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Featured researches published by Surajit Ganguly.


Cell | 2001

Crystal Structure of the 14-3-3ζ:Serotonin N-Acetyltransferase Complex: A Role for Scaffolding in Enzyme Regulation

Tomas Obsil; Rodolfo Ghirlando; David C. Klein; Surajit Ganguly; Fred Dyda

Serotonin N-acetyltransferase (AANAT) controls the daily rhythm in melatonin synthesis. When isolated from tissue, AANAT copurifies with isoforms epsilon and zeta of 14-3-3. We have determined the structure of AANAT bound to 14-3-3zeta, an association that is phosphorylation dependent. AANAT is bound in the central channel of the 14-3-3zeta dimer, and is held in place by extensive interactions both with the amphipathic phosphopeptide binding groove of 14-3-3zeta and with other parts of the central channel. Thermodynamic and activity measurements, together with crystallographic analysis, indicate that binding of AANAT by 14-3-3zeta modulates AANATs activity and affinity for its substrates by stabilizing a region of AANAT involved in substrate binding.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2001

Role of a pineal cAMP-operated arylalkylamine N-acetyltransferase/14-3-3-binding switch in melatonin synthesis.

Surajit Ganguly; Jonathan A. Gastel; Joan L. Weller; Christian Schwartz; Howard Jaffe; M. A. A. Namboodiri; Steven L. Coon; Alison Burgess Hickman; Mark D. Rollag; Tomas Obsil; Philippe Beauverger; Gilles Ferry; Jean A. Boutin; David C. Klein

The daily rhythm in melatonin levels is controlled by cAMP through actions on the penultimate enzyme in melatonin synthesis, arylalkylamine N-acetyltransferase (AANAT; serotonin N-acetyltransferase, EC 2.3.1.87). Results presented here describe a regulatory/binding sequence in AANAT that encodes a cAMP-operated binding switch through which cAMP-regulated protein kinase-catalyzed phosphorylation [RRHTLPAN → RRHpTLPAN] promotes formation of a complex with 14-3-3 proteins. Formation of this AANAT/14-3-3 complex enhances melatonin production by shielding AANAT from dephosphorylation and/or proteolysis and by decreasing the Km for 5-hydroxytryptamine (serotonin). Similar switches could play a role in cAMP signal transduction in other biological systems.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009

Night/Day Changes in Pineal Expression of >600 Genes CENTRAL ROLE OF ADRENERGIC/cAMP SIGNALING

Michael J. Bailey; Steven L. Coon; David Allan Carter; Ann Humphries; Jong-So Kim; Qiong Shi; Pascaline Gaildrat; Fabrice Morin; Surajit Ganguly; John B. Hogenesch; Joan L. Weller; Martin F. Rath; Morten Møller; Ruben Baler; David Sugden; Zoila Rangel; Peter J. Munson; David C. Klein

The pineal gland plays an essential role in vertebrate chronobiology by converting time into a hormonal signal, melatonin, which is always elevated at night. Here we have analyzed the rodent pineal transcriptome using Affymetrix GeneChip® technology to obtain a more complete description of pineal cell biology. The effort revealed that 604 genes (1,268 probe sets) with Entrez Gene identifiers are differentially expressed greater than 2-fold between midnight and mid-day (false discovery rate <0.20). Expression is greater at night in ∼70%. These findings were supported by the results of radiochemical in situ hybridization histology and quantitative real time-PCR studies. We also found that the regulatory mechanism controlling the night/day changes in the expression of most genes involves norepinephrine-cyclic AMP signaling. Comparison of the pineal gene expression profile with that in other tissues identified 334 genes (496 probe sets) that are expressed greater than 8-fold higher in the pineal gland relative to other tissues. Of these genes, 17% are expressed at similar levels in the retina, consistent with a common evolutionary origin of these tissues. Functional categorization of the highly expressed and/or night/day differentially expressed genes identified clusters that are markers of specialized functions, including the immune/inflammation response, melatonin synthesis, photodetection, thyroid hormone signaling, and diverse aspects of cellular signaling and cell biology. These studies produce a paradigm shift in our understanding of the 24-h dynamics of the pineal gland from one focused on melatonin synthesis to one including many cellular processes.


Journal of Neurochemistry | 2006

Expression of the Otx2 homeobox gene in the developing mammalian brain : embryonic and adult expression in the pineal gland

Martin F. Rath; Estela M. Muñoz; Surajit Ganguly; Fabrice Morin; Qiong Shi; David C. Klein; Morten Møller

Otx2 is a vertebrate homeobox gene, which has been found to be essential for the development of rostral brain regions and appears to play a role in the development of retinal photoreceptor cells and pinealocytes. In this study, the temporal expression pattern of Otx2 was revealed in the rat brain, with special emphasis on the pineal gland throughout late embryonic and postnatal stages. Widespread high expression of Otx2 in the embryonic brain becomes progressively restricted in the adult to the pineal gland. Crx (cone–rod homeobox), a downstream target gene of Otx2, showed a pineal expression pattern similar to that of Otx2, although there was a distinct lag in time of onset. Otx2 protein was identified in pineal extracts and found to be localized in pinealocytes. Total pineal Otx2 mRNA did not show day–night variation, nor was it influenced by removal of the sympathetic input, indicating that the level of Otx2 mRNA appears to be independent of the photoneural input to the gland. Our results are consistent with the view that pineal expression of Otx2 is required for development and we hypothesize that it plays a role in the adult in controlling the expression of the cluster of genes associated with phototransduction and melatonin synthesis.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2003

Cellular stabilization of the melatonin rhythm enzyme induced by nonhydrolyzable phosphonate incorporation.

Weiping Zheng; Zhongsen Zhang; Surajit Ganguly; Joan L. Weller; David C. Klein; Philip A. Cole

Serotonin N-acetyltransferase (arylalkylamine N-acetyltransferase, AANAT) controls daily changes in the production and circulating levels of melatonin. Here, the significance of the phosphorylation of AANAT was studied using a semisynthetic enzyme in which a nonhydrolyzable phosphoserine/threonine mimetic, phosphonomethylenealanine (Pma), was incorporated at position 31 (AANAT-Pma31). The results of studies in which AANAT-Pma31 and related analogs were injected into cells provide the first direct evidence that Thr31 phosphorylation controls AANAT stability in the context of the intact cells by binding to 14-3-3 protein. These findings establish Thr31 phosphorylation as an essential element in the intracellular regulation of melatonin production. The application of Pma in protein semisynthesis is likely to be broadly useful in the analysis of protein serine/threonine phosphorylation.


Molecular and Cellular Endocrinology | 2010

Pineal function: Impact of microarray analysis

David C. Klein; Michael J. Bailey; David Allan Carter; Jong-So Kim; Qiong Shi; Anthony Siong-Hock Ho; Constance L. Chik; Pascaline Gaildrat; Fabrice Morin; Surajit Ganguly; Martin F. Rath; Morten Møller; David Sugden; Zoila Rangel; Peter J. Munson; Joan L. Weller; Steven L. Coon

Microarray analysis has provided a new understanding of pineal function by identifying genes that are highly expressed in this tissue relative to other tissues and also by identifying over 600 genes that are expressed on a 24-h schedule. This effort has highlighted surprising similarity to the retina and has provided reason to explore new avenues of study including intracellular signaling, signal transduction, transcriptional cascades, thyroid/retinoic acid hormone signaling, metal biology, RNA splicing, and the role the pineal gland plays in the immune/inflammation response. The new foundation that microarray analysis has provided will broadly support future research on pineal function.


Journal of Neuroendocrinology | 2003

14-3-3 Proteins in Pineal Photoneuroendocrine Transduction: How Many Roles?

David C. Klein; Surajit Ganguly; Steven L. Coon; Qiong Shi; Pascaline Gaildrat; Fabrice Morin; Joan L. Weller; Tomas Obsil; Alison Burgess Hickman; Fred Dyda

Recent studies suggest that a common theme links the diverse elements of pineal photoneuroendocrine transduction –regulation via binding to 14‐3‐3 proteins. The elements include photoreception, neurotransmission, signal transduction and the synthesis of melatonin from tryptophan. We review general aspects of 14‐3‐3 proteins and their biological function as binding partners, and also focus on their roles in pineal photoneuroendocrine transduction.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2008

Evidence that proline focuses movement of the floppy loop of arylalkylamine N-acetyltransferase (EC 2.3.1.87).

Jiri Pavlicek; Steven L. Coon; Surajit Ganguly; Joan L. Weller; Sergio A. Hassan; Dan L. Sackett; David C. Klein

Arylalkylamine N-acetyltransferase (AANAT) catalyzes the N-acetylation of serotonin, the penultimate step in the synthesis of melatonin. Pineal AANAT activity increases at night in all vertebrates, resulting in increased melatonin production. This increases circulating levels of melatonin, thereby providing a hormonal signal of darkness. Kinetic and structural analysis of AANAT has determined that one element is floppy. This element, termed Loop 1, is one of three loops that comprise the arylalkylamine binding pocket. During the course of chordate evolution, Loop 1 acquired the tripeptide CPL, and the enzyme became highly active. Here we focused on the functional importance of the CPL tripeptide and found that activity was markedly reduced when it was absent. Moreover, increasing the local flexibility of this tripeptide region by P64G and P64A mutations had the counterintuitive effect of reducing activity and reducing the overall movement of Loop 1, as estimated from Langevin dynamics simulations. Binding studies indicate that these mutations increased the off-rate constant of a model substrate without altering the dissociation constant. The structural kink and local rigidity imposed by Pro-64 may enhance activity by favoring configurations of Loop 1 that facilitate catalysis and do not become immobilized by intramolecular interactions.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007

Neural adrenergic/cyclic AMP regulation of the immunoglobulin E receptor α-subunit expression in the mammalian pinealocyte : A neuroendocrine/immune response link?

Surajit Ganguly; Cristina Grodzki; David Sugden; Morten Møller; Sandra Odom; Pascaline Gaildrat; Igal Gery; Reuben P. Siraganian; Juan Rivera; David C. Klein

The high affinity immunoglobulin E receptor (FcϵRI) complex is dedicated to immunoglobulin E-mediated allergic responses. Expression of the FcϵRI receptor is thought to be relatively stable and limited to mast cells, basophils, eosinophils, monocytes, Langerhans cells, platelets, and neutrophils. We now report that the FcϵRIα and FcϵRIγ polypeptides are expressed in the pinealocyte, the melatonin-secreting cell of the pineal gland. Moreover, Fcer1a mRNA levels increased ∼100-fold at night to levels that were higher than in other tissues examined. Pineal FcϵRIα protein also increased markedly at night from nearly undetectable daytime levels. Our studies indicate that pineal Fcer1a mRNA levels are controlled by a well described neural pathway that controls pineal function. This pathway includes the master circadian oscillator in the suprachiasmatic nucleus and passes through central and peripheral structures. The circadian expression of FcϵRIα in the pineal gland is driven by this neural circuit via an adrenergic/cyclic AMP mechanism. Pineal FcϵRIα and FcϵRIγ may represent a previously unrealized molecular link between the neuroendocrine and immune systems.


Cell and Tissue Research | 2002

Control of melatonin synthesis in the mammalian pineal gland: the critical role of serotonin acetylation

Surajit Ganguly; Steven L. Coon; David C. Klein

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David C. Klein

National Institutes of Health

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Joan L. Weller

National Institutes of Health

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Steven L. Coon

National Institutes of Health

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Qiong Shi

National Institutes of Health

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Morten Møller

University of Copenhagen

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Tomas Obsil

Charles University in Prague

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Fred Dyda

National Institutes of Health

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Philip A. Cole

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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