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Dive into the research topics where Kuan-Ting Pan is active.

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Featured researches published by Kuan-Ting Pan.


The EMBO Journal | 2016

Hair cell synaptic dysfunction, auditory fatigue and thermal sensitivity in otoferlin Ile515Thr mutants.

Nicola Strenzke; Rituparna Chakrabarti; Hanan Al‐Moyed; Alexandra Müller; Gerhard Hoch; Tina Pangršič; Gulnara Yamanbaeva; Christof Lenz; Kuan-Ting Pan; Elisabeth Auge; Ruth Geiss-Friedlander; Henning Urlaub; Nils Brose; Carolin Wichmann; Ellen Reisinger

The multi‐C2 domain protein otoferlin is required for hearing and mutated in human deafness. Some OTOF mutations cause a mild elevation of auditory thresholds but strong impairment of speech perception. At elevated body temperature, hearing is lost. Mice homozygous for one of these mutations, OtofI515T/I515T, exhibit a moderate hearing impairment involving enhanced adaptation to continuous or repetitive sound stimulation. In OtofI515T/I515T inner hair cells (IHCs), otoferlin levels are diminished by 65%, and synaptic vesicles are enlarged. Exocytosis during prolonged stimulation is strongly reduced. This indicates that otoferlin is critical for the reformation of properly sized and fusion‐competent synaptic vesicles. Moreover, we found sustained exocytosis and sound encoding to scale with the amount of otoferlin at the plasma membrane. We identified a 20 amino acid motif including an RXR motif, presumably present in human but not in mouse otoferlin, which reduces the plasma membrane abundance of Ile515Thr‐otoferlin. Together, this likely explains the auditory synaptopathy at normal temperature and the temperature‐sensitive deafness in humans carrying the Ile515Thr mutation.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016

Elucidation of tonic and activated B-cell receptor signaling in Burkitt’s lymphoma provides insights into regulation of cell survival

Jasmin Corso; Kuan-Ting Pan; Roland Walter; Carmen Doebele; Sebastian Mohr; Hanibal Bohnenberger; Philipp Ströbel; Christof Lenz; Mikolaj Slabicki; Jennifer Hüllein; Federico Comoglio; Michael A. Rieger; Thorsten Zenz; Jürgen Wienands; Michael Engelke; Hubert Serve; Henning Urlaub; Thomas Oellerich

Significance B-cell receptor (BCR) signaling promotes the survival of malignant B cells, such as Burkitt’s lymphoma (BL) and the activated B-cell–like subtype of diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (ABC-DLBCL). In contrast to ABC-DLBCL, which depends on chronic activation of the BCR, BL cells rely on tonic BCR signaling that is antigen-independent. Elucidation and systematic comparison of tonic and activated BCR signaling led to the identification of novel signaling effectors, including ACTN4 and ARFGEF2, which were identified as regulators of BL-cell survival. Beyond its relevance to the understanding of BL pathogenesis and the development of targeted therapies, our study complements the general understanding of BCR-induced processes also in physiological settings. Burkitts lymphoma (BL) is a highly proliferative B-cell neoplasm and is treated with intensive chemotherapy that, because of its toxicity, is often not suitable for the elderly or for patients with endemic BL in developing countries. BL cell survival relies on signals transduced by B-cell antigen receptors (BCRs). However, tonic as well as activated BCR signaling networks and their relevance for targeted therapies in BL remain elusive. We have systematically characterized and compared tonic and activated BCR signaling in BL by quantitative phosphoproteomics to identify novel BCR effectors and potential drug targets. We identified and quantified ∼16,000 phospho-sites in BL cells. Among these sites, 909 were related to tonic BCR signaling, whereas 984 phospho-sites were regulated upon BCR engagement. The majority of the identified BCR signaling effectors have not been described in the context of B cells or lymphomas yet. Most of these newly identified BCR effectors are predicted to be involved in the regulation of kinases, transcription, and cytoskeleton dynamics. Although tonic and activated BCR signaling shared a considerable number of effector proteins, we identified distinct phosphorylation events in tonic BCR signaling. We investigated the functional relevance of some newly identified BCR effectors and show that ACTN4 and ARFGEF2, which have been described as regulators of membrane-trafficking and cytoskeleton-related processes, respectively, are crucial for BL cell survival. Thus, this study provides a comprehensive dataset for tonic and activated BCR signaling and identifies effector proteins that may be relevant for BL cell survival and thus may help to develop new BL treatments.


Blood | 2017

HSP90 promotes Burkitt lymphoma cell survival by maintaining tonic B-cell receptor signaling

Roland Walter; Kuan-Ting Pan; Carmen Doebele; Federico Comoglio; Katarzyna Tomska; Hanibal Bohnenberger; Ryan M. Young; Laura Jacobs; Ulrich Keller; Halvard Bonig; Michael Engelke; Andreas Rosenwald; Henning Urlaub; Louis M. Staudt; Hubert Serve; Thorsten Zenz; Thomas Oellerich

Burkitt lymphoma (BL) is an aggressive B-cell neoplasm that is currently treated by intensive chemotherapy in combination with anti-CD20 antibodies. Because of their toxicity, current treatment regimens are often not suitable for elderly patients or for patients in developing countries where BL is endemic. Targeted therapies for BL are therefore needed. In this study, we performed a compound screen in 17 BL cell lines to identify small molecule inhibitors affecting cell survival. We found that inhibitors of heat shock protein 90 (HSP90) induced apoptosis in BL cells in vitro at concentrations that did not affect normal B cells. By global proteomic and phosphoproteomic profiling, we show that, in BL, HSP90 inhibition compromises the activity of the pivotal B-cell antigen receptor (BCR)-proximal effector spleen tyrosine kinase (SYK), which we identified as an HSP90 client protein. Consistently, expression of constitutively active TEL-SYK counteracted the apoptotic effect of HSP90 inhibition. Together, our results demonstrate that HSP90 inhibition impairs BL cell survival by interfering with tonic BCR signaling, thus providing a molecular rationale for the use of HSP90 inhibitors in the treatment of BL.


Analytical Chemistry | 2017

Adapting Data-Independent Acquisition for Mass Spectrometry-Based Protein Site-Specific N-Glycosylation Analysis

Kuan-Ting Pan; Chen-Chun Chen; Henning Urlaub; Kay-Hooi Khoo

A hallmark of protein N-glycosylation is extensive heterogeneity associated with each glycosylation site. In human cells, the constituent glycoforms differ mostly in numerous ways of extensions from an invariable trimannosyl core and terminal modifications. The efficient identification of these glycoforms at the glycopeptide level by mass spectrometry (MS) requires a precursor sampling technique that is not dictated by signal intensity or by preset targets during MS2 data acquisition. We show here that the recently developed data-independent acquisition (DIA) approach is best suited to this demanding task. It allows postacquisition extraction of glycopeptide-specific fragment-ion chromatograms to be aligned with that of precursor MS1 ion by nanoLC elution time. For any target glycoprotein, judicious selection of the most favorable MS1/MS2 transitions can first be determined from prior analysis of a purified surrogate standard that carries similar site-specific glycosylation but may differ in its exact range of glycoforms. Since the MS2 transitions to be used for extracting DIA data is common to that glycosylation site and not dictated by a specific MS1 value, our workflow applies equally well to the identification of both targeted and unexpected glycoforms. Using a case example, we show that, in targeted mode, it identified more site-specific glycoforms than the more commonly used data-dependent acquisition method when the amount of the target glycoprotein was limited in a sample of high complexity. In discovery mode, it allows detection, with supporting MS2 evidence, of under-sampled glycoforms and of those that failed to be identified by searching against a predefined glycan library owing to unanticipated modifications.


Embo Molecular Medicine | 2018

Comparative proteomics reveals a diagnostic signature for pulmonary head-and-neck cancer metastasis.

Hanibal Bohnenberger; Lars Kaderali; Philipp Ströbel; Diego Yepes; Uwe Plessmann; Neekesh V. Dharia; Sha Yao; Carina Heydt; Sabine Merkelbach-Bruse; Alexander Emmert; Jonatan Hoffmann; Julius Bodemeyer; Kirsten Reuter‐Jessen; Anna‐Maria Lois; Leif Hendrik Dröge; Philipp Baumeister; Christoph Walz; Lorenz Biggemann; Roland Walter; Björn Häupl; Federico Comoglio; Kuan-Ting Pan; Sebastian Scheich; Christof Lenz; Stefan Küffer; Felix Bremmer; Julia Kitz; Maren Sitte; Tim Beißbarth; Marc Hinterthaner

Patients with head‐and‐neck cancer can develop both lung metastasis and primary lung cancer during the course of their disease. Despite the clinical importance of discrimination, reliable diagnostic biomarkers are still lacking. Here, we have characterised a cohort of squamous cell lung (SQCLC) and head‐and‐neck (HNSCC) carcinomas by quantitative proteomics. In a training cohort, we quantified 4,957 proteins in 44 SQCLC and 30 HNSCC tumours. A total of 518 proteins were found to be differentially expressed between SQCLC and HNSCC, and some of these were identified as genetic dependencies in either of the two tumour types. Using supervised machine learning, we inferred a proteomic signature for the classification of squamous cell carcinomas as either SQCLC or HNSCC, with diagnostic accuracies of 90.5% and 86.8% in cross‐ and independent validations, respectively. Furthermore, application of this signature to a cohort of pulmonary squamous cell carcinomas of unknown origin leads to a significant prognostic separation. This study not only provides a diagnostic proteomic signature for classification of secondary lung tumours in HNSCC patients, but also represents a proteomic resource for HNSCC and SQCLC.


Nature Communications | 2018

Disrupted alternative splicing for genes implicated in splicing and ciliogenesis causes PRPF31 retinitis pigmentosa

Adriana Buskin; Lili Zhu; Valeria Chichagova; Basudha Basu; Sina Mozaffari-Jovin; David Dolan; Alastair Droop; Joseph Collin; Revital Bronstein; Sudeep Mehrotra; Michael H. Farkas; Gerrit Hilgen; Kathryn White; Kuan-Ting Pan; Achim Treumann; Dean Hallam; Katarzyna Bialas; Git Chung; Carla Mellough; Yuchun Ding; Natalio Krasnogor; Stefan Przyborski; Simon Zwolinski; Jumana Y. Al-Aama; Sameer E. Al-Harthi; Yaobo Xu; Gabrielle Wheway; Katarzyna Szymanska; Martin McKibbin; Chris F. Inglehearn

Mutations in pre-mRNA processing factors (PRPFs) cause autosomal-dominant retinitis pigmentosa (RP), but it is unclear why mutations in ubiquitously expressed genes cause non-syndromic retinal disease. Here, we generate transcriptome profiles from RP11 (PRPF31-mutated) patient-derived retinal organoids and retinal pigment epithelium (RPE), as well as Prpf31+/− mouse tissues, which revealed that disrupted alternative splicing occurred for specific splicing programmes. Mis-splicing of genes encoding pre-mRNA splicing proteins was limited to patient-specific retinal cells and Prpf31+/− mouse retinae and RPE. Mis-splicing of genes implicated in ciliogenesis and cellular adhesion was associated with severe RPE defects that include disrupted apical – basal polarity, reduced trans-epithelial resistance and phagocytic capacity, and decreased cilia length and incidence. Disrupted cilia morphology also occurred in patient-derived photoreceptors, associated with progressive degeneration and cellular stress. In situ gene editing of a pathogenic mutation rescued protein expression and key cellular phenotypes in RPE and photoreceptors, providing proof of concept for future therapeutic strategies.Mutations in pre-mRNA processing factors cause autosomal dominant retinitis pigmentosa. Here the authors provide insights into the pathophysiological mechanisms underlying non-syndromic retinal disease caused by heterozygous mutations in genes encoding ubiquitously expressed splicing factors.


Journal of Thoracic Oncology | 2015

Proteomic profiling of pulmonary cancer with squamous cell histology.

H. Bohnenberger; D. Yepes; Kuan-Ting Pan; A. Emmert; H. Henric-Petri; F. Bremmer; J. Strecker; A. M. Lois; L. Fischer; S. Kuffer; M. Hinterthaner; H. Wolff; M. Canis; Martin Sebastian; B. Danner; Philipp Ströbel; Hubert Serve; Henning Urlaub; T. Oellerich


Nature Communications | 2018

Splicing factor PRPF31 retinitis pigmentosa (RP11) is caused by disrupted alternative splicing programmes for genes implicated in pre-mRNA splicing, cellular adhesion and ciliogenesis

Adriana Buskin; Lili Zhu; Valeria Chichagova; B. Basu; Sina Mozaffari-Jovin; David Dolan; Alastair Droop; Joseph Collin; R. Bronstein; S. Mehrotra; Michael H. Farkas; Gerrit Hilgen; Kathryn White; Kuan-Ting Pan; Achim Treumann; Dean Hallam; K. Bialas; Git Chung; Carla Mellough; Yuchun Ding; Natalio Krasnogor; S. Przyborksi; Simon Zwolinski; Jumana Y. Al-Aama; Sameer E. Al-Harthi; Yaobo Xu; Gabrielle Wheway; Katarzyna Szymanska; Martin McKibbin; Chris F. Inglehearn


Experimental Hematology | 2017

Involvement of the vascular niche in the regulation of murine chronic myeloid leukemia

Sonika Godavarthy; Stefanie Herkt; Eva Weissenberger; Djamel Aggoune; Kuan-Ting Pan; Thomas Oellerich; Vivian G. Oehler; Richard A. Van Etten; Joern Lausen; Daniela S. Krause


Cancer Research | 2017

Abstract 4640: Proteomic differentiation of pulmonary cancer with squamous cell histology

Hanibal Bohnenberger; Diego Yepes; Sabine Merkelbach-Bruse; Alexander Emmert; Anna‐Maria Lois; Sha Yao; Maren Sitte; Kuan-Ting Pan; Leif Hendrik Dröge; Felix Bremmer; Jasmin Strecker; Stefan Küffer; Martin Sebastian; Martin Hinterthaner; Julia Kitz; Lorenz Biggemann; Joachim Lotz; Hans-Ulrich Schildhaus; Hendrik A. Wolff; Martin Canis; Bernd Danner; Tim Beißbarth; Reinhard Büttner; Philipp Ströbel; Hubert Serve; Henning Urlaub; Thomas Oellerich

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Thomas Oellerich

Goethe University Frankfurt

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Roland Walter

Goethe University Frankfurt

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Carmen Doebele

Goethe University Frankfurt

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