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Dive into the research topics where Paulo S. Ribeiro is active.

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Featured researches published by Paulo S. Ribeiro.


Cell Host & Microbe | 2008

PIMS Modulates Immune Tolerance by Negatively Regulating Drosophila Innate Immune Signaling

Nouara Lhocine; Paulo S. Ribeiro; Nicolas Buchon; Alexander Wepf; Rebecca Wilson; Tencho Tenev; Bruno Lemaitre; Matthias Gstaiger; Pascal Meier; François Leulier

Metazoans tolerate commensal-gut microbiota by suppressing immune activation while maintaining the ability to launch rapid and balanced immune reactions to pathogenic bacteria. Little is known about the mechanisms underlying the establishment of this threshold. We report that a recently identified Drosophila immune regulator, which we call PGRP-LC-interacting inhibitor of Imd signaling (PIMS), is required to suppress the Imd innate immune signaling pathway in response to commensal bacteria. pims expression is Imd (immune deficiency) dependent, and its basal expression relies on the presence of commensal flora. In the absence of PIMS, resident bacteria trigger constitutive expression of antimicrobial peptide genes (AMPs). Moreover, pims mutants hyperactivate AMPs upon infection with Gram-negative bacteria. PIMS interacts with the peptidoglycan recognition protein (PGRP-LC), causing its depletion from the plasma membrane and shutdown of Imd signaling. Therefore, PIMS is required to establish immune tolerance to commensal bacteria and to maintain a balanced Imd response following exposure to bacterial infections.


Molecular Cell | 2010

Combined Functional Genomic and Proteomic Approaches Identify a PP2A Complex as a Negative Regulator of Hippo Signaling

Paulo S. Ribeiro; Filipe Josué; Alexander Wepf; Michael C. Wehr; Oliver Rinner; Gavin Kelly; Nicolas Tapon; Matthias Gstaiger

The Hippo (Hpo) pathway is a central determinant of tissue size in both Drosophila and higher organisms. The core of the pathway is a kinase cascade composed of an upstream kinase Hpo (MST1/2 in mammals) and a downstream kinase Warts (Wts, Lats1/2 in mammals), as well as several scaffold proteins, Sav, dRASSF, and Mats. Activation of the core kinase cassette results in phosphorylation and inactivation of the progrowth transcriptional coactivator Yki, leading to increased apoptosis and reduced tissue growth. The mechanisms that prevent inappropriate Hpo activation remain unclear, and in particular, the identity of the phosphatase that antagonizes Hpo is unknown. Using combined proteomic and RNAi screening approaches, we identify the dSTRIPAK PP2A complex as a major regulator of Hpo signaling. dSTRIPAK depletion leads to increased Hpo activatory phosphorylation and repression of Yki target genes in vivo, suggesting this phosphatase complex prevents Hpo activation during development.


Cell Death & Differentiation | 2006

Systematic in vivo RNAi analysis of putative components of the Drosophila cell death machinery

François Leulier; Paulo S. Ribeiro; E Palmer; Tencho Tenev; Kuniaki Takahashi; D Robertson; Anna Zachariou; F Pichaud; Ryu Ueda; Pascal Meier

Despite the identification of numerous key players of the cell death machinery, little is known about their physiological role. Using RNA interference (RNAi) in vivo, we have studied the requirement of all Drosophila caspases and caspase-adaptors in different paradigms of apoptosis. Of the seven caspases, Dronc, drICE, Strica and Decay are rate limiting for apoptosis. Surprisingly, Hid-mediated apoptosis requires a broader range of caspases than apoptosis initiated by loss of the caspase inhibitor DIAP1, suggesting that Hid causes apoptosis not only by antagonizing DIAP1 but also by activating DIAP1-independent caspase cascades. While Hid killing requires Strica, Decay, Dronc/Dark and drICE, apoptosis triggered by DIAP1 depletion merely relied upon Dronc/Dark and drICE. Furthermore, we found that overexpression of DIAP2 can rescue diap1-RNAi-mediated apoptosis, suggesting that DIAP2 regulates caspases directly. Consistently, we show that DIAP2 binds active drICE. Since DIAP2 associates with Hid, we propose a model whereby Hid co-ordinately targets both DIAP1 and DIAP2 to unleash drICE.


The EMBO Journal | 2012

Ubiquitylation of the initiator caspase DREDD is required for innate immune signalling

Annika Meinander; Christopher Runchel; Tencho Tenev; Li Chen; Chan-Hee Kim; Paulo S. Ribeiro; Meike Broemer; François Leulier; Marketa Zvelebil; Neal S. Silverman; Pascal Meier

Caspases have been extensively studied as critical initiators and executioners of cell death pathways. However, caspases also take part in non‐apoptotic signalling events such as the regulation of innate immunity and activation of nuclear factor‐κB (NF‐κB). How caspases are activated under these conditions and process a selective set of substrates to allow NF‐κB signalling without killing the cell remains largely unknown. Here, we show that stimulation of the Drosophila pattern recognition protein PGRP‐LCx induces DIAP2‐dependent polyubiquitylation of the initiator caspase DREDD. Signal‐dependent ubiquitylation of DREDD is required for full processing of IMD, NF‐κB/Relish and expression of antimicrobial peptide genes in response to infection with Gram‐negative bacteria. Our results identify a mechanism that positively controls NF‐κB signalling via ubiquitin‐mediated activation of DREDD. The direct involvement of ubiquitylation in caspase activation represents a novel mechanism for non‐apoptotic caspase‐mediated signalling.


The EMBO Journal | 2015

The Spectrin cytoskeleton regulates the Hippo signalling pathway

Georgina Fletcher; Ahmed Elbediwy; Ichha Khanal; Paulo S. Ribeiro; Nic Tapon; Barry J. Thompson

The Spectrin cytoskeleton is known to be polarised in epithelial cells, yet its role remains poorly understood. Here, we show that the Spectrin cytoskeleton controls Hippo signalling. In the developing Drosophila wing and eye, loss of apical Spectrins (alpha/beta‐heavy dimers) produces tissue overgrowth and mis‐regulation of Hippo target genes, similar to loss of Crumbs (Crb) or the FERM‐domain protein Expanded (Ex). Apical beta‐heavy Spectrin binds to Ex and co‐localises with it at the apical membrane to antagonise Yki activity. Interestingly, in both the ovarian follicular epithelium and intestinal epithelium of Drosophila, apical Spectrins and Crb are dispensable for repression of Yki, while basolateral Spectrins (alpha/beta dimers) are essential. Finally, the Spectrin cytoskeleton is required to regulate the localisation of the Hippo pathway effector YAP in response to cell density human epithelial cells. Our findings identify both apical and basolateral Spectrins as regulators of Hippo signalling and suggest Spectrins as potential mechanosensors.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2007

DIAP2 functions as a mechanism-based regulator of drICE that contributes to the caspase activity threshold in living cells

Paulo S. Ribeiro; Erina Kuranaga; Tencho Tenev; François Leulier; Masayuki Miura; Pascal Meier

In addition to their well-known function in apoptosis, caspases are also important in several nonapoptotic processes. How caspase activity is restrained and shut down under such nonapoptotic conditions remains unknown. Here, we show that Drosophila melanogaster inhibitor of apoptosis protein 2 (DIAP2) controls the level of caspase activity in living cells. Animals that lack DIAP2 have higher levels of drICE activity. Although diap2-deficient cells remain viable, they are sensitized to apoptosis following treatment with sublethal doses of x-ray irradiation. We find that DIAP2 regulates the effector caspase drICE through a mechanism that resembles the one of the caspase inhibitor p35. As for p35, cleavage of DIAP2 is required for caspase inhibition. Our data suggest that DIAP2 forms a covalent adduct with the catalytic machinery of drICE. In addition, DIAP2 also requires a functional RING finger domain to block cell death and target drICE for ubiquitylation. Because DIAP2 efficiently interacts with drICE, our data suggest that DIAP2 controls drICE in its apoptotic and nonapoptotic roles.


Developmental Cell | 2015

Patterned Anchorage to the Apical Extracellular Matrix Defines Tissue Shape in the Developing Appendages of Drosophila.

Robert P. Ray; Alexis Matamoro-Vidal; Paulo S. Ribeiro; Nic Tapon; David Houle; Isaac Salazar-Ciudad; Barry J. Thompson

Summary How tissues acquire their characteristic shape is a fundamental unresolved question in biology. While genes have been characterized that control local mechanical forces to elongate epithelial tissues, genes controlling global forces in epithelia have yet to be identified. Here, we describe a genetic pathway that shapes appendages in Drosophila by defining the pattern of global tensile forces in the tissue. In the appendages, shape arises from tension generated by cell constriction and localized anchorage of the epithelium to the cuticle via the apical extracellular-matrix protein Dumpy (Dp). Altering Dp expression in the developing wing results in predictable changes in wing shape that can be simulated by a computational model that incorporates only tissue contraction and localized anchorage. Three other wing shape genes, narrow, tapered, and lanceolate, encode components of a pathway that modulates Dp distribution in the wing to refine the global force pattern and thus wing shape.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Crumbs promotes expanded recognition and degradation by the SCFSlimb/β-TrCP ubiquitin ligase

Paulo S. Ribeiro; Maxine Holder; David Frith; Ambrosius P. Snijders; Nicolas Tapon

Significance Regulation of tissue growth is essential for metazoan development and adult homeostasis. The Hippo (Hpo) pathway is an evolutionarily conserved signaling cascade that has emerged as a crucial regulator of tissue size by virtue of its control of cell proliferation and cell death. Multiple epithelial architecture inputs converge on Hpo signaling, allowing tissues to quickly respond to disruptions in cell–cell and cell–matrix interactions. Here, we show that the polarity protein Crumbs promotes the apical localization and degradation of the Hpo pathway protein Expanded, by the SCFSlmb/β-TRCP ubiquitin ligase. This ubiquitin-dependent mechanism could potentially allow the dynamic regulation of Hpo signaling in response to changes in polarity. In epithelial tissues, growth control depends on the maintenance of proper architecture through apicobasal polarity and cell–cell contacts. The Hippo signaling pathway has been proposed to sense tissue architecture and cell density via an intimate coupling with the polarity and cell contact machineries. The apical polarity protein Crumbs (Crb) controls the activity of Yorkie (Yki)/Yes-activated protein, the progrowth target of the Hippo pathway core kinase cassette, both in flies and mammals. The apically localized Four-point-one, Ezrin, Radixin, Moesin domain protein Expanded (Ex) regulates Yki by promoting activation of the kinase cascade and by directly tethering Yki to the plasma membrane. Crb interacts with Ex and promotes its apical localization, thereby linking cell polarity with Hippo signaling. We show that, as well as repressing Yki by recruiting Ex to the apical membrane, Crb promotes phosphorylation-dependent ubiquitin-mediated degradation of Ex. We identify Skp/Cullin/F-boxSlimb/β-transducin repeats-containing protein (SCFSlimb/β-TrCP) as the E3 ubiquitin ligase complex responsible for Ex degradation. Thus, Crb is part of a homeostatic mechanism that promotes Ex inhibition of Yki, but also limits Ex activity by inducing its degradation, allowing precise tuning of Yki function.


Nature Communications | 2016

The unconventional myosin CRINKLED and its mammalian orthologue MYO7A regulate caspases in their signalling roles

Mariam Orme; Gianmaria Liccardi; Nina Moderau; Rebecca Feltham; Sidonie Wicky-John; Tencho Tenev; Lior Aram; Rebecca Wilson; Katiuscia Bianchi; Otto Morris; Celia Monteiro Domingues; David Robertson; Meghana Tare; Alexander Wepf; David A. Williams; Andreas Bergmann; Matthias Gstaiger; Eli Arama; Paulo S. Ribeiro; Pascal Meier

Caspases provide vital links in non-apoptotic regulatory networks controlling inflammation, compensatory proliferation, morphology and cell migration. How caspases are activated under non-apoptotic conditions and process a selective set of substrates without killing the cell remain enigmatic. Here we find that the Drosophila unconventional myosin CRINKLED (CK) selectively interacts with the initiator caspase DRONC and regulates some of its non-apoptotic functions. Loss of CK in the arista, border cells or proneural clusters of the wing imaginal discs affects DRONC-dependent patterning. Our data indicate that CK acts as substrate adaptor, recruiting SHAGGY46/GSK3-β to DRONC, thereby facilitating caspase-mediated cleavage and localized modulation of kinase activity. Similarly, the mammalian CK counterpart, MYO7A, binds to and impinges on CASPASE-8, revealing a new regulatory axis affecting receptor interacting protein kinase-1 (RIPK1)>CASPASE-8 signalling. Together, our results expose a conserved role for unconventional myosins in transducing caspase-dependent regulation of kinases, allowing them to take part in specific signalling events.


Current Opinion in Cell Biology | 2018

Upstairs, downstairs: spatial regulation of Hippo signalling

Alexander Fulford; Nicolas Tapon; Paulo S. Ribeiro

Cellular signalling lies at the heart of every decision involved in the development and homeostasis of multicellular organisms. The Hippo pathway was discovered nearly two decades ago through seminal work in Drosophila and rapidly emerged as a crucial signalling network implicated in developmental and oncogenic growth, tissue regeneration and stem cell biology. Here, we review recent advances in the field relating to the upstream regulation of Hippo signalling and the intracellular tug-of-war that tightly controls its main target, the transcriptional co-activator Yorkie/YAP.

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S. P. Walborn

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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François Leulier

École normale supérieure de Lyon

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Alexander Fulford

Queen Mary University of London

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Dimitris Lagos

Hull York Medical School

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John G. Foster

Queen Mary University of London

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Katherine S. Bridge

Queen Mary University of London

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Kathryn M. Davidson

Queen Mary University of London

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