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Ulla Schwertassek

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory (CSHL)
schwerta@cshl.edu

Journal articles

2010
Ulla Schwertassek, Deirdre A Buckley, Chong-Feng Xu, Andrew J Lindsay, Mary W McCaffrey, Thomas A Neubert, Nicholas K Tonks (2010)  Myristoylation of the dual-specificity phosphatase c-JUN N-terminal kinase (JNK) stimulatory phosphatase 1 is necessary for its activation of JNK signaling and apoptosis.   FEBS J 277: 11. 2463-2473 Jun  
Abstract: Activation of the c-JUN N-terminal kinase (JNK) pathway is implicated in a number of important physiological processes, from embryonic morphogenesis to cell survival and apoptosis. JNK stimulatory phosphatase 1 (JSP1) is a member of the dual-specificity phosphatase subfamily of protein tyrosine phosphatases. In contrast to other dual-specificity phosphatases that catalyze the inactivation of mitogen-activated protein kinases, expression of JSP1 activates JNK-mediated signaling. JSP1 and its relative DUSP15 are unique among members of the protein tyrosine phosphatase family in that they contain a potential myristoylation site at the N-terminus (MGNGMXK). In this study, we investigated whether JSP1 was myristoylated and examined the functional consequences of myristoylation. Using mass spectrometry, we showed that wild-type JSP1, but not a JSP1 mutant in which Gly2 was mutated to Ala (JSP1-G2A), was myristoylated in cells. Although JSP1 maintained intrinsic phosphatase activity in the absence of myristoylation, the subcellular localization of the enzyme was altered. Compared with the wild type, the ability of nonmyristoylated JSP1 to induce JNK activation and phosphorylation of the transcription factor c-JUN was attenuated. Upon expression of wild-type JSP1, a subpopulation of cells, with the highest levels of the phosphatase, was induced to float off the dish and undergo apoptosis. In contrast, cells expressing similar levels of JSP1-G2A remained attached, further highlighting that the myristoylation mutant was functionally compromised.
Notes:
2007
Ulla Schwertassek, Yves Balmer, Marcus Gutscher, Lars Weingarten, Marc Preuss, Johanna Engelhard, Monique Winkler, Tobias P Dick (2007)  Selective redox regulation of cytokine receptor signaling by extracellular thioredoxin-1.   EMBO J 26: 13. 3086-3097 Jul  
Abstract: The thiol-disulfide oxidoreductase thioredoxin-1 (Trx1) is known to be secreted by leukocytes and to exhibit cytokine-like properties. Extracellular effects of Trx1 require a functional active site, suggesting a redox-based mechanism of action. However, specific cell surface proteins and pathways coupling extracellular Trx1 redox activity to cellular responses have not been identified so far. Using a mechanism-based kinetic trapping technique to identify disulfide exchange interactions on the intact surface of living lymphocytes, we found that Trx1 catalytically interacts with a single principal target protein. This target protein was identified as the tumor necrosis factor receptor superfamily member 8 (TNFRSF8/CD30). We demonstrate that the redox interaction is highly specific for both Trx1 and CD30 and that the redox state of CD30 determines its ability to engage the cognate ligand and transduce signals. Furthermore, we confirm that Trx1 affects CD30-dependent changes in lymphocyte effector function. Thus, we conclude that receptor-ligand signaling interactions can be selectively regulated by an extracellular redox catalyst.
Notes:
Ulla Schwertassek, Lars Weingarten, Tobias P Dick (2007)  Identification of redox-active cell-surface proteins by mechanism-based kinetic trapping.   Sci STKE 2007: 417. Dec  
Abstract: A number of thiol-dependent oxidoreductases are released from cells and act on the cell surface. Correspondingly, several cell-surface processes appear to depend on catalyzed thiol-disulfide exchange, including integrin activation and the fusion of viral particles with the host membrane. Tumor cells frequently increase the abundance of secreted and cell-surface forms of particular oxidoreductases, and evidence suggests that oxidoreductases released from tumor cells promote growth and contribute to the remodeling of the cellular microenvironment. Few cell-surface or membrane proteins that are targeted by extracellular redox enzymes have been identified. One major reason for this slow progress is the highly transient nature of thiol-disulfide exchange, making its detection by conventional techniques difficult or impossible. Here we describe the application of an activity-based proteomics approach, also known as "mechanism-based kinetic trapping," to identify individual cell-surface target proteins that engage in disulfide exchange with thiol-dependent oxidoreductases. Although we have applied this approach to thioredoxin-1, it should also be applicable to other members of the thioredoxin superfamily whose activity is based on the CXXC active-site motif.
Notes:
2006
2004
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