Ross Warrington
University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center
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Featured researches published by Ross Warrington.
Molecular Cell | 2009
Yulia V. Surovtseva; Dmitri Churikov; Kara A. Boltz; Xiangyu Song; Jonathan C. Lamb; Ross Warrington; Katherine Leehy; Michelle L. Heacock; Carolyn M. Price; Dorothy E. Shippen
Orthologs of the yeast telomere protein Stn1 are present in plants, but other components of the Cdc13/Stn1/Ten1 (CST) complex have only been found in fungi. Here we report the identification of conserved telomere maintenance component 1 (CTC1) in plants and vertebrates. CTC1 encodes an approximately 140 kDa telomere-associated protein predicted to contain multiple OB-fold domains. Arabidopsis mutants null for CTC1 display a severe telomere deprotection phenotype accompanied by a rapid onset of developmental defects and sterility. Telomeric and subtelomeric tracts are dramatically eroded, and chromosome ends exhibit increased G overhangs, recombination, and end-to-end fusions. AtCTC1 both physically and genetically interacts with AtSTN1. Depletion of human CTC1 by RNAi triggers a DNA damage response, chromatin bridges, increased G overhangs, and sporadic telomere loss. These data indicate that CTC1 participates in telomere maintenance in diverse species and that a CST-like complex is required for telomere integrity in multicellular organisms.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008
Xiangyu Song; Katherine Leehy; Ross Warrington; Jonathan C. Lamb; Yulia V. Surovtseva; Dorothy E. Shippen
Telomeres shield the natural ends of chromosomes from nucleolytic attack, recognition as double-strand breaks, and inappropriate processing by DNA repair machinery. The trimeric Stn1/Ten1/Cdc13 complex is critical for chromosome end protection in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, while vertebrate telomeres are protected by shelterin, a complex of six proteins that does not include STN1 or TEN1. Recent studies demonstrate that Stn1 and Ten1 orthologs in Schizosaccharomyces pombe contribute to telomere integrity in a complex that is distinct from the shelterin components, Pot1 and Tpp1. Thus, chromosome-end protection may be mediated by distinct subcomplexes of telomere proteins. Here we report the identification of a STN1 gene in Arabidopsis that is essential for chromosome-end protection. AtSTN1 encodes an 18-kDa protein bearing a single oligonucleotide/oligosaccharide binding fold with significant sequence similarity to the yeast Stn1 proteins. Plants null for AtSTN1 display an immediate onset of growth and developmental defects and reduced fertility. These outward phenotypes are accompanied by catastrophic loss of telomeric and subtelomeric DNA, high levels of end-to-end chromosome fusions, increased G-overhang signals, and elevated telomere recombination. Thus, AtSTN1 is a crucial component of the protective telomere cap in Arabidopsis, and likely in other multicellular eukaryotes.
Molecular Cell | 2015
Hong Liu; Qianhui Qu; Ross Warrington; Allyson M. Rice; Ningyan Cheng; Hongtao Yu
Human sister chromatids at metaphase are primarily linked by centromeric cohesion, forming the iconic X shape. Premature loss of centromeric cohesion disrupts orderly mitotic progression. Shugoshin (Sgo1) binds to and protects cohesin at inner centromeres. The kinetochore kinase Bub1 phosphorylates histone H2A at T120 (H2A-pT120) and recruits Sgo1 to kinetochores, 0.5 μm from inner centromeres. Here, we show that Sgo1 is a direct reader of the H2A-pT120 mark. Bub1 also recruits RNA polymerase II (Pol II) to unattached kinetochores and promotes active transcription at mitotic kinetochores. Mitosis-specific inactivation of Pol II traps Sgo1 at kinetochores and weakens centromeric cohesion. Sgo1 interacts with Pol II in human cells and with RNA in vitro. We propose that Pol II-dependent transcription enables kinetochore-bound Sgo1 initially recruited by H2A-pT120 to reach cohesin embedded in centromeric chromatin. Our study implicates mitotic transcription in targeting regulatory factors to highly compacted mitotic chromatin.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012
Wei Tian; Bing Li; Ross Warrington; Diana R. Tomchick; Hongtao Yu; Xuelian Luo
The anaphase-promoting complex/cyclosome (APC/C) promotes anaphase onset and mitotic exit through ubiquitinating securin and cyclin B1. The mitotic APC/C activator, the cell division cycle 20 (Cdc20) protein, directly interacts with APC/C degrons––the destruction (D) and KEN boxes. APC/CCdc20 is the target of the spindle checkpoint. Checkpoint inhibition of APC/CCdc20 requires the binding of a BubR1 KEN box to Cdc20. How APC/C recognizes substrates is not understood. We report the crystal structures of human Cdc20 alone or bound to a BubR1 KEN box. Cdc20 has a disordered N-terminal region and a C-terminal WD40 β propeller with a preformed KEN-box-binding site at its top face. We identify a second conserved surface at the side of the Cdc20 β propeller as a D-box-binding site. The D box of securin, but not its KEN box, is critical for securin ubiquitination by APC/CCdc20. Although both motifs contribute to securin ubiquitination by APC/CCdh1, securin mutants lacking either motif are efficiently ubiquitinated. Furthermore, D-box peptides diminish the ubiquitination of KEN-box substrates by APC/CCdh1, suggesting possible competition between the two motifs. Our results indicate the lack of strong positive cooperativity between the two degrons of securin. We propose that low-cooperativity, multisite target recognition enables APC/C to robustly ubiquitinate diverse substrates and helps to drive cell cycle oscillations.
The EMBO Journal | 2011
Yuwen Ke; Jae Wan Huh; Ross Warrington; Bing Li; Nan Wu; Mei Leng; Junmei Zhang; Haydn L. Ball; Hongtao Yu
Centromeres nucleate the formation of kinetochores and are vital for chromosome segregation during mitosis. The SNF2 family helicase PICH (Plk1‐interacting checkpoint helicase) and the BLM (the Blooms syndrome protein) helicase decorate ultrafine histone‐negative DNA threads that link the segregating sister centromeres during anaphase. The functions of PICH and BLM at these threads are not understood, however. Here, we show that PICH binds to BLM and enables BLM localization to anaphase centromeric threads. PICH‐ or BLM‐RNAi cells fail to resolve these threads in anaphase. The fragmented threads form centromeric‐chromatin‐containing micronuclei in daughter cells. Anaphase threads in PICH‐ and BLM‐RNAi cells contain histones and centromere markers. Recombinant purified PICH has nucleosome remodelling activities in vitro. We propose that PICH and BLM unravel centromeric chromatin and keep anaphase DNA threads mostly free of nucleosomes, thus allowing these threads to span long distances between rapidly segregating centromeres without breakage and providing a spatiotemporal window for their resolution.
Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2011
Luying Jia; Bing Li; Ross Warrington; Xing Hao; Shixuan Wang; Hongtao Yu
A general molecular framework for spindle checkpoint inactivation is lacking. The Mad2 inhibitor, p31comet, has roles independent of the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway. This key finding allows the delineation of two partially redundant pathways for mitotic exit.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2015
Laura A. Díaz-Martínez; Wei Tian; Bing Li; Ross Warrington; Luying Jia; Chad A. Brautigam; Xuelian Luo; Hongtao Yu
Background: The spindle checkpoint protein BubR1 inhibits the anaphase-promoting complex through binding to Cdc20. Results: We identify a new Cdc20-binding motif within BubR1 termed the Phe box. Conclusion: The Phe box maintains steady-state levels of BubR1-containing checkpoint complexes in human cells. Significance: Our study provides key insights into the homeostatic mechanisms of a key spindle checkpoint complex. The spindle checkpoint ensures accurate chromosome segregation by monitoring kinetochore-microtubule attachment. Unattached or tensionless kinetochores activate the checkpoint and enhance the production of the mitotic checkpoint complex (MCC) consisting of BubR1, Bub3, Mad2, and Cdc20. MCC is a critical checkpoint inhibitor of the anaphase-promoting complex/cyclosome, a ubiquitin ligase required for anaphase onset. The N-terminal region of BubR1 binds to both Cdc20 and Mad2, thus nucleating MCC formation. The middle region of human BubR1 (BubR1M) also interacts with Cdc20, but the nature and function of this interaction are not understood. Here we identify two critical motifs within BubR1M that contribute to Cdc20 binding and anaphase-promoting complex/cyclosome inhibition: a destruction box (D box) and a phenylalanine-containing motif termed the Phe box. A BubR1 mutant lacking these motifs is defective in MCC maintenance in mitotic human cells but is capable of supporting spindle-checkpoint function. Thus, the BubR1M-Cdc20 interaction indirectly contributes to MCC homeostasis. Its apparent dispensability in the spindle checkpoint might be due to functional duality or redundant, competing mechanisms.
The EMBO Journal | 2014
Laura A. Díaz-Martínez; Zemfira N. Karamysheva; Ross Warrington; Bing Li; Shuguang Wei; Xian Jin Xie; Michael G. Roth; Hongtao Yu
The antimitotic anti‐cancer drugs, including taxol, perturb spindle dynamics, and induce prolonged, spindle checkpoint‐dependent mitotic arrest in cancer cells. These cells then either undergo apoptosis triggered by the intrinsic mitochondrial pathway or exit mitosis without proper cell division in an adaptation pathway. Using a genome‐wide small interfering RNA (siRNA) screen in taxol‐treated HeLa cells, we systematically identify components of the mitotic apoptosis and adaptation pathways. We show that the Mad2 inhibitor p31comet actively promotes mitotic adaptation through cyclin B1 degradation and has a minor separate function in suppressing apoptosis. Conversely, the pro‐apoptotic Bcl2 family member, Noxa, is a critical initiator of mitotic cell death. Unexpectedly, the upstream components of the mitochondrial apoptosis pathway and the mitochondrial fission protein Drp1 contribute to mitotic adaption. Our results reveal crosstalk between the apoptosis and adaptation pathways during mitotic arrest.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007
Laurent Vespa; Ross Warrington; Petr Mokros; Jiri Siroky; Dorothy E. Shippen
Telomeres have the paradoxical ability of protecting linear chromosome ends from DNA damage sensors by using these same proteins as essential components of their maintenance machinery. We have previously shown that the absence of ataxia telangiectasia mutated (ATM), a central regulator of the DNA damage response, accelerates the onset of genome instability in telomerase-deficient Arabidopsis, without increasing the rate of bulk telomere shortening. Here, we examine individual telomere tracts through successive plant generations using both fluorescence situ in hybridization (FISH) and primer extension telomere repeat amplification (PETRA). Unexpectedly, we found that the onset of profound developmental defects and abundant end-to-end chromosome fusions in fifth generation (G5) atm tert mutants required the presence of only one critically shortened telomere. Parent progeny analysis revealed that the short telomere arose as a consequence of an unusually large telomere rapid deletion (TRD) event. The most dramatic TRD was detected in atm tert mutants that had undergone meiosis. Notably, in contrast to TRD, alternative lengthening of telomeres (ALT) was suppressed in the absence of ATM. Finally, we show that size differences between telomeres on homologous chromosome ends are greater for atm tert than tert plants. Altogether, these findings suggest a dual role for ATM in regulating telomere size by promoting elongation of short telomeres and by preventing the accumulation of cells that harbor large telomere deletions.
PLOS Genetics | 2014
Farjana Fattah; Kodai Hara; Kazi R. Fattah; Chenyi Yang; Nan Wu; Ross Warrington; David J. Chen; Pengbo Zhou; David A. Boothman; Hongtao Yu
Translesion synthesis (TLS) enables DNA replication through damaged bases, increases cellular DNA damage tolerance, and maintains genomic stability. The sliding clamp PCNA and the adaptor polymerase Rev1 coordinate polymerase switching during TLS. The polymerases Pol η, ι, and κ insert nucleotides opposite damaged bases. Pol ζ, consisting of the catalytic subunit Rev3 and the regulatory subunit Rev7, then extends DNA synthesis past the lesion. Here, we show that Rev7 binds to the transcription factor TFII-I in human cells. TFII-I is required for TLS and DNA damage tolerance. The TLS function of TFII-I appears to be independent of its role in transcription, but requires homodimerization and binding to PCNA. We propose that TFII-I bridges PCNA and Pol ζ to promote TLS. Our findings extend the general principle of component sharing among divergent nuclear processes and implicate TLS deficiency as a possible contributing factor in Williams-Beuren syndrome.