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Featured researches published by Sarah H. Holt.


Nature Genetics | 2011

The genome of woodland strawberry ( Fragaria vesca )

Vladimir Shulaev; Daniel J. Sargent; Ross N. Crowhurst; Todd C. Mockler; Otto Folkerts; Arthur L. Delcher; Pankaj Jaiswal; Keithanne Mockaitis; Aaron Liston; Shrinivasrao P. Mane; Paul D. Burns; Thomas M. Davis; Janet P. Slovin; Nahla Bassil; Roger P. Hellens; Clive Evans; Tim Harkins; Chinnappa D. Kodira; Brian Desany; Oswald Crasta; Roderick V. Jensen; Andrew C. Allan; Todd P. Michael; João C. Setubal; Jean Marc Celton; Kelly P. Williams; Sarah H. Holt; Juan Jairo Ruiz Rojas; Mithu Chatterjee; Bo Liu

The woodland strawberry, Fragaria vesca (2n = 2x = 14), is a versatile experimental plant system. This diminutive herbaceous perennial has a small genome (240 Mb), is amenable to genetic transformation and shares substantial sequence identity with the cultivated strawberry (Fragaria × ananassa) and other economically important rosaceous plants. Here we report the draft F. vesca genome, which was sequenced to ×39 coverage using second-generation technology, assembled de novo and then anchored to the genetic linkage map into seven pseudochromosomes. This diploid strawberry sequence lacks the large genome duplications seen in other rosids. Gene prediction modeling identified 34,809 genes, with most being supported by transcriptome mapping. Genes critical to valuable horticultural traits including flavor, nutritional value and flowering time were identified. Macrosyntenic relationships between Fragaria and Prunus predict a hypothetical ancestral Rosaceae genome that had nine chromosomes. New phylogenetic analysis of 154 protein-coding genes suggests that assignment of Populus to Malvidae, rather than Fabidae, is warranted.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

NAF-1 and mitoNEET are central to human breast cancer proliferation by maintaining mitochondrial homeostasis and promoting tumor growth

Yang-Sung Sohn; Sagi Tamir; Luhua Song; Dorit Michaeli; Imad Matouk; Andrea R. Conlan; Yael Harir; Sarah H. Holt; Vladimir Shulaev; Mark L. Paddock; Abraham Hochberg; Ioav Z. Cabanchick; José N. Onuchic; Patricia A. Jennings; Rachel Nechushtai; Ron Mittler

Mitochondria are emerging as important players in the transformation process of cells, maintaining the biosynthetic and energetic capacities of cancer cells and serving as one of the primary sites of apoptosis and autophagy regulation. Although several avenues of cancer therapy have focused on mitochondria, progress in developing mitochondria-targeting anticancer drugs nonetheless has been slow, owing to the limited number of known mitochondrial target proteins that link metabolism with autophagy or cell death. Recent studies have demonstrated that two members of the newly discovered family of NEET proteins, NAF-1 (CISD2) and mitoNEET (mNT; CISD1), could play such a role in cancer cells. NAF-1 was shown to be a key player in regulating autophagy, and mNT was proposed to mediate iron and reactive oxygen homeostasis in mitochondria. Here we show that the protein levels of NAF-1 and mNT are elevated in human epithelial breast cancer cells, and that suppressing the level of these proteins using shRNA results in significantly reduced cell proliferation and tumor growth, decreased mitochondrial performance, uncontrolled accumulation of iron and reactive oxygen in mitochondria, and activation of autophagy. Our findings highlight NEET proteins as promising mitochondrial targets for cancer therapy.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015

The Fe-S cluster-containing NEET proteins mitoNEET and NAF-1 as chemotherapeutic targets in breast cancer

Fang Bai; Faruck Morcos; Yang-Sung Sohn; Merav Darash-Yahana; Celso O. Rezende; Colin H. Lipper; Mark L. Paddock; Luhua Song; Yuting Luo; Sarah H. Holt; Sagi Tamir; Emmanuel A. Theodorakis; Patricia A. Jennings; José N. Onuchic; Ron Mittler; Rachel Nechushtai

Significance Cancer is a leading cause of mortality worldwide, with the identification of novel drug targets and chemotherapeutic agents being a high priority in the fight against it. The NEET proteins mitoNEET (mNT) and nutrient-deprivation autophagy factor-1 (NAF-1) were recently shown to be required for cancer cell proliferation. Utilizing a combination of experimental and computational techniques, we identified a derivative of the mitocan cluvenone that binds to NEET proteins at the vicinity of their 2Fe-2S clusters and facilitates their destabilization. The new drug displays a high specificity in the selective killing of human epithelial breast cancer cells, without any apparent effects on normal breast cells. Our results identify the 2Fe-2S clusters of NEET proteins as a novel target in the chemotherapeutic treatment of breast cancer. Identification of novel drug targets and chemotherapeutic agents is a high priority in the fight against cancer. Here, we report that MAD-28, a designed cluvenone (CLV) derivative, binds to and destabilizes two members of a unique class of mitochondrial and endoplasmic reticulum (ER) 2Fe-2S proteins, mitoNEET (mNT) and nutrient-deprivation autophagy factor-1 (NAF-1), recently implicated in cancer cell proliferation. Docking analysis of MAD-28 to mNT/NAF-1 revealed that in contrast to CLV, which formed a hydrogen bond network that stabilized the 2Fe-2S clusters of these proteins, MAD-28 broke the coordinative bond between the His ligand and the cluster’s Fe of mNT/NAF-1. Analysis of MAD-28 performed with control (Michigan Cancer Foundation; MCF-10A) and malignant (M.D. Anderson–metastatic breast; MDA-MB-231 or MCF-7) human epithelial breast cells revealed that MAD-28 had a high specificity in the selective killing of cancer cells, without any apparent effects on normal breast cells. MAD-28 was found to target the mitochondria of cancer cells and displayed a surprising similarity in its effects to the effects of mNT/NAF-1 shRNA suppression in cancer cells, causing a decrease in respiration and mitochondrial membrane potential, as well as an increase in mitochondrial iron content and glycolysis. As expected, if the NEET proteins are targets of MAD-28, cancer cells with suppressed levels of NAF-1 or mNT were less susceptible to the drug. Taken together, our results suggest that NEET proteins are a novel class of drug targets in the chemotherapeutic treatment of breast cancer, and that MAD-28 can now be used as a template for rational drug design for NEET Fe-S cluster-destabilizing anticancer drugs.


Journal of Cell Science | 2016

Activation of apoptosis in NAF-1-deficient human epithelial breast cancer cells.

Sarah H. Holt; Merav Darash-Yahana; Yang Sung Sohn; Luhua Song; Ola Karmi; Sagi Tamir; Dorit Michaeli; Yuting Luo; Mark L. Paddock; Patricia A. Jennings; José N. Onuchic; Rajeev K. Azad; Eli Pikarsky; Ioav Cabantchik; Rachel Nechushtai; Ron Mittler

ABSTRACT Maintaining iron (Fe) ion and reactive oxygen species homeostasis is essential for cellular function, mitochondrial integrity and the regulation of cell death pathways, and is recognized as a key process underlying the molecular basis of aging and various diseases, such as diabetes, neurodegenerative diseases and cancer. Nutrient-deprivation autophagy factor 1 (NAF-1; also known as CISD2) belongs to a newly discovered class of Fe-sulfur proteins that are localized to the outer mitochondrial membrane and the endoplasmic reticulum. It has been implicated in regulating homeostasis of Fe ions, as well as the activation of autophagy through interaction with BCL-2. Here we show that small hairpin (sh)RNA-mediated suppression of NAF-1 results in the activation of apoptosis in epithelial breast cancer cells and xenograft tumors. Suppression of NAF-1 resulted in increased uptake of Fe ions into cells, a metabolic shift that rendered cells more susceptible to a glycolysis inhibitor, and the activation of cellular stress pathways that are associated with HIF1α. Our studies suggest that NAF-1 is a major player in the metabolic regulation of breast cancer cells through its effects on cellular Fe ion distribution, mitochondrial metabolism and the induction of apoptosis. Summary: NAF-1 is a major player in the metabolic regulation of breast cancer cells through its effects on cellular Fe ion distribution, mitochondrial metabolism and the induction of apoptosis.


PLOS ONE | 2017

Interactions between mitoNEET and NAF-1 in cells

Ola Karmi; Sarah H. Holt; Luhua Song; Sagi Tamir; Yuting Luo; Fang Bai; Ammar Adenwalla; Merav Darash-Yahana; Yang-Sung Sohn; Patricia A. Jennings; Rajeev K. Azad; José N. Onuchic; Faruck Morcos; Rachel Nechushtai; Ron Mittler

The NEET proteins mitoNEET (mNT) and nutrient-deprivation autophagy factor-1 (NAF-1) are required for cancer cell proliferation and resistance to oxidative stress. NAF-1 and mNT are also implicated in a number of other human pathologies including diabetes, neurodegeneration and cardiovascular disease, as well as in development, differentiation and aging. Previous studies suggested that mNT and NAF-1 could function in the same pathway in mammalian cells, preventing the over-accumulation of iron and reactive oxygen species (ROS) in mitochondria. Nevertheless, it is unknown whether these two proteins directly interact in cells, and how they mediate their function. Here we demonstrate, using yeast two-hybrid, in vivo bimolecular fluorescence complementation (BiFC), direct coupling analysis (DCA), RNA-sequencing, ROS and iron imaging, and single and double shRNA lines with suppressed mNT, NAF-1 and mNT/NAF-1 expression, that mNT and NAF-1 directly interact in mammalian cells and could function in the same cellular pathway. We further show using an in vitro cluster transfer assay that mNT can transfer its clusters to NAF-1. Our study highlights the possibility that mNT and NAF-1 function as part of an iron-sulfur (2Fe-2S) cluster relay to maintain the levels of iron and Fe-S clusters under control in the mitochondria of mammalian cells, thereby preventing the activation of apoptosis and/or autophagy and supporting cellular proliferation.


Plant Methods | 2017

Protoplast isolation prior to flow cytometry reveals clear patterns of endoreduplication in potato tubers, related species, and some starchy root crops

F. Parker E. Laimbeer; Sarah H. Holt; Melissa R. Makris; Michael A. Hardigan; C. Robin Buell; Richard E. Veilleux

BackgroundEndoreduplication, the process of DNA replication in the absence of cell division, is associated with specialized cellular function and increased cell size. Genes controlling endoreduplication in tomato fruit have been shown to affect mature fruit size. An efficient method of estimating endoreduplication is required to study its role in plant organ development. Flow cytometry is often utilized to evaluate endoreduplication, yet some tissues and species, among them the tubers of Solanum tuberosum, remain intractable to routine tissue preparation for flow cytometry. We aimed to develop a method through the use of protoplast extraction preceding flow cytometry, specifically for the assessment of endoreduplication in potato tubers.ResultsWe present a method for appraising endoreduplication in potato (Solanum tuberosum) tuber tissues. We evaluated this method and observed consistent differences between pith and cortex of tubers and between different cultivars, but no apparent relationship with whole tuber size. Furthermore, we were able to observe distinct patterns of endoreduplication in 16 of 20 wild potato relatives, with mean endoreduplication index (EI) ranging from 0.94 to 2.62 endocycles per cell. The protocol was also applied to a panel of starchy root crop species and, while only two of five yielded reliable flow histograms, the two (sweet potato and turnip) exhibited substantially lower EIs than wild and cultivated potato accessions.ConclusionsThe protocol reported herein has proven effective on tubers of a variety of potato cultivars and related species, as well as storage roots of other starchy crops. This method provides an important tool for the study of potato morphology and development while revealing natural variation for endoreduplication which may have agricultural relevance.


The Plant Genome | 2016

Self-Fertility in a Cultivated Diploid Potato Population Examined with the Infinium 8303 Potato Single-Nucleotide Polymorphism Array

Brenda A. Peterson; Sarah H. Holt; F. Parker E. Laimbeer; Andreas G. Doulis; Joseph J. Coombs; David S. Douches; Michael A. Hardigan; C. Robin Buell; Richard E. Veilleux

Self‐fertility in diploid potato is independent of self‐compatibility SNP genotyping may be confounded by copy number variation Genomic regions of a highly heterozygous species resist homozygosity during inbreeding


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2015

Structure-function analysis of NEET proteins uncovers their role as key regulators of iron and ROS homeostasis in health and disease.

Sagi Tamir; Mark L. Paddock; Merav Darash-Yahana-Baram; Sarah H. Holt; Yang Sung Sohn; Lily Agranat; Dorit Michaeli; Jason T. Stofleth; Colin H. Lipper; Faruck Morcos; Ioav Cabantchik; José N. Onuchic; Patricia A. Jennings; Ron Mittler; Rachel Nechushtai


Theoretical and Applied Genetics | 2010

SNP discovery and genetic mapping of T-DNA insertional mutants in Fragaria vesca L.

Juan Jairo Ruiz-Rojas; Daniel J. Sargent; Vladimir Shulaev; Allan W. Dickerman; J. Pattison; Sarah H. Holt; A. Ciordia; Richard E. Veilleux


Plant Biotechnology Journal | 2012

Transposon tagging in diploid strawberry

Richard E. Veilleux; Kerri P. Mills; Aaron Baxter; Kendall T. Upham; Tammy J. Ferguson; Sarah H. Holt; Nan Lu; Juan Jairo Ruiz-Rojas; Christopher J. Pantazis; Cherish M. Davis; Robert C. Lindsay; Frankie L. Powell; Yinghui Dan; Allan W. Dickerman; Teruko Oosumi; Vladimir Shulaev

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Ron Mittler

University of North Texas

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Rachel Nechushtai

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Sagi Tamir

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Luhua Song

University of North Texas

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Yuting Luo

University of North Texas

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