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Dive into the research topics where Paul A. Ney is active.

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Featured researches published by Paul A. Ney.


EMBO Reports | 2010

Nix is a selective autophagy receptor for mitochondrial clearance

Ivana Novak; Vladimir Kirkin; David G. McEwan; Ji Zhang; Philipp Wild; Alexis Rozenknop; Vladimir V. Rogov; Frank Löhr; Doris Popovic; Angelo Occhipinti; Andreas S. Reichert; Janoš Terzić; Volker Dötsch; Paul A. Ney; Ivan Dikic

Autophagy is the cellular homeostatic pathway that delivers large cytosolic materials for degradation in the lysosome. Recent evidence indicates that autophagy mediates selective removal of protein aggregates, organelles and microbes in cells. Yet, the specificity in targeting a particular substrate to the autophagy pathway remains poorly understood. Here, we show that the mitochondrial protein Nix is a selective autophagy receptor by binding to LC3/GABARAP proteins, ubiquitin‐like modifiers that are required for the growth of autophagosomal membranes. In cultured cells, Nix recruits GABARAP‐L1 to damaged mitochondria through its amino‐terminal LC3‐interacting region. Furthermore, ablation of the Nix:LC3/GABARAP interaction retards mitochondrial clearance in maturing murine reticulocytes. Thus, Nix functions as an autophagy receptor, which mediates mitochondrial clearance after mitochondrial damage and during erythrocyte differentiation.


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

NIX is required for programmed mitochondrial clearance during reticulocyte maturation

Rachel L. Schweers; Ji Zhang; Mindy S. Randall; Melanie R. Loyd; Weimin Li; Frank C. Dorsey; Mondira Kundu; Joseph T. Opferman; John L. Cleveland; Jeffery L. Miller; Paul A. Ney

The regulated clearance of mitochondria is a well recognized but poorly understood aspect of cellular homeostasis, and defects in this process have been linked to aging, degenerative diseases, and cancer. Mitochondria are recycled through an autophagy-related process, and reticulocytes, which completely eliminate their mitochondria during maturation, provide a physiological model to study this phenomenon. Here, we show that mitochondrial clearance in reticulocytes requires the BCL2-related protein NIX (BNIP3L). Mitochondrial clearance does not require BAX, BAK, BCL-XL, BIM, or PUMA, indicating that NIX does not function through established proapoptotic pathways. Similarly, NIX is not required for the induction of autophagy during terminal erythroid differentiation. NIX is required for the selective elimination of mitochondria, however, because mitochondrial clearance, in the absence of NIX, is arrested at the stage of mitochondrial incorporation into autophagosomes and autophagosome maturation. These results yield insight into the mechanism of mitochondrial clearance in higher eukaryotes. Furthermore, they show a BAX- and BAK-independent role for a BCL2-related protein in development.


Blood | 2008

Ulk1 plays a critical role in the autophagic clearance of mitochondria and ribosomes during reticulocyte maturation.

Mondira Kundu; Tullia Lindsten; Chia Ying Yang; Junmin Wu; Fangping Zhao; Ji Zhang; Mary A. Selak; Paul A. Ney; Craig B. Thompson

Production of a red blood cells hemoglobin depends on mitochondrial heme synthesis. However, mature red blood cells are devoid of mitochondria and rely on glycolysis for ATP production. The molecular basis for the selective elimination of mitochondria from mature red blood cells remains controversial. Recent evidence suggests that clearance of both mitochondria and ribosomes, which occurs in reticulocytes following nuclear extrusion, depends on autophagy. Here, we demonstrate that Ulk1, a serine threonine kinase with homology to yeast atg1p, is a critical regulator of mitochondrial and ribosomal clearance during the final stages of erythroid maturation. However, in contrast to the core autophagy genes such as atg5 and atg7, expression of ulk1 is not essential for induction of macroautophagy in response to nutrient deprivation or for survival of newborn mice. Together, these data suggest that the ATG1 homologue, Ulk1, is a component of the selective autophagy machinery that leads to the elimination of organelles in erythroid cells rather that an essential mechanistic component of autophagy.


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

GATA transcription factors directly regulate the Parkinson's disease-linked gene α-synuclein

Clemens R. Scherzer; Jeffrey A. Grass; Zhixiang Liao; Imelda Pepivani; Bin Zheng; Aron Charles Eklund; Paul A. Ney; Juliana Ng; Meghan McGoldrick; Brit Mollenhauer; Emery H. Bresnick; Michael G. Schlossmacher

Increased α-synuclein gene (SNCA) dosage due to locus multiplication causes autosomal dominant Parkinsons disease (PD). Variation in SNCA expression may be critical in common, genetically complex PD but the underlying regulatory mechanism is unknown. We show that SNCA and the heme metabolism genes ALAS2, FECH, and BLVRB form a block of tightly correlated gene expression in 113 samples of human blood, where SNCA naturally abounds (validated P = 1.6 × 10−11, 1.8 × 10−10, and 6.6 × 10−5). Genetic complementation analysis revealed that these four genes are co-induced by the transcription factor GATA-1. GATA-1 specifically occupies a conserved region within SNCA intron-1 and directly induces a 6.9-fold increase in α-synuclein. Endogenous GATA-2 is highly expressed in substantia nigra vulnerable to PD, occupies intron-1, and modulates SNCA expression in dopaminergic cells. This critical link between GATA factors and SNCA may enable therapies designed to lower α-synuclein production.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 1993

Purification of the human NF-E2 complex: cDNA cloning of the hematopoietic cell-specific subunit and evidence for an associated partner.

Paul A. Ney; Nancy C. Andrews; S M Jane; B Safer; M E Purucker; Stanislawa Weremowicz; Cynthia C. Morton; S C Goff; Stuart H. Orkin; A W Nienhuis

The human globin locus control region-binding protein, NF-E2, was purified by DNA affinity chromatography. Its tissue-specific component, p45 NF-E2, was cloned by use of a low-stringency library screen with murine p45 NF-E2 cDNA (N. C. Andrews, H. Erdjument-Bromage, M. B. Davidson, P. Tempst, and S. H. Orkin, Nature [London] 362:722-728, 1993). The human p45 NF-E2 gene was localized to chromosome 12q13 by fluorescent in situ hybridization. Human p45 NF-E2 and murine p45 NF-E2 are highly homologous basic region-leucine zipper (bZIP) proteins with identical DNA-binding domains. Immunoprecipitation experiments demonstrated that p45 NF-E2 is associated in vivo with an 18-kDa protein (p18). Because bZIP proteins bind DNA as dimers, we infer that native NF-E2 must be a heterodimer of 45- and 18-kDa subunits. Although AP-1 and CREB copurified with NF-E2, no evidence was found for heterodimer formation between p45 NF-E2 and proteins other than p18. Thus, p18 appears to be the sole specific partner of p45 NF-E2 in erythroid cells. Cloning of human p45 NF-E2 should permit studies of the role of NF-E2 in globin gene regulation and erythroid differentiation.


Nature | 2002

A transcription-factor-binding surface of coactivator p300 is required for haematopoiesis

Lawryn H. Kasper; Fayçal Boussouar; Paul A. Ney; Carl W. Jackson; Jerold E. Rehg; Jan M. van Deursen; Paul K. Brindle

The coactivators CBP (Cre-element binding protein (CREB)-binding protein) and its paralogue p300 are thought to supply adaptor molecule and protein acetyltransferase functions to many transcription factors that regulate gene expression. Normal development requires CBP and p300, and mutations in these genes are found in haematopoietic and epithelial tumours. It is unclear, however, which functions of CBP and p300 are essential in vivo. Here we show that the protein-binding KIX domains of CBP and p300 have nonredundant functions in mice. In mice homozygous for point mutations in the KIX domain of p300 designed to disrupt the binding surface for the transcription factors c-Myb and CREB, multilineage defects occur in haematopoiesis, including anaemia, B-cell deficiency, thymic hypoplasia, megakaryocytosis and thrombocytosis. By contrast, age-matched mice homozygous for identical mutations in the KIX domain of CBP are essentially normal. There is a synergistic genetic interaction between mutations in c-Myb and mutations in the KIX domain of p300, which suggests that the binding of c-Myb to this domain of p300 is crucial for the development and function of megakaryocytes. Thus, conserved domains in two highly related coactivators have contrasting roles in haematopoiesis.


Blood | 2009

Mitochondrial clearance is regulated by Atg7-dependent and -independent mechanisms during reticulocyte maturation.

Ji Zhang; Mindy S. Randall; Melanie R. Loyd; Frank C. Dorsey; Mondira Kundu; John L. Cleveland; Paul A. Ney

Mitochondrial clearance is a well recognized but poorly understood biologic process, and reticulocytes, which undergo programmed mitochondrial clearance, provide a useful model to study this phenomenon. At the ultrastructural level, mitochondrial clearance resembles an autophagy-related process; however, the role of autophagy in mitochondrial clearance has not been established. Here we provide genetic evidence that autophagy pathways, initially identified in yeast, are involved in mitochondrial clearance from reticulocytes. Atg7 is an autophagy protein and an E1-like enzyme, which is required for the activity of dual ubiquitin-like conjugation pathways. Atg7 is required for the conjugation of Atg12 to Atg5, and Atg8 to phosphatidylethanolamine (PE), and is essential for autophagosome formation. In the absence of Atg7, mitochondrial clearance from reticulocytes is diminished but not completely blocked. Mammalian homologs of Atg8 are unmodified in Atg7(-/-) erythroid cells, indicating that canonical autophagy pathways are inactive. Thus, mitochondrial clearance is regulated by both autophagy-dependent and -independent mechanisms. In addition, mitochondria, which depolarize in wild-type cells before elimination, remain polarized in Atg7(-/-) reticulocytes in culture. This suggests that mitochondrial depolarization is a consequence rather than a cause of autophagosome formation in reticulocytes.


Nature Genetics | 1999

Fv2 encodes a truncated form of the Stk receptor tyrosine kinase

Derek A. Persons; Robert F. Paulson; Melanie R. Loyd; Mark T. Herley; Sara Bodner; Alan Bernstein; Pamela H. Correll; Paul A. Ney

The Friend virus susceptibility 2 (Fv2) locus encodes a dominant host factor that confers susceptibility to Friend virus-induced erythroleukaemia in mice. We mapped Fv2 to a 1.0-Mb interval that also contained the gene (Ron) encoding the stem cell kinase receptor (Stk). A truncated form of Stk (Sf-stk), which was the most abundant form of Stk in Fv2-sensitive (Fv2ss) erythroid cells, was not expressed in Fv2 resistant (Fv2rr) cells. Enforced expression of Sf-stk conferred susceptibility to Friend disease, whereas targeted disruption of Ron caused resistance. We conclude that the Fv2 locus encodes Ron, and that a naturally expressed, truncated form of Stk confers susceptibility to Friend virus-induced erythroleukaemia.


Molecular Cell | 2011

Hsp90-Cdc37 Chaperone Complex Regulates Ulk1- and Atg13-Mediated Mitophagy

Joung Hyuck Joo; Frank C. Dorsey; Aashish Joshi; Kristin M. Hennessy-Walters; Kristie L. Rose; Kelly McCastlain; Ji Zhang; Rekha Iyengar; Chang Hwa Jung; Der-Fen Suen; Meredith A. Steeves; Chia Ying Yang; Stephanie M. Prater; Do Hyung Kim; Craig B. Thompson; Richard J. Youle; Paul A. Ney; John L. Cleveland; Mondira Kundu

Autophagy, the primary recycling pathway of cells, plays a critical role in mitochondrial quality control under normal growth conditions and in the response to cellular stress. The Hsp90-Cdc37 chaperone complex coordinately regulates the activity of select kinases to orchestrate many facets of the stress response. Although both maintain mitochondrial integrity, the relationship between Hsp90-Cdc37 and autophagy has not been well characterized. Ulk1, one of the mammalian homologs of yeast Atg1, is a serine-threonine kinase required for mitophagy. Here we show that the interaction between Ulk1 and Hsp90-Cdc37 stabilizes and activates Ulk1, which in turn is required for the phosphorylation and release of Atg13 from Ulk1, and for the recruitment of Atg13 to damaged mitochondria. Hsp90-Cdc37, Ulk1, and Atg13 phosphorylation are all required for efficient mitochondrial clearance. These findings establish a direct pathway that integrates Ulk1- and Atg13-directed mitophagy with the stress response coordinated by Hsp90 and Cdc37.


The EMBO Journal | 2001

The distal region and receptor tyrosines of the Epo receptor are non‐essential for in vivo erythropoiesis

Heesuk Zang; Ken Sato; Hideaki Nakajima; Catriona McKay; Paul A. Ney; James N. Ihle

The erythropoietin receptor (EpoR) is required for the proliferation and survival of committed erythroid lineage cells. Previous studies have utilized receptor mutations to show the requirement for the distal half of the cytoplasmic domain of the EpoR and receptor tyrosines for activation of signaling pathways potentially critical to Epo function. To extend these studies to in vivo erythropoiesis, we have created two mutant strains of mice. One strain (H) contains a truncation of the distal half of the cytoplasmic domain, while the second strain (HM) contains the same truncation as well as the mutation of the residual tyrosine (Y343) to a phenylalanine. Strikingly, both strains of mice are viable, with only slight alterations in constitutive erythropoiesis or in in vitro assays of red cell lineage function. Challenging H mutant mice with continuous injections of Epo results in an erythrocytosis that is not seen in HM mice. The results demonstrate that neither the distal region nor receptor tyrosines are essential for in vivo EpoR function, but contribute to receptor function in a subtle manner.

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Ji Zhang

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

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Melanie R. Loyd

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

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Mindy S. Randall

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

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Arthur W. Nienhuis

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

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Jerold E. Rehg

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

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Mondira Kundu

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

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Brian P. Sorrentino

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

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Derek A. Persons

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

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Rachel L. Schweers

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

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Weimin Li

Scripps Research Institute

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