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Topic Name: Role of key protein in tumor growth
Category: Genetic Engineering
Research persons: Michael B. Yaffe,Associate Professor, Biology,MIT
Location: Center for Cancer Research,Massachusetts Institute of Technology ,77 Massachusetts Avenue,Cambridge, MA 02139 ,, United States
Details
Regulation of protein-protein interactions
and signal transduction pathways by protein and lipid phosphorylation. Structure
and function of modular signaling domains. Design of bioinformatics tools for
proteomic analysis.
The goal of our research is to understand how
protein phosphorylation controls progression through the cell cycle at the
molecular level and how defects in phosphorylation bypass normal cell cycle
checkpoints and lead to human cancer. We also study how protein and lipid
phosphorylation controls the inflammatory response in phagocytic cells.
Research Summary
Cells activate complex signaling pathways in
response to stresses and injuries such as DNA damage, hypoxia, and bacterial or
viral infection. These pathways control cell cycle progression, coordinately
regulate patterns of gene expression and/or initiate programmed cell death by
activating protein serine/threonine kinases that phosphorylate critical
downstream targets. Mutations in signaling pathways that normally respond to
either DNA damage or to disruption of the mitotic spindle, for example, play
critical roles in the genesis of most human cancers. Similarly, hypoxia and
infection cause dysregulation of cell signaling pathways in phagocytic cells,
causing tissue damage in auto-inflammatory diseases and multiple organ failure
in sepsis.
How are these signaling pathways assembled?
What are the key molecules involved? How does their phosphorylation on serine
and threonine residues regulate protein-protein interactions to control the cell
cycle in epithelial cells or regulate the production of inflammatory mediators
by phagocytic cells? Our lab uses a broad proteomics approach to decode how
these cell signaling pathways are "wired" using bioinformatics,
combinatorial
chemistry, cell biology, physical biochemistry, structural biology and molecular
genetics.
Modular domains that mediate the phosphoserine/threonine-dependent
assembly of signaling complexes.
A major clue to understanding cell
signaling was the discovery that many molecules contain discrete modular
signaling domains such as SH2, SH3 and PDZ domains, arranged in a combinatorial
fashion. SH2 and PTB domains bind to phosphotyrosine- containing sequence
motifs, but the fundamental mechanisms underlying phosphoserine/phosphothreonine
signaling have remained poorly understood. Very recently, a subset of new
modules, including 14-3-3 proteins, FHA domains and WW domains, were found to
bind specifically to short phosphoserine or phosphothreonine-containing amino
acid sequences within proteins. These pSer/pThr-binding modules integrate
signals from upstream protein Ser/Thr kinases to control the actions of
downstream effector molecules, controlling cell cycle checkpoints and activating
patterns of gene transcription. We are using phosphoserine- and phosphothreonine-oriented
peptide libraries to elucidate the specific sequence motifs recognized by each
of these modules and have developed bioinformatics algorithms that use this
information to identify likely interacting proteins within the mouse, human and
yeast proteomes. In parallel with this combinatorial chemistry/computational
approach, we are using high-density protein arrays and expression libraries to
identify specific interacting proteins that play critical roles in establishing
cell cycle checkpoints that respond to DNA damage or disruption of the mitotic
spindle. In addition, we are developing a novel library-against-library
screening approach which should reveal additional phosphoserine/threonine-binding
modules that have not yet been identified. In a long-standing joint effort with
the Drs. Stephen Smerdon and Steven Gamblin in the Division of Protein Structure
at the National Institute of Medical Research in London we are elucidating the
structural basis of pSer/pThr binding for 14-3-3 and FHA domains by X-ray
crystallography. We hope to be able to use this information to design specific
chemical inhibitors that can serve as research tools for cell biology and may
act as lead compounds for drug design in the treatment of human cancer.
Neutrophil Signaling in Inflammation.
Neutrophils
are professional phagocytic cells that constitute the first line of defense
against infection. In response to cytokines and bacterial products, neutrophils
generate reactive oxygen species to kill pathogens. Excessive amounts of
reactive oxygen products, however, damage adjacent host tissues, causing the
auto-inflammation seen in diseases like rheumatoid arthritis and the lung and
kidney failure observed in patients with fulminant infections, like gram
negative sepsis and Legionnaire’s disease. The production of reactive oxygen by
the NADPH oxidase complex must therefore be tightly controlled.
The NADPH oxidase consists of at least 6
subunits – 4 cytosolic proteins p47phox, p67phox, p40phox and Rac, and 2
membrane proteins - p22phox and gp91phox. The cytosolic proteins contain SH3
domains, PX domains and TPR repeats, through which the cytosolic subunits bind
to the membrane subunits in response to activation of protein Ser/Thr kinases
and lipid kinases. Most of the details of how this occurs, as well as the
relevant kinase signaling pathways, are still unknown. We have recently found
that cytokines like TNFa can "prime" neutrophils to generate excessive amounts
of reactive oxygen and cause multiple organ failure through a process that
involves the p38 MAPK pathway. Using peptide and protein libraries,
bioinformatics, ligand screening approaches and a novel cell based assay using
human neutrophils, we are decoding the sequence motifs recognized by the modular
signaling domains in p47phox, p40phox and p67phox, and the molecular targets of
the relevant Ser/Thr kinases and lipid kinases involved. We have recently
discovered that the PX domains of p47phox and p40phox recognize specific
phosphoinositol lipids generated by the signaling enzyme PI 3-kinase, providing
a new conceptual model for how the cytosolic components migrate to the membrane
upon activation. Using green fluorescent protein fused to domains from the
cytosolic subunits of the NADPH oxidase, we are attempting to analyze the
process of oxidase assembly in real time in phagocytic cells. Together with Dr.
Katrin Rittinger at the National Institute of Medical Research in London, we are
pursuing the structure of the NADPH oxidase using X-ray crystallography.
About Researcher:
Michael B.
Yaffe
Associate
Professor, Biology
Ph.D. 1987, Case Western Reserve University
M.D. 1989, Case Western Reserve University
Room E18-580
Phone: (617) 452-2442
Email:
myaffe@mit.edu
Yaffe Lab
Publications
Funding:
Support comes from a variety of sources:
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Alumni
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Parents
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Students
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MIT is a work in progress. And it’s a work
that is being created by many thousands of people and institutions. We extend
our sincere thanks to all of our donors and volunteers for participating in
MIT’s past successes—and future contributions. Several
donor recognition
societies have been established at MIT to thank donors for their generosity.
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