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Dive into the research topics where Kevin A. Wilkinson is active.

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Featured researches published by Kevin A. Wilkinson.


Nature Reviews Neuroscience | 2007

Emerging extranuclear roles of protein SUMOylation in neuronal function and dysfunction

Stéphane Martin; Kevin A. Wilkinson; Atsushi Nishimune; Jeremy M. Henley

Post-translational protein modifications are integral components of signalling cascades that enable cells to efficiently, rapidly and reversibly respond to extracellular stimuli. These modifications have crucial roles in the CNS, where the communication between neurons is particularly complex. SUMOylation is a post-translational modification in which a member of the small ubiquitin-like modifier (SUMO) family of proteins is conjugated to lysine residues in target proteins. It is well established that SUMOylation controls many aspects of nuclear function, but it is now clear that it is also a key determinant in many extranuclear neuronal processes, and it has also been implicated in a wide range of neuropathological conditions.


Nature Reviews Neuroscience | 2016

Synaptic AMPA receptor composition in development, plasticity and disease

Jeremy M. Henley; Kevin A. Wilkinson

AMPA receptors (AMPARs) are assemblies of four core subunits, GluA1–4, that mediate most fast excitatory neurotransmission. The component subunits determine the functional properties of AMPARs, and the prevailing view is that the subunit composition also determines AMPAR trafficking, which is dynamically regulated during development, synaptic plasticity and in response to neuronal stress in disease. Recently, the subunit dependence of AMPAR trafficking has been questioned, leading to a reappraisal of this field. In this Review, we discuss what is known, uncertain, conjectured and unknown about the roles of the individual subunits, and how they affect AMPAR assembly, trafficking and function under both normal and pathological conditions.


The EMBO Journal | 2013

SENP3‐mediated deSUMOylation of dynamin‐related protein 1 promotes cell death following ischaemia

Chun Guo; Keri L. Hildick; Jia Luo; Laura Dearden; Kevin A. Wilkinson; Jeremy M. Henley

Global increases in small ubiquitin‐like modifier (SUMO)‐2/3 conjugation are a neuroprotective response to severe stress but the mechanisms and specific target proteins that determine cell survival have not been identified. Here, we demonstrate that the SUMO‐2/3‐specific protease SENP3 is degraded during oxygen/glucose deprivation (OGD), an in vitro model of ischaemia, via a pathway involving the unfolded protein response (UPR) kinase PERK and the lysosomal enzyme cathepsin B. A key target for SENP3‐mediated deSUMOylation is the GTPase Drp1, which plays a major role in regulating mitochondrial fission. We show that depletion of SENP3 prolongs Drp1 SUMOylation, which suppresses Drp1‐mediated cytochrome c release and caspase‐mediated cell death. SENP3 levels recover following reoxygenation after OGD allowing deSUMOylation of Drp1, which facilitates Drp1 localization at mitochondria and promotes fragmentation and cytochrome c release. RNAi knockdown of SENP3 protects cells from reoxygenation‐induced cell death via a mechanism that requires Drp1 SUMOylation. Thus, we identify a novel adaptive pathway to extreme cell stress in which dynamic changes in SENP3 stability and regulation of Drp1 SUMOylation are crucial determinants of cell fate.


Physiological Reviews | 2014

Neuronal SUMOylation: mechanisms, physiology, and roles in neuronal dysfunction.

Jeremy M. Henley; Tim J. Craig; Kevin A. Wilkinson

Protein SUMOylation is a critically important posttranslational protein modification that participates in nearly all aspects of cellular physiology. In the nearly 20 years since its discovery, SUMOylation has emerged as a major regulator of nuclear function, and more recently, it has become clear that SUMOylation has key roles in the regulation of protein trafficking and function outside of the nucleus. In neurons, SUMOylation participates in cellular processes ranging from neuronal differentiation and control of synapse formation to regulation of synaptic transmission and cell survival. It is a highly dynamic and usually transient modification that enhances or hinders interactions between proteins, and its consequences are extremely diverse. Hundreds of different proteins are SUMO substrates, and dysfunction of protein SUMOylation is implicated in a many different diseases. Here we briefly outline core aspects of the SUMO system and provide a detailed overview of the current understanding of the roles of SUMOylation in healthy and diseased neurons.


Nature Neuroscience | 2012

SUMOylation and phosphorylation of GluK2 regulate kainate receptor trafficking and synaptic plasticity

Sophie Chamberlain; Inmaculada M. González-González; Kevin A. Wilkinson; Filip Konopacki; Sriharsha Kantamneni; Jeremy M. Henley; Jack R. Mellor

Phosphorylation or SUMOylation of the kainate receptor (KAR) subunit GluK2 have both individually been shown to regulate KAR surface expression. However, it is unknown whether phosphorylation and SUMOylation of GluK2 are important for activity-dependent KAR synaptic plasticity. We found that protein kinase C–mediated phosphorylation of GluK2 at serine 868 promotes GluK2 SUMOylation at lysine 886 and that both of these events are necessary for the internalization of GluK2-containing KARs that occurs during long-term depression of KAR-mediated synaptic transmission at rat hippocampal mossy fiber synapses. Conversely, phosphorylation of GluK2 at serine 868 in the absence of SUMOylation led to an increase in KAR surface expression by facilitating receptor recycling between endosomal compartments and the plasma membrane. Our results suggest a role for the dynamic control of synaptic SUMOylation in the regulation of KAR synaptic transmission and plasticity.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

Agonist-induced PKC phosphorylation regulates GluK2 SUMOylation and kainate receptor endocytosis.

Filip Konopacki; Nadia Jaafari; Daniel L. Rocca; Kevin A. Wilkinson; Sophie Chamberlain; Philip Rubin; Sriharsha Kantamneni; Jack R. Mellor; Jeremy M. Henley

The surface expression and regulated endocytosis of kainate (KA) receptors (KARs) plays a critical role in neuronal function. PKC can modulate KAR trafficking, but the sites of action and molecular consequences have not been fully characterized. Small ubiquitin-like modifier (SUMO) modification of the KAR subunit GluK2 mediates agonist-evoked internalization, but how KAR activation leads to GluK2 SUMOylation is unclear. Here we show that KA stimulation causes rapid phosphorylation of GluK2 by PKC, and that PKC activation increases GluK2 SUMOylation both in vitro and in neurons. The intracellular C-terminal domain of GluK2 contains two predicted PKC phosphorylation sites, S846 and S868, both of which are phosphorylated in response to KA. Phosphomimetic mutagenesis of S868 increased GluK2 SUMOylation, and mutation of S868 to a nonphosphorylatable alanine prevented KA-induced SUMOylation and endocytosis in neurons. Infusion of SUMO-1 dramatically reduced KAR-mediated currents in HEK293 cells expressing WT GluK2 or nonphosphorylatable S846A mutant, but had no effect on currents mediated by the S868A mutant. These data demonstrate that agonist activation of GluK2 promotes PKC-dependent phosphorylation of S846 and S868, but that only S868 phosphorylation is required to enhance GluK2 SUMOylation and promote endocytosis. Thus, direct phosphorylation by PKC and GluK2 SUMOylation are intimately linked in regulating the surface expression and function of GluK2-containing KARs.


Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism | 2012

Enhanced SUMOylation and SENP-1 Protein Levels following Oxygen and Glucose Deprivation in Neurones

Helena Cimarosti; Emi Ashikaga; Nadia Jaafari; Laura Dearden; Philip Rubin; Kevin A. Wilkinson; Jeremy M. Henley

Here, we show that oxygen and glucose deprivation (OGD) causes increased small ubiquitin-like modifier (SUMO)-1 and SUMO-2/3 conjugation to substrate proteins in cultured hippocampal neurones. Surprisingly, the SUMO protease SENP-1, which removes SUMO from conjugated proteins, was also increased by OGD, suggesting that the neuronal response to OGD involves a complex interplay between SUMOylation and deSUMOylation. Importantly, decreasing global SUMOylation in cultured hippocampal neurones by overexpression of the catalytic domain of SENP-1 increased neuronal vulnerability to OGD-induced cell death. Taken together, these results suggest a neuroprotective role for neuronal SUMOylation after OGD.


Neuroscience Letters | 2008

Analysis of SUMO-1 modification of neuronal proteins containing consensus SUMOylation motifs

Kevin A. Wilkinson; Atsushi Nishimune; Jeremy M. Henley

SUMOylation is emerging as an important mechanism for modulating protein function in many cell types. A large variety of proteins have been proposed as SUMO targets based on the presence of a consensus SUMOylation core motif (Psi-K-x-D/E). In neurons these include multiple synaptic proteins but it has not been established whether proteins carrying this motif are SUMOylated either in vitro or in vivo. Here we use a bacterial SUMOylation assay to systematically test for SUMO-1 modification of a selection of neuronal proteins containing one or more amino acid sequences predicted as high-probability SUMOylation sites in computer-based searches. Of the 39 proteins analysed only 14 sites were posttranslationally modified by SUMO-1, including the group III metabotropic glutamate receptors and the kainate receptor subunit GluR7. These results identify new candidate proteins that may be involved in the SUMO regulation of synaptic activity and also demonstrate that the presence of the Psi-K-x-D/E motif is not sufficient to indicate that a protein can be SUMOylated in this bacterial system.


PLOS ONE | 2013

SUMOylation is required for glycine-induced increases in AMPA receptor surface expression (ChemLTP) in hippocampal neurons.

Nadia Jaafari; Filip Konopacki; Thomas F. Owen; Sriharsha Kantamneni; Philip Rubin; Tim J. Craig; Kevin A. Wilkinson; Jeremy M. Henley

Multiple pathways participate in the AMPA receptor trafficking that underlies long-term potentiation (LTP) of synaptic transmission. Here we demonstrate that protein SUMOylation is required for insertion of the GluA1 AMPAR subunit following transient glycine-evoked increase in AMPA receptor surface expression (ChemLTP) in dispersed neuronal cultures. ChemLTP increases co-localisation of SUMO-1 and the SUMO conjugating enzyme Ubc9 and with PSD95 consistent with the recruitment of SUMOylated proteins to dendritic spines. In addition, we show that ChemLTP increases dendritic levels of SUMO-1 and Ubc9 mRNA. Consistent with activity dependent translocation of these mRNAs to sites near synapses, levels of the mRNA binding and dendritic transport protein CPEB are also increased by ChemLTP. Importantly, reducing the extent of substrate protein SUMOylation by overexpressing the deSUMOylating enzyme SENP-1 or inhibiting SUMOylation by expressing dominant negative Ubc9 prevent the ChemLTP-induced increase in both AMPAR surface expression and dendritic SUMO-1 mRNA. Taken together these data demonstrate that SUMOylation of synaptic protein(s) involved in AMPA receptor trafficking is necessary for activity-dependent increases in AMPAR surface expression.


Drug News & Perspectives | 2009

Protein SUMOylation in neuropathological conditions.

Dina B. Anderson; Kevin A. Wilkinson; Jeremy M. Henley

Small ubiquitin-related modifier (SUMO) proteins are approximately 11 kDa proteins that can be covalently conjugated to lysine residues in defined target proteins. The resultant post-translational modification, SUMOylation, is vital for the viability of mammalian cells and regulates, among other things, a range of essential nuclear processes. It has become increasingly apparent in recent years that SUMOylation also serves multiple functions outside the nucleus and that it plays a critical role in the regulation of neuronal integrity and synaptic function. In particular, dysfunction of the SUMOylation pathway has been implicated in the molecular and cellular dysfunction associated with neurodegenerative and psychiatric disorders. Here, we outline current knowledge of the SUMO pathway and discuss the growing evidence for its involvement in multiple neurodegenerative disorders, with a view to highlighting the potential of the SUMO pathway as a putative drug target.

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Chun Guo

University of Sheffield

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