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Featured researches published by Thomas J. Lyons.


Current Opinion in Chemical Biology | 1998

The dark side of dioxygen biochemistry

Joan Selverstone Valentine; Diana L. Wertz; Thomas J. Lyons; Lee-Loung Liou; Joy J. Goto; Edith Butler Gralla

The cellular biochemistry of dioxygen is Janus-faced. The good side includes numerous enzyme-catalyzed reactions of dioxygen that occur in respiration and normal metabolism, while the dark side encompasses deleterious reactions of species derived from dioxygen that lead to damage of cellular components. These reactive oxygen species have historically been perceived almost exclusively as agents of the dark side, but it has recently become clear that they play beneficial roles as well.


Biochemistry | 2009

Antagonism of Human Adiponectin Receptors and Their Membrane Progesterone Receptor Paralogs by TNFα and a Ceramidase Inhibitor

Brian R. Kupchak; Ibon Garitaonandia; Nancy Y. Villa; Jessica L. Smith; Thomas J. Lyons

The progestin and AdipoQ receptor (PAQR) family of proteins comprises three distinct structural classes, each with seemingly different agonist specificities. For example, Class I receptors, like the human adiponectin receptors (AdipoR1 and AdipoR2), sense proteins with a particular three-dimensional fold, while Class II receptors are nonclassical membrane receptors for the steroid hormone progesterone. Using a previously developed heterologous expression system to study PAQR receptor activity, we demonstrate that human PAQRs from all three classes are antagonized by both 1(S),2(R)-d-erythro-2-(N-myristoylamino)-1-phenyl-1-propanol, a ceramidase inhibitor, and TNFalpha, a homologue of adiponectin that functions antagonistically to both adiponectin and progesterone in human cells.


Biochemical Society Transactions | 2012

Non-genomic progesterone signalling and its non-canonical receptor.

Patricia Moussatche; Thomas J. Lyons

The steroid hormone progesterone regulates many critical aspects of vertebrate physiology. The nuclear receptor for progesterone functions as a ligand-activated transcription factor, directly regulating gene expression. This type of signalling is referred to as the genomic pathway. Nevertheless, progesterone also stimulates rapid physiological effects that are independent of transcription. This pathway, termed non-genomic, is mediated by the mPRs (membrane progesterone receptors). These mPRs belong to a larger class of membrane receptors called PAQRs (progestin and adipoQ receptors), which include receptors for adiponectin in vertebrates and osmotin in fungi. mPRs have been shown to activate inhibitory G-proteins, suggesting that they act as GPCRs (G-protein-coupled receptors). However, PAQRs do not resemble GPCRs with respect to topology or conserved sequence motifs. Instead, they more closely resemble proteins in the alkaline ceramidase family and they may possess enzymatic activity. In the present paper, we highlight the evidence in support of each model and what is currently known for PAQR signal transduction of this non-canonical receptor.


Journal of Biological Inorganic Chemistry | 1998

Metal ion reconstitution studies of yeast copper-zinc superoxide dismutase: the "phantom" subunit and the possible role of Lys7p

Thomas J. Lyons; Aram M. Nersissian; Joy J. Goto; Haining Zhu; Edith Butler Gralla; Joan Selverstone Valentine

Abstractu2002Using a corrected molar extinction coefficient for yeast apo copper-zinc superoxide dismutase (CuZnSOD), we have confirmed that the metal binding properties of this protein in vitro differ greatly from those of the bovine and human CuZnSOD enzymes. Thus yeast apo CuZnSOD was found to bind only one Co2+ per protein dimer under the conditions in which the bovine and human CuZnSOD apoenzymes readily bind two per dimer. The spectroscopic properties characteristic of the two Cu2+ plus two Co2+ per dimer or four Cu2+ per dimer metal-substituted bovine apo CuZnSOD derivatives were obtained for the yeast apoprotein but by the addition of only half of the appropriate metals, i.e., one Cu2+ plus one Co2+ per dimer or two Cu2+ per dimer. This half-metallated yeast CuZnSOD has been characterized by UV-visible and EPR spectroscopy as well as by native polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. We conclude that yeast apo CuZnSOD, unlike the bovine and human apoproteins, cannot be reconstituted fully with metal ions under the same conditions. Instead, only one subunit of the homodimer, the normal subunit, can be remetalled in a fashion reminiscent of the well-characterized bovine protein. The other phantom subunit is not competent to bind metals in this fashion. Furthermore, we have shown that CuZnSOD protein isolated from Saccharomyces cerevisiae that lacks the gene coding for the copper chaperone, Lys7p, contains only one metal ion, Zn2+, per protein dimer. The possibility that yeast CuZnSOD can exist in multiple conformational states may represent an increased propensity of the yeast protein to undergo changes that can occur in all CuZnSODs, and may have implications for amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.


Journal of Molecular Evolution | 2011

Phylogenetic and Preliminary Phenotypic Analysis of Yeast PAQR Receptors: Potential Antifungal Targets

Nancy Y. Villa; Patricia Moussatche; Stephen G. Chamberlin; Anuj Kumar; Thomas J. Lyons

Proteins belonging to the Progestin and AdipoQ Receptor (PAQR) superfamily of membrane bound receptors are ubiquitously found in fungi. Nearly, all fungi possess two evolutionarily distinct paralogs of PAQR protein, which we have called the PQRA and PQRB subtypes. In the model fungus Saccharomyces cerevisiae, these subtypes are represented by the Izh2p and Izh3p proteins, respectively. S. cerevisiae also possesses two additional PQRA-type receptors called Izh1p and Izh4p that are restricted to other species within the “Saccharomyces complex”. Izh2p has been the subject of several recent investigations and is of particular interest because it regulates fungal growth in response to proteins produced by plants and, as such, represents a new paradigm for interspecies communication. We demonstrate that IZH2 and IZH3 gene dosage affects resistance to polyene antifungal drugs. Moreover, we provide additional evidence that Izh2p and Izh3p negatively regulate fungal filamentation. These data suggest that agonists of these receptors might make antifungal therapeutics, either by inhibiting fungal development or by sensitizing fungi to the toxic effects of current antifungal therapies. This is particularly relevant for pathogenic fungi such as Candida glabrata that are closely related to S. cerevisiae and contain the same complement of PAQR receptors.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1996

Mutations in copper-zinc superoxide dismutase that cause amyotrophic lateral sclerosis alter the zinc binding site and the redox behavior of the protein

Thomas J. Lyons; Hongbin Liu; Joy J. Goto; Aram M. Nersissian; James A. Roe; Janet A. Graden; Carla Cafe; Dale E. Bredesen; Edith Butler Gralla; Joan Selverstone Valentine


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2004

Metalloregulation of yeast membrane steroid receptor homologs

Thomas J. Lyons; Nancy Y. Villa; Lisa M. Regalla; Brian R. Kupchak; Anna L. Vagstad; David J. Eide


Biochemistry | 2000

X-ray crystallographic and analytical ultracentrifugation analyses of truncated and full-length yeast copper chaperones for SOD (LYS7): a dimer-dimer model of LYS7-SOD association and copper delivery.

Leslie T. Hall; Raylene J. Sanchez; Stephen P. Holloway; Haining Zhu; Jennifer E. Stine; Thomas J. Lyons; Borries Demeler; Virgil Schirf; Jeffrey C. Hansen; Aram M. Nersissian; Joan Selverstone Valentine; P. John Hart


Archive | 2016

Microorganisms for Succinic Acid Production

Joanna Martyna Krawczyk; Stefan Haefner; Hartwig Schröder; Esther Dantas Costa; Oakar Zelder; Gregory Von Abendroth; Christoph Wittmann; René Stellmacher; Judith Becker; Anna Lange; Benjamin J. Lyons; Thomas J. Lyons; Eudes de Crécy; Ewa Hughes


Archive | 2015

Improved microorganisms for succinic acid production

Joanna Martyna Krawczyk; Stefan Haefner; Hartwig Schröder; Costa Esther Dantas; Oskar Zelder; Abendroth Gregory Von; Christoph Wittmann; René Stellmacher; Judith Becker; Anna Lange; Benjamin J. Lyons; Thomas J. Lyons; Crecy Eudes De; Ewa Hughes

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Joy J. Goto

University of California

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Haining Zhu

University of California

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