Ramon F. Thali
ETH Zurich
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Featured researches published by Ramon F. Thali.
The EMBO Journal | 2010
Nabil Djouder; Roland Tuerk; Marianne Suter; Paolo Salvioni; Ramon F. Thali; Roland W. Scholz; Kari Vaahtomeri; Yolanda Auchli; Helene Rechsteiner; René Brunisholz; Benoit Viollet; Tomi P. Mäkelä; Theo Wallimann; Dietbert Neumann; Wilhelm Krek
The mobilization of metabolic energy from adipocytes depends on a tightly regulated balance between hydrolysis and resynthesis of triacylglycerides (TAGs). Hydrolysis is stimulated by β‐adrenergic signalling to PKA that mediates phosphorylation of lipolytic enzymes, including hormone‐sensitive lipase (HSL). TAG resynthesis is associated with high‐energy consumption, which when inordinate, leads to increased AMPK activity that acts to restrain hydrolysis of TAGs by inhibiting PKA‐mediated activation of HSL. Here, we report that in primary mouse adipocytes, PKA associates with and phosphorylates AMPKα1 at Ser‐173 to impede threonine (Thr‐172) phosphorylation and thus activation of AMPKα1 by LKB1 in response to lipolytic signals. Activation of AMPKα1 by LKB1 is also blocked by PKA‐mediated phosphorylation of AMPKα1 in vitro. Functional analysis of an AMPKα1 species carrying a non‐phosphorylatable mutation at Ser‐173 revealed a critical function of this phosphorylation for efficient release of free fatty acids and glycerol in response to PKA‐activating signals. These results suggest a new mechanism of negative regulation of AMPK activity by PKA that is important for converting a lipolytic signal into an effective lipolytic response.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010
Rodrigo Alzamora; Ramon F. Thali; Fan Gong; Christy Smolak; Hui Li; Catherine J. Baty; Carol A. Bertrand; Yolanda Auchli; René Brunisholz; Dietbert Neumann; Kenneth R. Hallows; Núria M. Pastor-Soler
The vacuolar H+-ATPase (V-ATPase) is a major contributor to luminal acidification in epithelia of Wolffian duct origin. In both kidney-intercalated cells and epididymal clear cells, cAMP induces V-ATPase apical membrane accumulation, which is linked to proton secretion. We have shown previously that the A subunit in the cytoplasmic V1 sector of the V-ATPase is phosphorylated by protein kinase A (PKA). Here we have identified by mass spectrometry and mutagenesis that Ser-175 is the major PKA phosphorylation site in the A subunit. Overexpression in HEK-293T cells of either a wild-type (WT) or phosphomimic Ser-175 to Asp (S175D) A subunit mutant caused increased acidification of HCO3−-containing culture medium compared with cells expressing vector alone or a PKA phosphorylation-deficient Ser-175 to Ala (S175A) mutant. Moreover, localization of the S175A A subunit mutant expressed in HEK-293T cells was more diffusely cytosolic than that of WT or S175D A subunit. Acute V-ATPase-mediated, bafilomycin-sensitive H+ secretion was up-regulated by a specific PKA activator in HEK-293T cells expressing WT A subunit in HCO3−-free buffer. In cells expressing the S175D mutant, V-ATPase activity at the membrane was constitutively up-regulated and unresponsive to PKA activators, whereas cells expressing the S175A mutant had decreased V-ATPase activity that was unresponsive to PKA activation. Finally, Ser-175 was necessary for PKA-stimulated apical accumulation of the V-ATPase in a polarized rabbit cell line of collecting duct A-type intercalated cell characteristics (Clone C). In summary, these results indicate a novel mechanism for the regulation of V-ATPase localization and activity in kidney cells via direct PKA-dependent phosphorylation of the A subunit at Ser-175.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010
Roland W. Scholz; Corinne L. Sidler; Ramon F. Thali; Nicolas Winssinger; Peter C. F. Cheung; Dietbert Neumann
Transforming growth factor-β-activated kinase 1 (TAK1), an MAP3K, is a key player in processing a multitude of inflammatory stimuli. TAK1 autoactivation involves the interplay with TAK1-binding proteins (TAB), e.g. TAB1 and TAB2, and phosphorylation of several activation segment residues. However, the TAK1 autoactivation is not yet fully understood on the molecular level due to the static nature of available x-ray structural data and the complexity of cellular systems applied for investigation. Here, we established a bacterial expression system to generate recombinant mammalian TAK1 complexes. Co-expression of TAK1 and TAB1, but not TAB2, resulted in a functional and active TAK1-TAB1 complex capable of directly activating full-length heterotrimeric mammalian AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) in vitro. TAK1-dependent AMPK activation was mediated via hydrophobic residues of the AMPK kinase domain αG-helix as observed in vitro and in transfected cell culture. Co-immunoprecipitation of differently epitope-tagged TAK1 from transfected cells and mutation of hydrophobic αG-helix residues in TAK1 point to an intermolecular mechanism of TAB1-induced TAK1 autoactivation, as TAK1 autophosphorylation of the activation segment was impaired in these mutants. TAB1 phosphorylation was enhanced in a subset of these mutants, indicating a critical role of αG-helix residues in this process. Analyses of phosphorylation site mutants of the activation segment indicate that autophosphorylation of Ser-192 precedes TAB1 phosphorylation and is followed by sequential phosphorylation of Thr-178, Thr-187, and finally Thr-184. Finally, we present a model for the chronological order of events governing TAB1-induced TAK1 autoactivation.
American Journal of Physiology-renal Physiology | 2013
Rodrigo Alzamora; Mohammad M. Al-bataineh; Wen Liu; Fan Gong; Hui Li; Ramon F. Thali; Yolanda Joho-Auchli; René Brunisholz; Lisa M. Satlin; Dietbert Neumann; Kenneth R. Hallows; Núria M. Pastor-Soler
The vacuolar H(+)-ATPase (V-ATPase) in intercalated cells contributes to luminal acidification in the kidney collecting duct and nonvolatile acid excretion. We previously showed that the A subunit in the cytoplasmic V1 sector of the V-ATPase (ATP6V1A) is phosphorylated by the metabolic sensor AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) in vitro and in kidney cells. Here, we demonstrate that treatment of rabbit isolated, perfused collecting ducts with the AMPK activator 5-aminoimidazole-4-carboxamide-1-β-D-ribofuranoside (AICAR) inhibited V-ATPase-dependent H(+) secretion from intercalated cells after an acid load. We have identified by mass spectrometry that Ser-384 is a major AMPK phosphorylation site in the V-ATPase A subunit, a result confirmed by comparing AMPK-dependent phosphate labeling of wild-type A-subunit (WT-A) with that of a Ser-384-to-Ala A subunit mutant (S384A-A) in vitro and in intact HEK-293 cells. Compared with WT-A-expressing HEK-293 cells, S384A-A-expressing cells exhibited greater steady-state acidification of HCO3(-)-containing media. Moreover, AICAR treatment of clone C rabbit intercalated cells expressing the WT-A subunit reduced V-ATPase-dependent extracellular acidification, an effect that was blocked in cells expressing the phosphorylation-deficient S384A-A mutant. Finally, expression of the S384A-A mutant prevented cytoplasmic redistribution of the V-ATPase by AICAR in clone C cells. In summary, direct phosphorylation of the A subunit at Ser-384 by AMPK represents a novel regulatory mechanism of the V-ATPase in kidney intercalated cells. Regulation of the V-ATPase by AMPK may couple V-ATPase activity to cellular metabolic status with potential relevance to ischemic injury in the kidney and other tissues.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2015
Yvonne Oligschlaeger; Marie Miglianico; Dipanjan Chanda; Roland W. Scholz; Ramon F. Thali; Roland Tuerk; David Stapleton; Paul R. Gooley; Dietbert Neumann
Background: AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) is a current drug target. AMPK can attach to glycogen granules. Results: Autophosphorylation of AMPK prevents its association with glycogen. Conclusion: Subcellular localization of AMPK is affected by the kinase autophosphorylation status. Significance: Understanding the regulation of AMPK at subcellular level is crucial for the currently pursued drug targeting approach. The mammalian AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) is an obligatory αβγ heterotrimeric complex carrying a carbohydrate-binding module (CBM) in the β-subunit (AMPKβ) capable of attaching AMPK to glycogen. Nonetheless, AMPK localizes at many different cellular compartments, implying the existence of mechanisms that prevent AMPK from glycogen binding. Cell-free carbohydrate binding assays revealed that AMPK autophosphorylation abolished its carbohydrate-binding capacity. X-ray structural data of the CBM displays the central positioning of threonine 148 within the binding pocket. Substitution of Thr-148 for a phospho-mimicking aspartate (T148D) prevents AMPK from binding to carbohydrate. Overexpression of isolated CBM or β1-containing AMPK in cellular models revealed that wild type (WT) localizes to glycogen particles, whereas T148D shows a diffuse pattern. Pharmacological AMPK activation and glycogen degradation by glucose deprivation but not forskolin enhanced cellular Thr-148 phosphorylation. Cellular glycogen content was higher if pharmacological AMPK activation was combined with overexpression of T148D mutant relative to WT AMPK. In summary, these data show that glycogen-binding capacity of AMPKβ is regulated by Thr-148 autophosphorylation with likely implications in the regulation of glycogen turnover. The findings further raise the possibility of regulated carbohydrate-binding function in a wider variety of CBM-containing proteins.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009
Roland W. Scholz; Marianne Suter; Théodore Weimann; Cécile Polge; Petr V. Konarev; Ramon F. Thali; Roland Tuerk; Benoit Viollet; Theo Wallimann; Uwe Schlattner; Dietbert Neumann
AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) is a heterotrimeric complex playing a crucial role in maintaining cellular energy homeostasis. Recently, homodimerization of mammalian AMPK and yeast ortholog SNF1 was shown by us and others. In SNF1, it involved specific hydrophobic residues in the kinase domain αG-helix. Mutation of the corresponding AMPK α-subunit residues (Val-219 and Phe-223) to glutamate reduced the tendency of the kinase to form higher order homo-oligomers, as was determined by the following three independent techniques in vitro: (i) small angle x-ray scattering, (ii) surface plasmon resonance spectroscopy, and (iii) two-dimensional blue native/SDS-PAGE. Recombinant protein as well as AMPK in cell lysates of primary cells revealed distinct complexes of various sizes. In particular, the assembly of very high molecular mass complexes was dependent on both the αG-helix-mediated hydrophobic interactions and kinase activation. In vitro and when overexpressed in double knock-out (α1−/−, α2−/−) mouse embryonic fibroblast cells, activation of mutant AMPK was impaired, indicating a critical role of the αG-helix residues for AMPK activation via its upstream kinases. Also inactivation by protein phosphatase 2Cα was affected in mutant AMPK. Importantly, activation of mutant AMPK by LKB1 was restored by exchanging the corresponding and conserved hydrophobic αG-helix residues of LKB1 (Ile-260 and Phe-264) to positively charged amino acids. These mutations functionally rescued LKB1-dependent activation of mutant AMPK in vitro and in cell culture. Our data suggest a physiological role for the hydrophobic αG-helix residues in homo-oligomerization of heterotrimers and cellular interactions, in particular with upstream kinases, indicating an additional level of AMPK regulation.
Analytical Biochemistry | 2009
Roland Tuerk; Yolanda Auchli; Ramon F. Thali; Roland W. Scholz; Theo Wallimann; René Brunisholz; Dietbert Neumann
Phosphoamino acid modifications on substrate proteins are critical components of protein kinase signaling pathways. Thus, diverse methodologies have been developed and applied to identify the sites of phosphorylated amino acids within proteins. Despite significant progress in the field, even the determination of phosphorylated residues in a given highly purified protein is not a matter of routine and can be difficult and time-consuming. Here we present a practicable approach that integrates into a liquid chromatography matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization mass spectrometry (LC-MALDI MS) workflow and allows localization and quantification of phosphorylated peptides on the MALDI target plate prior to MS analysis. Tryptic digests of radiolabeled proteins are fractionated by reversed-phase LC directly onto disposable MALDI target plates, followed by autoradiographic imaging. Visualization of the radiolabel enables focused analysis of selected spots, thereby accelerating the process of phosphorylation site mapping by decreasing the number of spectra to be acquired. Moreover, absolute quantification of the phosphorylated peptides is permitted by the use of appropriate standards. Finally, the manual sample handling is minimal, and consequently the risk of adsorptive sample loss is very low. Application of the procedure allowed the targeted identification of six novel autophosphorylation sites of AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) and displayed additional unknown phosphorylated peptide species not amenable to detection by MS. Furthermore, autoradiography revealed topologically inhomogeneous distribution of phosphorylated peptides within individual spots. However, accurate analysis of defined areas within single spots suggests that, rather than such quantitative differences, mainly the manner of matrix crystallization significantly affects ionization of phosphopeptides.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2014
Sacnicte Ramírez Ríos; Frédéric Lamarche; Cécile Cottet-Rousselle; Anna Klaus; Roland Tuerk; Ramon F. Thali; Yolanda Auchli; René Brunisholz; Dietbert Neumann; Luc Barret; Malgorzata Tokarska-Schlattner; Uwe Schlattner
AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) and cytosolic brain-type creatine kinase (BCK) cooperate under energy stress to compensate for loss of adenosine triphosphate (ATP) by either stimulating ATP-generating and inhibiting ATP-consuming pathways, or by direct ATP regeneration from phosphocreatine, respectively. Here we report on AMPK-dependent phosphorylation of BCK from different species identified by in vitro screening for AMPK substrates in mouse brain. Mass spectrometry, protein sequencing, and site-directed mutagenesis identified Ser6 as a relevant residue with one site phosphorylated per BCK dimer. Yeast two-hybrid analysis revealed interaction of active AMPK specifically with non-phosphorylated BCK. Pharmacological activation of AMPK mimicking energy stress led to BCK phosphorylation in astrocytes and fibroblasts, as evidenced with a highly specific phospho-Ser6 antibody. BCK phosphorylation at Ser6 did not affect its enzymatic activity, but led to the appearance of the phosphorylated enzyme at the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), close to the ER calcium pump, a location known for muscle-type cytosolic creatine kinase (CK) to support Ca²⁺-pumping.
Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2010
Ramon F. Thali; Roland Tuerk; Roland W. Scholz; Yolanda Yoho-Auchli; René Brunisholz; Dietbert Neumann
AMPK is a metabolic stress-sensing kinase with important functions for red blood cell (RBC) survival. By using a proteomic approach, we identified putative AMPK targets in hemoglobin-depleted lysates of RBC, including metabolic enzymes, cytoskeletal proteins and enzymes involved in the oxidative stress response. These data tie in with the phenotypic observations of AMPKalpha1-deficient RBC and provide reference for future studies.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2016
Xiaoqing Zhu; V.E.H. Dahlmans; Ramon F. Thali; Christian Preisinger; Benoit Viollet; J. Willem Voncken; Dietbert Neumann
AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) is a molecular energy sensor that acts to sustain cellular energy balance. Although AMPK is implicated in the regulation of a multitude of ATP-dependent cellular processes, exactly how these processes are controlled by AMPK as well as the identity of AMPK targets and pathways continues to evolve. Here we identify MAP kinase-interacting serine/threonine protein kinase 1a (MNK1a) as a novel AMPK target. Specifically, we show AMPK-dependent Ser353 phosphorylation of the human MNK1a isoform in cell-free and cellular systems. We show that AMPK and MNK1a physically interact and that in vivo MNK1a-Ser353 phosphorylation requires T-loop phosphorylation, in good agreement with a recently proposed structural regulatory model of MNK1a. Our data suggest a physiological role for MNK1a-Ser353 phosphorylation in regulation of the MNK1a kinase, which correlates with increased eIF4E phosphorylation in vitro and in vivo.