Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Martin Balastik is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Martin Balastik.


Nature | 2006

The prolyl isomerase Pin1 regulates amyloid precursor protein processing and amyloid-β production

Lucia Pastorino; Anyang Sun; Pei-Jung Lu; Xiao Zhen Zhou; Martin Balastik; Greg Finn; Gerburg Wulf; Jormay Lim; Shihua Li; Xiao-Jiang Li; Weiming Xia; Linda K. Nicholson; Kun Ping Lu

Neuropathological hallmarks of Alzheimers disease are neurofibrillary tangles composed of tau and neuritic plaques comprising amyloid-β peptides (Aβ) derived from amyloid precursor protein (APP), but their exact relationship remains elusive. Phosphorylation of tau and APP on certain serine or threonine residues preceding proline affects tangle formation and Aβ production in vitro. Phosphorylated Ser/Thr-Pro motifs in peptides can exist in cis or trans conformations, the conversion of which is catalysed by the Pin1 prolyl isomerase. Pin1 has been proposed to regulate protein function by accelerating conformational changes, but such activity has never been visualized and the biological and pathological significance of Pin1 substrate conformations is unknown. Notably, Pin1 is downregulated and/or inhibited by oxidation in Alzheimers disease neurons, Pin1 knockout causes tauopathy and neurodegeneration, and Pin1 promoter polymorphisms appear to associate with reduced Pin1 levels and increased risk for late-onset Alzheimers disease. However, the role of Pin1 in APP processing and Aβ production is unknown. Here we show that Pin1 has profound effects on APP processing and Aβ production. We find that Pin1 binds to the phosphorylated Thr 668-Pro motif in APP and accelerates its isomerization by over 1,000-fold, regulating the APP intracellular domain between two conformations, as visualized by NMR. Whereas Pin1 overexpression reduces Aβ secretion from cell cultures, knockout of Pin1 increases its secretion. Pin1 knockout alone or in combination with overexpression of mutant APP in mice increases amyloidogenic APP processing and selectively elevates insoluble Aβ42 (a major toxic species) in brains in an age-dependent manner, with Aβ42 being prominently localized to multivesicular bodies of neurons, as shown in Alzheimers disease before plaque pathology. Thus, Pin1-catalysed prolyl isomerization is a novel mechanism to regulate APP processing and Aβ production, and its deregulation may link both tangle and plaque pathologies. These findings provide new insight into the pathogenesis and treatment of Alzheimers disease.


Nature Cell Biology | 2009

Essential role of Pin1 in the regulation of TRF1 stability and telomere maintenance

Tae Ho Lee; Adrian Tun-Kyi; Rong Shi; Jormay Lim; Christina Y. Soohoo; Greg Finn; Martin Balastik; Lucia Pastorino; Gerburg Wulf; Xiao Zhen Zhou; Kun Ping Lu

Telomeres are essential for maintaining cellular proliferative capacity and their loss has been implicated in ageing. A key regulator in telomere maintenance is the telomeric protein TRF1, which was also identified as Pin2 in a screen for Pin1. Pin1 is a unique prolyl isomerase that regulates protein conformation and function after phosphorylation. However, little is known about the role of Pin1 in telomere regulation or the modulation of TRF1 by upstream signals. Here we identify TRF1 as a major conserved substrate for Pin1 during telomere maintenance and ageing. Pin1 inhibition renders TRF1 resistant to protein degradation, enhances TRF1 binding to telomeres, and leads to gradual telomere loss in human cells and in mice. Pin1-deficient mice also show widespread premature ageing phenotypes within just one generation, similar to those in telomerase-deficient mice after 4–5 consecutive generations. Thus, Pin1 is an essential regulator of TRF1 stability, telomere maintenance and ageing.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

Deficiency in ubiquitin ligase TRIM2 causes accumulation of neurofilament light chain and neurodegeneration

Martin Balastik; Francesco Ferraguti; André Pires-da Silva; Tae Ho Lee; Gonzalo Alvarez-Bolado; Kun Ping Lu; Peter Gruss

TRIM RING finger proteins have been shown to play an important role in cancerogenesis, in the pathogenesis of some human hereditary disorders, and in the defense against viral infection, but the function of the majority of TRIM proteins remains unknown. Here, we show that TRIM RING finger protein TRIM2, highly expressed in the nervous system, is an UbcH5a-dependent ubiquitin ligase. We further demonstrate that TRIM2 binds to neurofilament light subunit (NF-L) and regulates NF-L ubiquitination. Additionally, we show that mice deficient in TRIM2 have increased NF-L level in axons and NF-L-filled axonal swellings in cerebellum, retina, spinal cord, and cerebral cortex. The axonopathy is followed by progressive neurodegeneration accompanied by juvenile-onset tremor and ataxia. Our results demonstrate that TRIM2 is an ubiquitin ligase and point to a mechanism regulating NF-L metabolism through an ubiquitination pathway that, if deregulated, triggers neurodegeneration.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2008

Pin1 has opposite effects on wild-type and P301L tau stability and tauopathy.

Jormay Lim; Martin Balastik; Tae Ho Lee; Kazuhiro Nakamura; Yih-Cherng Liou; Anyang Sun; Greg Finn; Lucia Pastorino; Virginia M.-Y. Lee; Kun Ping Lu

Tau pathology is a hallmark of many neurodegenerative diseases including Alzheimer disease (AD) and frontotemporal dementia with Parkinsonism linked to chromosome 17 (FTDP-17). Genetic tau mutations can cause FTDP-17, and mice overexpressing tau mutants such as P301L tau are used as AD models. However, since no tau mutations are found in AD, it remains unclear how appropriate tau mutant mice are as an AD model. The prolyl isomerase Pin1 binds and isomerizes tau and has been implicated in protecting against neurodegeneration, but whether such Pin1 regulation is affected by tau mutations is unknown. Consistent with earlier findings that Pin1 KO induces tauopathy, here we demonstrate that Pin1 knockdown or KO increased WT tau protein stability in vitro and in mice and that Pin1 overexpression suppressed the tauopathy phenotype in WT tau transgenic mice. Unexpectedly, Pin1 knockdown or KO decreased P301L tau protein stability and abolished its robust tauopathy phenotype in mice. In contrast, Pin1 overexpression exacerbated the tauopathy phenotype in P301L tau mice. Thus, Pin1 has opposite effects on the tauopathy phenotype depending on whether the tau is WT or a P301L mutant, indicating the need for disease-specific therapies for tauopathies.


Molecular Cell | 2012

Negative Regulation of the Stability and Tumor Suppressor Function of Fbw7 by the Pin1 Prolyl Isomerase

Sang Hyun Min; Alan W. Lau; Tae Ho Lee; Hiroyuki Inuzuka; Shuo Wei; Pengyu Huang; Shavali Shaik; Daniel Yenhong Lee; Greg Finn; Martin Balastik; Chun Hau Chen; Manli Luo; Adriana E. Tron; James A. DeCaprio; Xiao Zhen Zhou; Wenyi Wei; Kun Ping Lu

Fbw7 is the substrate recognition component of the Skp1-Cullin-F-box (SCF)-type E3 ligase complex and a well-characterized tumor suppressor that targets numerous oncoproteins for destruction. Genomic deletion or mutation of FBW7 has been frequently found in various types of human cancers; however, little is known about the upstream signaling pathway(s) governing Fbw7 stability and cellular functions. Here we report that Fbw7 protein destruction and tumor suppressor function are negatively regulated by the prolyl isomerase Pin1. Pin1 interacts with Fbw7 in a phoshorylation-dependent manner and promotes Fbw7 self-ubiquitination and protein degradation by disrupting Fbw7 dimerization. Consequently, overexpressing Pin1 reduces Fbw7 abundance and suppresses Fbw7s ability to inhibit proliferation and transformation. By contrast, depletion of Pin1 in cancer cells leads to elevated Fbw7 expression, which subsequently reduces Mcl-1 abundance, sensitizing cancer cells to Taxol. Thus, Pin1-mediated inhibition of Fbw7 contributes to oncogenesis, and Pin1 may be a promising drug target for anticancer therapy.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2008

Relative Resistance of Cdk5-phosphorylated CRMP2 to Dephosphorylation

Adam R. Cole; Marc P.M. Soutar; Makoto Rembutsu; Lidy van Aalten; C. James Hastie; Hilary McLauchlan; Mark Peggie; Martin Balastik; Kun Ping Lu; Calum Sutherland

Collapsin response mediator protein 2 (CRMP2) binds to microtubules and regulates axon outgrowth in neurons. This action is regulated by sequential phosphorylation by the kinases cyclin-dependent kinase 5 (Cdk5) and glycogen synthase kinase 3 (GSK3) at sites that are hyperphosphorylated in Alzheimer disease. The increased phosphorylation in Alzheimer disease could be due to increases in Cdk5 and/or GSK3 activity or, alternatively, through decreased activity of a CRMP phosphatase. Here we establish that dephosphorylation of CRMP2 at the residues targeted by GSK3 (Ser-518/Thr-514/Thr-509) is carried out by a protein phosphatase 1 family member in vitro, in neuroblastoma cells, and primary cortical neurons. Inhibition of GSK3 activity using insulin-like growth factor-1 or the highly selective inhibitor CT99021 causes rapid dephosphorylation of CRMP2 at these sites. In contrast, pharmacological inhibition of Cdk5 using purvalanol results in only a gradual and incomplete dephosphorylation of CRMP2 at the site targeted by Cdk5 (Ser-522), suggesting a distinct phosphatase targets this residue. A direct comparison of dephosphorylation at the Cdk5 versus GSK3 sites in vitro shows that the Cdk5 site is comparatively resistant to phosphatase treatment. The presence of the peptidyl-prolyl isomerase enzyme, Pin1, does not affect dephosphorylation of Ser-522 in vitro, in cells, or in Pin1 transgenic mice. Instead, the relatively high resistance of this site to phosphatase treatment is at least in part due to the presence of basic residues located nearby. Similar sequences in Tau are also highly resistant to phosphatase treatment. We propose that relative resistance to phosphatases might be a common feature of Cdk5 substrates and could contribute to the hyperphosphorylation of CRMP2 and Tau observed in Alzheimer disease.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2012

C/EBPγ deregulation results in differentiation arrest in acute myeloid leukemia.

Meritxell Alberich-Jorda; Bas J. Wouters; Martin Balastik; Clara Shapiro-Koss; Hong Zhang; Annalisa DiRuscio; Hanna S. Radomska; Alexander K. Ebralidze; Giovanni Amabile; Min Ye; Junyan Zhang; Irene Lowers; Roberto Avellino; Ari Melnick; Maria E. Figueroa; Ruud Delwel; Daniel G. Tenen

C/EBPs are a family of transcription factors that regulate growth control and differentiation of various tissues. We found that C/EBPγ is highly upregulated in a subset of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) samples characterized by C/EBPα hypermethylation/silencing. Similarly, C/EBPγ was upregulated in murine hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells lacking C/EBPα, as C/EBPα mediates C/EBPγ suppression. Studies in myeloid cells demonstrated that CEBPG overexpression blocked neutrophilic differentiation. Further, downregulation of Cebpg in murine Cebpa-deficient stem/progenitor cells or in human CEBPA-silenced AML samples restored granulocytic differentiation. In addition, treatment of these leukemias with demethylating agents restored the C/EBPα-C/EBPγ balance and upregulated the expression of myeloid differentiation markers. Our results indicate that C/EBPγ mediates the myeloid differentiation arrest induced by C/EBPα deficiency and that targeting the C/EBPα-C/EBPγ axis rescues neutrophilic differentiation in this unique subset of AMLs.


Cell Reports | 2015

Prolyl Isomerase Pin1 Regulates Axon Guidance by Stabilizing CRMP2A Selectively in Distal Axons

Martin Balastik; Xiao Zhen Zhou; Meritxell Alberich-Jorda; Romana Weissova; Jakub Žiak; Maria F. Pazyra-Murphy; Katharina E. Cosker; Olga Machonova; Iryna Kozmikova; Chun-Hau Chen; Lucia Pastorino; John M. Asara; Adam R. Cole; Calum Sutherland; Rosalind A. Segal; Kun Ping Lu

Axon guidance relies on precise translation of extracellular signal gradients into local changes in cytoskeletal dynamics, but the molecular mechanisms regulating dose-dependent responses of growth cones are still poorly understood. Here, we show that during embryonic development in growing axons, a low level of Semaphorin3A stimulation is buffered by the prolyl isomerase Pin1. We demonstrate that Pin1 stabilizes CDK5-phosphorylated CRMP2A, the major isoform of CRMP2 in distal axons. Consequently, Pin1 knockdown or knockout reduces CRMP2A levels specifically in distal axons and inhibits axon growth, which can be fully rescued by Pin1 or CRMP2A expression. Moreover, Pin1 knockdown or knockout increases sensitivity to Sema3A-induced growth cone collapse in vitro and in vivo, leading to developmental abnormalities in axon guidance. These results identify an important isoform-specific function and regulation of CRMP2A in controlling axon growth and uncover Pin1-catalyzed prolyl isomerization as a regulatory mechanism in axon guidance.


Haematologica | 2014

The gene signature in CCAAT-enhancer-binding protein α dysfunctional acute myeloid leukemia predicts responsiveness to histone deacetylase inhibitors.

Adam L. Liss; ChiaHuey Ooi; Polina Zjablovskaja; Touati Benoukraf; Hanna S. Radomska; Chen Ju; Mengchu Wu; Martin Balastik; Ruud Delwel; Tomas Brdicka; Patrick Tan; Daniel G. Tenen; Meritxell Alberich-Jorda

C/EPBα proteins, encoded by the CCAAT-enhancer-binding protein α gene, play a crucial role in granulocytic development, and defects in this transcription factor have been reported in acute myeloid leukemia. Here, we defined the C/EBPα signature characterized by a set of genes up-regulated upon C/EBPα activation. We analyzed expression of the C/EBPα signature in a cohort of 525 patients with acute myeloid leukemia and identified a subset characterized by low expression of this signature. We referred to this group of patients as the C/EBPα dysfunctional subset. Remarkably, a large percentage of samples harboring C/EBPα biallelic mutations clustered within this subset. We hypothesize that re-activation of the C/EBPα signature in the C/EBPα dysfunctional subset could have therapeutic potential. In search for small molecules able to reverse the low expression of the C/EBPα signature we applied the connectivity map. This analysis predicted positive connectivity between the C/EBPα activation signature and histone deacetylase inhibitors. We showed that these inhibitors reactivate expression of the C/EBPα signature and promote granulocytic differentiation of primary samples from the C/EBPα dysfunctional subset harboring biallelic C/EBPα mutations. Altogether, our study identifies histone deacetylase inhibitors as potential candidates for the treatment of certain leukemias characterized by down-regulation of the C/EBPα signature.


Journal of Alzheimer's Disease | 2012

Alzheimer's Disease-Related Loss of Pin1 Function Influences the Intracellular Localization and the Processing of AβPP

Lucia Pastorino; Suk Ling Ma; Martin Balastik; Pengyu Huang; Darshan Pandya; Linda K. Nicholson; Kun Ping Lu

Increased amyloidogenic processing of the amyloid-β protein precursor (AβPP) is a characteristic of Alzheimers disease (AD). We previously observed that the prolyl isomerase Pin1, which is down-regulated in AD, regulates AβPP conformation accelerating cis/trans isomerization of the phospho-Thr668-Pro669 peptide bond, and that Pin1 knockout in mice increases the amyloidogenic processing of AβPP, although the underlying mechanism is still unknown. Since the intracellular localization of AβPP determines whether the processing will be amyloidogenic or non-amyloidogenic, here we addressed the question whether loss of Pin1 function affects the intracellular localization of AβPP, influencing AβPP processing. Using cellular models of Pin1 knockout and Pin1 knockdown, we have demonstrated that lowering Pin1 levels changed the intracellular localization and the processing of AβPP. Under these conditions, less AβPP was retained at the plasma membrane favoring the amyloidogenic processing, and the kinetics of AβPP internalization increased as well as the nuclear trafficking of AβPP C-terminal fragment AICD. In addition, AβPPThr668Ala mutant, which cannot bind to Pin1 and retains more trans conformation, rescued the levels of AβPP at the plasma membrane in Pin1 knockout cells. Thus, loss of Pin1 function contributes to amyloidogenic pathways, by facilitating both the removal of AβPP from compartments where it is mostly non-amyloidogenic and its internalization to more amyloidogenic compartments. These data suggest that physiological levels of Pin1 are important to control the intracellular localization and metabolic fate of Thr668-phosphorylated AβPP, and regulation of AβPP conformation is especially important in pathologic conditions of AβPP hyperphosphorylation and/or loss of Pin1 function, associated with AD.

Collaboration


Dive into the Martin Balastik's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Kun Ping Lu

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Lucia Pastorino

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ruud Delwel

Erasmus University Medical Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Greg Finn

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jormay Lim

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Xiao Zhen Zhou

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Polina Zjablovskaja

Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Tomas Brdicka

Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge