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Dive into the research topics where Ryan L. Sontag is active.

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Featured researches published by Ryan L. Sontag.


Radiation Research | 2013

Annexin A2 Modulates Radiation-Sensitive Transcriptional Programming and Cell Fate

Katrina M. Waters; David L. Stenoien; Marianne B. Sowa; Claere von Neubeck; William B. Chrisler; Ruimin Tan; Ryan L. Sontag; Thomas J. Weber

We previously established annexin A2 as a radioresponsive protein associated with anchorage independent growth in murine epidermal cells. In this study, we demonstrate annexin A2 nuclear translocation in human skin organotypic culture and murine epidermal cells after exposure to X radiation (10–200 cGy), supporting a conserved nuclear function for annexin A2. Whole genome expression profiling in the presence and absence of annexin A2 [shRNA] identified fundamentally altered transcriptional programming that changes the radioresponsive transcriptome. Bioinformatics predicted that silencing AnxA2 may enhance cell death responses to stress in association with reduced activation of pro-survival signals such as nuclear factor kappa B. This prediction was validated by demonstrating a significant increase in sensitivity toward tumor necrosis factor alpha-induced cell death in annexin A2 silenced cells, relative to vector controls, associated with reduced nuclear translocation of RelA (p65) following tumor necrosis factor alpha treatment. These observations implicate an annexin A2 niche in cell fate regulation such that AnxA2 protects cells from radiation-induced apoptosis to maintain cellular homeostasis at low-dose radiation.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Spatially-Resolved Proteomics: Rapid Quantitative Analysis of Laser Capture Microdissected Alveolar Tissue Samples

Geremy Clair; Paul D. Piehowski; Teodora Nicola; Joseph A. Kitzmiller; Eric Huang; Erika M. Zink; Ryan L. Sontag; Daniel J. Orton; Ronald J. Moore; James P. Carson; Richard D. Smith; Jeffrey A. Whitsett; Richard A. Corley; Namasivayam Ambalavanan; Charles Ansong

Laser capture microdissection (LCM)-enabled region-specific tissue analyses are critical to better understand complex multicellular processes. However, current proteomics workflows entail several manual sample preparation steps and are challenged by the microscopic mass-limited samples generated by LCM, impacting measurement robustness, quantification and throughput. Here, we coupled LCM with a proteomics workflow that provides fully automated analysis of proteomes from microdissected tissues. Benchmarking against the current state-of-the-art in ultrasensitive global proteomics (FASP workflow), our approach demonstrated significant improvements in quantification (~2-fold lower variance) and throughput (>5 times faster). Using our approach we for the first time characterized, to a depth of >3,400 proteins, the ontogeny of protein changes during normal lung development in microdissected alveolar tissue containing only 4,000 cells. Our analysis revealed seven defined modules of coordinated transcription factor-signaling molecule expression patterns, suggesting a complex network of temporal regulatory control directs normal lung development with epigenetic regulation fine-tuning pre-natal developmental processes.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Lipidomics reveals dramatic lipid compositional changes in the maturing postnatal lung

Sydney E. Dautel; Jennifer E. Kyle; Geremy Clair; Ryan L. Sontag; Karl K. Weitz; Anil K. Shukla; Son N. Nguyen; Young Mo Kim; Erika M. Zink; Teresa Luders; Charles W. Frevert; Sina A. Gharib; Julia Laskin; James P. Carson; Thomas O. Metz; Richard A. Corley; Charles Ansong

Lung immaturity is a major cause of morbidity and mortality in premature infants. Understanding the molecular mechanisms driving normal lung development could provide insights on how to ameliorate disrupted development. While transcriptomic and proteomic analyses of normal lung development have been previously reported, characterization of changes in the lipidome is lacking. Lipids play significant roles in the lung, such as dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine in pulmonary surfactant; however, many of the roles of specific lipid species in normal lung development, as well as in disease states, are not well defined. In this study, we used liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) to investigate the murine lipidome during normal postnatal lung development. Lipidomics analysis of lungs from post-natal day 7, day 14 and 6–8 week mice (adult) identified 924 unique lipids across 21 lipid subclasses, with dramatic alterations in the lipidome across developmental stages. Our data confirmed previously recognized aspects of post-natal lung development and revealed several insights, including in sphingolipid-mediated apoptosis, inflammation and energy storage/usage. Complementary proteomics, metabolomics and chemical imaging corroborated these observations. This multi-omic view provides a unique resource and deeper insight into normal pulmonary development.


BMC Research Notes | 2012

Ectopic ERK expression induces phenotypic conversion of C10 cells and alters DNA methyltransferase expression

Ryan L. Sontag; Thomas J. Weber

BackgroundMany lung carcinogens activate mitogen activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathways and DNA methyltransferases (DNMTs) are under investigation as therapeutic targets for lung cancer. Our goal is to determine whether C10 type II alveolar epithelial cells are a sensitive model to investigate ERK-dependent transformation and DNMT expression patterns in experimental lung cancer.FindingsEctopic expression of an extracellular signal regulated kinase (ERK)-green fluorescent protein (ERK1-GFP) induces acquisition of growth in soft agar that is selectively associated with latent effects on the expression of DNA methyl transferases (DNMT1 and 3b), xeroderma pigmentosum complementation group A (XPA), DNA-dependent protein kinase catalytic subunit (DNA-PKcs), increased phosphatase activity and enhanced sensitivity to 5-azacytidine (5-azaC)-mediated toxicity, relative to controls.ConclusionsEctopic expression of ERK alone is sufficient to promote phenotypic conversion of C10 cells associated with altered DNMT expression patterns and sensitivity to DNMT inhibitor. This model may have applications for predicting sensitivity to DNMT inhibitors.


Molecular Carcinogenesis | 2015

Deficient expression of aldehyde dehydrogenase 1A1 is consistent with increased sensitivity of Gorlin syndrome patients to radiation carcinogenesis

Aaron T. Wright; Thierry Magnaldo; Ryan L. Sontag; Lindsey N. Anderson; Natalie C. Sadler; Paul D. Piehowski; Yannick Gache; Thomas J. Weber

Human phenotypes that are highly susceptible to radiation carcinogenesis have been identified. Sensitive phenotypes often display robust regulation of molecular features that modify biological response, which can facilitate identification of the pathways/networks that contribute to pathophysiological outcomes. Here we interrogate primary dermal fibroblasts isolated from Gorlin syndrome patients (GDFs), who display a pronounced inducible tumorigenic response to radiation, in comparison to normal human dermal fibroblasts (NHDFs). Our approach exploits newly developed thiol reactive probes to define changes in protein thiol profiles in live cell studies, which minimizes artifacts associated with cell lysis. Redox probes revealed deficient expression of an apparent 55 kDa protein thiol in GDFs from independent Gorlin syndrome patients, compared with NHDFs. Proteomics tentatively identified this protein as aldehyde dehydrogenase 1A1 (ALDH1A1), a key enzyme regulating retinoic acid synthesis, and ALDH1A1 protein deficiency in GDFs was confirmed by Western blot. A number of additional protein thiol differences in GDFs were identified, including radiation responsive annexin family members and lamin A/C. Collectively, candidates identified in our study have plausible implications for radiation health effects and cancer susceptibility.


Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology | 2013

Hepatic Leukemia Factor Promotes Resistance To Cell Death: Implications For Therapeutics and Chronotherapy

Katrina M. Waters; Ryan L. Sontag; Thomas J. Weber

Physiological variation related to circadian rhythms and aberrant gene expression patterns are believed to modulate therapeutic efficacy, but the precise molecular determinants remain unclear. Here we examine the regulation of cell death by hepatic leukemia factor (HLF), which is an output regulator of circadian rhythms and is aberrantly expressed in human cancers, using an ectopic expression strategy in JB6 mouse epidermal cells and human keratinocytes. Ectopic HLF expression inhibited cell death in both JB6 cells and human keratinocytes, as induced by serum-starvation, tumor necrosis factor alpha and ionizing radiation. Microarray analysis indicates that HLF regulates a complex multi-gene transcriptional program encompassing upregulation of anti-apoptotic genes, downregulation of pro-apoptotic genes, and many additional changes that are consistent with an anti-death program. Collectively, our results demonstrate that ectopic expression of HLF, an established transcription factor that cycles with circadian rhythms, can recapitulate many features associated with circadian-dependent physiological variation.


Molecular Carcinogenesis | 2011

Inhibition of ERK oscillations by ionizing radiation and reactive oxygen species

Harish Shankaran; William B. Chrisler; Ryan L. Sontag; Thomas J. Weber

The shuttling of activated protein kinases between the cytoplasm and nucleus is an essential feature of normal growth factor signaling cascades. Here we demonstrate that transforming growth factor alpha (TGFα) induces oscillations in extracellular signal regulated kinase (ERK) cytoplasmic‐nuclear translocations in human keratinocytes. TGFα‐dependent ERK oscillations mediated through the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) are inhibited by low dose X‐irradiation (10 cGy) and low concentrations of hydrogen peroxide (0.32–3.26 µM H2O2) used as a model reactive oxygen species (ROS). A fluorescent indicator dye (H2‐DCFDA) was used to measure cellular ROS levels following X‐irradiation, 12‐O‐tetradecanoyl phorbol‐13‐acetate (TPA) and H2O2. X‐irradiation did not generate significant ROS production while 0.32 µM H2O2 and TPA induced significant increases in ROS levels with H2O2 > TPA. TPA alone induced transactivation of the EGFR but did not induce ERK oscillations. TPA as a cotreatment did not inhibit TGFα‐stimulated ERK oscillations but qualitatively altered TGFα‐dependent ERK oscillation characteristics (amplitude, time‐period). Collectively, these observations demonstrate that TGFα‐induced ERK oscillations are inhibited by ionizing radiation/ROS and perturbed by epigenetic carcinogen in human keratinocytes.


mSystems | 2016

Identification of Novel Host Interactors of Effectors Secreted by Salmonella and Citrobacter

Ryan L. Sontag; Ernesto S. Nakayasu; Roslyn N. Brown; George S. Niemann; Michael A. Sydor; Octavio Sanchez; Charles Ansong; Shao Yeh Lu; Hyungwon Choi; Dylan Valleau; Karl K. Weitz; Alexei Savchenko; Eric D. Cambronne; Joshua N. Adkins

During infection, pathogenic bacteria face an adverse environment of factors driven by both cellular and humoral defense mechanisms. To help evade the immune response and ultimately proliferate inside the host, many bacteria evolved specialized secretion systems to deliver effector proteins directly into host cells. Translocated effector proteins function to subvert host defense mechanisms. Numerous pathogenic bacteria use a specialized secretion system called type III secretion to deliver effectors into the host cell cytosol. Here, we identified 75 new host targets of Salmonella and Citrobacter effectors, which will help elucidate their mechanisms of action. ABSTRACT Many pathogenic bacteria of the family Enterobacteriaceae use type III secretion systems to inject virulence proteins, termed “effectors,” into the host cell cytosol. Although host-cellular activities of several effectors have been demonstrated, the function and host-targeted pathways of most of the effectors identified to date are largely undetermined. To gain insight into host proteins targeted by bacterial effectors, we performed coaffinity purification of host proteins from cell lysates using recombinant effectors from the Enterobacteriaceae intracellular pathogens Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium and Citrobacter rodentium. We identified 54 high-confidence host interactors for the Salmonella effectors GogA, GtgA, GtgE, SpvC, SrfH, SseL, SspH1, and SssB collectively and 21 interactors for the Citrobacter effectors EspT, NleA, NleG1, and NleK. We biochemically validated the interaction between the SrfH Salmonella protein and the extracellular signal-regulated kinase 2 (ERK2) host protein kinase, which revealed a role for this effector in regulating phosphorylation levels of this enzyme, which plays a central role in signal transduction. IMPORTANCE During infection, pathogenic bacteria face an adverse environment of factors driven by both cellular and humoral defense mechanisms. To help evade the immune response and ultimately proliferate inside the host, many bacteria evolved specialized secretion systems to deliver effector proteins directly into host cells. Translocated effector proteins function to subvert host defense mechanisms. Numerous pathogenic bacteria use a specialized secretion system called type III secretion to deliver effectors into the host cell cytosol. Here, we identified 75 new host targets of Salmonella and Citrobacter effectors, which will help elucidate their mechanisms of action.


Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry | 2018

Towards High-Resolution Tissue Imaging Using Nanospray Desorption Electrospray Ionization Mass Spectrometry Coupled to Shear Force Microscopy

Son N. Nguyen; Ryan L. Sontag; James P. Carson; Richard A. Corley; Charles Ansong; Julia Laskin

AbstractConstant mode ambient mass spectrometry imaging (MSI) of tissue sections with high lateral resolution of better than 10 μm was performed by combining shear force microscopy with nanospray desorption electrospray ionization (nano-DESI). Shear force microscopy enabled precise control of the distance between the sample and nano-DESI probe during MSI experiments and provided information on sample topography. Proof-of-concept experiments were performed using lung and brain tissue sections representing spongy and dense tissues, respectively. Topography images obtained using shear force microscopy were comparable to the results obtained using contact profilometry over the same region of the tissue section. Variations in tissue height were found to be dependent on the tissue type and were in the range of 0–5 μm for lung tissue and 0–3 μm for brain tissue sections. Ion images of phospholipids obtained in this study are in good agreement with literature data. Normalization of nano-DESI MSI images to the signal of the internal standard added to the extraction solvent allowed us to construct high-resolution ion images free of matrix effects. Graphical Abstractᅟ


Journal of Proteome Research | 2015

Identification of Salmonella Typhimurium deubiquitinase SseL substrates by immunoaffinity enrichment and quantitative proteomic analysis

Ernesto S. Nakayasu; Michael A. Sydor; Roslyn N. Brown; Ryan L. Sontag; Tiago J. P. Sobreira; Gordon W. Slysz; Daniel R. Humphrys; Tatiana Skarina; Olena Onoprienko; Rosa Di Leo; Brooke L. Deatherage Kaiser; Jie Li; Charles Ansong; Eric D. Cambronne; Richard D. Smith; Alexei Savchenko; Joshua N. Adkins

Ubiquitination is a key protein post-translational modification that regulates many important cellular pathways and whose levels are regulated by equilibrium between the activities of ubiquitin ligases and deubiquitinases. Here, we present a method to identify specific deubiquitinase substrates based on treatment of cell lysates with recombinant enzymes, immunoaffinity purification, and global quantitative proteomic analysis. As a model system to identify substrates, we used a virulence-related deubiquitinase, SseL, secreted by Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium into host cells. Using this approach, two SseL substrates were identified in the RAW 264.7 murine macrophage-like cell line, S100A6 and heterogeneous nuclear ribonuclear protein K, in addition to the previously reported K63-linked ubiquitin chains. These substrates were further validated by a combination of enzymatic and binding assays. This method can be used for the systematic identification of substrates of deubiquitinases from other organisms and applied to study their functions in physiology and disease.

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Charles Ansong

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

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Richard D. Smith

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

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Thomas J. Weber

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

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Joshua N. Adkins

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

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Karl K. Weitz

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

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Paul D. Piehowski

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

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Roslyn N. Brown

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

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Vladislav A. Petyuk

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

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Ernesto S. Nakayasu

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

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James P. Carson

University of Texas at Austin

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