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Dive into the research topics where Pimthanya Wanichawan is active.

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Featured researches published by Pimthanya Wanichawan.


American Journal of Physiology-cell Physiology | 2011

Full-length cardiac Na+/Ca2+ exchanger 1 protein is not phosphorylated by protein kinase A

Pimthanya Wanichawan; William E. Louch; Kristin Halvorsen Hortemo; Bjørg Austbø; Per Kristian Lunde; John D. Scott; Ole M. Sejersted; Cathrine R. Carlson

The cardiac Na(+)/Ca(2+) exchanger 1 (NCX1) is an important regulator of intracellular Ca(2+) homeostasis and cardiac function. Several studies have indicated that NCX1 is phosphorylated by the cAMP-dependent protein kinase A (PKA) in vitro, which increases its activity. However, this finding is controversial and no phosphorylation site has so far been identified. Using bioinformatic analysis and peptide arrays, we screened NCX1 for putative PKA phosphorylation sites. Although several NCX1 synthetic peptides were phosphorylated by PKA in vitro, only one PKA site (threonine 731) was identified after mutational analysis. To further examine whether NCX1 protein could be PKA phosphorylated, wild-type and alanine-substituted NCX1-green fluorescent protein (GFP)-fusion proteins expressed in human embryonic kidney (HEK)293 cells were generated. No phosphorylation of full-length or calpain- or caspase-3 digested NCX1-GFP was observed with purified PKA-C and [γ-(32)P]ATP. Immunoblotting experiments with anti-PKA substrate and phosphothreonine-specific antibodies were further performed to investigate phosphorylation of endogenous NCX1. Phospho-NCX1 levels were also not increased after forskolin or isoproterenol treatment in vivo, in isolated neonatal cardiomyocytes, or in total heart homogenate. These data indicate that the novel in vitro PKA phosphorylation site is inaccessible in full-length as well as in calpain- or caspase-3 digested NCX1 protein, suggesting that NCX1 is not a direct target for PKA phosphorylation.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2014

Molecular Basis of Calpain Cleavage and Inactivation of the Sodium-Calcium Exchanger 1 in Heart Failure

Pimthanya Wanichawan; Tandekile Lubelwana Hafver; Kjetil Hodne; Jan Magnus Aronsen; Ida G. Lunde; Bjørn Dalhus; Marianne Lunde; Heidi Kvaløy; William E. Louch; Theis Tønnessen; Ivar Sjaastad; Ole M. Sejersted; Cathrine R. Carlson

Background: Sodium-calcium exchanger 1 (NCX1) and calpain are up-regulated in heart failure (HF). Molecular mechanisms and functional consequences of NCX1 cleavage by calpain are not known. Results: Calpain anchors to two NCX1 regions and cleaves at methionine-369, leading to inactivation. Conclusion: NCX1 inhibition by calpain might improve cardiac function. Significance: Calpain might play a pivotal role in NCX1 regulation during HF. Cardiac sodium (Na+)-calcium (Ca2+) exchanger 1 (NCX1) is central to the maintenance of normal Ca2+ homeostasis and contraction. Studies indicate that the Ca2+-activated protease calpain cleaves NCX1. We hypothesized that calpain is an important regulator of NCX1 in response to pressure overload and aimed to identify molecular mechanisms and functional consequences of calpain binding and cleavage of NCX1 in the heart. NCX1 full-length protein and a 75-kDa NCX1 fragment along with calpain were up-regulated in aortic stenosis patients and rats with heart failure. Patients with coronary artery disease and sham-operated rats were used as controls. Calpain co-localized, co-fractionated, and co-immunoprecipitated with NCX1 in rat cardiomyocytes and left ventricle lysate. Immunoprecipitations, pull-down experiments, and extensive use of peptide arrays indicated that calpain domain III anchored to the first Ca2+ binding domain in NCX1, whereas the calpain catalytic region bound to the catenin-like domain in NCX1. The use of bioinformatics, mutational analyses, a substrate competitor peptide, and a specific NCX1-Met369 antibody identified a novel calpain cleavage site at Met369. Engineering NCX1-Met369 into a tobacco etch virus protease cleavage site revealed that specific cleavage at Met369 inhibited NCX1 activity (both forward and reverse mode). Finally, a short peptide fragment containing the NCX1-Met369 cleavage site was modeled into the narrow active cleft of human calpain. Inhibition of NCX1 activity, such as we have observed here following calpain-induced NCX1 cleavage, might be beneficial in pathophysiological conditions where increased NCX1 activity contributes to cardiac dysfunction.


Brain | 2017

A combinatorial approach to identify calpain cleavage sites in the Machado-Joseph disease protein ataxin-3

Jonasz Jeremiasz Weber; Matthias Golla; Giambattista Guaitoli; Pimthanya Wanichawan; Stefanie N. Hayer; Stefan Hauser; Ann-Christin Krahl; Maike Nagel; Sebastian Samer; Eleonora Aronica; Cathrine R. Carlson; Ludger Schöls; Olaf Riess; Christian Johannes Gloeckner; Huu P. Nguyen; Jeannette Hübener-Schmid

Ataxin-3, the disease protein in Machado-Joseph disease, is known to be proteolytically modified by various enzymes including two major families of proteases, caspases and calpains. This processing results in the generation of toxic fragments of the polyglutamine-expanded protein. Although various approaches were undertaken to identify cleavage sites within ataxin-3 and to evaluate the impact of fragments on the molecular pathogenesis of Machado-Joseph disease, calpain-mediated cleavage of the disease protein and the localization of cleavage sites remained unclear. Here, we report on the first precise localization of calpain cleavage sites in ataxin-3 and on the characterization of the resulting breakdown products. After confirming the occurrence of calpain-derived fragmentation of ataxin-3 in patient-derived cell lines and post-mortem brain tissue, we combined in silico prediction tools, western blot analysis, mass spectrometry, and peptide overlay assays to identify calpain cleavage sites. We found that ataxin-3 is primarily cleaved at two sites, namely at amino acid positions D208 and S256 and mutating amino acids at both cleavage sites to tryptophan nearly abolished ataxin-3 fragmentation. Furthermore, analysis of calpain cleavage-derived fragments showed distinct aggregation propensities and toxicities of C-terminal polyglutamine-containing breakdown products. Our data elucidate the important role of ataxin-3 proteolysis in the pathogenesis of Machado-Joseph disease and further emphasize the relevance of targeting this disease pathway as a treatment strategy in neurodegenerative disorders.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2016

Protein Phosphatase 1c Associated with the Cardiac Sodium Calcium Exchanger 1 Regulates Its Activity by Dephosphorylating Serine 68-phosphorylated Phospholemman

Tandekile Lubelwana Hafver; Kjetil Hodne; Pimthanya Wanichawan; Jan Magnus Aronsen; Bjørn Dalhus; Per Kristian Lunde; Marianne Lunde; Marita Martinsen; Ulla H. Enger; William Fuller; Ivar Sjaastad; William E. Louch; Ole M. Sejersted; Cathrine R. Carlson

The sodium (Na+)-calcium (Ca2+) exchanger 1 (NCX1) is an important regulator of intracellular Ca2+ homeostasis. Serine 68-phosphorylated phospholemman (pSer-68-PLM) inhibits NCX1 activity. In the context of Na+/K+-ATPase (NKA) regulation, pSer-68-PLM is dephosphorylated by protein phosphatase 1 (PP1). PP1 also associates with NCX1; however, the molecular basis of this association is unknown. In this study, we aimed to analyze the mechanisms of PP1 targeting to the NCX1-pSer-68-PLM complex and hypothesized that a direct and functional NCX1-PP1 interaction is a prerequisite for pSer-68-PLM dephosphorylation. Using a variety of molecular techniques, we show that PP1 catalytic subunit (PP1c) co-localized, co-fractionated, and co-immunoprecipitated with NCX1 in rat cardiomyocytes, left ventricle lysates, and HEK293 cells. Bioinformatic analysis, immunoprecipitations, mutagenesis, pulldown experiments, and peptide arrays constrained PP1c anchoring to the K(I/V)FF motif in the first Ca2+ binding domain (CBD) 1 in NCX1. This binding site is also partially in agreement with the extended PP1-binding motif K(V/I)FF-X5–8Φ1Φ2-X8–9-R. The cytosolic loop of NCX1, containing the K(I/V)FF motif, had no effect on PP1 activity in an in vitro assay. Dephosphorylation of pSer-68-PLM in HEK293 cells was not observed when NCX1 was absent, when the K(I/V)FF motif was mutated, or when the PLM- and PP1c-binding sites were separated (mimicking calpain cleavage of NCX1). Co-expression of PLM and NCX1 inhibited NCX1 current (both modes). Moreover, co-expression of PLM with NCX1(F407P) (mutated K(I/V)FF motif) resulted in the current being completely abolished. In conclusion, NCX1 is a substrate-specifying PP1c regulator protein, indirectly regulating NCX1 activity through pSer-68-PLM dephosphorylation.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2017

A c-Myb mutant causes deregulated differentiation due to impaired histone binding and abrogated pioneer factor function

Bettina Maria Fuglerud; Roza Berhanu Lemma; Pimthanya Wanichawan; Arvind Y. M. Sundaram; Ragnhild Eskeland; Odd S. Gabrielsen

Abstract The transcription factor c-Myb is involved in early differentiation and proliferation of haematopoietic cells, where it operates as a regulator of self-renewal and multi-lineage differentiation. Deregulated c-Myb plays critical roles in leukaemias and other human cancers. Due to its role as a master regulator, we hypothesized it might function as a pioneer transcription factor. Our approach to test this was to analyse a mutant of c-Myb, D152V, previously reported to cause haematopoietic defects in mice by an unknown mechanism. Our transcriptome data from K562 cells indicates that this mutation specifically affects c-Mybs ability to regulate genes involved in differentiation, causing failure in c-Mybs ability to block differentiation. Furthermore, we see a major effect of this mutation in assays where chromatin opening is involved. We show that each repeat in the minimal DNA-binding domain of c-Myb binds to histones and that D152V disrupts histone binding of the third repeat. ATAC-seq data indicates this mutation impairs the ability of c-Myb to cause chromatin opening at specific sites. Taken together, our findings support that c-Myb acts as a pioneer factor and show that D152V impairs this function. The D152V mutant is the first mutant of a transcription factor specifically destroying pioneer factor function.


Proteomics | 2017

Mapping the in vitro interactome of cardiac sodium (Na+)-calcium (Ca2+) exchanger 1 (NCX1)

Tandekile Lubelwana Hafver; Pimthanya Wanichawan; Ornella Manfra; Gustavo A. de Souza; Marianne Lunde; Marita Martinsen; William E. Louch; Ole M. Sejersted; Cathrine R. Carlson

The sodium (Na+)‐calcium (Ca2+) exchanger 1 (NCX1) is an antiporter membrane protein encoded by the SLC8A1 gene. In the heart, it maintains cytosolic Ca2+ homeostasis, serving as the primary mechanism for Ca2+ extrusion during relaxation. Dysregulation of NCX1 is observed in end‐stage human heart failure. In this study, we used affinity purification coupled with MS in rat left ventricle lysates to identify novel NCX1 interacting proteins in the heart. Two screens were conducted using: (1) anti‐NCX1 against endogenous NCX1 and (2) anti‐His (where His is histidine) with His‐trigger factor‐NCX1cyt recombinant protein as bait. The respective methods identified 112 and 350 protein partners, of which several were known NCX1 partners from the literature, and 29 occurred in both screens. Ten novel protein partners (DYRK1A, PPP2R2A, SNTB1, DMD, RABGGTA, DNAJB4, BAG3, PDE3A, POPDC2, STK39) were validated for binding to NCX1, and two partners (DYRK1A, SNTB1) increased NCX1 activity when expressed in HEK293 cells. A cardiac NCX1 protein–protein interaction map was constructed. The map was highly connected, containing distinct clusters of proteins with different biological functions, where “cell communication” and “signal transduction” formed the largest clusters. The NCX1 interactome was also significantly enriched with proteins/genes involved in “cardiovascular disease” which can be explored as novel drug targets in future research.


Biochemical Journal | 2016

Development of a high-affinity peptide that prevents phospholemman (PLM) inhibition of the sodium/calcium exchanger 1 (NCX1)

Pimthanya Wanichawan; Kjetil Hodne; Tandekile Lubelwana Hafver; Marianne Lunde; Marita Martinsen; William E. Louch; Ole M. Sejersted; Cathrine R. Carlson

NCX1 (Na+/Ca2+ exchanger 1) is an important regulator of intracellular Ca2+ and a potential therapeutic target for brain ischaemia and for diastolic heart failure with preserved ejection fraction. PLM (phospholemman), a substrate for protein kinases A and C, has been suggested to regulate NCX1 activity. However, although several studies have demonstrated that binding of phosphorylated PLM (pSer68-PLM) leads to NCX1 inhibition, other studies have failed to demonstrate a functional interaction of these proteins. In the present study, we aimed to analyse the biological function of the pSer68-PLM–NCX1 interaction by developing high-affinity blocking peptides. PLM was observed to co-fractionate and co-immunoprecipitate with NCX1 in rat left ventricle, and in co-transfected HEK (human embryonic kidney)-293 cells. For the first time, the NCX1–PLM interaction was also demonstrated in the brain. PLM binding sites on NCX1 were mapped to two regions by peptide array assays, containing the previously reported PASKT and QKHPD motifs. Conversely, the two NCX1 regions bound identical sequences in the cytoplasmic domain of PLM, suggesting that NCX1-PASKT and NCX1-QKHPD might bind to each PLM monomer. Using two-dimensional peptide arrays of the native NCX1 sequence KHPDKEIEQLIELANYQVLS revealed that double substitution of tyrosine for positions 1 and 4 (K1Y and D4Y) enhanced pSer68-PLM binding 8-fold. The optimized peptide blocked binding of NCX1-PASKT and NCX1-QKHPD to PLM and reversed PLM(S68D) inhibition of NCX1 activity (both forward and reverse mode) in HEK-293 cells. Altogether our data indicate that PLM interacts directly with NCX1 and inhibits NCX1 activity when phosphorylated at Ser68.


Biophysical Journal | 2015

PP1 Anchoring onto NCX1 Facilitates Dephosphorylation of P-SER68-PLM

Tandekile Lubelwana Hafver; Pimthanya Wanichawan; Kjetil Hodne; Jan Magnus Aronsen; Bjørn Dalhus; Marianne Lunde; Ulla H. Enger; Marita Mathisen; William Fuller; Ivar Sjaastad; Ole M. Sejersted; Cathrine R. Carlson


Biophysical Journal | 2014

Identification and Functional Role of Calpain Cleavage Site in Na+-Ca2+ Exchanger 1 (NCX1)

Kjetil Hodne; Pimthanya Wanichawan; Tandekile Lubelwana Hafver; Jan Magnus Aronsen; Ida G. Lunde; Marianne Lunde; Heidi Kvaløy; Theis Tønnessen; Ivar Sjaastad; William E. Louch; Ole M. Sejersted; Cathrine R. Carlson


Circulation | 2013

Abstract 13025: Modulation of the Sodium-calcium Exchanger 1 (NCX1) by Calpain; Molecular Interactions and Identification of a Calpain Cleavage Site

Pimthanya Wanichawan; Tandi L Hafver; Jan Magnus Aronsen; Ida G. Lunde; Marianne Lunde; Heidi Kvaløy; Theis Tønnessen; Ivar Sjaastad; Ole M. Sejersted; Cathrine R. Carlson

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Ivar Sjaastad

Oslo University Hospital

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Bjørn Dalhus

Oslo University Hospital

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