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    Date Issued2018 (1)2014 (2)2013 (1)Author
    Mana-Capelli, Sebastian (4)
    McCollum, Dannel (4)Amcheslavsky, Alla (1)Chen, Chun-Ti (1)Chen, Xiaochu (1)View MoreUMass Chan AffiliationDepartment of Biochemistry and Molecular Pharmacology (3)Program in Cell Dynamics (2)Department of Cancer Biology (1)Department of Microbiology and Physiological Systems (1)Program in Molecular Medicine (1)Document TypeJournal Article (3)Accepted Manuscript (1)KeywordCell Biology (4)Amino Acids, Peptides, and Proteins (2)Biochemistry (2)Cells (2)Actin Cytoskeleton; Actins; Adaptor Proteins, Signal Transducing; Binding Sites; Carrier Proteins; Cell Line; HEK293 Cells; HeLa Cells; Humans; Intercellular Signaling Peptides and Proteins; Membrane Proteins; Phosphoproteins; Phosphorylation; Protein Binding; Protein Structure, Tertiary; Protein-Serine-Threonine Kinases; RNA Interference; RNA, Small Interfering; Signal Transduction; Tumor Suppressor Proteins (1)View MoreJournalCurrent biology : CB (1)Developmental cell (1)Molecular biology of the cell (1)The Journal of biological chemistry (1)

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    Angiomotins stimulate LATS kinase autophosphorylation and act as scaffolds that promote Hippo signaling

    Mana-Capelli, Sebastian; McCollum, Dannel (2018-09-28)
    The Hippo pathway controls cell proliferation, differentiation, and survival by regulating the YAP transcriptional coactivator in response to various stimuli, including the mechanical environment. The major YAP regulators are the LATS1/2 kinases, which phosphorylate and inhibit YAP. LATS1/2 are activated by phosphorylation on a hydrophobic motif (HM) outside the kinase domain by MST1/2 and other kinases. Phosphorylation of the HM motif then triggers autophosphorylation of the kinase in the activation loop (AL) to fully activate the kinase, a process facilitated by MOB1. The angiomotin family of proteins (AMOT, AMOTL1, and AMOTL2) bind LATS1/2 and promote its kinase activity and YAP phosphorylation through an unknown mechanism. Here, we show that angiomotins increase Hippo signaling through multiple mechanisms. We found that by binding LATS1/2, SAV1, and YAP, angiomotins function as a scaffold that connects LATS1/2 to both its activator SAV1-MST1 and its target YAP. Deletion of all three angiomotins reduced the association of LATS1 with SAV1-MST1 and decreased MST1/2-mediated LATS1/2-HM phosphorylation. Angiomotin deletion also reduced LATS1/2's ability to associate with and phosphorylate YAP. In addition, we found that angiomotins have an unexpected function along with MOB1 to promote autophosphorylation of LATS1/2 on the AL motif independent of HM phosphorylation. These results indicate that angiomotins enhance Hippo signaling by stimulating LATS1/2 autophosphorylation and by connecting LATS1/2 with both its activator SAV1-MST1/2 and its substrate YAP.
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    The conserved misshapen-warts-Yorkie pathway acts in enteroblasts to regulate intestinal stem cells in Drosophila

    Li, Qi; Mana-Capelli, Sebastian; Roth Flach, Rachel J.; Danai, Laura V.; Amcheslavsky, Alla; Nie, Yingchao; Kaneko, Satoshi; Yao, Xiaohao; Chen, Xiaochu; Cotton, Jennifer L.; et al. (2014-11-10)
    Similar to the mammalian intestine, the Drosophila adult midgut has resident stem cells that support growth and regeneration. How the niche regulates intestinal stem cell activity in both mammals and flies is not well understood. Here, we show that the conserved germinal center protein kinase Misshapen restricts intestinal stem cell division by repressing the expression of the JAK-STAT pathway ligand Upd3 in differentiating enteroblasts. Misshapen, a distant relative to the prototypic Warts activating kinase Hippo, interacts with and activates Warts to negatively regulate the activity of Yorkie and the expression of Upd3. The mammalian Misshapen homolog MAP4K4 similarly interacts with LATS (Warts homolog) and promotes inhibition of YAP (Yorkie homolog). Together, this work reveals that the Misshapen-Warts-Yorkie pathway acts in enteroblasts to control niche signaling to intestinal stem cells. These findings also provide a model in which to study requirements for MAP4K4-related kinases in MST1/2-independent regulation of LATS and YAP.
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    Angiomotins link F-actin architecture to Hippo pathway signaling

    Mana-Capelli, Sebastian; Paramasivam, Murugan; Dutta, Shubham; McCollum, Dannel (2014-05-01)
    The Hippo pathway regulates the transcriptional coactivator YAP to control cell proliferation, organ size, and stem cell maintenance. Multiple factors, such as substrate stiffness, cell density, and G protein-coupled receptor signaling, regulate YAP through their effects on the F-actin cytoskeleton, although the mechanism is not known. Here we show that angiomotin proteins (AMOT130, AMOTL1, and AMOTL2) connect F-actin architecture to YAP regulation. First, we show that angiomotins are required to relocalize YAP to the cytoplasm in response to various manipulations that perturb the actin cytoskeleton. Second, angiomotins associate with F-actin through a conserved F-actin-binding domain, and mutants defective for F-actin binding show enhanced ability to retain YAP in the cytoplasm. Third, F-actin and YAP compete for binding to AMOT130, explaining how F-actin inhibits AMOT130-mediated cytoplasmic retention of YAP. Furthermore, we find that LATS can synergize with F-actin perturbations by phosphorylating free AMOT130 to keep it from associating with F-actin. Together these results uncover a mechanism for how F-actin levels modulate YAP localization, allowing cells to make developmental and proliferative decisions based on diverse inputs that regulate actin architecture.
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    Identification of SIN pathway targets reveals mechanisms of crosstalk between NDR kinase pathways

    Gupta, Sneha; Mana-Capelli, Sebastian; McLean, Janel R.; Chen, Chun-Ti; Ray, Samriddha; Gould, Kathleen L.; McCollum, Dannel (2013-02-18)
    The septum initiation network (SIN) regulates multiple functions during late mitosis to ensure successful completion of cytokinesis in Schizosaccharomyces pombe. One mechanism by which the SIN promotes cytokinesis is by inhibiting a competing polarity pathway called the MOR, which is required for initiation of polarized growth following completion of cytokinesis. Mutual antagonism between the two NDR kinase pathways, SIN and MOR, is required to coordinate cytoskeletal rearrangements during the mitosis-interphase transition. To determine how the SIN regulates the MOR pathway, we developed a proteomics approach that allowed us to identify multiple substrates of the SIN effector kinase Sid2, including the MOR pathway components Nak1 kinase and an associated protein, Sog2. We show that Sid2 phosphorylation of Nak1 causes removal of Nak1 from the spindle pole bodies, which may both relieve Nak1 inhibition of the SIN and block MOR signaling by preventing interaction of Nak1 with the scaffold protein Mor2. Because the SIN and MOR are conserved in mammalian cells (Hippo and Ndr1/2 pathways, respectively), this work may provide important insight into how the activities of these essential pathways are coordinated.
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