Stuart J. Frank
University of Alabama at Birmingham
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Featured researches published by Stuart J. Frank.
Nature Medicine | 2010
A. McGarry Houghton; Danuta M Rzymkiewicz; Hongbin Ji; Alyssa D. Gregory; Eduardo E. Egea; Heather E. Metz; Donna B Stolz; Stephanie R. Land; Marconcini La; Corrine R. Kliment; Kimberly M. Jenkins; Keith A Beaulieu; Majd Mouded; Stuart J. Frank; Kwok K. Wong; Steven D. Shapiro
Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer death worldwide. Recent data suggest that tumor-associated inflammatory cells may modify lung tumor growth and invasiveness. To determine the role of neutrophil elastase (encoded by Elane) on tumor progression, we used the loxP-Stop-loxP K-rasG12D (LSL–K-ras) model of mouse lung adenocarcinoma to generate LSL–K-ras-Elane−/− mice. Tumor burden was markedly reduced in LSL–K-ras-Elane−/− mice at all time points after induction of mutant K-ras expression. Kaplan-Meier survival analysis showed that whereas all LSL–K-ras-Elane+/+ mice died, none of the mice lacking neutrophil elastase died. Neutrophil elastase directly induced tumor cell proliferation in both human and mouse lung adenocarcinomas by gaining access to an endosomal compartment within tumor cells, where it degraded insulin receptor substrate-1 (IRS-1). Immunoprecipitation studies showed that, as neutrophil elastase degraded IRS-1, there was increased interaction between phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K) and the potent mitogen platelet-derived growth factor receptor (PDGFR), thereby skewing the PI3K axis toward tumor cell proliferation. The inverse relationship identified between neutrophil elastase and IRS-1 in LSL–K-ras mice was also identified in human lung adenocarcinomas, thus translating these findings to human disease. This study identifies IRS-1 as a key regulator of PI3K within malignant cells. Additionally, to our knowledge, this is the first description of a secreted proteinase gaining access to the inside of a cell and altering intracellular signaling.
Journal of Neurochemistry | 2001
Elvira Lopez-Perez; Yue Zhang; Stuart J. Frank; John Creemers; Nabil G. Seidah; Frédéric Checler
The β‐amyloid precursor protein (βAPP) undergoes a physiological cleavage triggered by one or several proteolytic activities referred to as α‐secretases, leading to the secretion of sAPPα. Several lines of evidence indicate that the α‐secretase cleavage is a highly regulated process. Thus, besides constitutive production of sAPPα, several studies have reported on protein kinase C‐regulated sAPPα secretion. Studies aimed at identifying α‐secretase(s) candidates suggest the involvement of enzymes belonging to the pro‐hormone convertases and disintegrin families. The delineation of respective contributions of proteolytic activities in constitutive and regulated sAPPα secretion is rendered difficult by the fact that the overall regulated response always includes the basal constitutive counterpart that cannot be selectively abolished. Here we report on the fact that the furin‐deficient LoVo cells are devoid of regulated PKC‐dependent sAPPα secretion and therefore represent an interesting model to study exclusively the constitutive sAPPα secretion. We show here, by a pharmacological approach using selective inhibitors, that pro‐hormone convertases and proteases of the ADAM (disintegrin metalloproteases) family participate in the production/secretion of sAPPαs in LoVo cells. Transfection analysis allowed us to further establish that the pro‐hormone convertase 7 and ADAM10 but not ADAM17 (TACE, tumour necrosis factor α‐converting enzyme) likely contribute to constitutive sAPPα secretion by LoVo cells.
Endocrinology | 2000
Yue Zhang; Jing Jiang; Roy A. Black; Gerhard Baumann; Stuart J. Frank
The GH binding protein (GHBP), which exists in many vertebrates, is a circulating high affinity binding protein corresponding to the extracellular domain of the GH receptor (GHR). In humans, rabbits, and several other species, the GHBP is generated by proteolysis of the GHR and shedding of its extracellular domain. We previously showed that GHBP shedding is inducible by the phorbol ester phorbol 12-myristate,13-acetate (PMA) and inhibited by the metalloprotease inhibitor, Immunex Corp. Compound 3 (IC3). The metzincin metalloprotease, tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α)-converting enzyme (TACE), catalyzes the shedding of TNF-α from its transmembrane precursor, a process that is also inhibitable by IC3. TACE may hence be a candidate for GHBP sheddase. In this study, we reconstitute fibroblasts derived from a TACE knockout mouse (Null cells) with either the rabbit (rb) GHR alone (Null/R) or rbGHR plus murine TACE (Null/R+T). Although GHR in both cells was expressed at similar abundance, dimerized normally and ca...
Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2010
Mahendra D. Mavalli; Douglas J. DiGirolamo; Yong Fan; Ryan C. Riddle; Kenneth S. Campbell; Thomas van Groen; Stuart J. Frank; Mark A. Sperling; Karyn A. Esser; Marcas M. Bamman; Thomas L. Clemens
Skeletal muscle development, nutrient uptake, and nutrient utilization is largely coordinated by growth hormone (GH) and its downstream effectors, in particular, IGF-1. However, it is not clear which effects of GH on skeletal muscle are direct and which are secondary to GH-induced IGF-1 expression. Thus, we generated mice lacking either GH receptor (GHR) or IGF-1 receptor (IGF-1R) specifically in skeletal muscle. Both exhibited impaired skeletal muscle development characterized by reductions in myofiber number and area as well as accompanying deficiencies in functional performance. Defective skeletal muscle development, in both GHR and IGF-1R mutants, was attributable to diminished myoblast fusion and associated with compromised nuclear factor of activated T cells import and activity. Strikingly, mice lacking GHR developed metabolic features that were not observed in the IGF-1R mutants, including marked peripheral adiposity, insulin resistance, and glucose intolerance. Insulin resistance in GHR-deficient myotubes derived from reduced IR protein abundance and increased inhibitory phosphorylation of IRS-1 on Ser 1101. These results identify distinct signaling pathways through which GHR regulates skeletal muscle development and modulates nutrient metabolism.
Nature Reviews Endocrinology | 2014
Karen L. Gamble; Ryan Berry; Stuart J. Frank; Martin E. Young
Organisms experience dramatic fluctuations in demands and stresses over the course of the day. In order to maintain biological processes within physiological boundaries, mechanisms have evolved for anticipation of, and adaptation to, these daily fluctuations. Endocrine factors have an integral role in homeostasis. Not only do circulating levels of various endocrine factors oscillate over the 24 h period, but so too does responsiveness of target tissues to these signals or stimuli. Emerging evidence suggests that these daily endocrine oscillations do not occur solely in response to behavioural fluctuations associated with sleep–wake and feeding–fasting cycles, but are orchestrated by an intrinsic timekeeping mechanism known as the circadian clock. Disruption of circadian clocks by genetic and/or environmental factors seems to precipitate numerous common disorders, including the metabolic syndrome and cancer. Collectively, these observations suggest that strategies designed to realign normal circadian rhythmicities hold potential for the treatment of various endocrine-related disorders.
Endocrinology | 2002
Stuart J. Frank
The receptors for GH and erythropoietin are members of the cytokine receptor superfamily. They are single membrane-spanning proteins that bind ligand in the extracellular domain and couple to cytosolic JAK tyrosine kinases to initiate signaling. The ligand-engaged GH receptor (GHR) and erythropoietin receptor (EpoR) extracellular domains are believed to exist in a dimerized configuration in which a single ligand molecule engages two receptor extracellular domains. The last several years have witnessed a rapid expansion in our knowledge of the structural and functional details of this dimerization process and have forced a reexamination of how the ligand-containing complexes achieve their conformation. For EpoR, there is good evidence that the unliganded receptor is already a preformed dimer that is activated by a ligand-induced change in the receptor conformation. Owing in some measure to the unavailability of the analogous crystal structure of the unliganded GHR extracellular domain, it is still unknown ...
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1999
Yue Zhang; Jing Jiang; John J. Kopchick; Stuart J. Frank
The growth hormone (GH) receptor (GHR) binds GH in its extracellular domain and transduces activating signals via its cytoplasmic domain. Both GH-induced GHR dimerization and JAK2 tyrosine kinase activation are critical in initiation of GH signaling. We previously described a rapid GH-induced disulfide linkage of GHRs in human IM-9 cells. In this study, three GH-induced phenomena (GHR dimerization, GHR disulfide linkage, and enhanced GHR-JAK2 association) were examined biochemically and immunologically. By using the GH antagonist, G120K, and an antibody recognizing a dimerization-sensitive GHR epitope, we demonstrated that GH-induced GHR disulfide linkage reflects GH-induced GHR dimerization. GH, not G120K, promoted both GHR disulfide linkage and enhanced association with JAK2. Measures that diminished GH-dependent JAK2 and GHR tyrosine phosphorylation diminished neither GH-induced GHR disulfide linkage nor GH-enhanced GHR-JAK2 association. By using both transient and stable expression systems, we determined that cysteine 241 (an unpaired extracellular cysteine) was critical for GH-induced GHR disulfide linkage; however, GH-induced GHR dimerization, GHR-JAK2 interaction, and GHR, JAK2, and STAT5 tyrosine phosphorylation still proceeded when this cysteine residue was mutated. We conclude GH-induced GHR disulfide linkage is not required for GHR dimerization, and activation and GH-enhanced GHR-JAK2 association depends more on GHR dimerization than on GHR and/or JAK2 tyrosine phosphorylation.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2001
Yue Zhang; Ran Guan; Jing Jiang; John J. Kopchick; Roy A. Black; Gerhard Baumann; Stuart J. Frank
Growth hormone (GH) initiates its cellular action by properly dimerizing GH receptor (GHR). A substantial fraction of circulating GH is complexed with a high-affinity GH-binding protein (GHBP) that in many species can be generated by GHR proteolysis and shedding of the receptors ligand-binding extracellular domain. We previously showed that this proteolysis 1) can be acutely promoted by the phorbol ester phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA), 2) requires a metalloprotease activity, 3) generates both shed GHBP and a membrane-associated GHR transmembrane/cytoplasmic domain remnant, and 4) results in down-regulation of GHR abundance and GH signaling. Using cell culture model systems, we now explore the effects of GH treatment on inducible GHR proteolysis and GHBP shedding. In human IM-9 lymphocytes, which endogenously express GHRs, and in Chinese hamster ovary cells heterologously expressing wild-type or cytoplasmic domain internal deletion mutant rabbit GHRs, brief exposure to GH inhibited PMA-induced GHR proteolysis (receptor loss and remnant accumulation) by 60–93%. PMA-induced shedding of GHBP from Chinese hamster ovary transfectants was also inhibited by 70% in the presence of GH. The capacity of GH to inhibit inducible GHR cleavage did not rely on JAK2-dependent GH signaling, as evidenced by its continued protection in JAK2-deficient γ2A rabbit GHR cells. The GH concentration dependence for inhibition of PMA-induced GHR proteolysis paralleled that for its promotion of receptor dimerization (as monitored by formation of GHR disulfide linkage). Unlike GH, the GH antagonist, G120K, which binds to but fails to properly dimerize GHRs, alone did not protect against PMA-induced GHR proteolysis; G120K did, however, antagonize the protective effect of GH. Our data suggest that GH inhibits PMA-induced GHR proteolysis and GHBP shedding by inducing GHR dimerization and that this effect does not appear to be related to GH site 1 binding, GHR internalization, or GHR signaling. The implications of these findings with regard to GH signaling and GHR down-regulation are discussed.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007
Douglas J. DiGirolamo; Aditi Mukherjee; Keertik Fulzele; Yujun Gan; Xuemei Cao; Stuart J. Frank; Thomas L. Clemens
Growth hormone (GH) affects bone size and mass in part through stimulating insulin-like growth factor type 1 (IGF-1) production in liver and bone. Whether GH acts independent of IGF-1 in bone remains unclear. To define the mode of GH action in bone, we have used a Cre/loxP system in which the type 1 IGF-1 receptor (Igf1r) has been disrupted specifically in osteoblasts in vitro and in vivo. Calvarial osteoblasts from mice homozygous for the floxed IGF-1R allele (IGF-1Rflox/flox) were infected with adenoviral vectors expressing Cre. Disruption of IGF-1R mRNA (>90%) was accompanied by near elimination of IGF-1R protein but retention of GHR protein. GH-induced STAT5 activation was consistently greater in osteoblasts with an intact IGF-1R. Osteoblasts lacking IGF-1R retained GH-induced ERK and Akt phosphorylation and GH-stimulated IGF-1 and IGFBP-3 mRNA expression. GH-induced osteoblast proliferation was abolished by Cre-mediated disruption of the IGF-1R or co-incubation of cells with an IGF-1-neutralizing antibody. By contrast, GH inhibited apoptosis in osteoblasts lacking the IGF-1R. To examine the effects of GH on osteoblasts in vivo, mice wild type for the IGF-1R treated with GH subcutaneously for 7 days showed a doubling in the number of osteoblasts lining trabecular bone, whereas osteoblast numbers in similarly treated mice lacking the IGF-1R in osteoblasts were not significantly affected. These results indicate that although direct IGF-1R-independent actions of GH on osteoblast apoptosis can be demonstrated in vitro, IGF-1R is required for anabolic effects of GH in osteoblasts in vivo.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2005
Jon W. Cowan; Xiangdong Wang; Ran Guan; Kai He; Jing Jiang; Gerhard Baumann; Roy A. Black; Michael S. Wolfe; Stuart J. Frank
Growth hormone receptor (GHR) is a cytokine receptor superfamily member that binds growth hormone (GH) via its extracellular domain and signals via interaction of its cytoplasmic domain with JAK2 and other signaling molecules. GHR is a target for inducible metalloprotease-mediated cleavage in its perimembranous extracellular domain, a process that liberates the extracellular domain as the soluble GH-binding protein and leaves behind a cell-associated GHR remnant protein containing the transmembrane and cytoplasmic domains. GHR metalloproteolysis can be catalyzed by tumor necrosis factor-α-converting enzyme (ADAM-17) and is associated with down-modulation of GH signaling. We now study the fate of the GHR remnant protein. By anti-GHR cytoplasmic domain immunoblotting, we observed that the remnant induced in response to phorbol ester or platelet-derived growth factor has a reliable pattern of appearance and disappearance in both mouse preadipocytes endogenously expressing GHR and transfected fibroblasts expressing rabbit GHR. Lactacystin, a specific proteasome inhibitor, did not appreciably change the time course of remnant appearance or clearance but allowed detection of the GHR stub, a receptor fragment slightly smaller than the remnant but containing the C terminus of the remnant (receptor cytoplasmic domain). In contrast, MG132, another (less specific) proteasome inhibitor, strongly inhibited remnant clearance and prevented stub appearance. Inhibitors of γ-secretase, an aspartyl protease, also prevented the appearance of the stub, even in the presence of lactacystin, and concomitantly inhibited remnant clearance in the same fashion as MG132. In addition, mouse embryonic fibroblasts derived from presenilin 1 and 2 (PS1/2) knockouts recapitulated the γ-secretase inhibitor studies, as compared with their littermate controls (PS1/2 wild type). Confocal microscopy indicated that the GHR cytoplasmic domain became localized to the nucleus in a fashion dependent on PS1/2 activity. These data indicate that the GHR is subject to sequential proteolysis by metalloprotease and γ-secretase activities and may suggest GH-independent roles for the GHR.