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Dive into the research topics where Tanya Svinkina is active.

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Featured researches published by Tanya Svinkina.


Science | 2014

Lenalidomide Causes Selective Degradation of IKZF1 and IKZF3 in Multiple Myeloma Cells

Jan Krönke; Namrata D. Udeshi; Anupama Narla; Peter Grauman; Slater N. Hurst; Marie McConkey; Tanya Svinkina; Dirk Heckl; Eamon Comer; Xiaoyu Li; Christie Ciarlo; Emily Hartman; Nikhil C. Munshi; Monica Schenone; Stuart L. Schreiber; Steven A. Carr; Benjamin L. Ebert

Drug With a (Re)Purpose Thalidomide, once infamous for its deleterious effects on fetal development, has re-emerged as a drug of great interest because of its beneficial immunomodulatory effects. A derivative drug called lenalidomide significantly extends the survival of patients with multiple myeloma, but the molecular mechanisms underlying its efficacy remain unclear (see the Perspective by Stewart). Building on a previous observation that thalidomide binds to cereblon, a ubiquitin ligase, Lu et al. (p. 305, published online 28 November) and Krönke et al. (p. 301, published online 28 November) show that in the presence of lenalidomide, cereblon selectively targets two B cell transcription factors (Ikaros family members, IKZF1 and IKZF3) for degradation. In myeloma cell lines and patient cells, down-regulation of IKZF1 and IKZF3 was necessary and sufficient for the drugs anticancer activity. Thus, lenalidomide may act, at least in part, by “grepurposing” a ubiquitin ligase. A drug with potent activity in multiple myeloma patients acts by inducing degradation of two specific transcription factors. [Also see Perspective by Stewart] Lenalidomide is a drug with clinical efficacy in multiple myeloma and other B cell neoplasms, but its mechanism of action is unknown. Using quantitative proteomics, we found that lenalidomide causes selective ubiquitination and degradation of two lymphoid transcription factors, IKZF1 and IKZF3, by the CRBN-CRL4 ubiquitin ligase. IKZF1 and IKZF3 are essential transcription factors in multiple myeloma. A single amino acid substitution of IKZF3 conferred resistance to lenalidomide-induced degradation and rescued lenalidomide-induced inhibition of cell growth. Similarly, we found that lenalidomide-induced interleukin-2 production in T cells is due to depletion of IKZF1 and IKZF3. These findings reveal a previously unknown mechanism of action for a therapeutic agent: alteration of the activity of an E3 ubiquitin ligase, leading to selective degradation of specific targets.


Nature | 2015

Lenalidomide induces ubiquitination and degradation of CK1α in del(5q) MDS.

Jan Krönke; Emma C. Fink; Paul Hollenbach; Kyle J. MacBeth; Slater N. Hurst; Namrata D. Udeshi; Philip Chamberlain; D. R. Mani; Hon Wah Man; Anita Gandhi; Tanya Svinkina; Rebekka K. Schneider; Marie McConkey; Marcus Järås; Elizabeth A. Griffiths; Meir Wetzler; Lars Bullinger; Brian E. Cathers; Steven A. Carr; Rajesh Chopra; Benjamin L. Ebert

Lenalidomide is a highly effective treatment for myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) with deletion of chromosome 5q (del(5q)). Here, we demonstrate that lenalidomide induces the ubiquitination of casein kinase 1A1 (CK1α) by the E3 ubiquitin ligase CUL4–RBX1–DDB1–CRBN (known as CRL4CRBN), resulting in CK1α degradation. CK1α is encoded by a gene within the common deleted region for del(5q) MDS and haploinsufficient expression sensitizes cells to lenalidomide therapy, providing a mechanistic basis for the therapeutic window of lenalidomide in del(5q) MDS. We found that mouse cells are resistant to lenalidomide but that changing a single amino acid in mouse Crbn to the corresponding human residue enables lenalidomide-dependent degradation of CK1α. We further demonstrate that minor side chain modifications in thalidomide and a novel analogue, CC-122, can modulate the spectrum of substrates targeted by CRL4CRBN. These findings have implications for the clinical activity of lenalidomide and related compounds, and demonstrate the therapeutic potential of novel modulators of E3 ubiquitin ligases.


Nature Protocols | 2013

Large-scale identification of ubiquitination sites by mass spectrometry

Namrata D. Udeshi; Philipp Mertins; Tanya Svinkina; Steven A. Carr

Ubiquitination is essential for the regulation of cellular protein homeostasis. It also has a central role in numerous signaling events. Recent advances in the production and availability of antibodies that recognize the Lys-ɛ-Gly-Gly (K-ɛ-GG) remnant produced by trypsin digestion of proteins having ubiquitinated lysine side chains have markedly improved the ability to enrich and detect endogenous ubiquitination sites by mass spectrometry (MS). The following protocol describes the steps required to complete a large-scale ubiquitin experiment for the detection of tens of thousands of distinct ubiquitination sites from cell lines or tissue samples. Specifically, we present detailed, step-by-step instructions for sample preparation, off-line fractionation by reversed-phase chromatography at pH 10, immobilization of an antibody specific to K-ɛ-GG to beads by chemical cross-linking, enrichment of ubiquitinated peptides using these antibodies and proteomic analysis of enriched samples by LC–tandem MS (MS/MS). Relative quantification can be achieved by performing stable isotope labeling by amino acids in cell culture (SILAC) labeling of cells. After cell or tissue samples have been prepared for lysis, the described protocol can be completed in ∼5 d.


Science | 2014

Ubiquitylome analysis identifies dysregulation of effector substrates in SPOP-mutant prostate cancer

Jean Philippe Theurillat; Namrata D. Udeshi; Wesley J. Errington; Tanya Svinkina; Sylvan C. Baca; Marius S. Pop; Peter Wild; Mirjam Blattner; Anna C. Groner; Mark A. Rubin; Holger Moch; Gilbert G. Privé; Steven A. Carr; Levi A. Garraway

Mutant protein in tumors hits the DEK Cancer genome sequencing projects have uncovered a multitude of mutations in human tumors. Understanding whether and how these mutations contribute to tumor development and progression could ultimately lead to new therapies. Theurillat et al. studied the protein product of a gene that is recurrently mutated in prostate cancer. Normally this protein helps attach a biochemical tag to cellular proteins that marks them for degradation. The new work shows that the tumor-associated mutant protein loses this tagging ability, which results in the stabilization of a handful of cellular proteins that would otherwise be degraded. One of the most intriguing of these proteins was DEK, which helps prostate cancer cells invade into surrounding tissue. Science, this issue p. 85 Mutations in human prostate tumors impair degradation of a protein that helps cancer cells invade into surrounding tissue. Cancer genome characterization has revealed driver mutations in genes that govern ubiquitylation; however, the mechanisms by which these alterations promote tumorigenesis remain incompletely characterized. Here, we analyzed changes in the ubiquitin landscape induced by prostate cancer–associated mutations of SPOP, an E3 ubiquitin ligase substrate-binding protein. SPOP mutants impaired ubiquitylation of a subset of proteins in a dominant-negative fashion. Of these, DEK and TRIM24 emerged as effector substrates consistently up-regulated by SPOP mutants. We highlight DEK as a SPOP substrate that exhibited decreases in ubiquitylation and proteasomal degradation resulting from heteromeric complexes of wild-type and mutant SPOP protein. DEK stabilization promoted prostate epithelial cell invasion, which implicated DEK as an oncogenic effector. More generally, these results provide a framework to decipher tumorigenic mechanisms linked to dysregulated ubiquitylation.


Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2015

Deep, quantitative coverage of the lysine acetylome using novel anti-acetyl-lysine antibodies and an optimized proteomic workflow

Tanya Svinkina; Hongbo Gu; Philipp Mertins; Jana Qiao; Shaunt Fereshetian; Jacob D. Jaffe; Eric Kuhn; Namrata D. Udeshi; Steven A. Carr

Introduction of antibodies specific for acetylated lysine has significantly improved the detection of endogenous acetylation sites by mass spectrometry. Here, we describe a new, commercially available mixture of anti-lysine acetylation (Kac) antibodies and show its utility for in-depth profiling of the acetylome. Specifically, seven complementary monoclones with high specificity for Kac were combined into a final anti-Kac reagent which results in at least a twofold increase in identification of Kac peptides over a commonly used Kac antibody. We outline optimal antibody usage conditions, effective offline basic reversed phase separation, and use of state-of-the-art LC-MS technology for achieving unprecedented coverage of the acetylome. The methods were applied to quantify acetylation sites in suberoylanilide hydroxamic acid-treated Jurkat cells. Over 10,000 Kac peptides from over 3000 Kac proteins were quantified from a single stable isotope labeling by amino acids in cell culture labeled sample using 7.5 mg of peptide input per state. This constitutes the deepest coverage of acetylation sites in quantitative experiments obtained to-date. The approach was also applied to breast tumor xenograft samples using isobaric mass tag labeling of peptides (iTRAQ4, TMT6 and TMT10-plex reagents) for quantification. Greater than 6700 Kac peptides from over 2300 Kac proteins were quantified using 1 mg of tumor protein per iTRAQ 4-plex channel. The novel reagents and methods we describe here enable quantitative, global acetylome analyses with depth and sensitivity approaching that obtained for other well-studied post-translational modifications such as phosphorylation and ubiquitylation, and should have widespread application in biological and clinical studies employing mass spectrometry-based proteomics.


Cell | 2016

Proteomic Analysis of Unbounded Cellular Compartments: Synaptic Clefts

Ken H. Loh; Philipp S. Stawski; Austin S. Draycott; Namrata D. Udeshi; Emily K. Lehrman; Daniel K. Wilton; Tanya Svinkina; Thomas J. Deerinck; Mark H. Ellisman; Beth Stevens; Steven A. Carr; Alice Y. Ting

Cellular compartments that cannot be biochemically isolated are challenging to characterize. Here we demonstrate the proteomic characterization of the synaptic clefts that exist at both excitatory and inhibitory synapses. Normal brain function relies on the careful balance of these opposing neural connections, and understanding how this balance is achieved relies on knowledge of their protein compositions. Using a spatially restricted enzymatic tagging strategy, we mapped the proteomes of two of the most common excitatory and inhibitory synaptic clefts in living neurons. These proteomes reveal dozens of synaptic candidates and assign numerous known synaptic proteins to a specific cleft type. The molecular differentiation of each cleft allowed us to identify Mdga2 as a potential specificity factor influencing Neuroligin-2s recruitment of presynaptic neurotransmitters at inhibitory synapses.


ACS Chemical Biology | 2014

An Unbiased Approach To Identify Endogenous Substrates of "Histone" Deacetylase 8

David E. Olson; Namrata D. Udeshi; Noah A. Wolfson; Carol Ann Pitcairn; Eric D. Sullivan; Jacob D. Jaffe; Tanya Svinkina; Ted Natoli; Xiaodong Lu; Joshiawa Paulk; Patrick McCarren; Florence F. Wagner; Doug Barker; Eleanor Howe; Fanny Lazzaro; Jennifer Gale; Yan Ling Zhang; Aravind Subramanian; Carol A. Fierke; Steven A. Carr; Edward B. Holson

Despite being extensively characterized structurally and biochemically, the functional role of histone deacetylase 8 (HDAC8) has remained largely obscure due in part to a lack of known cellular substrates. Herein, we describe an unbiased approach using chemical tools in conjunction with sophisticated proteomics methods to identify novel non-histone nuclear substrates of HDAC8, including the tumor suppressor ARID1A. These newly discovered substrates of HDAC8 are involved in diverse biological processes including mitosis, transcription, chromatin remodeling, and RNA splicing and may help guide therapeutic strategies that target the function of HDAC8.


eLife | 2017

Proteomic mapping of cytosol-facing outer mitochondrial and ER membranes in living human cells by proximity biotinylation

Victoria Hung; Stephanie S Lam; Namrata D. Udeshi; Tanya Svinkina; Gaelen Guzman; Vamsi K. Mootha; Steven A. Carr; Alice Y. Ting

The cytosol-facing membranes of cellular organelles contain proteins that enable signal transduction, regulation of morphology and trafficking, protein import and export, and other specialized processes. Discovery of these proteins by traditional biochemical fractionation can be plagued with contaminants and loss of key components. Using peroxidase-mediated proximity biotinylation, we captured and identified endogenous proteins on the outer mitochondrial membrane (OMM) and endoplasmic reticulum membrane (ERM) of living human fibroblasts. The proteomes of 137 and 634 proteins, respectively, are highly specific and highlight 94 potentially novel mitochondrial or ER proteins. Dataset intersection identified protein candidates potentially localized to mitochondria-ER contact sites. We found that one candidate, the tail-anchored, PDZ-domain-containing OMM protein SYNJ2BP, dramatically increases mitochondrial contacts with rough ER when overexpressed. Immunoprecipitation-mass spectrometry identified ribosome-binding protein 1 (RRBP1) as SYNJ2BP’s ERM binding partner. Our results highlight the power of proximity biotinylation to yield insights into the molecular composition and function of intracellular membranes.


Nature Medicine | 2017

Opposing effects of cancer-type-specific SPOP mutants on BET protein degradation and sensitivity to BET inhibitors

Hana Janouskova; Geniver El Tekle; Elisa Bellini; Namrata D. Udeshi; Anna Rinaldi; Anna Ulbricht; Tiziano Bernasocchi; Gianluca Civenni; Marco Losa; Tanya Svinkina; Craig M. Bielski; Gregory V. Kryukov; Luciano Cascione; Sara Napoli; Radoslav I. Enchev; David G. Mutch; Michael E. Carney; Andrew Berchuck; Boris Winterhoff; Russell Broaddus; Peter Schraml; Holger Moch; Francesco Bertoni; Carlo V. Catapano; Matthias Peter; Steven A. Carr; Levi A. Garraway; Peter Wild; Jean Philippe Theurillat

It is generally assumed that recurrent mutations within a given cancer driver gene elicit similar drug responses. Cancer genome studies have identified recurrent but divergent missense mutations affecting the substrate-recognition domain of the ubiquitin ligase adaptor SPOP in endometrial and prostate cancers. The therapeutic implications of these mutations remain incompletely understood. Here we analyzed changes in the ubiquitin landscape induced by endometrial cancer–associated SPOP mutations and identified BRD2, BRD3 and BRD4 proteins (BETs) as SPOP–CUL3 substrates that are preferentially degraded by endometrial cancer–associated SPOP mutants. The resulting reduction of BET protein levels sensitized cancer cells to BET inhibitors. Conversely, prostate cancer–specific SPOP mutations resulted in impaired degradation of BETs, promoting their resistance to pharmacologic inhibition. These results uncover an oncogenomics paradox, whereby mutations mapping to the same domain evoke opposing drug susceptibilities. Specifically, we provide a molecular rationale for the use of BET inhibitors to treat patients with endometrial but not prostate cancer who harbor SPOP mutations.


Nature Methods | 2017

Antibodies to biotin enable large-scale detection of biotinylation sites on proteins

Namrata D. Udeshi; Kayvon Pedram; Tanya Svinkina; Shaunt Fereshetian; Samuel A. Myers; Ozan Aygün; Karsten Krug; Karl R. Clauser; Dominic Ryan; Tslil Ast; Vamsi K. Mootha; Alice Y. Ting; Steven A. Carr

Although purification of biotinylated molecules is highly efficient, identifying specific sites of biotinylation remains challenging. We show that anti-biotin antibodies enable unprecedented enrichment of biotinylated peptides from complex peptide mixtures. Live-cell proximity labeling using APEX peroxidase followed by anti-biotin enrichment and mass spectrometry yielded over 1,600 biotinylation sites on hundreds of proteins, an increase of more than 30-fold in the number of biotinylation sites identified compared to streptavidin-based enrichment of proteins.

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Alice Y. Ting

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Benjamin L. Ebert

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Marie McConkey

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Slater N. Hurst

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Emma C. Fink

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Jan Krönke

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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