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Dive into the research topics where Uri R. Mbonye is active.

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Featured researches published by Uri R. Mbonye.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006

The 19-amino acid cassette of cyclooxygenase-2 mediates entry of the protein into the endoplasmic reticulum-associated degradation system

Uri R. Mbonye; Masayuki Wada; Caroline Jill Rieke; Hui Yuan Tang; David L. DeWitt; William L. Smith

Cyclooxygenase (COX) isoforms catalyze the committed step in prostaglandin biosynthesis. The primary structures of COX-1 and COX-2 are very similar except that COX-2 has a 19-amino acid (19-AA) segment of unknown function located just inside its C terminus. Here we provide evidence that the major role of the 19-AA cassette is to mediate entry of COX-2 into the ER-associated degradation system that transports ER proteins to the cytoplasm. COX-1 is constitutively expressed in many cells, whereas COX-2 is usually expressed inducibly and transiently. In murine NIH/3T3 fibroblasts, we find that COX-2 protein is degraded with a half-life (t½) of about 2 h, whereas COX-1 is reasonably stable (t½ >12 h); COX-2 degradation is retarded by 26 S proteasome inhibitors. Similarly, COX-1 expressed heterologously in HEK293 cells is quite stable (t½ > 24 h), whereas COX-2 expressed heterologously is degraded with a t½ of ∼5h, and its degradation is slowed by proteasome inhibitors. A deletion mutant of COX-2 was prepared lacking 18 residues of the 19-AA cassette. This mutant retains native COX-2 activity but, unlike native COX-2, is stable in HEK293 cells. Conversely, inserting the COX-2 19-AA cassette near the C terminus of COX-1 yields a mutant ins594–612 COX-1 that is unstable (t½ ∼3 h). Mutation of Asn-594, an N-glycosylation site at the beginning of the 19-AA cassette, stabilizes both COX-2 and ins594–612 COX-1; nonetheless, COX mutants that are glycosylated at Asn-594 but lack the remainder of the 19-amino acid cassette (i.e. del597–612 COX-2 and ins594–596 COX-1) are stable. Thus, although glycosylation of Asn-594 is necessary for COX-2 degradation, at least part of the remainder of the 19-AA insert is also required. Finally, kifunensine, a mannosidase inhibitor that can block entry of ER proteins into the ER-associated degradation system, retards COX-2 degradation.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2008

Two Distinct Pathways for Cyclooxygenase-2 Protein Degradation

Uri R. Mbonye; Chong Yuan; Clair Harris; Ranjinder S. Sidhu; Inseok Song; Toshiya Arakawa; William L. Smith

Cyclooxygenases (COX-1 and COX-2) are N-glycosylated, endoplasmic reticulum-resident, integral membrane proteins that catalyze the committed step in prostanoid synthesis. COX-1 is constitutively expressed in many types of cells, whereas COX-2 is usually expressed inducibly and transiently. The control of COX-2 protein expression occurs at several levels, and overexpression of COX-2 is associated with pathologies such as colon cancer. Here we have investigated COX-2 protein degradation and demonstrate that it can occur through two independent pathways. One pathway is initiated by post-translational N-glycosylation at Asn-594. The N-glycosyl group is then processed, and the protein is translocated to the cytoplasm, where it undergoes proteasomal degradation. We provide evidence from site-directed mutagenesis that a 27-amino acid instability motif (27-IM) regulates posttranslational N-glycosylation of Asn-594. This motif begins with Glu-586 8 residues upstream of the N-glycosylation site and ends with Lys-612 near the C terminus at Leu-618. Key elements of the 27-IM include a helix involving residues Glu-586 to Ser-596 with Asn-594 near the end of this helix and residues Leu-610 and Leu-611, which are located in an apparently unstructured downstream region of the 27-IM. The last 16 residues of the 27-IM, including Leu-610 and Leu-611, appear to promote N-glycosylation of Asn-594 perhaps by causing this residue to become exposed to appropriate glycosyl transferases. A second pathway for COX-2 protein degradation is initiated by substrate-dependent suicide inactivation. Suicide-inactivated protein is then degraded. The biochemical steps have not been resolved, but substrate-dependent degradation is not inhibited by proteasome inhibitors or inhibitors of lysosomal proteases. The pathway involving the 27-IM occurs at a constant rate, whereas degradation through the substrate-dependent process is coupled to the rate of substrate turnover.


Current HIV Research | 2011

Control of HIV Latency by Epigenetic and Non-Epigenetic Mechanisms

Uri R. Mbonye; Jonathan Karn

Intensive antiretroviral therapy successfully suppresses viral replication but is unable to eradicate the virus. HIV persists in a small number of resting memory T cells where HIV has been transcriptionally silenced. This review will focus on recent insights into the HIV transcriptional control mechanisms that provide the biochemical basis for understanding latency. There are no specific repressors of HIV transcription encoded by the virus, instead latency arises when the regulatory feedback mechanism driven by HIV Tat expression is disrupted. Small changes in transcriptional initiation, induced by epigenetic silencing, lead to profound restrictions in Tat levels and force the entry of proviruses into latency. In resting memory T cells, which carry the bulk of the latent viral pool, additional restrictions, especially the limiting cellular levels of the essential Tat cofactor P-TEFb and the transcription initiation factors NF-κB and NFAT ensure that the provirus remains silenced unless the host cell is activated. The detailed understanding of HIV transcription is providing a framework for devising new therapeutic strategies designed to purge the latent viral pool. Importantly, the recognition that there are multiple restrictions imposed on latent proviruses suggest that proviral reactivation will not be achieved when only a single reactivation step is targeted and that any optimal activation strategy will require both removal of epigenetic blocks and the activation of P-TEFb.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2011

T-cell receptor signaling enhances transcriptional elongation from latent HIV proviruses by activating P-TEFb through an ERK-dependent pathway

Young Kyeung Kim; Uri R. Mbonye; Joseph Hokello; Jonathan Karn

Latent human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) proviruses are thought to be primarily reactivated in vivo through stimulation of the T-cell receptor (TCR). Activation of the TCR induces multiple signal transduction pathways, leading to the ordered nuclear migration of the HIV transcription initiation factors NF-κB (nuclear factor κB) and NFAT (nuclear factor of activated T-cells), as well as potential effects on HIV transcriptional elongation. We have monitored the kinetics of proviral reactivation using chromatin immunoprecipitation assays to measure changes in the distribution of RNA polymerase II in the HIV provirus. Surprisingly, in contrast to TNF-α (tumor necrosis factor α) activation, where early transcription elongation is highly restricted due to rate-limiting concentrations of Tat, efficient and sustained HIV elongation and positive transcription elongation factor b (P-TEFb) recruitment are detected immediately after the activation of latent proviruses through the TCR. Inhibition of NFAT activation by cyclosporine had no effect on either HIV transcription initiation or elongation. However, examination of P-TEFb complexes by gel-filtration chromatography showed that TCR signaling led to the rapid dissociation of the large inactive P-TEFb:7SK RNP (small nuclear RNA 7SK ribonucleoprotein) complex and the release of active low-molecular-weight P-TEFb complexes. Both P-TEFb recruitment to the HIV long terminal repeat and enhanced HIV processivity were blocked by the ERK (extracellular-signal-regulated kinase) inhibitor U0126, but not by AKT (serine/threonine protein kinase Akt) and PI3K (phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase) inhibitors. In contrast to treatment with HMBA (hexamethylene bisacetamide) and DRB (5,6-dichlorobenzimidazole 1-β-ribofuranoside), which disrupt the large 7SK RNP complex but do not stimulate early HIV elongation, TCR signaling provides the first example of a physiological pathway that can shift the balance between the inactive P-TEFb pool and the active P-TEFb pool and thereby stimulate proviral reactivation.


PLOS Pathogens | 2013

Phosphorylation of CDK9 at Ser175 Enhances HIV Transcription and Is a Marker of Activated P-TEFb in CD4+ T Lymphocytes

Uri R. Mbonye; Giridharan Gokulrangan; Manish Datt; Curtis Dobrowolski; Maxwell Cooper; Mark R. Chance; Jonathan Karn

The HIV transactivator protein, Tat, enhances HIV transcription by recruiting P-TEFb from the inactive 7SK snRNP complex and directing it to proviral elongation complexes. To test the hypothesis that T-cell receptor (TCR) signaling induces critical post-translational modifications leading to enhanced interactions between P-TEFb and Tat, we employed affinity purification–tandem mass spectrometry to analyze P-TEFb. TCR or phorbal ester (PMA) signaling strongly induced phosphorylation of the CDK9 kinase at Ser175. Molecular modeling studies based on the Tat/P-TEFb X-ray structure suggested that pSer175 strengthens the intermolecular interactions between CDK9 and Tat. Mutations in Ser175 confirm that this residue could mediate critical interactions with Tat and with the bromodomain protein BRD4. The S175A mutation reduced CDK9 interactions with Tat by an average of 1.7-fold, but also completely blocked CDK9 association with BRD4. The phosphomimetic S175D mutation modestly enhanced Tat association with CDK9 while causing a 2-fold disruption in BRD4 association with CDK9. Since BRD4 is unable to compete for binding to CDK9 carrying S175A, expression of CDK9 carrying the S175A mutation in latently infected cells resulted in a robust Tat-dependent reactivation of the provirus. Similarly, the stable knockdown of BRD4 led to a strong enhancement of proviral expression. Immunoprecipitation experiments show that CDK9 phosphorylated at Ser175 is excluded from the 7SK RNP complex. Immunofluorescence and flow cytometry studies carried out using a phospho-Ser175-specific antibody demonstrated that Ser175 phosphorylation occurs during TCR activation of primary resting memory CD4+ T cells together with upregulation of the Cyclin T1 regulatory subunit of P-TEFb, and Thr186 phosphorylation of CDK9. We conclude that the phosphorylation of CDK9 at Ser175 plays a critical role in altering the competitive binding of Tat and BRD4 to P-TEFb and provides an informative molecular marker for the identification of the transcriptionally active form of P-TEFb.


Annual Review of Virology | 2017

The Molecular Basis for Human Immunodeficiency Virus Latency

Uri R. Mbonye; Jonathan Karn

Although potent combination antiretroviral therapy can effectively block viral replication in the host, human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) persists due to the existence of latent but replication-competent proviruses residing primarily in a very small population of resting memory CD4+ T cells. Viral latency is established when the expression of the autoregulatory viral trans-activating factor Tat is reduced to subthreshold levels. The absence of Tat reduces HIV transcription and protein production to levels that make the host cell invisible to the immune system and refractory to antiretroviral treatment. Key host cell mechanisms that drive HIV into latency are sequestration of transcription initiation factors, establishment of epigenetic barriers inactivating the proviral promoter, and blockage of the assembly of the host elongation factor P-TEFb. This comprehensive understanding of the molecular control of HIV transcription is leading to the development of optimized combinatorial reactivation and immune surveillance strategies designed to purge the latent viral reservoir.


Proteomics | 2015

Phosphorylation of HEXIM1 at Tyr271 and Tyr274 Promotes Release of P‐TEFb from the 7SK snRNP Complex and Enhances Proviral HIV Gene Expression

Uri R. Mbonye; Benlian Wang; Giridharan Gokulrangan; Mark R. Chance; Jonathan Karn

Efficient HIV transcription requires P‐TEFb, an essential co‐factor for Tat. In actively replicating cells, P‐TEFb is incorporated into the 7SK snRNP complex together with the repressor protein HEXIM1. Using an affinity purification‐tandem mass spectrometry approach to identify modification sites on HEXIM1 that regulate the sequestration of P‐TEFb by 7SK snRNP, we found that HEXIM1 can be phosphorylated on adjacent residues in a region immediately upstream of the coiled‐coil dimerization domain (Ser268, Thr270, Tyr271, and Tyr274). Phosphomimetic mutations of Tyr271 and Tyr274 disrupted the assembly of P‐TEFb and HEXIM1 into the 7SK snRNP complex. Although Y271E/Y274E did not adversely affect the nuclear localization pattern of HEXIM1, it induced the redistribution of the CDK9 subunit of P‐TEFb into the cytoplasm. By contrast, the Y271F/Y274F HEXIM1 mutant assembled normally with P‐TEFb within the 7SK snRNP complex but severely reduced proviral gene expression in T cells in response to activation signals and caused a severe growth defect of Jurkat T cells. Thus, Y271F/Y274F, which cannot be phosphorylated on these residues, appears to block the exchange of active P‐TEFb from the 7SK complex, thereby limiting the level of P‐TEFb below the threshold required to support transcription elongation of the HIV provirus and cellular genes.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2018

Cyclin-dependent kinase 7 (CDK7)-mediated phosphorylation of the CDK9 activation loop promotes P-TEFb assembly with Tat and proviral HIV reactivation

Uri R. Mbonye; Benlian Wang; Giridharan Gokulrangan; Wuxian Shi; Sichun Yang; Jonathan Karn

The HIV trans-activator Tat recruits the host transcription elongation factor P-TEFb to stimulate proviral transcription. Phosphorylation of Thr-186 on the activation loop (T-loop) of cyclin-dependent kinase 9 (CDK9) is essential for its kinase activity and assembly of CDK9 and cyclin T1 (CycT1) to form functional P-TEFb. Phosphorylation of a second highly conserved T-loop site, Ser-175, alters the competitive binding of Tat and the host recruitment factor bromodomain containing 4 (BRD4) to P-TEFb. Here, we investigated the intracellular mechanisms that regulate these key phosphorylation events required for HIV transcription. Molecular dynamics simulations revealed that the CDK9/CycT1 interface is stabilized by intramolecular hydrogen bonding of pThr-186 by an arginine triad and Glu-96 of CycT1. Arginine triad substitutions that disrupted CDK9/CycT1 assembly accumulated Thr-186–dephosphorylated CDK9 associated with the cytoplasmic Hsp90/Cdc37 chaperone. The Hsp90/Cdc37/CDK9 complex was also present in resting T cells, which lack CycT1. Hsp90 inhibition in primary T cells blocked P-TEFb assembly, disrupted Thr-186 phosphorylation, and suppressed proviral reactivation. The selective CDK7 inhibitor THZ1 blocked CDK9 phosphorylation at Ser-175, and in vitro kinase assays confirmed that CDK7 activity is principally responsible for Ser-175 phosphorylation. Mutation of Ser-175 to Lys had no effect on CDK9 kinase activity or P-TEFb assembly but strongly suppressed both HIV expression and BRD4 binding. We conclude that the transfer of CDK9 from the Hsp90/Cdc37 complex induced by Thr-186 phosphorylation is a key step in P-TEFb biogenesis. Furthermore, we demonstrate that CDK7-mediated Ser-175 phosphorylation is a downstream nuclear event essential for facilitating CDK9 T-loop interactions with Tat.


PLOS Pathogens | 2018

The KAT5-Acetyl-Histone4-Brd4 axis silences HIV-1 transcription and promotes viral latency

Zichong Li; Uri R. Mbonye; Zeming Feng; Xiaohui Wang; Xiang Gao; Jonathan Karn; Qiang Zhou

The bromodomain protein Brd4 promotes HIV-1 latency by competitively inhibiting P-TEFb-mediated transcription induced by the virus-encoded Tat protein. Brd4 is recruited to the HIV LTR by interactions with acetyl-histones3 (AcH3) and AcH4. However, the precise modification pattern that it reads and the writer for generating this pattern are unknown. By examining a pool of latently infected proviruses with diverse integration sites, we found that the LTR characteristically has low AcH3 but high AcH4 content. This unusual acetylation profile attracts Brd4 to suppress the interaction of Tat with the host super elongation complex (SEC) that is essential for productive HIV transcription and latency reversal. KAT5 (lysine acetyltransferase 5), but not its paralogs KAT7 and KAT8, is found to promote HIV latency through acetylating H4 on the provirus. Antagonizing KAT5 removes AcH4 and Brd4 from the LTR, enhances the SEC loading, and reverses as well as delays, the establishment of latency. The pro-latency effect of KAT5 is confirmed in a primary CD4+ T cell latency model as well as cells from ART-treated patients. Our data thus indicate the KAT5-AcH4-Brd4 axis as a key regulator of latency and a potential therapeutic target to reactivate latent HIV reservoirs for eradication.


Progress in Lipid Research | 2007

Regulation of intracellular cyclooxygenase levels by gene transcription and protein degradation

Yeon Joo Kang; Uri R. Mbonye; Cynthia J. DeLong; Masayuki Wada; William L. Smith

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Jonathan Karn

Case Western Reserve University

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Giridharan Gokulrangan

Case Western Reserve University

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Benlian Wang

Case Western Reserve University

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Mark R. Chance

Case Western Reserve University

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Inseok Song

Seoul National University

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Chong Yuan

University of Michigan

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