, we show that the polymerase stalls upon encountering an abasic site in the template strand, indicating that, like many replicative polymerases, the poxviral holoenzyme cannot perform translesion synthesis across an abasic site.


Methods of Molecular Biology | 2004

Methods for Analysis of Poxvirus DNA Replication

Paula Traktman; Kathleen A. Boyle

Cytoplasmic replication of poxviruses dictates the encoding of most, if not all, of the trans-acting factors required for faithful genome duplication. Several of these proteins have been identified through genetic and biochemical evaluation, including the catalytic DNA polymerase (E9), an essential and stoichiometric component of the processive polymerase (A20), a single-strand DNA-binding protein (I3), a type I topoisomerase (H6), the uracil DNA glycosylase (D4), a nucleic acid-independent nucleoside triphosphatase (D5), a serine/threonine protein kinase (B1), and a Holliday Junction resolvase (A22). All of these factors work in concert to faithfully duplicate the viral genome. Although a replication origin has not been defined for the poxviruses, cis-acting sequences found within the telomeric 200 bp have been implicated as necessary and sufficient for minichromosome replication. Replication occurs within cytoplasmic foci from approx 3 to 12 h postinfection. This chapter includes several methodologies to assay and quantitate replication in vivo, visualize replication foci microscopically, and test the integrity of central replication enzymes in vitro.


Journal of Virology | 2013

Biogenesis of the Vaccinia Virus Membrane: Genetic and Ultrastructural Analysis of the Contributions of the A14 and A17 Proteins

Bethany Unger; Jason Mercer; Kathleen A. Boyle; Paula Traktman

ABSTRACT Vaccinia virus membrane biogenesis requires the A14 and A17 proteins. We show here that both proteins can associate with membranes co- but not posttranslationally, and we perform a structure function analysis of A14 and A17 using inducible recombinants. In the absence of A14, electron-dense virosomes and distinct clusters of small vesicles accumulate; in the absence of A17, small vesicles form a corona around the virosomes. When the proteins are induced at 12 h postinfection (hpi), crescents appear at the periphery of the electron-dense virosomes, with the accumulated vesicles likely contributing to their formation. A variety of mutant alleles of A14 and A17 were tested for their ability to support virion assembly. For A14, biologically important motifs within the N-terminal or central loop region affected crescent maturation and the immature virion (IV)→mature virion (MV) transition. For A17, truncation or mutation of the N terminus of A17 engendered a phenotype consistent with the N terminus of A17 recruiting the D13 scaffold protein to nascent membranes. When N-terminal processing was abrogated, virions attempted to undergo the IV-to-MV transition without removing the D13 scaffold and were therefore noninfectious and structurally aberrant. Finally, we show that A17 is phosphorylated exclusively within the C-terminal tail and that this region is a direct substrate of the viral F10 kinase. In vivo, the biological competency of A17 was reduced by mutations that prevented its serine-threonine phosphorylation and restored by phosphomimetic substitutions. Precleavage of the C terminus or abrogation of its phosphorylation diminished the IV→MV maturation; a block to cleavage spared virion maturation but compromised the yield of infectious virus.


Journal of Virology | 2012

Molecular Genetic and Biochemical Characterization of the Vaccinia Virus I3 Protein, the Replicative Single-Stranded DNA Binding Protein

Matthew D. Greseth; Kathleen A. Boyle; Matthew S. Bluma; Bethany Unger; Matthew S. Wiebe; Jamária Adriana Pinheiro Soares-Martins; Nadi T. Wickramasekera; James Wahlberg; Paula Traktman

ABSTRACT Vaccinia virus, the prototypic poxvirus, efficiently and faithfully replicates its ∼200-kb DNA genome within the cytoplasm of infected cells. This intracellular localization dictates that vaccinia virus encodes most, if not all, of its own DNA replication machinery. Included in the repertoire of viral replication proteins is the I3 protein, which binds to single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) with great specificity and stability and has been presumed to be the replicative ssDNA binding protein (SSB). We substantiate here that I3 colocalizes with bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU)-labeled nascent viral genomes and that these genomes accumulate in cytoplasmic factories that are delimited by membranes derived from the endoplasmic reticulum. Moreover, we report on a structure/function analysis of I3 involving the isolation and characterization of 10 clustered charge-to-alanine mutants. These mutants were analyzed for their biochemical properties (self-interaction and DNA binding) and biological competence. Three of the mutant proteins, encoded by the I3 alleles I3-4, -5, and -7, were deficient in self-interaction and unable to support virus viability, strongly suggesting that the multimerization of I3 is biologically significant. Mutant I3-5 was also deficient in DNA binding. Additionally, we demonstrate that small interfering RNA (siRNA)-mediated depletion of I3 causes a significant decrease in the accumulation of progeny genomes and that this reduction diminishes the yield of infectious virus.


Journal of Virology | 2015

Genetic confirmation that the H5 protein is required for vaccinia virus DNA replication

Kathleen A. Boyle; Matthew D. Greseth; Paula Traktman

ABSTRACT The duplication of the poxvirus double-stranded DNA genome occurs in cytoplasmic membrane-delimited factories. This physical autonomy from the host nucleus suggests that poxvirus genomes encode the full repertoire of proteins committed for genome replication. Biochemical and genetic analyses have confirmed that six viral proteins are required for efficient DNA synthesis; indirect evidence has suggested that the multifunctional H5 protein may also have a role. Here we show that H5 localizes to replication factories, as visualized by immunofluorescence and immunoelectron microscopy, and can be retrieved upon purification of the viral polymerase holoenzyme complex. The temperature-sensitive (ts) mutant Dts57, which was generated by chemical mutagenesis and has a lesion in H5, exhibits defects in DNA replication and morphogenesis under nonpermissive conditions, depending upon the experimental protocol. The H5 variant encoded by the genome of this mutant is ts for function but not stability. For a more precise investigation of how H5 contributes to DNA synthesis, we placed the ts57 H5 allele in an otherwise wild-type viral background and also performed small interfering RNA-mediated depletion of H5. Finally, we generated a complementing cell line, CV-1–H5, which allowed us to generate a viral recombinant in which the H5 open reading frame was deleted and replaced with mCherry (vΔH5). Analysis of vΔH5 allowed us to demonstrate conclusively that viral DNA replication is abrogated in the absence of H5. The loss of H5 does not compromise the accumulation of other early viral replication proteins or the uncoating of the virion core, suggesting that H5 plays a direct and essential role in facilitating DNA synthesis. IMPORTANCE Variola virus, the causative agent of smallpox, is the most notorious member of the Poxviridae family. Poxviruses are unique among DNA viruses that infect mammalian cells, in that their replication is restricted to the cytoplasm of the cell. This physical autonomy from the nucleus has both cell biological and genetic ramifications. Poxviruses must establish cytoplasmic niches that support replication, and the genomes must encode the repertoire of proteins necessary for genome synthesis. Here we focus on H5, a multifunctional and abundant viral protein. We confirm that H5 associates with the DNA polymerase holoenzyme and localizes to the sites of DNA synthesis. By generating an H5-expressing cell line, we were able to isolate a deletion virus that lacks the H5 gene and show definitively that genome synthesis does not occur in the absence of H5. These data support the hypothesis that H5 is a crucial participant in cytoplasmic poxvirus genome replication.

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Paula Traktman

Medical College of Wisconsin

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Michael B. Dwinell

Medical College of Wisconsin

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B. Kalyanaraman

Medical College of Wisconsin

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Douglas B. Evans

Medical College of Wisconsin

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Matthew D. Greseth

Medical University of South Carolina

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Susan Tsai

Medical College of Wisconsin

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A. Craig Mackinnon

Medical College of Wisconsin

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Bethany Unger

Medical College of Wisconsin

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Gang Cheng

Medical College of Wisconsin

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Ishan Roy

Medical College of Wisconsin

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