Liam St. Pierre
QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute
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Featured researches published by Liam St. Pierre.
Blood | 2009
Mettine H.A. Bos; Michael Boltz; Liam St. Pierre; Paul P. Masci; John de Jersey; Martin F. Lavin; Rodney M. Camire
Venomous snakes produce an array of toxic compounds, including procoagulants to defend themselves and incapacitate prey. The Australian snake Pseudonaja textilis has a venom-derived prothrombin activator homologous to coagulation factors V (FV) and Xa (FXa). Here we show that the FV component (pt-FV) has unique biologic properties that subvert the normal regulatory restraints intended to restrict an unregulated procoagulant response. Unlike human FV, recombinant pt-FV is constitutively active and does not require proteolytic processing to function. Sequence comparisons show that it has shed a large portion of the central B-domain, including residues that stabilize the inactive procofactor state. Remarkably, pt-FV functions in the absence of anionic membranes as it binds snake-FXa with high affinity in solution. Furthermore, despite cleavage in the heavy chain, pt-FV is functionally resistant to activated protein C, an anticoagulant. We speculate this stability is the result of noncovalent interactions and/or a unique disulfide bond in pt-FV linking the heavy and light chains. Taken together, these findings provide a biochemical rationale for the strong procoagulant nature of venom prothrombinase. Furthermore, they illustrate how regulatory mechanisms designed to limit the hemostatic response can be uncoupled to provide a sustained, disseminated procoagulant stimulus for use as a biologic toxin.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013
Tara L. Roberts; Uda Ho; John Luff; C. Soon Lee; Simon H. Apte; Kelli P. A. MacDonald; Liza J. Raggat; Allison R. Pettit; Carl A. Morrow; Michael J. Waters; Phil Chen; Rick Woods; Gethin P. Thomas; Liam St. Pierre; Camile S. Farah; Raymond A. Clarke; James A. L. Brown; Martin F. Lavin
SMG1 is a member of the phosphoinositide kinase-like kinase family of proteins that includes ATM, ATR, and DNA-PK, proteins with known roles in DNA damage and cellular stress responses. SMG1 has a well-characterized role in nonsense-mediated decay as well as suggested roles in the DNA damage response, resistance to oxidative stress, regulation of hypoxic responses, and apoptosis. To understand the roles of SMG1 further, we generated a Genetrap Smg1 mouse model. Smg1 homozygous KO mice were early embryonic lethal, but Smg1 heterozygous mice showed a predisposition to a range of cancers, particularly lung and hematopoietic malignancies, as well as development of chronic inflammation. These mice did not display deficiencies in known roles of SMG1, including nonsense-mediated decay. However, they showed elevated basal tissue and serum cytokine levels, indicating low-level inflammation before the development of tumors. Smg1 heterozygous mice also showed evidence of oxidative damage in tissues. These data suggest that the inflammation observed in Smg1 haploinsufficiency contributes to susceptibility to cancer and that Smg1-deficient animals represent a model of inflammation-enhanced cancer development.
British Journal of Haematology | 2005
Igor Filippovich; Natasha Sorokina; Liam St. Pierre; Simone Flight; John de Jersey; Naomi Perry; Paul P. Masci; Martin F. Lavin
The snake venom group C prothrombin activators contain a number of components that enhance the rate of prothrombin activation. The cloning and expression of full‐length cDNA for one of these components, an activated factor X (factor Xa)‐like protease from Pseudonaja textilis as well as the generation of functional chimeric constructs with procoagulant activity were described. The complete cDNA codes for a propeptide, light chain, activation peptide (AP) and heavy chain related in sequence to mammalian factor X. Efficient expression of the protease was achieved with constructs where the AP was deleted and the cleavage sites between the heavy and light chains modified, or where the AP was replaced with a peptide involved in insulin receptor processing. In human kidney cells (H293F) transfected with these constructs, up to 80% of the pro‐form was processed to heavy and light chains. Binding of the protease to barium citrate and use of specific antibodies demonstrated that γ‐carboxylation of glutamic acid residues had occurred on the light chain in both cases, as observed in human factor Xa and the native P. textilis protease. The recombinant protease caused efficient coagulation of whole citrated blood and citrated plasma that was enhanced by the presence of Ca2+. This study identified the complete cDNA sequence of a factor Xa‐like protease from P. textilis and demonstrated for the first time the expression of a recombinant form of P. textilis protease capable of blood coagulation.
Molecular Biology and Evolution | 2005
Liam St. Pierre; Paul P. Masci; Igor Filippovich; Natasha Sorokina; N. A. Marsh; David J. Miller; Martin F. Lavin
Proteomics | 2006
Stephen T.H. Earl; Geoff W. Birrell; Tristan P. Wallis; Liam St. Pierre; Paul P. Masci; John de Jersey; Jeffrey J. Gorman; Martin F. Lavin
Journal of Proteome Research | 2007
Liam St. Pierre; Geoff W. Birrell; Stephen T.H. Earl; Tristan P. Wallis; Jeffrey J. Gorman; John de Jersey; Paul P. Masci; Martin F. Lavin
Biochimie | 2011
Renee S. Richards; Liam St. Pierre; Manuela Trabi; Lambro A. Johnson; John de Jersey; Paul P. Masci; Martin F. Lavin
Handbook of venoms and toxins of reptiles | 2009
Martin F. Lavin; Stephen T.H. Earl; Geoff W. Birrell; Liam St. Pierre; Luke W. Guddat; John de Jersey; Paul P. Masci
Blood | 2007
Mettine H.A. Bos; Michael Boltz; Liam St. Pierre; Martin F. Lavin; Rodney M. Camire
Toxicology Letters | 2013
Liam St. Pierre; Paul P. Masci; Kong-Nan Zhao; John de Jersey; Martin F. Lavin