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    Date Issued2013 (1)2009 (1)Author
    Veenstra, Timothy D. (2)
    Acharya, Jairaj K. (1)Acharya, Usha (1)Au, Wei-Chun (1)Baker, Richard E. (1)View MoreUMass Chan AffiliationDepartment of Microbiology and Physiological Systems (1)Program in Gene Function and Expression (1)Document TypeJournal Article (2)Keyword*Apoptosis (1)*Mutation (1)Animals (1)Biological Transport (1)Cell Biology (1)View MoreJournalMolecular biology of the cell (1)The Journal of cell biology (1)

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    Phosphorylation of centromeric histone H3 variant regulates chromosome segregation in S. cerevisiae

    Boeckmann, Lars; Takahashi, Yoshimitsu; Au, Wei-Chun; Mishra, Prashant K.; Choy, John S.; Dawson, Anthony R.; Szeto, May Y.; Waybright, Timothy J.; Heger, Christopher; McAndrew, Christopher; et al. (2013-06-15)
    The centromeric histone H3 variant (CenH3) is essential for chromosome segregation in eukaryotes. We have identified posttranslational modifications of S. cerevisiae CenH3, Cse4. Functional characterization of cse4 phosphorylation mutants showed growth and chromosome segregation defects when combined with kinetochore mutants okp1 and ame1. Using a phosphoserine-specific antibody we showed that the association of phosphorylated Cse4 with centromeres is increased in response to defective microtubule attachment or reduced cohesion. We determined that evolutionarily conserved Ipl1/Aurora B contributes to phosphorylation of Cse4, as levels of phosphorylated Cse4 were reduced at centromeres in ipl1 strains in vivo and in vitro assays showed phosphorylation of Cse4 by Ipl1. Consistent with these results we observed that a phosphomimetic cse4-4SD mutant suppressed the temperature sensitive growth of ipl1-2 and Ipl1 substrate mutants dam1 spc34 and ndc80 that are defective for chromosome biorientation. Furthermore, cell biology approaches using a GFP labeled chromosome showed that cse4-4SD suppressed chromosome segregation defects in dam1 spc34 strains. Based these results we propose that phosphorylation of Cse4 destabilizes defective kinetochores to promote biorientation and ensure faithful chromosome segregation. Taken together, our study provides a detailed analysis, in vivo and in vitro, of Cse4 phosphorylation and its role in promoting faithful chromosome segregation.
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    Mitochondrial degeneration and not apoptosis is the primary cause of embryonic lethality in ceramide transfer protein mutant mice

    Wang, Xin; Rao, Raghavendra Pralhada; Kosakowska-Cholody, Teresa; Masood, M. Athar; Southon, Eileen; Zhang, Helin; Berthet, Cyril; Nagashima, Kunio; Veenstra, Timothy D.; Tessarollo, Lino; et al. (2009-01-14)
    Ceramide transfer protein (CERT) functions in the transfer of ceramide from the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) to the Golgi. In this study, we show that CERT is an essential gene for mouse development and embryonic survival and, quite strikingly, is critical for mitochondrial integrity. CERT mutant embryos accumulate ceramide in the ER but also mislocalize ceramide to the mitochondria, compromising their function. Cells in mutant embryos show abnormal dilation of the ER and degenerating mitochondria. These subcellular changes manifest as heart defects and cause severely compromised cardiac function and embryonic death around embryonic day 11.5. In spite of ceramide accumulation, CERT mutant mice do not die as a result of enhanced apoptosis. Instead, cell proliferation is impaired, and expression levels of cell cycle-associated proteins are altered. Individual cells survive, perhaps because cell survival mechanisms are activated. Thus, global compromise of ER and mitochondrial integrity caused by ceramide accumulation in CERT mutant mice primarily affects organogenesis rather than causing cell death via apoptotic pathways.
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