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    Date Issued2010 (1)2007 (2)2004 (1)2001 (1)Author
    Delprato, Anna M. (5)
    Lambright, David G. (5)Merithew, Eric Lee (2)Cronin, Thomas Charles (1)Czech, Michael P. (1)View MoreUMass Chan AffiliationGraduate School of Biomedical Sciences (3)Program in Molecular Medicine (3)Program in Molecular Medicine and Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Pharmacology (2)Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Pharmacology (1)Department of Cell Biology (1)Document TypeJournal Article (5)KeywordLife Sciences (4)Medicine and Health Sciences (4)Humans (2)*Cell Movement (1)3T3-L1 Cells; ADP-Ribosylation Factors; Adipocytes; Amino Acid Motifs; Amino Acid Sequence; Animals; Cell Membrane; Crystallography, X-Ray; DNA Mutational Analysis; Enzyme Activation; Guanine Nucleotide Exchange Factors; Mice; Models, Biological; Models, Molecular; Molecular Sequence Data; Phosphatidylinositols; Protein Structure, Tertiary; Protein Transport; Receptors, Cytoplasmic and Nuclear; inhibitors; Structure-Activity Relationship; Substrate Specificity (1)View MoreJournalBiochemistry (1)Cell (1)Molecular cell (1)Nature structural and molecular biology (1)Traffic (Copenhagen, Denmark) (1)

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    The membrane-associated protein, supervillin, accelerates F-actin-dependent rapid integrin recycling and cell motility

    Fang, Zhiyou; Takizawa, Norio; Wilson, Korey A.; Smith, Tara C.; Delprato, Anna M.; Davidson, Michael W.; Lambright, David G.; Luna, Elizabeth J. (2010-06-25)
    In migrating cells, the cytoskeleton coordinates signal transduction and redistribution of transmembrane proteins, including integrins and growth factor receptors. Supervillin is an F-actin- and myosin II-binding protein that tightly associates with signaling proteins in cholesterol-rich, 'lipid raft' membrane microdomains. We show here that supervillin also can localize with markers for early and sorting endosomes (EE/SE) and with overexpressed components of the Arf6 recycling pathway in the cell periphery. Supervillin tagged with the photoswitchable fluorescent protein, tdEos, moves both into and away from dynamic structures resembling podosomes at the basal cell surface. Rapid integrin recycling from EE/SE is inhibited in supervillin-knockdown cells, but the rates of integrin endocytosis and recycling from the perinuclear recycling center (PNRC) are unchanged. A lack of synergy between supervillin knockdown and the actin filament barbed-end inhibitor, cytochalasin D, suggests that both treatments affect actin-dependent rapid recycling. Supervillin also enhances signaling from the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) to extracellular signal-regulated kinases (ERKs) 1 and 2 and increases the velocity of cell translocation. These results suggest that supervillin, F-actin and associated proteins coordinate a rapid, basolateral membrane recycling pathway that contributes to ERK signaling and actin-based cell motility.
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    Structural basis and mechanism of autoregulation in 3-phosphoinositide-dependent Grp1 family Arf GTPase exchange factors

    DiNitto, Jonathan P.; Delprato, Anna M.; Lee, Meng-Tse Gabe; Cronin, Thomas Charles; Huang, Shaohui; Guilherme, Adilson L.; Czech, Michael P.; Lambright, David G. (2007-11-29)
    Arf GTPases regulate membrane trafficking and actin dynamics. Grp1, ARNO, and Cytohesin-1 comprise a family of phosphoinositide-dependent Arf GTPase exchange factors with a Sec7-pleckstrin homology (PH) domain tandem. Here, we report that the exchange activity of the Sec7 domain is potently autoinhibited by conserved elements proximal to the PH domain. The crystal structure of the Grp1 Sec7-PH tandem reveals a pseudosubstrate mechanism of autoinhibition in which the linker region between domains and a C-terminal amphipathic helix physically block the docking sites for the switch regions of Arf GTPases. Mutations within either element result in partial or complete activation. Critical determinants of autoinhibition also contribute to insulin-stimulated plasma membrane recruitment. Autoinhibition can be largely reversed by binding of active Arf6 to Grp1 and by phosphorylation of tandem PKC sites in Cytohesin-1. These observations suggest that Grp1 family GEFs are autoregulated by mechanisms that depend on plasma membrane recruitment for activation.
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    Structural basis for Rab GTPase activation by VPS9 domain exchange factors

    Delprato, Anna M.; Lambright, David G. (2007-04-24)
    RABEX-5 and other exchange factors with VPS9 domains regulate endocytic trafficking through activation of the Rab family GTPases RAB5, RAB21 and RAB22. Here we report the crystal structure of the RABEX-5 catalytic core in complex with nucleotide-free RAB21, a key intermediate in the exchange reaction pathway. The structure reveals how VPS9 domain exchange factors recognize Rab GTPase substrates, accelerate GDP release and stabilize the nucleotide-free conformation. We further identify an autoinhibitory element in a predicted amphipathic helix located near the C terminus of the VPS9 domain. The autoinhibitory element overlaps with the binding site for the multivalent effector RABAPTIN-5 and potently suppresses the exchange activity of RABEX-5. Autoinhibition can be partially reversed by mutation of conserved residues on the nonpolar face of the predicted amphipathic helix or by assembly of the complex with RABAPTIN-5.
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    Structure, exchange determinants, and family-wide rab specificity of the tandem helical bundle and Vps9 domains of Rabex-5

    Delprato, Anna M.; Merithew, Eric Lee; Lambright, David G. (2004-09-02)
    The Rab5 GTPase, an essential regulator of endocytosis and endosome biogenesis, is activated by guanine-nucleotide exchange factors (GEFs) that contain a Vps9 domain. Here, we show that the catalytic core of the Rab GEF Rabex-5 has a tandem architecture consisting of a Vps9 domain stabilized by an indispensable helical bundle. A family-wide analysis of Rab specificity demonstrates high selectivity for Rab5 subfamily GTPases. Conserved exchange determinants map to a common surface of the Vps9 domain, which recognizes invariant aromatic residues in the switch regions of Rab GTPases and selects for the Rab5 subfamily by requiring a small nonacidic residue preceding a critical phenylalanine in the switch I region. These and other observations reveal unexpected similarity with the Arf exchange site in the Sec7 domain.
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    Determinants of the broad recognition of exocytic Rab GTPases by Mss4

    Zhu, Zhongyuan; Delprato, Anna M.; Merithew, Eric Lee; Lambright, David G. (2001-12-19)
    Rab GTPases function as essential regulators of vesicle transport between subcellular compartments of eukaryotic cells. Mss4, an evolutionarily conserved Rab accessory factor, facilitates nucleotide release and binds tightly to the nucleotide-free form of exocytic but not endocytic Rab GTPases. A structure-based mutational analysis of residues that are conserved only in exocytic Rab GTPases reveals three residues that are critical determinants of the broad specificity recognition of exocytic Rab GTPases by Mss4. One of these residues is located at the N-terminus of the switch I region near the nucleotide binding site whereas the other two flank an exposed hydrophobic triad previously implicated in effector recognition. The spatial disposition of these residues with respect to the structure of Rab3A correlates with the dimensions of the elongated Rab interaction epitope in Mss4 and supports a mode of interaction similar to that of other exchange factor-GTPase complexes. The complementarity of the corresponding interaction surfaces suggests a hypothetical structural model for the complex between Mss4 and Rab GTPases.
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