Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Rodney J. Devenish is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Rodney J. Devenish.


Cell Death & Differentiation | 2007

Mdm38 protein depletion causes loss of mitochondrial K+/H+ exchange activity, osmotic swelling and mitophagy

Karin Nowikovsky; Siegfried Reipert; Rodney J. Devenish; Rudolf J. Schweyen

Loss of the MDM38 gene product in yeast mitochondria results in a variety of phenotypic effects including reduced content of respiratory chain complexes, altered mitochondrial morphology and loss of mitochondrial K+/H+ exchange activity resulting in osmotic swelling. By use of doxycycline-regulated shut-off of MDM38 gene expression, we show here that loss of K+/H+ exchange activity and mitochondrial swelling are early events, associated with a reduction in membrane potential and fragmentation of the mitochondrial reticulum. Changes in the pattern of mitochondrially encoded proteins are likely to be secondary to the loss of K+/H+ exchange activity. The use of a novel fluorescent biosensor directed to the mitochondrial matrix revealed that the loss of K+/H+ exchange activity was immediately followed by morphological changes of mitochondria and vacuoles, the close association of these organelles and finally uptake of mitochondrial material by vacuoles. Nigericin, a K+/H+ ionophore, fully prevented these effects of Mdm38p depletion. We conclude that osmotic swelling of mitochondria triggers selective mitochondrial autophagy or mitophagy.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2003

The 2.0-Å Crystal Structure of eqFP611, a Far Red Fluorescent Protein from the Sea Anemone Entacmaea quadricolor

Jan Petersen; Pascal G. Wilmann; Travis Beddoe; Aaron J. Oakley; Rodney J. Devenish; Mark Prescott; Jamie Rossjohn

We have crystallized and subsequently determined to 2.0-Å resolution the crystal structure of eqFP611, a far red fluorescent protein from the sea anemone Entacmaea quadricolor. The structure of the protomer, which adopts a β-can topology, is similar to that of the related monomeric green fluorescent protein (GFP). The quaternary structure of eqFP611, a tetramer exhibiting 222 symmetry, is similar to that observed for the more closely related red fluorescent protein DsRed and the chromoprotein Rtms5. The unique chromophore sequence (Met63-Tyr64-Gly65) of eqFP611, adopts a coplanar and trans conformation within the interior of the β-can fold. Accordingly, the eqFP611 chromophore adopts a significantly different conformation in comparison to the chromophore conformation observed in GFP, DsRed, and Rtms5. The coplanar chromophore conformation and its immediate environment provide a structural basis for the far red, highly fluorescent nature of eqFP611. The eqFP611 structure extends our knowledge on the range of conformations a chromophore can adopt within closely related members of the green fluorescent protein family.


Structure | 2003

The 2.2 A crystal structure of a pocilloporin pigment reveals a nonplanar chromophore conformation.

Mark Prescott; Michael Ling; Travis Beddoe; Aaron J. Oakley; Sophie Dove; Ove Hoegh-Guldberg; Rodney J. Devenish; Jamie Rossjohn

Reef-building corals contain host pigments, termed pocilloporins, that function to regulate the light environment of their resident microalgae by acting as a photoprotectant in excessive sunlight. We have determined the crystal structure of an intensely blue, nonfluorescent pocilloporin to 2.2 A resolution and a genetically engineered fluorescent variant to 2.4 A resolution. The pocilloporin chromophore structure adopts a markedly different conformation in comparison with the DsRed chromophore, despite the chromophore sequences (Gln-Tyr-Gly) being identical; the tyrosine ring of the pocilloporin chromophore is noncoplanar and in the trans configuration. Furthermore, the fluorescent variant adopted a noncoplanar chromophore conformation. The data presented here demonstrates that the conformation of the chromophore is highly dependent on its immediate environment.


PLOS ONE | 2011

The Burkholderia pseudomallei type III secretion system and BopA are required for evasion of LC3-associated phagocytosis.

Lan Gong; Meabh Cullinane; Puthayalai Treerat; Georg Ramm; Mark Prescott; Ben Adler; John D. Boyce; Rodney J. Devenish

Burkholderia pseudomallei is the causative agent of melioidosis, a fatal infectious disease endemic in tropical regions worldwide, and especially prevalent in southeast Asia and northern Australia. This intracellular pathogen can escape from phagosomes into the host cytoplasm, where it replicates and infects adjacent cells. We previously demonstrated that, in response to B. pseudomallei infection of macrophage cell line RAW 264.7, a subset of bacteria co-localized with the autophagy marker protein, microtubule-associated protein light chain 3 (LC3), implicating autophagy in host cell defence against infection. Recent reports have suggested that LC3 can be recruited to both phagosomes and autophagosomes, thereby raising questions regarding the identity of the LC3-positive compartments in which invading bacteria reside and the mechanism of the autophagic response to B. pseudomallei infection. Electron microscopy analysis of infected cells demonstrated that the invading bacteria were either free in the cytosol, or sequestered in single-membrane phagosomes rather than double-membrane autophagosomes, suggesting that LC3 is recruited to B. pseudomallei-containing phagosomes. Partial or complete loss of function of type III secretion system cluster 3 (TTSS3) in mutants lacking the BopA (effector) or BipD (translocator) proteins respectively, resulted in delayed or no escape from phagosomes. Consistent with these observations, bopA and bipD mutants both showed a higher level of co-localization with LC3 and the lysosomal marker LAMP1, and impaired survival in RAW264.7 cells, suggesting enhanced killing in phagolysosomes. We conclude that LC3 recruitment to phagosomes stimulates killing of B. pseudomallei trapped in phagosomes. Furthermore, BopA plays an important role in efficient escape of B. pseudomallei from phagosomes.


Autophagy | 2008

Stimulation of autophagy suppresses the intracellular survival of Burkholderia pseudomallei in mammalian cell lines.

Meabh Cullinane; Lan Gong; Xuelei Li; Natalie R. Lazar Adler; Thien Tra; Ernst J. Wolvetang; Mark Prescott; John D. Boyce; Rodney J. Devenish; Ben Adler

Burkholderia pseudomallei is the causative agent of melioidosis, a tropical infection of humans and other animals. The bacterium is an intracellular pathogen that can escape from endosomes into the host cytoplasm, where it replicates and infects adjacent cells. We investigated the role played by autophagy in the intracellular survival of B. pseudomallei in phagocytic and non-phagocytic cell lines. Autophagy was induced in response to B. pseudomallei invasion of murine macrophage (RAW 264.7) cells and a proportion of the bacteria co-localized with the autophagy effector protein LC3, a marker for autophagosome formation. Pharmacological stimulation of autophagy in RAW 264.7 and murine embryonic fibroblast (MEF) cell lines resulted in increased co-localization of B. pseudomallei with LC3 while basal levels of co-localization could be abrogated using inhibitors of the autophagic pathway. Furthermore, induction of autophagy decreased the intracellular survival of B. pseudomallei in these cell lines, but bacterial survival was not affected in MEF cell lines deficient in autophagy. Treatment of infected macrophages with chloramphenicol increased the proportion of bacteria within autophagosomes indicating that autophagic evasion is an active process relying on bacterial protein synthesis. Consistent with this hypothesis, we identified a B. pseudomallei type III secreted protein, BopA, which plays a role in mediating bacterial evasion of autophagy. We conclude that the autophagic pathway is a component of the innate defense system against invading B. pseudomallei, but which the bacteria can actively evade. However, when autophagy is pharmacologically induced using rapamycin, bacteria are actively sequestered in autophagosomes, ultimately decreasing their survival.


Autophagy | 2007

Different fates of mitochondria: alternative ways for degradation?

Dalibor Mijaljica; Mark Prescott; Rodney J. Devenish

Cellular degradative processes including proteasomal and vacuolar / lysosomal (autophagic) degradation, as well as the activity of proteases (both cytosolic and mitochondrial), provide for a continuous turnover of damaged and obsolete macromolecules and organelles. Mitochondria are organelles essential for respiration and oxidative energy production in aerobic cells; they are also required for multiple biosynthetic pathways. As such, mitochondrial homeostasis is very important for cell survival. We review the evidence regarding the possible mechanisms for mitochondrial degradation. Increasingly, the evidence suggests autophagy plays a central role in the degradation of mitochondria. How mitochondria might be specifically selected for autophagy (mitophagy) remains an open question, although some evidence suggests that, under certain circumstances, in mammalian cells the Mitochondrial Permeability Transition (MPT) plays a role in initiation of the process. As more is learned about the functioning of autophagy as a degradation process, the greater the appreciation we are developing concerning its role in the control of mitochondrial degradation.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 1991

Yeast pyruvate carboxylase : identification of two genes encoding isoenzymes

Michelle E. Walker; Dale L. Val; Manfred Rohde; Rodney J. Devenish; John C. Wallace

In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, pyruvate carboxylase [EC 6.4.1.1] has an important anaplerotic role in the production of oxaloacetate from pyruvate. We report here the existence of two pyruvate carboxylase isozymes, which are encoded by separate genes within the yeast genome. Null mutants were constructed by one step gene disruption of the characterised PYC gene in the yeast genome. The mutants were found to have 10-20% residual pyruvate carboxylase activity, which was attributable to a protein of identical size and immunogenically related to pyruvate carboxylase. Immunocytochemical labelling studies on ultrathin sections of embedded whole cells from the null mutants showed the isozyme to be located exclusively in the cytoplasm. We have mapped the genes encoding both enzymes and shown the previously characterised gene, designated PYC1, to be on chromosome VII whilst PYC2 is on chromosome II.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2000

Insights into ATP synthase assembly and function through the molecular genetic manipulation of subunits of the yeast mitochondrial enzyme complex

Rodney J. Devenish; Mark Prescott; Xavier Roucou; Phillip Nagley

Development of an increasingly detailed understanding of the eucaryotic mitochondrial ATP synthase requires a detailed knowledge of the stoichiometry, structure and function of F(0) sector subunits in the contexts of the proton channel and the stator stalk. Still to be resolved are the precise locations and roles of other supernumerary subunits present in mitochondrial ATP synthase complexes, but not found in the bacterial or chloroplast enzymes. The highly developed system of molecular genetic manipulation available in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, a unicellular eucaryote, permits testing for gene function based on the effects of gene disruption or deletion. In addition, the genes encoding ATP synthase subunits can be manipulated to introduce specific amino acids at desired positions within a subunit, or to add epitope or affinity tags at the C-terminus, enabling questions of stoichiometry, structure and function to be addressed. Newly emerging technologies, such as fusions of subunits with GFP are being applied to probe the dynamic interactions within mitochondrial ATP synthase, between ATP synthase complexes, and between ATP synthase and other mitochondrial enzyme complexes.


Journal of Bioenergetics and Biomembranes | 2000

The oligomycin axis of mitochondrial ATP synthase: OSCP and the proton channel.

Rodney J. Devenish; Mark Prescott; Glen M. Boyle; Phillip Nagley

Oligomycin has long been known as an inhibitor of mitochondrial ATP synthase, putatively binding the Fo subunits 9 and 6 that contribute to proton channel function of the complex. As its name implies, OSCP is the oligomycin sensitivity-conferring protein necessary for the intact enzyme complex to display sensitivity to oligomycin. Recent advances concerning the structure and mechanism of mitochondrial ATP synthase have led to OSCP now being considered a component of the peripheral stator stalk rather than a central stalk component. How OSCP confers oligomycin sensitivity on the enzyme is unknown, but probably reflects important protein–protein interactions made within the assembled complex and transmitted down the stator stalk, thereby influencing proton channel function. We review here our studies directed toward establishing the stoichiometry, assembly, and function of OSCP in the context of knowledge of the organization of the stator stalk and the proton channel.


International Review of Cell and Molecular Biology | 2008

The structure and function of mitochondrial F1F0-ATP synthases.

Rodney J. Devenish; Mark Prescott; Andrew J.W. Rodgers

We review recent advances in understanding of the structure of the F(1)F(0)-ATP synthase of the mitochondrial inner membrane (mtATPase). A significant achievement has been the determination of the structure of the principal peripheral or stator stalk components bringing us closer to achieving the Holy Grail of a complete 3D structure for the complex. A major focus of the field in recent years has been to understand the physiological significance of dimers or other oligomer forms of mtATPase recoverable from membranes and their relationship to the structure of the cristae of the inner mitochondrial membrane. In addition, the association of mtATPase with other membrane proteins has been described and suggests that further levels of functional organization need to be considered. Many reports in recent years have concerned the location and function of ATP synthase complexes or its component subunits on the external surface of the plasma membrane. We consider whether the evidence supports complete complexes being located on the cell surface, the biogenesis of such complexes, and aspects of function especially related to the structure of mtATPase.

Collaboration


Dive into the Rodney J. Devenish's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Sophie Dove

University of Queensland

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Andrew Bradbury

Los Alamos National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge