Lesley A. Kane
Johns Hopkins University
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Featured researches published by Lesley A. Kane.
Circulation Research | 2006
D. Kent Arrell; Steven T. Elliott; Lesley A. Kane; Yurong Guo; Young Hee Ko; Pete L. Pedersen; John C. Robinson; Mitsushige Murata; Anne M. Murphy; Eduardo Marbán; Jennifer E. Van Eyk
Ischemic preconditioning is characterized by resistance to ischemia reperfusion injury in response to previous short ischemic episodes, a protective effect that can be mimicked pharmacologically. The underlying mechanism of protection remains controversial and requires greater understanding before it can be fully exploited therapeutically. To investigate the overall effect of preconditioning on the myocardial proteome, isolated rabbit ventricular myocytes were treated with drugs known to induce preconditioning, adenosine or diazoxide (each at 100 &mgr;mol/L for 60 minutes). Their protein profiles were then compared with vehicle-treated controls (n=4 animals per treatment) using a multitiered 2D gel electrophoresis approach. Of 28 significantly altered protein spots, 19 nonredundant proteins were identified (5 spots remained unidentified). The majority of these proteins are involved in mitochondrial energetics, including subunits of tricarboxylic acid cycle enzymes and oxidative phosphorylation complexes. These changes were not indiscriminate, with only a small number of enzymes or complex subunits altered, indicating a very specific and targeted affect of these 2 preconditioning mimetics. Among the changes were shifts in the extent of posttranslational modification of 4 proteins. One of these, the adenosine-induced phosphorylation of the ATP synthase β subunit, was fully characterized with the identification of 5 novel phosphorylation sites. This proteomics approach provides an overall assessment of the cellular response to pharmacological treatment with adenosine and diazoxide and identifies a distinct subset of enzymes and protein complex subunit that may underlie the preconditioned phenotype.
Circulation-cardiovascular Genetics | 2010
Giulio Agnetti; Nina Kaludercic; Lesley A. Kane; Steven T. Elliott; Yurong Guo; Khalid Chakir; Daya Samantapudi; Nazareno Paolocci; Gordon F. Tomaselli; David A. Kass; Jennifer E. Van Eyk
Background—Cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) improves chamber mechanoenergetics and morbidity and mortality of patients manifesting heart failure with ventricular dyssynchrony; however, little is known about the molecular changes underlying CRT benefits. We hypothesized that mitochondria may play an important role because of their involvement in energy production. Methods and Results—Mitochondria isolated from the left ventricle in a canine model of dyssynchronous or resynchronized (CRT) heart failure were analyzed by a classical, gel-based, proteomic approach. Two-dimensional gel electrophoresis revealed that 31 mitochondrial proteins where changed when controlling the false discovery rate at 30%. Key enzymes in anaplerotic pathways, such as pyruvate carboxylation and branched-chain amino acid oxidation, were increased. These concerted changes, along with others, suggested that CRT may increase the pool of Krebs cycle intermediates and fuel oxidative phosphorylation. Nearly 50% of observed changes pertained to subunits of the respiratory chain. ATP synthase-&bgr; subunit of complex V was less degraded, and its phosphorylation modulated by CRT was associated with increased formation (2-fold, P=0.004) and specific activity (+20%, P=0.05) of the mature complex. The importance of these modifications was supported by coordinated changes in mitochondrial chaperones and proteases. CRT increased the mitochondrial respiratory control index with tightened coupling when isolated mitochondria were reexposed to substrates for both complex I (glutamate and malate) and complex II (succinate), an effect likely related to ATP synthase subunit modifications and complex quantity and activity. Conclusions—CRT potently affects both the mitochondrial proteome and the performance associated with improved cardiac function.
Current protocols in molecular biology | 2009
Rebekah L. Gundry; Melanie Y. White; Christopher I. Murray; Lesley A. Kane; Qin Fu; Brian A. Stanley; Jennifer E. Van Eyk
This unit outlines the steps required to prepare a sample for MS analysis following protein separation or enrichment by gel electrophoresis, liquid chromatography, and affinity capture within the context of a bottom-up proteomics workflow in which the protein is first broken up into peptides, either by chemical or enzymatic digestion, prior to MS analysis. Also included are protocols for enrichment at the peptide level, including phosphopeptide enrichment and reversed-phase chromatography for sample purification immediately prior to MS analysis. Finally, there is a discussion regarding the types of MS technologies commonly used to analyze proteomics samples, as well as important parameters that should be considered when analyzing the MS data to ensure stringent and robust protein identifications and characterization.
PLOS Biology | 2010
Praveen Balabaskaran Nina; Natalya V. Dudkina; Lesley A. Kane; Jennifer E. Van Eyk; Egbert J. Boekema; Michael W. Mather; Akhil B. Vaidya
Tetrahymena ATP synthase, an evolutionarily divergent protein complex, has a very unusual structure and protein composition including a unique Fo subunit a and at least 13 proteins with no orthologs outside of the ciliate lineage.
Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2011
Christopher I. Murray; Lesley A. Kane; Helge Uhrigshardt; Sheng Bing Wang; Jennifer E. Van Eyk
S-nitrosation (SNO) of mitochondrial protein cysteines can be cardioprotective. Several targets have been implicated, yet the scope and identification of specific residues has not been fully assessed. To address this, a comprehensive assessment of mitochondrial SNO-modifiable cysteines was performed to determine nitric oxide (NO) susceptible pathways and identify novel mechanisms of oxidative cardioprotection. The biotin switch assay and mass spectrometry were used on rat cardiac mitochondrial lysates treated with the nitric oxide donor, S-nitrosoglutathione, and controls (n = 3) to map 83 SNO-modified cysteine residues on 60 proteins. Of these, three sites have been reported, 30 sites are new to 21 proteins previously known to be S-nitrosated but which lacked site-specific information and 50 sites were found on 39 proteins not previously implicated in SNO pathways. The SNO-modifications occurred in only a subset of available cysteines, indicating a specific targeted effect. Functional annotation and site-specificity analysis revealed a twofold greater nitric oxide-susceptibility for proteins involved in transport; including regulators of mitochondrial permeability transition suggesting SNO-regulation and a possible protective mechanism. Additionally, we identified many novel SNO-modified proteins with cardioprotective potential involved in the electron transport chain, tricarboxylic acid cycle, oxidative stress defense, fatty acid and amino acid metabolism. These findings suggest that SNO-modification may represent a novel mechanism for the regulation of oxidative phosphorylation and/or cell death. S-nitrosation of mitochondrial permeability transition-associated proteins represents an intriguing potential link to cardioprotection.
Circulation Research | 2010
Lesley A. Kane; Matthew J. Youngman; Robert E. Jensen; Jennifer E. Van Eyk
Rationale: We previously discovered several phosphorylations to the β subunit of the mitochondrial F1Fo ATP synthase complex in isolated rabbit myocytes on adenosine treatment, an agent that induces cardioprotection. The role of these phosphorylations is unknown. Objective: The present study focuses on the functional consequences of phosphorylation of the ATP synthase complex β subunit by generating nonphosphorylatable and phosphomimetic analogs in a model system, Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Methods and Results: The 4 amino acid residues with homology in yeast (T58, S213, T262, and T318) were studied with respect to growth, complex and supercomplex formation, and enzymatic activity (ATPase rate). The most striking mutant was the T262 site, for which the phosphomimetic (T262E) abolished activity, whereas the nonphosphorylatable strain (T262A) had an ATPase rate equivalent to wild type. Although T262E, like all of the β subunit mutants, was able to form the intact complex (F1Fo), this strain lacked a free F1 component found in wild-type and had a corresponding increase of lower-molecular-weight forms of the protein, indicating an assembly/stability defect. In addition, the ATPase activity was reduced but not abolished with the phosphomimetic mutation at T58, a site that altered the formation/maintenance of dimers of the F1Fo ATP synthase complex. Conclusions: Taken together, these data show that pseudophosphorylation of specific amino acid residues can have separate and distinctive effects on the F1Fo ATP synthase complex, suggesting the possibility that several of the phosphorylations observed in the rabbit heart can have structural and functional consequences to the F1Fo ATP synthase complex.
Journal of Bioenergetics and Biomembranes | 2009
Lesley A. Kane; Jennifer E. Van Eyk
The ATP synthase complex is a critical enzyme in the energetic pathways of cells because it is the enzyme complex that produces the majority of cellular ATP. It has been shown to be involved in several cardiac phenotypes including heart failure and preconditioning, a cellular protective mechanism. Understanding the regulation of this enzyme is important in understanding the mechanisms behind these important phenomena. Recently there have been several post-translational modifications (PTM) reported for various subunits of this enzyme complex, opening up the possibility of differential regulation by these PTMs. Here we discuss the known PTMs in the heart and other mammalian tissues and their implication to function and regulation of the ATP synthase.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011
Xiaoou Pan; Lesley A. Kane; Jennifer E. Van Eyk; Pierre A. Coulombe
Background: Keratin 17 (K17) provides structural support and regulates cell growth, apoptosis, and immune responses in skin epithelia. Results: K17-Ser44 is dynamically phosphorylated by RSK1 in skin keratinocytes undergoing growth or stress. Conclusion: K17 is regulated by Ser44 phosphorylation in vivo. Significance: K17-Ser44 phosphorylation provides a novel biomarker reflecting growth or stress situations in keratinocytes. Keratin 17 (K17) is a type I intermediate filament protein that is constitutively expressed in ectoderm-derived epithelial appendages and robustly induced in epidermis following injury, during inflammation, and in chronic diseases such as psoriasis and cancer. Mutations within K17 are responsible for two rare diseases related to ectodermal dysplasias. Studies in K17-null mice uncovered several roles for K17, including structural support, resistance to TNFα-induced apoptosis, regulation of protein synthesis, and modulation of cytokine expression. Yet, little is known about the regulation of K17 protein via post-translational modification. Here, we report that serine 44 in the N-terminal head domain of K17 (K17-Ser44) is phosphorylated in response to extracellular stimuli (serum, EGF, and the phorbol ester 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate) that alter skin keratinocyte growth, and to cellular stresses (sorbitol-induced hyperosmotic shock, UV irradiation, and hydrogen peroxide-induced oxidative stress). It also occurs in basaloid skin tumors in situ. Upon its stimulation in skin keratinocytes, K17-Ser44 phosphorylation is induced rapidly but stays on transiently. The majority of the phosphorylated K17-Ser44 pool is polymer-bound and is not obviously related to a change in filament organization. The amino acid sequence surrounding K17-Ser44 matches the consensus for the AGC family of basophilic kinases. We show that p90 RSK1, an AGC kinase involved in the regulation of cell survival and proliferation, phosphorylates K17-Ser44 in skin keratinocytes. These findings confirm and expand the tight link that has emerged between K17 up-regulation and growth and stress responses in the skin epithelium.
Methods of Molecular Biology | 2007
Lesley A. Kane; Irina Neverova; Jennifer E. Van Eyk
Proteomic analysis of heart tissue is complicated by the large dynamic range of its proteins. The most abundant proteins are the myofilament proteins, which comprise the contractile apparatus. This chapter describes a protocol for fractionation of heart tissue that extracts the myofilament proteins into a separate sample fraction, allowing analysis of lower-abundance proteins. Importantly, this is performed in a manner that is compatible with two-dimensional electrophoresis and high-performance liquid chromatography, two of main technologies of proteomics. The method produces three fractions based on solubility at different pHs: (1) cytoplasmic-enriched extract (neutral pH), (2) myofilament-enriched extract (acidic pH), and (3) membrane protein-enriched pellet. Fractionation of heart tissue in this manner provides the basis for in-depth proteomic analysis.
Pharmacological Research | 2007
Giulio Agnetti; Lesley A. Kane; Carlo Guarnieri; Claudio M. Caldarera; J.E. Van Eyk