Morvarid Mohseni
Harvard University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Morvarid Mohseni.
Cell | 2014
Masaki Mori; Robinson Triboulet; Morvarid Mohseni; Karin Schlegelmilch; Kriti Shrestha; Fernando D. Camargo; Richard I. Gregory
Global downregulation of microRNAs (miRNAs) is commonly observed in human cancers and can have a causative role in tumorigenesis. The mechanisms responsible for this phenomenon remain poorly understood. Here, we show that YAP, the downstream target of the tumor-suppressive Hippo-signaling pathway regulates miRNA biogenesis in a cell-density-dependent manner. At low cell density, nuclear YAP binds and sequesters p72 (DDX17), a regulatory component of the miRNA-processing machinery. At high cell density, Hippo-mediated cytoplasmic retention of YAP facilitates p72 association with Microprocessor and binding to a specific sequence motif in pri-miRNAs. Inactivation of the Hippo pathway or expression of constitutively active YAP causes widespread miRNA suppression in cells and tumors and a corresponding posttranscriptional induction of MYC expression. Thus, the Hippo pathway links contact-inhibition regulation to miRNA biogenesis and may be responsible for the widespread miRNA repression observed in cancer.
Nature Cell Biology | 2014
Morvarid Mohseni; Jianlong Sun; Allison N. Lau; Stephen Curtis; Jeffrey D. Goldsmith; Victor L. Fox; Chongjuan Wei; Marsha L. Frazier; Owen Samson; Kwok K. Wong; Carla F. Kim; Fernando D. Camargo
The Hippo–YAP pathway is an emerging signalling cascade involved in the regulation of stem cell activity and organ size. To identify components of this pathway, we performed an RNAi-based kinome screen in human cells. Our screen identified several kinases not previously associated with Hippo signalling that control multiple cellular processes. One of the hits, LKB1, is a common tumour suppressor whose mechanism of action is only partially understood. We demonstrate that LKB1 acts through its substrates of the microtubule affinity-regulating kinase family to regulate the localization of the polarity determinant Scribble and the activity of the core Hippo kinases. Our data also indicate that YAP is functionally important for the tumour suppressive effects of LKB1. Our results identify a signalling axis that links YAP activation with LKB1 mutations, and have implications for the treatment of LKB1-mutant human malignancies. In addition, our findings provide insight into upstream signals of the Hippo–YAP signalling cascade.
The EMBO Journal | 2014
Allison N. Lau; Stephen Curtis; Christine M. Fillmore; Samuel P. Rowbotham; Morvarid Mohseni; Darcy E. Wagner; Alexander M. Beede; Daniel T. Montoro; Kerstin W. Sinkevicius; Zandra E. Walton; Juliana Barrios; Daniel J. Weiss; Fernando D. Camargo; Kwok-Kin Wong; Carla F. Kim
Metastasis is the leading cause of morbidity for lung cancer patients. Here we demonstrate that murine tumor propagating cells (TPCs) with the markers Sca1 and CD24 are enriched for metastatic potential in orthotopic transplantation assays. CD24 knockdown decreased the metastatic potential of lung cancer cell lines resembling TPCs. In lung cancer patient data sets, metastatic spread and patient survival could be stratified with a murine lung TPC gene signature. The TPC signature was enriched for genes in the Hippo signaling pathway. Knockdown of the Hippo mediators Yap1 or Taz decreased in vitro cellular migration and transplantation of metastatic disease. Furthermore, constitutively active Yap was sufficient to drive lung tumor progression in vivo. These results demonstrate functional roles for two different pathways, CD24‐dependent and Yap/Taz‐dependent pathways, in lung tumor propagation and metastasis. This study demonstrates the utility of TPCs for identifying molecules contributing to metastatic lung cancer, potentially enabling the therapeutic targeting of this devastating disease.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2008
Anwar A. Khan; Toshihiko Hanada; Morvarid Mohseni; Jong-Jin Jeong; Lixiao Zeng; Massimiliano Gaetani; Donghai Li; Brent C. Reed; David W. Speicher; Athar H. Chishti
Dematin and adducin are actin-binding proteins located at the spectrin-actin junctions, also called the junctional complex, in the erythrocyte membrane. Here we propose a new model whereby dematin and adducin link the junctional complex to human erythrocyte plasma membrane. Using a combination of surface labeling, immunoprecipitation, and vesicle proteomics approaches, we have identified glucose transporter-1 as the receptor for dematin and adducin in the human erythrocyte membrane. This finding is the first description of a transmembrane protein that binds to dematin and adducin, thus providing a rationale for the attachment of the junctional complex to the lipid bilayer. Because homologues of dematin, adducin, and glucose transporter-1 exist in many non-erythroid cells, we propose that a conserved mechanism may exist that couples sugar and other related transporters to the actin cytoskeleton.
Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2008
Morvarid Mohseni; Athar H. Chishti
ABSTRACT RhoA is known to participate in cytoskeletal remodeling events through several signaling pathways, yet the precise mechanism of its activation remains unknown. Here, we provide the first evidence that dematin functions upstream of RhoA and regulates its activation. Primary mouse embryonic fibroblasts were generated from a dematin headpiece domain null (HPKO) mouse, and the visualization of the actin morphology revealed a time-dependent defect in stress fiber formation, membrane protrusions, cell motility, and cell adhesion. Rescue experiments using RNA interference and transfection assays revealed that the observed phenotypes are due to a null effect and not a gain of function in the mutant fibroblasts. In vivo wounding of adult HPKO mouse skin showed a decrease in wound healing (reepithelialization and granulation) compared to the wild-type control. Biochemical analysis of the HPKO fibroblasts revealed a sustained hyperphosphorylation of focal adhesion kinase (FAK) at tyrosine 397 as well as a twofold increase in RhoA activation. Inhibition of both RhoA and FAK signaling using C3 toxin and FRNK (focal adhesion kinase nonrelated kinase), respectively, revealed that dematin acts upstream of RhoA. Together, these results unveil a new function of dematin as a negative regulator of the RhoA activation pathway with physiological implications for normal and pathogenic signaling pathways.
Nature Medicine | 2018
Leila Dardaei; Hui Qin Wang; Manrose Singh; Paul Fordjour; Katherine X Shaw; Satoshi Yoda; Grainne Kerr; Kristine Yu; Jinsheng Liang; Yichen Cao; Yan Chen; Michael S. Lawrence; Adam Langenbucher; Justin F. Gainor; Luc Friboulet; Ibiayi Dagogo-Jack; David T. Myers; Emma Labrot; David A. Ruddy; Melissa Parks; Dana Lee; Richard H. DiCecca; Susan E. Moody; Huai-Xiang Hao; Morvarid Mohseni; Matthew J. LaMarche; Juliet Williams; Keith Hoffmaster; Giordano Caponigro; Alice T. Shaw
Most anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK)-rearranged non-small-cell lung tumors initially respond to small-molecule ALK inhibitors, but drug resistance often develops. Of tumors that develop resistance to highly potent second-generation ALK inhibitors, approximately half harbor resistance mutations in ALK, while the other half have other mechanisms underlying resistance. Members of the latter group often have activation of at least one of several different tyrosine kinases driving resistance. Such tumors are not expected to respond to lorlatinib—a third-generation inhibitor targeting ALK that is able to overcome all clinically identified resistant mutations in ALK—and further therapeutic options are limited. Herein, we deployed a shRNA screen of 1,000 genes in multiple ALK-inhibitor-resistant patient-derived cells (PDCs) to discover those that confer sensitivity to ALK inhibition. This approach identified SHP2, a nonreceptor protein tyrosine phosphatase, as a common targetable resistance node in multiple PDCs. SHP2 provides a parallel survival input downstream of multiple tyrosine kinases that promote resistance to ALK inhibitors. Treatment with SHP099, the recently discovered small-molecule inhibitor of SHP2, in combination with the ALK tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) ceritinib halted the growth of resistant PDCs through preventing compensatory RAS and ERK1 and ERK2 (ERK1/2) reactivation. These findings suggest that combined ALK and SHP2 inhibition may be a promising therapeutic strategy for resistant cancers driven by several different ALK-independent mechanisms underlying resistance.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2017
Jonathan R. LaRochelle; Michelle Fodor; Jana M. Ellegast; Xiaoxi Liu; Vidyasiri Vemulapalli; Morvarid Mohseni; Travis Stams; Sara J. Buhrlage; Kimberly Stegmaier; Matthew J. LaMarche; Michael G. Acker; Stephen C. Blacklow
The PTPN11 oncogene encodes the cytoplasmic protein tyrosine phosphatase SHP2, which, through its role in multiple signaling pathways, promotes the progression of hematological malignancies and other cancers. Here, we employ high-throughput screening to discover a lead chemical scaffold, the benzothiazolopyrimidones, that allosterically inhibits this oncogenic phosphatase by simultaneously engaging the C-SH2 and PTP domains. We improved our lead to generate an analogue that better suppresses SHP2 activity in vitro. Suppression of Erk phopsphorylation by the lead compound is also consistent with SHP2 inhibition in AML cells. Our findings provide an alternative starting point for therapeutic intervention and will catalyze investigations into the relationship between SHP2 conformational regulation, activity, and disease progression.
Nature Communications | 2018
Jonathan R. LaRochelle; Michelle Fodor; Vidyasiri Vemulapalli; Morvarid Mohseni; Ping Wang; Travis Stams; Matthew J. LaMarche; Rajiv Chopra; Michael G. Acker; Stephen C. Blacklow
Activating mutations in PTPN11, encoding the cytosolic protein tyrosine phosphatase SHP2, result in developmental disorders and act as oncogenic drivers in patients with hematologic cancers. The allosteric inhibitor SHP099 stabilizes the wild-type SHP2 enzyme in an autoinhibited conformation that is itself destabilized by oncogenic mutations. Here, we report the impact of the highly activated and most frequently observed mutation, E76K, on the structure of SHP2, and investigate the effect of E76K and other oncogenic mutations on allosteric inhibition by SHP099. SHP2E76K adopts an open conformation but can be restored to the closed, autoinhibited conformation, near-identical to the unoccupied wild-type enzyme, when complexed with SHP099. SHP099 inhibitory activity against oncogenic SHP2 variants in vitro and in cells scales inversely with the activating strength of the mutation, indicating that either oncoselective or vastly more potent inhibitors will be necessary to suppress oncogenic signaling by the most strongly activating SHP2 mutations in cancer.Activating mutations of the non-receptor protein tyrosine phosphatase SHP2 can cause cancer. Here the authors present the crystal structure of SHP2E76K, the most frequent cancer-associated SHP2 mutation, which adopts an open-state structure and show that the allosteric inhibitor SHP099 can revert SHP2E76K to its closed, autoinhibited conformation.
Cell | 2011
Karin Schlegelmilch; Morvarid Mohseni; Oktay Kirak; Jan Pruszak; J. Renato Rodriguez; Dawang Zhou; Bridget T. Kreger; Valera Vasioukhin; Joseph Avruch; Thijn R. Brummelkamp; Fernando D. Camargo
Nature Cell Biology | 2014
Morvarid Mohseni; Jianlong Sun; Allison N. Lau; Stephen Curtis; Jeffrey D. Goldsmith; Victor L. Fox; Chongjuan Wei; Marsha L. Frazier; Owen Samson; Kwok-Kin Wong; Carla F. Kim; Fernando D. Camargo