Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Rebecca Wood is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Rebecca Wood.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Tyrosine 416 Is Phosphorylated in the Closed, Repressed Conformation of c-Src

Sevgi Irtegun; Rebecca Wood; Angelique R. Ormsby; Terrence D. Mulhern; Danny M. Hatters

c-Src kinase activity is regulated by phosphorylation of Y527 and Y416. Y527 phosphorylation stabilizes a closed conformation, which suppresses kinase activity towards substrates, whereas phosphorylation at Y416 promotes an elevated kinase activity by stabilizing the activation loop in a manner permissive for substrate binding. Here we investigated the correlation of Y416 phosphorylation with c-Src activity when c-Src was locked into the open and closed conformations (by mutations Y527F and Q528E, P529E, G530I respectively). Consistent with prior findings, we found Y416 to be more greatly phosphorylated when c-Src was in an open, active conformation. However, we also observed an appreciable amount of Y416 was phosphorylated when c-Src was in a closed, repressed conformation under conditions by which c-Src was unable to phosphorylate substrate STAT3. The phosphorylation of Y416 in the closed conformation arose by autophosphorylation, since abolishing kinase activity by mutating the ATP binding site (K295M) prevented phosphorylation. Basal Y416 phosphorylation correlated positively with cellular levels of c-Src suggesting autophosphorylation depended on self-association. Using sedimentation velocity analysis on cell lysate with fluorescence detection optics, we confirmed that c-Src forms monomers and dimers, with the open conformation also forming a minor population of larger mass complexes. Collectively, our studies suggest a model by which dimerization of c-Src primes c-Src via Y416 phosphorylation to enable rapid potentiation of activity when Src adopts an open conformation. Once in the open conformation, c-Src can amplify the response by recruiting and phosphorylating substrates such as STAT3 and increasing the extent of autophosphorylation.


Journal of Evolutionary Biology | 2011

Wings or winds: inferring bat migration in a stepping-stone archipelago

Nicole Weyeneth; Steven M. Goodman; Belinda Appleton; Rebecca Wood; Manuel Ruedi

Eocene ocean currents and prevailing winds correlate with over‐water dispersals of terrestrial mammals from Africa to Madagascar. Since the Early Miocene (about 23 Ma), these currents flowed in the reverse direction, from the Indian Ocean towards Africa. The Comoro Islands are equidistant between Africa and Madagascar and support an endemic land vertebrate fauna that shares recent ancestry predominantly with Madagascar. We examined whether gene flow in two Miniopterus bat species endemic to the Comoros and Madagascar correlates with the direction of current winds, using uni‐ and bi‐parentally inherited markers with different evolutionary rates. Coalescence‐based analyses of mitochondrial matrilines support a Pleistocene (approximately 180 000 years ago) colonization event from Madagascar west to the Comoros (distance: 300 km) in the predicted direction. However, nuclear microsatellites show that more recent gene flow is restricted to a few individuals flying against the wind, from Grande Comore to Anjouan (distance: 80 km).


Nature Communications | 2017

A thiol probe for measuring unfolded protein load and proteostasis in cells

Moore Z. Chen; Nagaraj S. Moily; Jessica L. Bridgford; Rebecca Wood; Mona Radwan; Trevor A. Smith; Zhegang Song; Ben Zhong Tang; Leann Tilley; Xiaohong Xu; Gavin E. Reid; Mahmoud A. Pouladi; Yuning Hong; Danny M. Hatters

When proteostasis becomes unbalanced, unfolded proteins can accumulate and aggregate. Here we report that the dye, tetraphenylethene maleimide (TPE-MI) can be used to measure cellular unfolded protein load. TPE-MI fluorescence is activated upon labelling free cysteine thiols, normally buried in the core of globular proteins that are exposed upon unfolding. Crucially TPE-MI does not become fluorescent when conjugated to soluble glutathione. We find that TPE-MI fluorescence is enhanced upon reaction with cellular proteomes under conditions promoting accumulation of unfolded proteins. TPE-MI reactivity can be used to track which proteins expose more cysteine residues under stress through proteomic analysis. We show that TPE-MI can report imbalances in proteostasis in induced pluripotent stem cell models of Huntington disease, as well as cells transfected with mutant Huntington exon 1 before the formation of visible aggregates. TPE-MI also detects protein damage following dihydroartemisinin treatment of the malaria parasites Plasmodium falciparum. TPE-MI therefore holds promise as a tool to probe proteostasis mechanisms in disease.Proteostasis is maintained through a number of molecular mechanisms, some of which function to protect the folded state of proteins. Here the authors demonstrate the use of TPE-MI in a fluorigenic dye assay for the quantitation of unfolded proteins that can be used to assess proteostasis on a cellular or proteome scale.


Iubmb Life | 2017

When proteostasis goes bad: Protein aggregation in the cell

Mona Radwan; Rebecca Wood; Xiaojing Sui; Danny M. Hatters

Protein aggregation is a hallmark of the major neurodegenerative diseases including Alzheimers, Parkinsons, Huntingtons and motor neuron and is a symptom of a breakdown in the management of proteome foldedness. Indeed, it is remarkable that under normal conditions cells can keep their proteome in a highly crowded and confined space without uncontrollable aggregation. Proteins pose a particular challenge relative to other classes of biomolecules because upon synthesis they must typically follow a complex folding pathway to reach their functional conformation (native state). Non‐native conformations, including the unfolded nascent chain, are highly prone to aberrant interactions, leading to aggregation. Here we review recent advances in knowledge of proteostasis, approaches to monitor proteostasis and the impact that protein aggregation has on biology. We also include discussion of the outstanding challenges.


ACS Chemical Biology | 2014

A biosensor of SRC family kinase conformation by exposable tetracysteine useful for cell-based screening.

Sevgi Irtegun; Rebecca Wood; Kurt Lackovic; Jörg Schweiggert; Yasmin M. Ramdzan; David C. S. Huang; Terrence D. Mulhern; Danny M. Hatters

We developed a new approach to distinguish distinct protein conformations in live cells. The method, exposable tetracysteine (XTC), involved placing an engineered tetracysteine motif into a target protein that has conditional access to biarsenical dye binding by conformational state. XTC was used to distinguish open and closed regulatory conformations of Src family kinases. Substituting just four residues with cysteines in the conserved SH2 domain of three Src-family kinases (c-Src, Lck, Lyn) enabled open and closed conformations to be monitored on the basis of binding differences to biarsenical dyes FlAsH or ReAsH. Fusion of the kinases with a fluorescent protein tracked the kinase presence, and the XTC approach enabled simultaneous assessment of regulatory state. The c-Src XTC biosensor was applied in a boutique screen of kinase inhibitors, which revealed six compounds to induce conformational closure. The XTC approach demonstrates new potential for assays targeting conformational changes in key proteins in disease and biology.


Molecular Ecology Resources | 2011

Development and characterisation of 20 microsatellite loci isolated from the large bent-wing bat, Miniopterus schreibersii (Chiroptera: Miniopteridae) and their cross-taxa utility in the family Miniopteridae

Rebecca Wood; Nicole Weyeneth; Belinda Appleton

The large bent‐wing bat, Miniopterus schreibersii (Kuhl 1819), has a long history of taxonomic uncertainty and many populations are known to be in a state of decline. Microsatellite loci were developed for the taxonomic and population genetic assessment of the Australian complex of this species. Of the 33 primer sets designed for this research, seven (21%) were deemed suitably polymorphic for population‐level analyses of the Australian taxa, with five (71%) of these loci revealing moderate to high levels of polymorphism (PIC = 0.56 to 0.91). The cross‐taxa utility of the M. schreibersii microsatellite markers was assessed in the microbat (Chiroptera) family Miniopteridae. Sub‐species and species covering the Miniopteridae’s global distribution (with the exception of the Middle East) were selected, numbering 25 taxa in total. Amplification was successful for 26 loci, of which 20 (77%) were polymorphic. High cross‐taxa utility of markers was observed with amplification achieved for all taxa for between four (20%) and 20 (100%) loci, and polymorphism was considered moderate to high (PIC = 0.47–0.91) for 12 (60%) of these loci. The high cross‐taxa utility of the microsatellites reported herein reveal versatile and cost‐effective molecular markers, contributing an important genetic resource for the research and conservation of Miniopteridae species worldwide.


Nature Communications | 2018

A biosensor-based framework to measure latent proteostasis capacity

Rebecca Wood; Angelique R. Ormsby; Mona Radwan; Dezerae Cox; Abhishek Sharma; Tobias Vöpel; Simon Ebbinghaus; Mikael Oliveberg; Gavin E. Reid; Alex Dickson; Danny M. Hatters

The pool of quality control proteins (QC) that maintains protein-folding homeostasis (proteostasis) is dynamic but can become depleted in human disease. A challenge has been in quantitatively defining the depth of the QC pool. With a new biosensor, flow cytometry-based methods and mathematical modeling we measure the QC capacity to act as holdases and suppress biosensor aggregation. The biosensor system comprises a series of barnase kernels with differing folding stability that engage primarily with HSP70 and HSP90 family proteins. Conditions of proteostasis stimulation and stress alter QC holdase activity and aggregation rates. The method reveals the HSP70 chaperone cycle to be rate limited by HSP70 holdase activity under normal conditions, but this is overcome by increasing levels of the BAG1 nucleotide exchange factor to HSPA1A or activation of the heat shock gene cluster by HSF1 overexpression. This scheme opens new paths for biosensors of disease and proteostasis systems.A pool of quality control proteins (QC) maintains the protein-folding homeostasis in the cell, but its quantitative analysis is challenging. Here the authors develop a FRET sensor based on the protein barnase, able to quantify QC holdase activity and its ability to suppress protein aggregation.


Methods of Molecular Biology | 2013

Pulse shape analysis (PulSA) to track protein translocalization in cells by flow cytometry: applications for polyglutamine aggregation.

Yasmin M. Ramdzan; Rebecca Wood; Danny M. Hatters

Pulse shape analysis (PulSA) is a flow cytometry-based method that can be used to study protein localization patterns in cells. Examples for its use include tracking the formation of inclusion bodies of polyglutamine-expanded proteins and other aggregating proteins. The method can also be used for phenomena relating to protein movements in cells such as translocation from the cytoplasm to the nucleus, trafficking from the plasma membrane to the Golgi, and stress granule formation. An attractive feature is its capacity to quantify these parameters in whole-cell populations very quickly and in high throughput. We describe the basic experimental details for performing PulSA using expression of GFP-tagged proteins, endogenous proteins labelled immunofluorescently, and organelle dyes.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2015

Polyalanine expansions drive a shift into α-helical clusters without amyloid-fibril formation.

Saskia Polling; Angelique R. Ormsby; Rebecca Wood; Kristie Lee; Cheryl Shoubridge; James N. Hughes; Paul Q. Thomas; Michael D. W. Griffin; Andrew F. Hill; Quill Bowden; Till Böcking; Danny M. Hatters


Protocol exchange | 2018

Measuring proteostasis capacity using transiently transfected bait proteins by flow cytometry

Danny M. Hatters; Rebecca Wood; Candice Raeburn; Angelique R. Ormsby; Mikael Oliveberg; Alex Dickson

Collaboration


Dive into the Rebecca Wood's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Mona Radwan

University of Melbourne

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Nicole Weyeneth

Natural History Museum of Geneva

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge