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Dive into the research topics where Szilvia K. Nagy is active.

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Featured researches published by Szilvia K. Nagy.


The EMBO Journal | 2017

Arabidopsis RETINOBLASTOMA RELATED directly regulates DNA damage responses through functions beyond cell cycle control

Beatrix M. Horvath; Hana Kourová; Szilvia K. Nagy; Edit Nemeth; Zoltán Magyar; Csaba Papdi; Zaki Ahmad; Gabino Sanchez-Perez; Serena Perilli; Ikram Blilou; Aladár Pettkó-Szandtner; Zsuzsanna Darula; Tamás Mészáros; Pavla Binarová; László Bögre; Ben Scheres

The rapidly proliferating cells in plant meristems must be protected from genome damage. Here, we show that the regulatory role of the Arabidopsis RETINOBLASTOMA RELATED (RBR) in cell proliferation can be separated from a novel function in safeguarding genome integrity. Upon DNA damage, RBR and its binding partner E2FA are recruited to heterochromatic γH2AX‐labelled DNA damage foci in an ATM‐ and ATR‐dependent manner. These γH2AX‐labelled DNA lesions are more dispersedly occupied by the conserved repair protein, AtBRCA1, which can also co‐localise with RBR foci. RBR and AtBRCA1 physically interact in vitro and in planta. Genetic interaction between the RBR‐silenced amiRBR and Atbrca1 mutants suggests that RBR and AtBRCA1 may function together in maintaining genome integrity. Together with E2FA, RBR is directly involved in the transcriptional DNA damage response as well as in the cell death pathway that is independent of SOG1, the plant functional analogue of p53. Thus, plant homologs and analogues of major mammalian tumour suppressor proteins form a regulatory network that coordinates cell proliferation with cell and genome integrity.


New Phytologist | 2015

The Arabidopsis mitogen-activated protein kinase 6 is associated with γ-tubulin on microtubules, phosphorylates EB1c and maintains spindle orientation under nitrosative stress

Lucie Kohoutová; Hana Kourová; Szilvia K. Nagy; Jindřich Volc; Petr Halada; Tamás Mészáros; Irute Meskiene; László Bögre; Pavla Binarová

Stress-activated plant mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase pathways play roles in growth adaptation to the environment by modulating cell division through cytoskeletal regulation, but the mechanisms are poorly understood. We performed protein interaction and phosphorylation experiments with cytoskeletal proteins, mass spectrometric identification of MPK6 complexes and immunofluorescence analyses of the microtubular cytoskeleton of mitotic cells using wild-type, mpk6-2 mutant and plants overexpressing the MAP kinase-inactivating phosphatase, AP2C3. We showed that MPK6 interacted with γ-tubulin and co-sedimented with plant microtubules polymerized in vitro. It was the active form of MAP kinase that was enriched with microtubules and followed similar dynamics to γ-tubulin, moving from poles to midzone during the anaphase-to-telophase transition. We found a novel substrate for MPK6, the microtubule plus end protein, EB1c. The mpk6-2 mutant was sensitive to 3-nitro-l-tyrosine (NO2 -Tyr) treatment with respect to mitotic abnormalities, and root cells overexpressing AP2C3 showed defects in chromosome segregation and spindle orientation. Our data suggest that the active form of MAP kinase interacts with γ-tubulin on specific subsets of mitotic microtubules during late mitosis. MPK6 phosphorylates EB1c, but not EB1a, and has a role in maintaining regular planes of cell division under stress conditions.


FEBS Letters | 2018

Coevolving MAPK and PID phosphosites indicate an ancient environmental control of PIN auxin transporters in land plants

Magdalena Dory; Elizabeth Hatzimasoura; Brigitta M. Kállai; Szilvia K. Nagy; Katalin Jäger; Zsuzsanna Darula; Tímea Virág Nádai; Tamás Mészáros; Enrique López-Juez; Beáta Barnabás; Klaus Palme; László Bögre; Franck Anicet Ditengou; Róbert Dóczi

Plant growth flexibly adapts to environmental conditions, implying cross‐talk between environmental signalling and developmental regulation. Here, we show that the PIN auxin efflux carrier family possesses three highly conserved putative mitogen‐activated protein kinase (MAPK) sites adjacent to the phosphorylation sites of the well‐characterised AGC kinase PINOID, which regulates the polar localisation of PINs and directional auxin transport, thereby underpinning organ growth. The conserved sites of PIN1 are phosphorylated in vitro by two environmentally activated MAPKs, MPK4 and MPK6. In contrast to AGC kinases, MAPK‐mediated phosphorylation of PIN1 at adjacent sites leads to a partial loss of the plasma membrane localisation of PIN1. MAPK‐mediated modulation of PIN trafficking may participate in environmental adjustment of plant growth.


FEBS Letters | 2016

Glucose transporter type 10—lacking in arterial tortuosity syndrome—facilitates dehydroascorbic acid transport

Csilla Németh; Paola Marcolongo; Alessandra Gamberucci; Rosella Fulceri; A Benedetti; Nicoletta Zoppi; Marco Ritelli; Nicola Chiarelli; Marina Colombi; Andy Willaert; Bert Callewaert; Paul Coucke; Pál Gróf; Szilvia K. Nagy; Tamás Mészáros; Gábor Bánhegyi; Éva Margittai

Loss‐of‐function mutations in the gene encoding GLUT10 are responsible for arterial tortuosity syndrome (ATS), a rare connective tissue disorder. In this study GLUT10‐mediated dehydroascorbic acid (DAA) transport was investigated, supposing its involvement in the pathomechanism. GLUT10 protein produced by in vitro translation and incorporated into liposomes efficiently transported DAA. Silencing of GLUT10 decreased DAA transport in immortalized human fibroblasts whose plasma membrane was selectively permeabilized. Similarly, the transport of DAA through endomembranes was markedly reduced in fibroblasts from ATS patients. Re‐expression of GLUT10 in patients’ fibroblasts restored DAA transport activity. The present results demonstrate that GLUT10 is a DAA transporter and DAA transport is diminished in the endomembranes of fibroblasts from ATS patients.


Biochimie | 2013

Natural mutations lead to enhanced proteasomal degradation of human Ncb5or, a novel flavoheme reductase

Fanni S. Kálmán; Beáta Lizák; Szilvia K. Nagy; Tamás Mészáros; Veronika Zámbó; József Mandl; Miklós Csala; Eva Kereszturi

NADH cytochrome b5 oxidoreductase (Ncb5or) protects β-cells against oxidative stress and lipotoxicity. The predominant phenotype of lean Ncb5or-null mouse is insulin-dependent diabetes due to β-cell death. This suggests the putative role of NCB5OR polymorphism in human diabetes. Therefore, we aimed to investigate the effect of natural missense mutations on the expression of human NCB5OR. Protein and mRNA levels of five non-synonymous coding variants were analyzed in transfected HEK293 and HepG2 cells. Although the mRNA levels were only slightly affected by the mutations, the amount of Ncb5or protein was largely reduced upon two Glu to Gly replacements in the third exon (p.E87G, p.E93G). These two mutations remarkably and synergistically shortened the half-life of Ncb5or and their effect could be attenuated by proteasome inhibitors. Our results strongly indicate that p.E87G, p.E93G mutations lead to enhanced proteasomal degradation due to manifest conformational alterations in the b5 domain. These data provide first evidence for natural mutations in NCB5OR gene resulting in decreased protein levels and hence having potential implications in human pathology.


Methods of Molecular Biology | 2014

In Vitro Translation-Based Protein Kinase Substrate Identification

Szilvia K. Nagy; Tamás Mészáros

Identification of a particular protein as a physiological substrate towards kinases of interest is an extremely complex process. Under physiological conditions kinases and their putative substrates are in low abundance, and production of active eukaryotic kinases with standard overexpressing methods is an arduous task. Herein, we describe a cell-free in vitro protein translation procedure combined with fluorescent phosphoprotein staining as a simple and rapid method for identification of putative kinase substrates.


BMC Plant Biology | 2016

Kinase-Associated Phosphoisoform Assay: a novel candidate-based method to detect specific kinase-substrate phosphorylation interactions in vivo.

Magdalena Dory; Zoltán Doleschall; Szilvia K. Nagy; Helga Ambrus; Tamás Mészáros; Beáta Barnabás; Róbert Dóczi

BackgroundProtein kinases are important components of signalling pathways, and kinomes have remarkably expanded in plants. Yet, our knowledge of kinase substrates in plants is scarce, partly because tools to analyse protein phosphorylation dynamically are limited. Here we describe Kinase-Associated Phosphoisoform Assay, a flexible experimental method for directed experiments to study specific kinase-substrate interactions in vivo.The concept is based on the differential phosphoisoform distribution of candidate substrates transiently expressed with or without co-expression of activated kinases. Phosphorylation status of epitope-tagged proteins is subsequently detected by high-resolution capillary isoelectric focusing coupled with nanofluidic immunoassay, which is capable of detecting subtle changes in isoform distribution.ResultsThe concept is validated by showing phosphorylation of the known mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) substrate, ACS6, by MPK6. Next, we demonstrate that two transcription factors, WUS and AP2, both of which are shown to be master regulators of plant development by extensive genetic studies, exist in multiple isoforms in plant cells and are phosphorylated by activated MAPKs.ConclusionAs plant development flexibly responds to environmental conditions, phosphorylation of developmental regulators by environmentally-activated kinases may participate in linking external cues to developmental regulation. As a counterpart of advances in unbiased screening methods to identify potential protein kinase substrates, such as phosphoproteomics and computational predictions, our results expand the candidate-based experimental toolkit for kinase research and provide an alternative in vivo approach to existing in vitro methodologies.


Chemical Communications | 2014

A rational approach for generating cardiac troponin I selective Spiegelmers

Zsuzsanna Szeitner; Gergely Lautner; Szilvia K. Nagy; Róbert E. Gyurcsányi; Tamás Mészáros


New Phytologist | 2018

Characterization of auxin transporter PIN6 plasma membrane targeting reveals a function for PIN6 in plant bolting

Franck Anicet Ditengou; Dulceneia Gomes; Hugues Nziengui; Philip Kochersperger; Hanna Lasok; Violante Medeiros; Ivan A. Paponov; Szilvia K. Nagy; Tímea Virág Nádai; Tamás Mészáros; Beáta Barnabás; Beata Izabela Ditengou; Katja Rapp; Linlin Qi; Xugang Li; Claude Becker; Chuanyou Li; Róbert Dóczi; Klaus Palme


Biochemical Journal | 2015

Activation of AtMPK9 through autophosphorylation that makes it independent of the canonical MAPK cascades

Szilvia K. Nagy; Zsuzsanna Darula; Brigitta M. Kállai; László Bögre; Gábor Bánhegyi; Katalin F. Medzihradszky; Gábor V. Horváth; Tamás Mészáros

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Zsuzsanna Darula

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Beáta Barnabás

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Róbert Dóczi

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Hana Kourová

Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

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Pavla Binarová

Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

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Csaba Papdi

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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