Stephen High
University of Manchester
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Publication
Featured researches published by Stephen High.
Journal of Cell Science | 2006
Andrew Young; Edmond Chan; Xiao Wen Hu; Robert Köchl; Samuel G. Crawshaw; Stephen High; Dale W. Hailey; Jennifer Lippincott-Schwartz; Sharon A. Tooze
Autophagy, fundamentally a lysosomal degradation pathway, functions in cells during normal growth and certain pathological conditions, including starvation, to maintain homeostasis. Autophagosomes are formed through a mechanism that is not well understood, despite the identification of many genes required for autophagy. We have studied the mammalian homologue of Atg9p, a multi-spanning transmembrane protein essential in yeast for autophagy, to gain a better understanding of the function of this ubiquitious protein. We show that both the N- and C-termini of mammalian Atg9 (mAtg9) are cytosolic, and predict that mAtg9 spans the membrane six times. We find that mAtg9 is located in the trans-Golgi network and late endosomes and colocalizes with TGN46, the cation-independent mannose-6-phosphate receptor, Rab7 and Rab9. Amino acid starvation or rapamycin treatment, which upregulates autophagy, causes a redistribution of mAtg9 from the TGN to peripheral, endosomal membranes, which are positive for the autophagosomal marker GFP-LC3. siRNA-mediated depletion of the putative mammalian homologue of Atg1p, ULK1, inhibits this starvation-induced redistribution. The redistribution of mAtg9 also requires PI 3-kinase activity, and is reversed after restoration of amino acids. We speculate that starvation-induced autophagy, which requires mAtg9, may rely on an alteration of the steady-state trafficking of mAtg9, in a Atg1-dependent manner.
The EMBO Journal | 1998
Quido A. Valent; Pier A. Scotti; Stephen High; Jan Willem L De Gier; Gunnar von Heijne; Georg Lentzen; Wolfgang Wintermeyer; Bauke Oudega; Joen Luirink
Two distinct protein targeting pathways can direct proteins to the Escherichia coli inner membrane. The Sec pathway involves the cytosolic chaperone SecB that binds to the mature region of pre‐proteins. SecB targets the pre‐protein to SecA that mediates pre‐protein translocation through the SecYEG translocon. The SRP pathway is probably used primarily for the targeting and assembly of inner membrane proteins. It involves the signal recognition particle (SRP) that interacts with the hydrophobic targeting signal of nascent proteins. By using a protein cross‐linking approach, we demonstrate here that the SRP pathway delivers nascent inner membrane proteins at the membrane. The SRP receptor FtsY, GTP and inner membranes are required for release of the nascent proteins from the SRP. Upon release of the SRP at the membrane, the targeted nascent proteins insert into a translocon that contains at least SecA, SecY and SecG. Hence, as appears to be the case for several other translocation systems, multiple targeting mechanisms deliver a variety of precursor proteins to a common membrane translocation complex of the E.coli inner membrane.
The EMBO Journal | 1995
Quido A. Valent; Debra A. Kendall; Stephen High; Ron Kusters; Bauke Oudega; Joen Luirink
In Escherichia coli, components of a signal recognition particle (SRP) and its receptor have been identified which appear to be essential for efficient translocation of several proteins. In this study we use cross‐linking to demonstrate that E. coli SRP interacts with a variety of nascent presecretory proteins and integral inner membrane proteins. Evidence is presented that the interaction is correlated with the hydrophobicity of the core region of the signal sequence and thereby with its ability to promote transport in vivo. A second E. coli component, which is identified as trigger factor, can be efficiently cross‐linked to all tested nascent chains derived from both secreted and cytosolic proteins. We propose that SRP and trigger factor act as secretion‐specific and general molecular chaperone respectively, early in protein synthesis.
The EMBO Journal | 1994
Joen Luirink; C M ten Hagen-Jongman; C C van der Weijden; Bauke Oudega; Stephen High; Bernhard Dobberstein; Ron Kusters
In Escherichia coli, a signal recognition particle (SRP) has been identified which binds specifically to the signal sequence of presecretory proteins and which appears to be essential for efficient translocation of a subset of proteins. In this study we have investigated the function of E. coli FtsY which shares sequence similarity with the alpha‐subunit of the eukaryotic SRP receptor (‘docking protein’) in the membrane of the endoplasmic reticulum. A strain was constructed which allows the conditional expression of FtsY. Depletion of FtsY is shown to cause the accumulation of the precursor form of beta‐lactamase, OmpF and ribose binding protein in vivo, whereas the processing of various other presecretory proteins is unaffected. Furthermore, FtsY‐depleted inverted cytoplasmic membrane vesicles are shown to be defective in the translocation of pre‐beta‐lactamase using an in vitro import assay. Subcellular localization studies revealed that FtsY is located in part at the cytoplasmic membrane with which it seems peripherally associated. These observations suggest that FtsY is the functional E. coli homolog of the mammalian SRP receptor.
Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology | 2009
Benedict C. S. Cross; Irmgard Sinning; Joen Luirink; Stephen High
Correct protein function depends on delivery to the appropriate cellular or subcellular compartment. Following the initiation of protein synthesis in the cytosol, many bacterial and eukaryotic proteins must be integrated into or transported across a membrane to reach their site of function. Whereas in the post-translational delivery pathway ATP-dependent factors bind to completed polypeptides and chaperone them until membrane translocation is initiated, a GTP-dependent co-translational pathway operates to couple ongoing protein synthesis to membrane transport. These distinct pathways provide different solutions for the maintenance of proteins in a state that is competent for membrane translocation and their delivery for export from the cytosol.
FEBS Letters | 2000
Stephen High; Fabienne J.L. Lecomte; Sarah J. Russell; Benjamin Abell; Jason D. Oliver
The endoplasmic reticulum (ER) is a major site of protein synthesis and its inside, or lumen, is a major site of protein folding. The lumen of the ER contains many folding factors and molecular chaperones, which facilitate protein folding by increasing both the rate and the efficiency of this process. Amongst the many ER folding factors, there are three components that specifically modulate the folding glycoproteins bearing N‐linked carbohydrate side chains. These components are calnexin, calreticulin and ERp57, and this review focuses on the molecular basis for their capacity to influence glycoprotein folding.
The EMBO Journal | 1992
Henrich Lütcke; Stephen High; Karin Römisch; Anthony J. Ashford; Bernhard Dobberstein
The signal recognition particle (SRP) binds to signal sequences when they emerge from a translating ribosome and targets the complex of ribosome, nascent chain and SRP to the membrane of the rough endoplasmic reticulum (rER) allowing the co‐translational translocation of the nascent chain. By photo‐crosslinking it has been shown that the signal sequence of preprolactin (PPL) only interacts with the methionine‐rich (M) domain of the 54 kDa protein subunit (SRP54) of SRP. Here we show that (i) a signal‐anchor sequence is likewise crosslinked only to the methionine‐rich domain of SRP54, (ii) free SRP54 can interact with signal sequences independently of the other components of SRP, (iii) its M domain suffices to perform this function, and (iv) an essentially intact M domain is required for signal sequence recognition. Alkylation of the N+G domain in intact SRP54 with N‐ethyl maleimide (NEM), but not after cleavage with V8 protease, prevents the binding of a signal sequence to the M domain. This suggests a proximity between the N+G and M domains of SRP54 and raises the possibility that the role of the N+G domain may be to regulate the binding and/or the release of signal sequences.
The EMBO Journal | 2004
Benjamin Abell; Martin R. Pool; Oliver Schlenker; Irmgard Sinning; Stephen High
Signal recognition particle (SRP) plays a central role in the delivery of classical secretory and membrane proteins to the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). All nascent chains studied to date dissociate from SRP once released from the ribosome, thereby supporting a strictly cotranslational mode of action for eukaryotic SRP. We now report a novel post‐translational function for SRP in the targeting of tail‐anchored (TA) proteins to the ER. TA proteins possess a hydrophobic membrane insertion sequence at their C‐terminus such that it can only emerge from the ribosome after translation is terminated. We show that SRP can associate post‐translationally with this type of ER‐targeting signal, and deliver newly synthesised TA proteins to the ER membrane by a pathway dependent upon GTP and the SRP receptor. We find that dependency upon this SRP‐dependent route is precursor specific, and propose a unifying model to describe the biogenesis of TA proteins in vivo.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2013
Gloria Lopez-Castejon; Nadia Luheshi; Vincent Compan; Stephen High; Roger C. Whitehead; Sabine L. Flitsch; Aleksandr Kirov; Igor Prudovsky; Eileithyia Swanton; David Brough
Background: The inflammasome is a multimolecular complex that regulates the processing of the pro-inflammatory cytokine interleukin-1β. Results: Inhibitors of deubiquitinase (DUB) enzymes inhibited the release of interleukin-1β. Conclusion: DUBs regulate assembly of the inflammasome. Significance: DUBs may represent new anti-inflammatory drug targets for the treatment of inflammatory disease. IL-1β is a potent pro-inflammatory cytokine produced in response to infection or injury. It is synthesized as an inactive precursor that is activated by the protease caspase-1 within a cytosolic molecular complex called the inflammasome. Assembly of this complex is triggered by a range of structurally diverse damage or pathogen associated stimuli, and the signaling pathways through which these act are poorly understood. Ubiquitination is a post-translational modification essential for maintaining cellular homeostasis. It can be reversed by deubiquitinase enzymes (DUBs) that remove ubiquitin moieties from the protein thus modifying its fate. DUBs present specificity toward different ubiquitin chain topologies and are crucial for recycling ubiquitin molecules before protein degradation as well as regulating key cellular processes such as protein trafficking, gene transcription, and signaling. We report here that small molecule inhibitors of DUB activity inhibit inflammasome activation. Inhibition of DUBs blocked the processing and release of IL-1β in both mouse and human macrophages. DUB activity was necessary for inflammasome association as DUB inhibition also impaired ASC oligomerization and caspase-1 activation without directly blocking caspase-1 activity. These data reveal the requirement for DUB activity in a key reaction of the innate immune response and highlight the therapeutic potential of DUB inhibitors for chronic auto-inflammatory diseases.
The EMBO Journal | 2003
Eileithyia Swanton; Stephen High; Philip G. Woodman
The endoplasmic (ER) quality control apparatus ensures that misfolded or unassembled proteins are not deployed within the cell, but are retained in the ER and degraded. A glycoprotein‐specific system involving the ER lectins calnexin and calreticulin is well documented, but very little is known about mechanisms that may operate for non‐glycosylated proteins. We have used a folding mutant of a non‐ glycosylated membrane protein, proteolipid protein (PLP), to examine the quality control of this class of polypeptide. We find that calnexin associates with newly synthesized PLP molecules, binding stably to misfolded PLP. Calnexin also binds stably to an isolated transmembrane domain of PLP, suggesting that this chaperone is able to monitor the folding and assembly of domains within the ER membrane. Notably, this glycan‐independent interaction with calnexin significantly retards the degradation of misfolded PLP. We propose that calnexin contributes to the quality control of non‐glycosylated polytopic membrane proteins by binding to misfolded or unassembled transmembrane domains, and discuss our findings in relation to the role of calnexin in the degradation of misfolded proteins.