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Featured researches published by Yinghua Guan.


Current Biology | 2010

Identification of Signaling Pathways Regulating Primary Cilium Length and Flow-Mediated Adaptation

Tatiana Y. Besschetnova; Elona Kolpakova-Hart; Yinghua Guan; Jing Zhou; Björn Olsen; Jagesh V. Shah

The primary cilium acts as a transducer of extracellular stimuli into intracellular signaling [1, 2]. Its regulation, particularly with respect to length, has been defined primarily by genetic experiments and human disease states in which molecular components that are necessary for its proper construction have been mutated or deleted [1]. However, dynamic modulation of cilium length, a phenomenon observed in ciliated protists [3, 4], has not been well-characterized in vertebrates. Here we demonstrate that decreased intracellular calcium (Ca(2+)) or increased cyclic AMP (cAMP), and subsequent protein kinase A activation, increases primary cilium length in mammalian epithelial and mesenchymal cells. Anterograde intraflagellar transport is sped up in lengthened cilia, potentially increasing delivery flux of cilium components. The cilium length response creates a negative feedback loop whereby fluid shear-mediated deflection of the primary cilium, which decreases intracellular cAMP, leads to cilium shortening and thus decreases mechanotransductive signaling. This adaptive response is blocked when the autosomal-dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD) gene products, polycystin-1 or -2, are reduced. Dynamic regulation of cilium length is thus intertwined with cilium-mediated signaling and provides a natural braking mechanism in response to external stimuli that may be compromised in PKD.


Developmental Cell | 2012

Noise Reduction in the Intracellular Pom1p Gradient by a Dynamic Clustering Mechanism

Timothy E. Saunders; Kally Z. Pan; Andrew Angel; Yinghua Guan; Jagesh V. Shah; Martin Howard; Fred Chang

Chemical gradients can generate pattern formation in biological systems. In the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe, a cortical gradient of pom1p (a DYRK-type protein kinase) functions to position sites of cytokinesis and cell polarity and to control cell length. Here, using quantitative imaging, fluorescence correlation spectroscopy, and mathematical modeling, we study how its gradient distribution is formed. Pom1p gradients exhibit large cell-to-cell variability, as well as dynamic fluctuations in each individual gradient. Our data lead to a two-state model for gradient formation in which pom1p molecules associate with the plasma membrane at cell tips and then diffuse on the membrane while aggregating into and fragmenting from clusters, before disassociating from the membrane. In contrast to a classical one-component gradient, this two-state gradient buffers against cell-to-cell variations in protein concentration. This buffering mechanism, together with time averaging to reduce intrinsic noise, allows the pom1p gradient to specify positional information in a robust manner.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Activation and control of p53 tetramerization in individual living cells

Giorgio Gaglia; Yinghua Guan; Jagesh V. Shah; Galit Lahav

Significance p53 oligomerization has been the topic of many previous studies, mainly due to the connection between mutations in the p53 tetramerization domain and Li–Fraumeni syndrome. However, all previous studies have measured p53 oligomeric state in vitro. We measure the dynamics of p53 oligomerization in living cells using fluorescence correlation spectroscopy and quantify the discrete number of oligomers over time after DNA damage. Our study demonstrates the power of using sensitive analytical tools for acquiring accurate measures of fluctuation correlation in living cells and the use of mathematical models to gain new insights about p53 biology. The approach we used here should be of general utility in studying the quantitative dynamics and function of protein oligomerization in any cellular system. Homo-oligomerization is found in many biological systems and has been extensively studied in vitro. However, our ability to quantify and understand oligomerization processes in cells is still limited. We used fluorescence correlation spectroscopy and mathematical modeling to measure the dynamics of the tetramers formed by the tumor suppressor protein p53 in single living cells. Previous in vitro studies suggested that in basal conditions all p53 molecules are bound in dimers. We found that in resting cells p53 is present in a mix of oligomeric states with a large cell-to-cell variation. After DNA damage, p53 molecules in all cells rapidly assemble into tetramers before p53 protein levels increase. We developed a model to understand the connection between p53 accumulation and tetramerization. We found that the rapid increase in p53 tetramers requires a combination of active tetramerization and protein stabilization, however tetramerization alone is sufficient to activate p53 transcriptional targets. This suggests triggering tetramerization as a mechanism for activating the p53 pathway in cancer cells. Many other transcription factors homo-oligomerize, and our approach provides a unique way for probing the dynamics and functional consequences of oligomerization.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Impact of Histone H4 Lysine 20 Methylation on 53BP1 Responses to Chromosomal Double Strand Breaks

Andrea Hartlerode; Yinghua Guan; Anbazhagan Rajendran; Kiyoe Ura; Gunnar Schotta; Anyong Xie; Jagesh V. Shah; Ralph Scully

Recruitment of 53BP1 to chromatin flanking double strand breaks (DSBs) requires γH2AX/MDC1/RNF8-dependent ubiquitination of chromatin and interaction of 53BP1 with histone H4 methylated on lysine 20 (H4K20me). Several histone methyltransferases have been implicated in 53BP1 recruitment, but their quantitative contributions to the 53BP1 response are unclear. We have developed a multi-photon laser (MPL) system to target DSBs to subfemtoliter nuclear volumes and used this to mathematically model DSB response kinetics of MDC1 and of 53BP1. In contrast to MDC1, which revealed first order kinetics, the 53BP1 MPL-DSB response is best fitted by a Gompertz growth function. The 53BP1 MPL response shows the expected dependency on MDC1 and RNF8. We determined the impact of altered H4K20 methylation on 53BP1 MPL response kinetics in mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs) lacking key H4K20 histone methyltransferases. This revealed no major requirement for the known H4K20 dimethylases Suv4-20h1 and Suv4-20h2 in 53BP1 recruitment or DSB repair function, but a key role for the H4K20 monomethylase, PR-SET7. The histone methyltransferase MMSET/WHSC1 has recently been implicated in 53BP1 DSB recruitment. We found that WHSC1 homozygous mutant MEFs reveal an alteration in balance of H4K20 methylation patterns; however, 53BP1 DSB responses in these cells appear normal.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Prion-like proteins sequester and suppress the toxicity of huntingtin exon 1

Can Kayatekin; Kent E. S. Matlack; William R. Hesse; Yinghua Guan; Sohini Chakrabortee; Jenny Russ; Erich E. Wanker; Jagesh V. Shah; Susan Lindquist

Significance Expansion of polyglutamine tracts in at least nine proteins causes neurodegeneration. Although the pathology caused by each protein is different, there must be common features of the polyglutamine expansion that contribute to toxicity. We modeled polyglutamine toxicity in yeast by expressing a 103-glutamine expanded fragment of huntingtin (Htt103Q) and screened the yeast genome to identify proteins that alter this toxicity. Surprisingly, our suppressors were proteins containing glutamine- and asparagine-rich segments typical of prion proteins. When we expressed just these segments with Htt103Q, the two proteins formed large, coaggregated particles, and smaller, more toxic aggregated forms were absent. Proteins with such segments may interact with polyQ-expanded proteins and thereby modulate their toxicity. These interaction partners provide targets for therapeutic intervention. Expansions of preexisting polyglutamine (polyQ) tracts in at least nine different proteins cause devastating neurodegenerative diseases. There are many unique features to these pathologies, but there must also be unifying mechanisms underlying polyQ toxicity. Using a polyQ-expanded fragment of huntingtin exon-1 (Htt103Q), the causal protein in Huntington disease, we and others have created tractable models for investigating polyQ toxicity in yeast cells. These models recapitulate key pathological features of human diseases and provide access to an unrivalled genetic toolbox. To identify toxicity modifiers, we performed an unbiased overexpression screen of virtually every protein encoded by the yeast genome. Surprisingly, there was no overlap between our modifiers and those from a conceptually identical screen reported recently, a discrepancy we attribute to an artifact of their overexpression plasmid. The suppressors of Htt103Q toxicity recovered in our screen were strongly enriched for glutamine- and asparagine-rich prion-like proteins. Separated from the rest of the protein, the prion-like sequences of these proteins were themselves potent suppressors of polyQ-expanded huntingtin exon-1 toxicity, in both yeast and human cells. Replacing the glutamines in these sequences with asparagines abolished suppression and converted them to enhancers of toxicity. Replacing asparagines with glutamines created stronger suppressors. The suppressors (but not the enhancers) coaggregated with Htt103Q, forming large foci at the insoluble protein deposit in which proteins were highly immobile. Cells possessing foci had fewer (if any) small diffusible oligomers of Htt103Q. Until such foci were lost, cells were protected from death. We discuss the therapeutic implications of these findings.


Bioconjugate Chemistry | 2014

Monoalkoxy BODIPYs--a fluorophore class for bioimaging.

Alexandra M. Courtis; Sofia Santos; Yinghua Guan; J. Adam Hendricks; Balaram Ghosh; D. Miklos Szantai-Kis; Surya A. Reis; Jagesh V. Shah; Ralph Mazitschek

Small molecule fluorophores are indispensable tools for modern biomedical imaging techniques. In this report, we present the development of a new class of BODIPY dyes based on an alkoxy-fluoro-boron-dipyrromethene core. These novel fluorescent dyes, which we term MayaFluors, are characterized by good aqueous solubility and favorable in vitro physicochemical properties. MayaFluors are readily accessible in good yields in a one-pot, two-step approach starting from well-established BODIPY dyes, and allow for facile modification with functional groups of relevance to bioconjugate chemistry and bioorthogonal labeling. Biological profiling in living cells demonstrates excellent membrane permeability, low nonspecific binding, and lack of cytotoxicity.


PLOS ONE | 2015

High-Affinity Accumulation of a Maytansinoid in Cells via Weak Tubulin Interaction

Victor S. Goldmacher; Charlene Audette; Yinghua Guan; Eriene-Heidi Sidhom; Jagesh V. Shah; Kathleen R. Whiteman; Yelena Kovtun

The microtubule-targeting maytansinoids accumulate in cells and induce mitotic arrest at 250- to 1000-fold lower concentrations than those required for their association with tubulin or microtubules. To identify the mechanisms of this intracellular accumulation and exceptional cytotoxicity of maytansinoids we studied interaction of a highly cytotoxic maytansinoid, S-methyl DM1 and several other maytansinoids with cells. S-methyl DM1 accumulated inside the cells with a markedly higher apparent affinity than to tubulin or microtubules. The apparent affinities of maytansinoids correlated with their cytotoxicities. The number of intracellular binding sites for S-methyl DM1 in MCF7 cells was comparable to the number of tubulin molecules per cell (~ 4–6 × 107 copies). Efflux of 3 [H]-S-methyl DM1 from cells was enhanced in the presence of an excess of non-labeled S-methyl DM1, indicating that re-binding of 3 [H]-S-methyl DM1 to intracellular binding sites contributed to its intracellular retention. Liposomes loaded with non-polymerized tubulin recapitulated the apparent high-affinity association of S-methyl DM1 to cells. We propose a model for the intracellular accumulation of maytansinoids in which molecules of the compounds diffuse into a cell and associate with tubulin. Affinities of maytansinoids for individual tubulin molecules are weak, but the high intracellular concentration of tubulin favors, after dissociation of a compound-tubulin complex, their re-binding to a tubulin molecule, or to a tip of a microtubule in the same cell, over their efflux. As a result, a significant fraction of microtubule tips is occupied with a maytansinoid when added to cells at sub-nanomolar concentrations, inducing mitotic arrest and cell death.


ACS Chemical Neuroscience | 2015

Real-Time Monitoring of Alzheimer's-Related Amyloid Aggregation via Probe Enhancement-Fluorescence Correlation Spectroscopy.

Yinghua Guan; Kevin J. Cao; Adam Cantlon; Kristyna M. Elbel; Emmanuel A. Theodorakis; Dominic M. Walsh; Jerry Yang; Jagesh V. Shah

This work describes the use of fluorescence correlation spectroscopy (FCS) and a novel amyloid-binding fluorescent probe, ARCAM 1, to monitor the aggregation of the Alzheimers disease-associated amyloid β-peptide (Aβ). ARCAM 1 exhibits a large increase in fluorescence emission upon binding to Aβ assemblies, making it an excellent candidate for probe enhancement FCS (PE-FCS). ARCAM 1 binding does not change Aβ aggregation kinetics. It also exhibits greater dynamic range as a probe in reporting aggregate size by FCS in Aβ, when compared to thioflavin T (ThT) or an Aβ peptide modified with a fluorophore. Using fluorescent burst analysis (via PE-FCS) to follow aggregation of Aβ, we detected soluble aggregates at significantly earlier time points compared to typical bulk fluorescence measurements. Autocorrelation analysis revealed the size of these early Aβ assemblies. These results indicate that PE-FCS/ARCAM 1 based assays can detect and provide size characterization of small Aβ aggregation intermediates during the assembly process, which could enable monitoring and study of such aggregates that transiently accumulate in biofluids of patients with Alzheimers and other neurodegenerative diseases.


Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2015

Live-cell multiphoton fluorescence correlation spectroscopy with an improved large Stokes shift fluorescent protein

Yinghua Guan; Matthias Meurer; Sarada Raghavan; Aleksander Rebane; Jake R. Lindquist; Sofia Santos; Ilia Kats; Michael W. Davidson; Ralph Mazitschek; Thomas E. Hughes; Mikhail Drobizhev; Michael Knop; Jagesh V. Shah

An improved variant of mKeima, a monomeric long Stokes shift red fluorescent protein, is introduced, called hmKeima8.5. Its increased intracellular brightness and long Stokes shift (~180 nm) make it an excellent partner with teal fluorescent protein (mTFP1) for multiphoton, multicolor applications. Here we demonstrate its utility in intracellular fluorescence correlation spectroscopy applications.


Nature Communications | 2015

LRF maintains genome integrity by regulating the non-homologous end joining pathway of DNA repair.

Xue-Song Liu; Gurushankar Chandramouly; Emilie Rass; Yinghua Guan; Guocan Wang; Robin M. Hobbs; Anbazhagan Rajendran; Anyong Xie; Jagesh V. Shah; Anthony J. Davis; Ralph Scully; Andrea Lunardi; Pier Paolo Pandolfi

Leukemia/lymphoma-related factor (LRF) is a POZ/BTB and Krüppel (POK) transcriptional repressor characterized by context-dependent key roles in cell fate decision and tumorigenesis. Here we demonstrate an unexpected transcription-independent function for LRF in the classical non-homologous end joining (cNHEJ) pathway of double-strand break (DSB) repair. We find that LRF loss in cell lines and mouse tissues results in defective cNHEJ, genomic instability and hypersensitivity to ionizing radiation. Mechanistically, we show that LRF binds and stabilizes DNA-PKcs on DSBs, in turn favouring DNA-PK activity. Importantly, LRF loss restores ionizing radiation sensitivity to p53 null cells, making LRF an attractive biomarker to direct p53-null LRF-deficient tumours towards therapeutic treatments based on genotoxic agents or PARP inhibitors following a synthetic lethal strategy.

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Anbazhagan Rajendran

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Anyong Xie

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Ralph Scully

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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