Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Nathan H. Blewett is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Nathan H. Blewett.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2013

Lack of tRNA Modification Isopentenyl-A37 Alters mRNA Decoding and Causes Metabolic Deficiencies in Fission Yeast

Tek N. Lamichhane; Nathan H. Blewett; Amanda K. Crawford; Vera A. Cherkasova; James R. Iben; Thomas J. Begley; Philip J. Farabaugh; Richard J. Maraia

ABSTRACT tRNA isopentenyltransferases (Tit1) modify tRNA position 37, adjacent to the anticodon, to N6-isopentenyladenosine (i6A37) in all cells, yet the tRNA subsets selected for modification vary among species, and their relevance to phenotypes is unknown. We examined the function of i6A37 in Schizosaccharomyces pombe tit1+ and tit1-Δ cells by using a β-galactosidase codon-swap reporter whose catalytic activity is sensitive to accurate decoding of codon 503. i6A37 increased the activity of tRNACys at a cognate codon and that of tRNATyr at a near-cognate codon, suggesting that i6A37 promotes decoding activity generally and increases fidelity at cognate codons while decreasing fidelity at noncognate codons. S. pombe cells lacking tit1+ exhibit slow growth in glycerol or rapamycin. While existing data link wobble base U34 modifications to translation of functionally related mRNAs, whether this might extend to the anticodon-adjacent position 37 was unknown. Indeed, we found a biased presence of i6A37-cognate codons in high-abundance mRNAs for ribosome subunits and energy metabolism, congruent with the observed phenotypes and the idea that i6A37 promotes translational efficiency. Polysome profiles confirmed the decreased translational efficiency of mRNAs in tit1-Δ cells. Because subsets of i6A37-tRNAs differ among species, as do their cognate codon-sensitive mRNAs, these genomic variables may underlie associated phenotypic differences.


Nature Cell Biology | 2015

A conserved mechanism of TOR-dependent RCK-mediated mRNA degradation regulates autophagy

Guowu Hu; Travis McQuiston; Amélie Bernard; Yoon Park; Jin Qiu; Ali Vural; Nannan Zhang; Scott R. Waterman; Nathan H. Blewett; Timothy G. Myers; Richard J. Maraia; John H. Kehrl; Gulbu Uzel; Daniel J. Klionsky; Peter R. Williamson

Autophagy is an essential eukaryotic pathway requiring tight regulation to maintain homeostasis and preclude disease. Using yeast and mammalian cells, we report a conserved mechanism of autophagy regulation by RNA helicase RCK family members in association with the decapping enzyme Dcp2. Under nutrient-replete conditions, Dcp2 undergoes TOR-dependent phosphorylation and associates with RCK members to form a complex with autophagy-related (ATG) mRNA transcripts, leading to decapping, degradation and autophagy suppression. Simultaneous with the induction of ATG mRNA synthesis, starvation reverses the process, facilitating ATG mRNA accumulation and autophagy induction. This conserved post-transcriptional mechanism modulates fungal virulence and the mammalian inflammasome, the latter providing mechanistic insight into autoimmunity reported in a patient with a PIK3CD/p110δ gain-of-function mutation. We propose a dynamic model wherein RCK family members, in conjunction with Dcp2, function in controlling ATG mRNA stability to govern autophagy, which in turn modulates vital cellular processes affecting inflammation and microbial pathogenesis.


PLOS Genetics | 2015

RNA Polymerase III Output Is Functionally Linked to tRNA Dimethyl-G26 Modification.

Aneeshkumar G. Arimbasseri; Nathan H. Blewett; James R. Iben; Tek N. Lamichhane; Vera A. Cherkasova; Markus Hafner; Richard J. Maraia

Control of the differential abundance or activity of tRNAs can be important determinants of gene regulation. RNA polymerase (RNAP) III synthesizes all tRNAs in eukaryotes and it derepression is associated with cancer. Maf1 is a conserved general repressor of RNAP III under the control of the target of rapamycin (TOR) that acts to integrate transcriptional output and protein synthetic demand toward metabolic economy. Studies in budding yeast have indicated that the global tRNA gene activation that occurs with derepression of RNAP III via maf1-deletion is accompanied by a paradoxical loss of tRNA-mediated nonsense suppressor activity, manifested as an antisuppression phenotype, by an unknown mechanism. We show that maf1-antisuppression also occurs in the fission yeast S. pombe amidst general activation of RNAP III. We used tRNA-HydroSeq to document that little changes occurred in the relative levels of different tRNAs in maf1Δ cells. By contrast, the efficiency of N2,N2-dimethyl G26 (m2 2G26) modification on certain tRNAs was decreased in response to maf1-deletion and associated with antisuppression, and was validated by other methods. Over-expression of Trm1, which produces m2 2G26, reversed maf1-antisuppression. A model that emerges is that competition by increased tRNA levels in maf1Δ cells leads to m2 2G26 hypomodification due to limiting Trm1, reducing the activity of suppressor-tRNASerUCA and accounting for antisuppression. Consistent with this, we show that RNAP III mutations associated with hypomyelinating leukodystrophy decrease tRNA transcription, increase m2 2G26 efficiency and reverse antisuppression. Extending this more broadly, we show that a decrease in tRNA synthesis by treatment with rapamycin leads to increased m2 2G26 modification and that this response is conserved among highly divergent yeasts and human cells.


eLife | 2017

A novel perivascular cell population in the zebrafish brain

Marina Venero Galanternik; Daniel Castranova; Aniket V. Gore; Nathan H. Blewett; Hyun Min Jung; Amber N. Stratman; Martha Kirby; James R. Iben; Mayumi F Miller; Koichi Kawakami; Richard J. Maraia; Brant M. Weinstein

The blood-brain barrier is essential for the proper homeostasis and function of the CNS, but its mechanism of function is poorly understood. Perivascular cells surrounding brain blood vessels are thought to be important for blood-brain barrier establishment, but their roles are not well defined. Here, we describe a novel perivascular cell population closely associated with blood vessels on the zebrafish brain. Based on similarities in their morphology, location, and scavenger behavior, these cells appear to be the zebrafish equivalent of cells variably characterized as Fluorescent Granular Perithelial cells (FGPs), perivascular macrophages, or ‘Mato Cells’ in mammals. Despite their macrophage-like morphology and perivascular location, zebrafish FGPs appear molecularly most similar to lymphatic endothelium, and our imaging studies suggest that these cells emerge by differentiation from endothelium of the optic choroidal vascular plexus. Our findings provide the first report of a perivascular cell population in the brain derived from vascular endothelium. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.24369.001


Nature Chemical Biology | 2008

It's a mod mod tRNA world.

Richard J. Maraia; Nathan H. Blewett; Mark A. Bayfield

Postsynthetic modifications are widespread in genetic regulation. Trm9-mediated modification of the anticodon wobble base of specific tRNAs modulates expression of DNA damage response mRNAs in which cognate codons are unusually overrepresented. Thus, modification-dependent tRNA decoding activity is keyed to codon use in a genetic program.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2014

Targeted Deletion of the Gene Encoding the La Autoantigen (Sjögren's Syndrome Antigen B) in B Cells or the Frontal Brain Causes Extensive Tissue Loss

Sergei Gaidamakov; Olga A. Maximova; Hyongi Chon; Nathan H. Blewett; Hongsheng Wang; Amanda K. Crawford; Amanda Day; Natalie Tulchin; Robert J. Crouch; Herbert C. Morse; Robert D. Blitzer; Richard J. Maraia

ABSTRACT La antigen (Sjögrens syndrome antigen B) is a phosphoprotein associated with nascent precursor tRNAs and other RNAs, and it is targeted by autoantibodies in patients with Sjögrens syndrome, systemic lupus erythematosus, and neonatal lupus. Increased levels of La are associated with leukemias and other cancers, and various viruses usurp La to promote their replication. Yeast cells (Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Schizosaccharomyces pombe) genetically depleted of La grow and proliferate, whereas deletion from mice causes early embryonic lethality, raising the question of whether La is required by mammalian cells generally or only to surpass a developmental stage. We developed a conditional La allele and used it in mice that express Cre recombinase in either B cell progenitors or the forebrain. B cell Mb1Cre La-deleted mice produce no B cells. Consistent with αCamKII Cre, which induces deletion in hippocampal CA1 cells in the third postnatal week and later throughout the neocortex, brains develop normally in La-deleted mice until ∼5 weeks and then lose a large amount of forebrain cells and mass, with evidence of altered pre-tRNA processing. The data indicate that La is required not only in proliferating cells but also in nondividing postmitotic cells. Thus, La is essential in different cell types and required for normal development of various tissue types.


Autophagy | 2015

TOR-dependent post-transcriptional regulation of autophagy

Guowu Hu; Travis McQuiston; Amélie Bernard; Yoon Park; Jin Qiu; Ali Vural; Nannan Zhang; Scott R. Waterman; Nathan H. Blewett; Timothy G. Myers; Richard J. Maraia; John H. Kehrl; Gulbu Uzel; Daniel J. Klionsky; Peter R. Williamson

Regulation of autophagy is required to maintain cellular equilibrium and prevent disease. While extensive study of post-translational mechanisms has yielded important insights into autophagy induction, less is known about post-transcriptional mechanisms that could potentiate homeostatic control. In our study, we showed that the RNA-binding protein, Dhh1 in Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Vad1 in the pathogenic yeast Cryptococcus neoformans is involved in recruitment and degradation of key autophagy mRNAs. In addition, phosphorylation of the decapping protein Dcp2 by the target of rapamycin (TOR), facilitates decapping and degradation of autophagy-related mRNAs, resulting in repression of autophagy under nutrient-replete conditions. The post-transcriptional regulatory process is conserved in both mouse and human cells and plays a role in autophagy-related modulation of the inflammasome product IL1B. These results were then applied to provide mechanistic insight into autoimmunity of a patient with a PIK3CD/p110δ gain-of-function mutation. These results thus identify an important new post-transcriptional mechanism of autophagy regulation that is highly conserved between yeast and mammals.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2017

La deletion from mouse brain alters pre-tRNA metabolism and accumulation of pre-5.8S rRNA, with neuron death and reactive astrocytosis

Nathan H. Blewett; James R. Iben; Sergei Gaidamakov; Richard J. Maraia

ABSTRACT Human La antigen (Sjögrens syndrome antigen B [SSB]) is an abundant multifunctional RNA-binding protein. In the nucleoplasm, La binds to and protects from 3′ exonucleases, the ends of precursor tRNAs, and other transcripts synthesized by RNA polymerase III and facilitates their maturation, while a nucleolar isoform has been implicated in rRNA biogenesis by multiple independent lines of evidence. We showed previously that conditional La knockout (La cKO) from mouse cortex neurons results in defective tRNA processing, although the pathway(s) involved in neuronal loss thereafter was unknown. Here, we demonstrate that La is stably associated with a spliced pre-tRNA intermediate. Microscopic evidence of aberrant nuclear accumulation of 5.8S rRNA in La cKO is supported by a 10-fold increase in a pre-5.8S rRNA intermediate. To identify pathways involved in subsequent neurodegeneration and loss of brain mass in the cKO cortex, we employed mRNA sequencing (mRNA-Seq), immunohistochemistry, and other approaches. This revealed robust enrichment of immune and astrocyte reactivity in La cKO cortex. Immunohistochemistry, including temporal analyses, demonstrated neurodegeneration, followed by astrocyte invasion associated with immune response and decreasing cKO cortex size over time. Thus, deletion of La from postmitotic neurons results in defective pre-tRNA and pre-rRNA processing and progressive neurodegeneration with loss of cortical brain mass.


Molecular and Cellular Oncology | 2016

Tor-dependent post-transcriptional regulation of autophagy: Implications for cancer therapeutics

Guowu Hu; Travis McQuiston; Amélie Bernard; Yoon-Dong Park; Jin Qiu; Ali Vural; Nannan Zhang; Scott R. Waterman; Nathan H. Blewett; Timothy G. Myers; John H. Kehrl; Gulbu Uzel; Daniel J. Klionsky; Peter R. Williamson

ABSTRACT Paradoxically, both anticancer immunosurveillance and tumor progression have been associated with intact autophagy, which is regulated by the target of rapamycin (Tor1). Here, we describe the potential impact on the design of cancer therapeutics of a newly described highly conserved post-transcriptional mechanism whereby Tor regulates autophagy.


Microbial Cell | 2015

The role of transcriptional ‘futile cycles’ in autophagy and microbial pathogenesis

Guowu Hu; Travis McQuiston; Amélie Bernard; Yoon-Dong Park; Jin Qiu; Ali Vural; Nannan Zhang; Scott R. Waterman; Nathan H. Blewett; Timothy G. Myers; John H. Kehrl; Gulbu Uzel; Daniel J. Klionsky; Peter Williamson

Eukaryotic cells utilize macroautophagy (hereafter autophagy) to recycle cellular materials during nutrient stress. Target of rapamycin (Tor) is a central regulator of this process, acting by post-translational mechanisms, phosphorylating preformed autophagy-related (Atg) proteins to repress autophagy during log-phase growth. We recently reported an additional role for post-transcriptional regulation of autophagy, whereby the mRNA decapping protein, Dcp2, undergoes Tor-dependent phosphorylation, resulting in increased ATG mRNA decapping and degradation under nutrient-rich, repressing conditions. Dephosphorylation of Dcp2 during starvation is associated with dissociation of the decapping-ATG mRNA complex, with resultant stabilization of, and accumulation of, ATG transcripts, leading to induction of autophagy. Regulation of mRNA degradation occurs in concert with known mRNA synthetic inductive mechanisms to potentiate overall transcriptional regulation. This mRNA degradative pathway thus constitutes a type of transcriptional ‘futile cycle’ where under nutrient-rich conditions transcript is constantly being generated and degraded. As nutrient levels decline, steady state mRNA levels are increased by both inhibition of degradation as well as increased de novo synthesis. A role for this regulatory process in fungal virulence was further demonstrated by showing that overexpression of the Dcp2-associated mRNA-binding protein Vad1 in the AIDS-associated pathogen Cryptococcus neoformans results in constitutive repression of autophagy even under starvation conditions as well as attenuated virulence in a mouse model. In summary, Tor-dependent post-transcriptional regulation of autophagy plays a key role in the facilitation of microbial pathogenesis.

Collaboration


Dive into the Nathan H. Blewett's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Richard J. Maraia

National Institutes of Health

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

James R. Iben

National Institutes of Health

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ali Vural

National Institutes of Health

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Gulbu Uzel

National Institutes of Health

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Guowu Hu

University of Illinois at Chicago

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jin Qiu

National Institutes of Health

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

John H. Kehrl

National Institutes of Health

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Nannan Zhang

National Institutes of Health

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge