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Dive into the research topics where Ricardo Nunes Bastos is active.

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Featured researches published by Ricardo Nunes Bastos.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2010

Protein phosphatase 6 regulates mitotic spindle formation by controlling the T-loop phosphorylation state of Aurora A bound to its activator TPX2

Kang Zeng; Ricardo Nunes Bastos; Francis A. Barr; Ulrike Gruneberg

Loss of PP6 function interferes with spindle formation and chromosome alignment because of amplified Aurora A activity.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2010

Plk1 negatively regulates Cep55 recruitment to the midbody to ensure orderly abscission

Ricardo Nunes Bastos; Francis A. Barr

Cytokinesis requires a membrane-remodeling and fission event termed abscission that occurs after chromosome segregation, cleavage furrow formation, and contraction have completed. In this study, we show how abscission factor recruitment is controlled by the Polo-like kinase 1 (Plk1). At the metaphase-anaphase transition, Plk1 initiates cleavage furrow formation and is then progressively degraded during mitotic exit. During this period, Plk1 phosphorylates the abscission factor Cep55 in trans and prevents its untimely recruitment to the anaphase spindle. A Plk1 phosphorylation site mutant of Cep55 is prematurely recruited to the anaphase spindle and fails to support abscission. Endogenous Cep55 behaves similarly after Plk1 inhibition by the drugs BI2536 or GW842862. Only once Plk1 is degraded can Cep55 target to the midbody and promote abscission. Blocking Plk1 degradation leads to elevated levels of Plk1 at the midbody and the failure of Cep55 recruitment. Thus, Plk1 activity negatively regulates Cep55 to ensure orderly abscission factor recruitment and ensures that this occurs only once cell contraction has completed.


Molecular Cell | 2013

The BEG (PP2A-B55/ENSA/Greatwall) Pathway Ensures Cytokinesis follows Chromosome Separation

Michael J. Cundell; Ricardo Nunes Bastos; Tongli Zhang; James Holder; Ulrike Gruneberg; Béla Novák; Francis A. Barr

Summary Cytokinesis follows separase activation and chromosome segregation. This order is ensured in budding yeast by the mitotic exit network (MEN), where Cdc14p dephosphorylates key conserved Cdk1-substrates exemplified by the anaphase spindle-elongation protein Ase1p. However, in metazoans, MEN and Cdc14 function is not conserved. Instead, the PP2A-B55α/ENSA/Greatwall (BEG) pathway controls the human Ase1p ortholog PRC1. In this pathway, PP2A-B55 inhibition is coupled to Cdk1-cyclin B activity, whereas separase inhibition is maintained by cyclin B concentration. This creates two cyclin B thresholds during mitotic exit. Simulation and experiments using PRC1 as a model substrate show that the first threshold permits separase activation and chromosome segregation, and the second permits PP2A-B55 activation and initiation of cytokinesis. Removal of the ENSA/Greatwall (EG) timer module eliminates this second threshold, as well as associated delay in PRC1 dephosphorylation and initiation of cytokinesis, by uncoupling PP2A-B55 from Cdk1-cyclin B activity. Therefore, temporal order during mitotic exit is promoted by the metazoan BEG pathway.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2012

CYK4 inhibits Rac1-dependent PAK1 and ARHGEF7 effector pathways during cytokinesis

Ricardo Nunes Bastos; Xenia Peñate; Michelle Bates; Dean E. Hammond; Francis A. Barr

CYK4 activity as a GTPase-activating protein is required during anaphase to inhibit Rac1-dependent effector pathways associated with control of cell spreading and adhesion.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2013

Aurora B suppresses microtubule dynamics and limits central spindle size by locally activating KIF4A

Ricardo Nunes Bastos; Sapan R. Gandhi; Ryan D. Baron; Ulrike Gruneberg; Erich A. Nigg; Francis A. Barr

The kinesin KIF4A is locally activated by the central spindle pool of Aurora B and thereby preferentially controls anaphase spindle length.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2014

PP2A-B56 opposes Mps1 phosphorylation of Knl1 and thereby promotes spindle assembly checkpoint silencing.

Antonio Espert; Pelin Uluocak; Ricardo Nunes Bastos; Davinderpreet Mangat; Philipp Graab; Ulrike Gruneberg

The kinetochore surveillance phosphatase PP2A-B56 dephosphorylates Knl1 to silence the spindle assembly checkpoint after all chromosomes have been correctly attached to microtubules.


Developmental Cell | 2012

Rab14 and its exchange factor FAM116 link endocytic recycling and adherens junction stability in migrating cells.

Andrea Linford; Shin-ichiro Yoshimura; Ricardo Nunes Bastos; Lars Langemeyer; Andreas Gerondopoulos; Daniel J. Rigden; Francis A. Barr

Summary Rab GTPases define the vesicle trafficking pathways underpinning cell polarization and migration. Here, we find that Rab4, Rab11, and Rab14 and the candidate Rab GDP-GTP exchange factors (GEFs) FAM116A and AVL9 are required for cell migration. Rab14 and its GEF FAM116A localize to and act on an intermediate compartment of the transferrin-recycling pathway prior to Rab11 and after Rab5 and Rab4. This Rab14 intermediate recycling compartment has specific functions in migrating cells discrete from early and recycling endosomes. Rab14-depleted cells show increased N-cadherin levels at junctional complexes and cannot resolve cell-cell junctions. This is due to decreased shedding of cell-surface N-cadherin by the ADAM family protease ADAM10/Kuzbanian. In FAM116A- and Rab14-depleted cells, ADAM10 accumulates in a transferrin-positive endocytic compartment, and the cell-surface level of ADAM10 is correspondingly reduced. FAM116 and Rab14 therefore define an endocytic recycling pathway needed for ADAM protease trafficking and regulation of cell-cell junctions.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2014

Rab18 and a Rab18 GEF complex are required for normal ER structure

Andreas Gerondopoulos; Ricardo Nunes Bastos; Shin-ichiro Yoshimura; Rachel Anderson; Sarah M. Carpanini; Irene A. Aligianis; Mark T. Handley; Francis A. Barr

The Rab3GAP complex that is mutated in the neurological disorder Micro syndrome is a guanine nucleotide exchange factor that promotes Rab18 localization to the endoplasmic reticulum.


eLife | 2014

Diversity and plasticity in Rab GTPase nucleotide release mechanism has consequences for Rab activation and inactivation

Lars Langemeyer; Ricardo Nunes Bastos; Yiying Cai; Aymelt Itzen; Karin M. Reinisch; Francis A. Barr

Ras superfamily GTPase activation and inactivation occur by canonical nucleotide exchange and GTP hydrolysis mechanisms. Despite conservation of active-site residues, the Ras-related Rab GTPase activation pathway differs from Ras and between different Rabs. Analysis of DENND1-Rab35, Rabex-Rab5, TRAPP-Rab1 and DrrA-Rab1 suggests Rabs have the potential for activation by distinct GDP-release pathways. Conserved active-site residues in the Rab switch II region stabilising the nucleotide-free form differentiate these pathways. For DENND1-Rab35 and DrrA-Rab1 the Rab active-site glutamine, often mutated to create constitutively active forms, is involved in GEF mediated GDP-release. By contrast, in Rab5 the switch II aspartate is required for Rabex mediated GDP-release. Furthermore, Rab1 switch II glutamine mutants refractory to activation by DrrA can be activated by TRAPP, showing that a single Rab can be activated by more than one mechanistically distinct GDP-release pathway. These findings highlight plasticity in the activation mechanisms of closely related Rab GTPases. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.01623.001


Journal of Cell Science | 2013

Melanoma-associated mutations in protein phosphatase 6 cause chromosome instability and DNA damage owing to dysregulated Aurora-A

Dean E. Hammond; Kang Zeng; Antonio Espert; Ricardo Nunes Bastos; Ryan D. Baron; Ulrike Gruneberg; Francis A. Barr

Summary Mutations in the PPP6C catalytic subunit of protein phosphatase 6 (PP6) are drivers for the development of melanoma. Here, we analyse a panel of melanoma-associated mutations in PPP6C and find that these generally compromise assembly of the PP6 holoenzyme and catalytic activity towards a model substrate. Detailed analysis of one mutant, PPP6C-H114Y, in both primary melanoma and engineered cell lines reveals it is destabilized and undergoes increased proteasome-mediated turnover. Global analysis of phosphatase substrates by mass spectrometry identifies the oncogenic kinase Aurora-A as the major PP6 substrate that is dysregulated under these conditions. Accordingly, cells lacking PPP6C or carrying the PPP6C-H114Y allele have elevated Aurora-A kinase activity and display chromosome instability with associated Aurora-A-dependent micronucleation. Chromosomes mis-segregated to these micronuclei are preferentially stained by the DNA damage marker &ggr;-H2AX, suggesting that loss of PPP6C promotes both chromosome instability and DNA damage. These findings support the view that formation of micronuclei rather than chromosome instability alone explains how loss of PPP6C, and more generally mitotic spindle and centrosome defects, can act as drivers for genome instability in melanoma and other cancers.

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