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Dive into the research topics where Matthew P. Stokes is active.

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Featured researches published by Matthew P. Stokes.


Cell | 2007

Global Survey of Phosphotyrosine Signaling Identifies Oncogenic Kinases in Lung Cancer

Klarisa Rikova; Ailan Guo; Qingfu Zeng; Anthony Possemato; Jian Yu; Herbert Haack; Julie Nardone; Kimberly Lee; Cynthia Reeves; Yu Li; Yerong Hu; Zhiping Tan; Matthew P. Stokes; Laura Sullivan; Jeffrey Mitchell; Randy Wetzel; Joan MacNeill; Jian Min Ren; Jin Yuan; Corey E. Bakalarski; Judit Villén; Jon M. Kornhauser; Bradley L. Smith; Daiqiang Li; Xinmin Zhou; Steven P. Gygi; Ting Lei Gu; Roberto D. Polakiewicz; John Rush; Michael J. Comb

Despite the success of tyrosine kinase-based cancer therapeutics, for most solid tumors the tyrosine kinases that drive disease remain unknown, limiting our ability to identify drug targets and predict response. Here we present the first large-scale survey of tyrosine kinase activity in lung cancer. Using a phosphoproteomic approach, we characterize tyrosine kinase signaling across 41 non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) cell lines and over 150 NSCLC tumors. Profiles of phosphotyrosine signaling are generated and analyzed to identify known oncogenic kinases such as EGFR and c-Met as well as novel ALK and ROS fusion proteins. Other activated tyrosine kinases such as PDGFRalpha and DDR1 not previously implicated in the genesis of NSCLC are also identified. By focusing on activated cell circuitry, the approach outlined here provides insight into cancer biology not available at the chromosomal and transcriptional levels and can be applied broadly across all human cancers.


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

Signaling networks assembled by oncogenic EGFR and c-Met.

Ailan Guo; Judit Villén; Jon M. Kornhauser; Kimberly Lee; Matthew P. Stokes; Klarisa Rikova; Anthony Possemato; Julie Nardone; Gregory Innocenti; Randall K. Wetzel; Yi Wang; Joan MacNeill; Jeffrey Mitchell; Steven P. Gygi; John Rush; Roberto D. Polakiewicz; Michael J. Comb

A major question regarding the sensitivity of solid tumors to targeted kinase inhibitors is why some tumors respond and others do not. The observation that many tumors express EGF receptor (EGFR), yet only a small subset with EGFR-activating mutations respond clinically to EGFR inhibitors (EGFRIs), suggests that responsive tumors uniquely depend on EGFR signaling for their survival. The nature of this dependence is not understood. Here, we investigate dependence on EGFR signaling by comparing non-small-cell lung cancer cell lines driven by EGFR-activating mutations and genomic amplifications using a global proteomic analysis of phospho-tyrosine signaling. We identify an extensive receptor tyrosine kinase signaling network established in cells expressing mutated and activated EGFR or expressing amplified c-Met. We show that in drug sensitive cells the targeted tyrosine kinase drives other RTKs and an extensive network of downstream signaling that collapse with drug treatment. Comparison of the signaling networks in EGFR and c-Met-dependent cells identify a “core network” of ≈50 proteins that participate in pathways mediating drug response.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

Profiling of UV-induced ATM/ATR signaling pathways

Matthew P. Stokes; John Rush; Joan MacNeill; Jian Min Ren; Kam Sprott; Julie Nardone; Vicky Yang; Sean A. Beausoleil; Steven P. Gygi; Mark Livingstone; Hui Zhang; Roberto D. Polakiewicz; Michael J. Comb

To ensure survival in the face of genomic insult, cells have evolved complex mechanisms to respond to DNA damage, termed the DNA damage checkpoint. The serine/threonine kinases ataxia telangiectasia-mutated (ATM) and ATM and Rad3-related (ATR) activate checkpoint signaling by phosphorylating substrate proteins at SQ/TQ motifs. Although some ATM/ATR substrates (Chk1, p53) have been identified, the lack of a more complete list of substrates limits current understanding of checkpoint pathways. Here, we use immunoaffinity phosphopeptide isolation coupled with mass spectrometry to identify 570 sites phosphorylated in UV-damaged cells, 498 of which are previously undescribed. Semiquantitative analysis yielded 24 known and 192 previously uncharacterized sites differentially phosphorylated upon UV damage, some of which were confirmed by SILAC, Western blotting, and immunoprecipitation/Western blotting. ATR-specific phosphorylation was investigated by using a Seckel syndrome (ATR mutant) cell line. Together, these results provide a rich resource for further deciphering ATM/ATR signaling and the pathways mediating the DNA damage response.


Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2012

PTMScan Direct: Identification and Quantification of Peptides from Critical Signaling Proteins by Immunoaffinity Enrichment Coupled with LC-MS/MS

Matthew P. Stokes; Charles Farnsworth; Albrecht Moritz; Xiaoying Jia; Kimberly Lee; Ailan Guo; Roberto Polakiewicz; Michael J. Comb

Proteomic studies of post-translational modifications by metal affinity or antibody-based methods often employ data-dependent analysis, providing rich data sets that consist of randomly sampled identified peptides because of the dynamic response of the mass spectrometer. This can complicate the primary goal of programs for drug development, mutational analysis, and kinase profiling studies, which is to monitor how multiple nodes of known, critical signaling pathways are affected by a variety of treatment conditions. Cell Signaling Technology has developed an immunoaffinity-based LC-MS/MS method called PTMScan Direct for multiplexed analysis of these important signaling proteins. PTMScan Direct enables the identification and quantification of hundreds of peptides derived from specific proteins in signaling pathways or specific protein types. Cell lines, tissues, or xenografts can be used as starting material. PTMScan Direct is compatible with both SILAC and label-free quantification. Current PTMScan Direct reagents target key nodes of many signaling pathways (PTMScan Direct: Multipathway), serine/threonine kinases, tyrosine kinases, and the Akt/PI3K pathway. Validation of each reagent includes score filtering of MS/MS assignments, filtering by identification of peptides derived from expected targets, identification of peptides homologous to expected targets, minimum signal intensity of peptide ions, and dependence upon the presence of the reagent itself compared with a negative control. The Multipathway reagent was used to study sensitivity of human cancer cell lines to receptor tyrosine kinase inhibitors and showed consistent results with previously published studies. The Ser/Thr kinase reagent was used to compare relative levels of kinase-derived phosphopeptides in mouse liver, brain, and embryo, showing tissue-specific activity of many kinases including Akt and PKC family members. PTMScan Direct will be a powerful quantitative method for elucidation of changes in signaling in a wide array of experimental systems, combining the specificity of traditional biochemical methods with the high number of data points and dynamic range of proteomic methods.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011

Ubiquitin ligase substrate identification through quantitative proteomics at both the protein and peptide levels

Kimberly Lee; Lisa P. Hammerle; Paul S. Andrews; Matthew P. Stokes; Tomas Mustelin; Roy A. Black; John R. Doedens

Background: Identification of ubiquitin ligase substrates remains an unmet challenge. Results: Two proteomic strategies were used to identify novel substrates of the E3 ligase HRD1. Conclusion: These methods identified populations of substrates enriched for potential targets of endoplasmic reticulum-associated degradation. Significance: This approach should be broadly useful for E3 ligase substrate identification, and the identified substrates provide insight into the role of HRD1 in disease. Protein ubiquitination is a key regulatory process essential to life at a cellular level; significant efforts have been made to identify ubiquitinated proteins through proteomics studies, but the level of success has not reached that of heavily studied post-translational modifications, such as phosphorylation. HRD1, an E3 ubiquitin ligase, has been implicated in rheumatoid arthritis, but no disease-relevant substrates have been identified. To identify these substrates, we have taken both peptide and protein level approaches to enrich for ubiquitinated proteins in the presence and absence of HRD1. At the protein level, a two-step strategy was taken using cells expressing His6-tagged ubiquitin, enriching proteins first based on their ubiquitination and second based on the His tag with protein identification by LC-MS/MS. Application of this method resulted in identification and quantification of more than 400 ubiquitinated proteins, a fraction of which were found to be sensitive to HRD1 and were therefore deemed candidate substrates. In a second approach, ubiquitinated peptides were enriched after tryptic digestion by peptide immunoprecipitation using an antibody specific for the diglycine-labeled internal lysine residue indicative of protein ubiquitination, with peptides and ubiquitination sites identified by LC-MS/MS. Peptide immunoprecipitation resulted in identification of over 1800 ubiquitinated peptides on over 900 proteins in each study, with several proteins emerging as sensitive to HRD1 levels. Notably, significant overlap exists between the HRD1 substrates identified by the protein-based and the peptide-based strategies, with clear cross-validation apparent both qualitatively and quantitatively, demonstrating the effectiveness of both strategies and furthering our understanding of HRD1 biology.


Journal of Proteomics | 2010

Phosphoproteomic characterization of PYK2 signaling pathways involved in osteogenesis

Peter C. Bonnette; Brett S. Robinson; Matthew P. Stokes; Arthur D. Brosius; Amy Baumann; Leonard Buckbinder

The PYK2 tyrosine kinase is a negative regulator of bone formation, but aside from the requirement for PYK2 kinase activity there has been little progress toward understanding of the molecular mechanism involved in this function. To gain insight into the signaling pathways modulated by PYK2 we sought to identify PYK2 substrates. Challenges inherent to a quantitative phosphoproteomic analysis for non-receptor tyrosine kinases were overcome by employing an inducible PYK2 overexpression system in NIH3T3 cells in combination with a selective PYK2 inhibitor. The identification of a number of known PYK2 substrates and interacting partners validated the methodology. Results of the inducible cell system were extended to a cell model of osteogenesis, examining the effect of the PYK2 inhibitor on the phosphorylation state of targets identified in the phosphoproteomic study. Consistent with phosphoproteomic analysis, increased osteogenesis associated with a selective PYK2 inhibitor was accompanied by reduced phosphorylation of paxillin, Gab1 and p130(Cas), along with reduction of phosphorylation levels of the Met activation loop. These results further confirmed the utility of the methodology and point to a previously unknown bi-directional activation pathway between PYK2 and Met.


Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2013

Systems-wide analysis of K-Ras, Cdc42 and PAK4 signaling by quantitative phosphoproteomics

Florian Gnad; Amy E. Young; Wei Zhou; Karen Lyle; Christy C. Ong; Matthew P. Stokes; Marcia Belvin; Lori Friedman; Hartmut Koeppen; Audrey Minden; Klaus P. Hoeflich

Although K-Ras, Cdc42, and PAK4 signaling are commonly deregulated in cancer, only a few studies have sought to comprehensively examine the spectrum of phosphorylation-mediated signaling downstream of each of these key signaling nodes. In this study, we completed a label-free quantitative analysis of oncogenic K-Ras, activated Cdc42, and PAK4-mediated phosphorylation signaling, and report relative quantitation of 2152 phosphorylated peptides on 1062 proteins. We define the overlap in phosphopeptides regulated by K-Ras, Cdc42, and PAK4, and find that perturbation of these signaling components affects phosphoproteins associated with microtubule depolymerization, cytoskeletal organization, and the cell cycle. These findings provide a resource for future studies to characterize novel targets of oncogenic K-Ras signaling and validate biomarkers of PAK4 inhibition.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015

A respiratory chain controlled signal transduction cascade in the mitochondrial intermembrane space mediates hydrogen peroxide signaling

Heide Christine Patterson; Carolin Gerbeth; Prathapan Thiru; Nora Vögtle; Marko Knoll; Aliakbar Shahsafaei; Kaitlin E. Samocha; Cher X. Huang; Mark Michael Harden; Rui Song; Cynthia Chen; Jennifer Kao; Jiahai Shi; Wendy Salmon; Yoav D. Shaul; Matthew P. Stokes; George W. Bell; Daniel G. MacArthur; Jürgen Ruland; Chris Meisinger; Harvey F. Lodish

Significance Both the mitochondrial respiratory chain and reactive oxygen species (ROS) control numerous physiological and pathological cellular responses. ROS such as hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) are thought to initiate signaling by broadly and nonspecifically redox-modifying signaling molecules, suggesting that H2O2 signaling may be distinct from other signal transduction pathways. Here, we provide evidence suggesting that H2O2 signaling is under control of what appears to be a typical signal transduction cascade that connects the respiratory chain to the mitochondrial intermembrane space-localized conserved Syk pathway and results in a focused signaling response in diverse cell types. The results thus reveal a mechanism that allows the respiratory chain to communicate with the remainder of the cell in response to ROS. Reactive oxygen species (ROS) such as hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) govern cellular homeostasis by inducing signaling. H2O2 modulates the activity of phosphatases and many other signaling molecules through oxidation of critical cysteine residues, which led to the notion that initiation of ROS signaling is broad and nonspecific, and thus fundamentally distinct from other signaling pathways. Here, we report that H2O2 signaling bears hallmarks of a regular signal transduction cascade. It is controlled by hierarchical signaling events resulting in a focused response as the results place the mitochondrial respiratory chain upstream of tyrosine-protein kinase Lyn, Lyn upstream of tyrosine-protein kinase SYK (Syk), and Syk upstream of numerous targets involved in signaling, transcription, translation, metabolism, and cell cycle regulation. The active mediators of H2O2 signaling colocalize as H2O2 induces mitochondria-associated Lyn and Syk phosphorylation, and a pool of Lyn and Syk reside in the mitochondrial intermembrane space. Finally, the same intermediaries control the signaling response in tissues and species responsive to H2O2 as the respiratory chain, Lyn, and Syk were similarly required for H2O2 signaling in mouse B cells, fibroblasts, and chicken DT40 B cells. Consistent with a broad role, the Syk pathway is coexpressed across tissues, is of early metazoan origin, and displays evidence of evolutionary constraint in the human. These results suggest that H2O2 signaling is under control of a signal transduction pathway that links the respiratory chain to the mitochondrial intermembrane space-localized, ubiquitous, and ancient Syk pathway in hematopoietic and nonhematopoietic cells.


PLOS Computational Biology | 2015

Neuroblastoma Tyrosine Kinase Signaling Networks Involve FYN and LYN in Endosomes and Lipid Rafts

Juan Palacios-Moreno; Lauren Foltz; Ailan Guo; Matthew P. Stokes; Emily D. Kuehn; Lynn George; Michael J. Comb; Mark L. Grimes

Protein phosphorylation plays a central role in creating a highly dynamic network of interacting proteins that reads and responds to signals from growth factors in the cellular microenvironment. Cells of the neural crest employ multiple signaling mechanisms to control migration and differentiation during development. It is known that defects in these mechanisms cause neuroblastoma, but how multiple signaling pathways interact to govern cell behavior is unknown. In a phosphoproteomic study of neuroblastoma cell lines and cell fractions, including endosomes and detergent-resistant membranes, 1622 phosphorylated proteins were detected, including more than half of the receptor tyrosine kinases in the human genome. Data were analyzed using a combination of graph theory and pattern recognition techniques that resolve data structure into networks that incorporate statistical relationships and protein-protein interaction data. Clusters of proteins in these networks are indicative of functional signaling pathways. The analysis indicates that receptor tyrosine kinases are functionally compartmentalized into distinct collaborative groups distinguished by activation and intracellular localization of SRC-family kinases, especially FYN and LYN. Changes in intracellular localization of activated FYN and LYN were observed in response to stimulation of the receptor tyrosine kinases, ALK and KIT. The results suggest a mechanism to distinguish signaling responses to activation of different receptors, or combinations of receptors, that govern the behavior of the neural crest, which gives rise to neuroblastoma.


PLOS ONE | 2013

HDAC4 Does Not Act as a Protein Deacetylase in the Postnatal Murine Brain In Vivo

Michal Mielcarek; Tamara Seredenina; Matthew P. Stokes; Georgina F. Osborne; Christian Landles; Linda Inuabasi; Sophie A. Franklin; Ruth Luthi-Carter; Vahri Beaumont; Gillian P. Bates

Reversible protein acetylation provides a central mechanism for controlling gene expression and cellular signaling events. It is governed by the antagonistic commitment of two enzymes families: the histone acetyltransferases (HATs) and the histone deacetylases (HDACs). HDAC4, like its class IIa counterparts, is a potent transcriptional repressor through interactions with tissue specific transcription factors via its N-terminal domain. Whilst the lysine deacetylase activity of the class IIa HDACs is much less potent than that of the class I enzymes, HDAC4 has been reported to influence protein deacetylation through its interaction with HDAC3. To investigate the influence of HDAC4 on protein acetylation we employed the immunoaffinity-based AcetylScan proteomic method. We identified many proteins known to be modified by acetylation, but found that the absence of HDAC4 had no effect on the acetylation profile of the murine neonate brain. This is consistent with the biochemical data suggesting that HDAC4 may not function as a lysine deacetylase, but these in vivo data do not support the previous report showing that the enzymatic activity of HDAC3 might be modified by its interaction with HDAC4. To complement this work, we used Affymetrix arrays to investigate the effect of HDAC4 knock-out on the transcriptional profile of the postnatal murine brain. There was no effect on global transcription, consistent with the absence of a differential histone acetylation profile. Validation of the array data by Taq-man qPCR indicated that only protamine 1 and Igfbp6 mRNA levels were increased by more than one-fold and only Calml4 was decreased. The lack of a major effect on the transcriptional profile is consistent with the cytoplasmic location of HDAC4 in the P3 murine brain.

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Ailan Guo

Cell Signaling Technology

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Albrecht Moritz

Cell Signaling Technology

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Klarisa Rikova

Cell Signaling Technology

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Kimberly Lee

Cell Signaling Technology

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Yu Li

Cell Signaling Technology

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John Rush

Cell Signaling Technology

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Peter Hornbeck

Cell Signaling Technology

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Valerie Goss

Cell Signaling Technology

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