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result(s) for
"Murphy, Maureen"
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Fatty acid transport protein 2 reprograms neutrophils in cancer
2019
Polymorphonuclear myeloid-derived suppressor cells (PMN-MDSCs) are pathologically activated neutrophils that are crucial for the regulation of immune responses in cancer. These cells contribute to the failure of cancer therapies and are associated with poor clinical outcomes. Despite recent advances in the understanding of PMN-MDSC biology, the mechanisms responsible for the pathological activation of neutrophils are not well defined, and this limits the selective targeting of these cells. Here we report that mouse and human PMN-MDSCs exclusively upregulate fatty acid transport protein 2 (FATP2). Overexpression of FATP2 in PMN-MDSCs was controlled by granulocyte–macrophage colony-stimulating factor, through the activation of the STAT5 transcription factor. Deletion of FATP2 abrogated the suppressive activity of PMN-MDSCs. The main mechanism of FATP2-mediated suppressive activity involved the uptake of arachidonic acid and the synthesis of prostaglandin E
2
. The selective pharmacological inhibition of FATP2 abrogated the activity of PMN-MDSCs and substantially delayed tumour progression. In combination with checkpoint inhibitors, FATP2 inhibition blocked tumour progression in mice. Thus, FATP2 mediates the acquisition of immunosuppressive activity by PMN-MDSCs and represents a target to inhibit the functions of PMN-MDSCs selectively and to improve the efficiency of cancer therapy.
The lipid transporter FATP2 reprograms neutrophils to polymorphonuclear myeloid-derived suppressor cells by mediating the uptake of arachidonic acid and promoting the synthesis of prostaglandin E
2
.
Journal Article
Mechanistic basis for impaired ferroptosis in cells expressing the African-centric S47 variant of p53
2019
A population-restricted single-nucleotide coding region polymorphism (SNP) at codon 47 exists in the human TP53 gene (P47S, hereafter P47 and S47). In studies aimed at identifying functional differences between these variants, we found that the African-specific S47 variant associates with an impaired response to agents that induce the oxidative stress-dependent, nonapoptotic cell death process of ferroptosis. This phenotype is manifested as a greater resistance to glutamate-induced cytotoxicity in cultured cells as well as increased carbon tetrachloride-mediated liver damage in a mouse model. The differential ferroptotic responses associate with intracellular antioxidant differences between P47 and S47 cells, including elevated abundance of the low molecular weight thiols coenzyme A (CoA) and glutathione in S47 cells. Importantly, the disparate ferroptosis phenotypes related to the P47S polymorphism are reversible. Exogenous administration of CoA provides protection against ferroptosis in cultured mouse and human cells, as well as in a mouse model. The combined data support a positive role for p53 in ferroptosis and identify CoA as a regulator of this cell death process. Together, these findings provide mechanistic insight linking redox regulation of p53 to small molecule antioxidants and stress signaling pathways. They also identify potential therapeutic approaches to redox-related pathologies.
Journal Article
Lipid bodies containing oxidatively truncated lipids block antigen cross-presentation by dendritic cells in cancer
by
Kagan, Valerian E.
,
Veglia, Filippo
,
Klein-Seetharaman, Judith
in
631/250/21/1293
,
631/67/580
,
631/67/580/1884
2017
Cross-presentation is a critical function of dendritic cells (DCs) required for induction of antitumor immune responses and success of cancer immunotherapy. It is established that tumor-associated DCs are defective in their ability to cross-present antigens. However, the mechanisms driving these defects are still unknown. We find that impaired cross-presentation in DCs is largely associated with defect in trafficking of peptide–MHC class I (pMHC) complexes to the cell surface. DCs in tumor-bearing hosts accumulate lipid bodies (LB) containing electrophilic oxidatively truncated (ox-tr) lipids. These ox-tr-LB, but not LB present in control DCs, covalently bind to chaperone heat shock protein 70. This interaction prevents the translocation of pMHC to cell surface by causing the accumulation of pMHC inside late endosomes/lysosomes. As a result, tumor-associated DCs are no longer able to stimulate adequate CD8 T cells responses. In conclusion, this study demonstrates a mechanism regulating cross-presentation in cancer and suggests potential therapeutic avenues.
Tumor-associated dendritic cells are defective in their ability to cross-present antigens, and they accumulate lipid bodies. Here the authors show that this defect is due to an impaired trafficking of peptide-MHC class I caused by the interaction of electrophilic lipids with chaperone heat shock protein 70.
Journal Article
LANA-dependent transcription-replication conflicts and R-loops at the terminal repeats (TR) correlate with KSHV episome maintenance
by
Hayden, James
,
Sobotka, Asher
,
Yoon, Leena
in
Antibodies
,
Antigens
,
Antigens, Viral - metabolism
2025
Transcription-replication conflicts frequently occur at repetitive DNA elements involved in genome maintenance functions. The KSHV terminal repeats (TR) function as the viral episome maintenance element when bound by the viral encoded nuclear antigen LANA. Here, we show that transcription-replication conflicts occur at or near LANA binding sites in the TR. We show by proximity ligation assay (PLA) that PCNA and RNAPII colocalize with LANA-nuclear bodies (LANA-NBs). Using DNA-RNA-IP (DRIP) assays with S9.6 antibody, we demonstrate that R-loops form at the TR. We find that these R-loops are also associated with histone H3pS10 a marker for R-loops associated with transcription-replication conflicts. Inhibitors of RNAPII eliminated R-loop formation at TR and reduced active histone modifications H3K4me3 and H3K27ac, with a corresponding increase in heterochromatic H3K9me3. RNAPII inhibitors also disrupted LANA binding to the TR, but did not eliminate LANA-NBs. We show that LANA can induce R-loops on a plasmid containing 8, but not 2 copies of the TR, and that the N-terminal histone binding function of LANA is required for this activity. RNaseH treatment eliminated R-loops and reduced LANA binding to the TR. Taken together, our study indicates that LANA induces histone modifications associated with RNA and DNA polymerase activity and the formation of R-loops that correlate with episome maintenance function. These findings provide new insights into mechanisms of KSHV episome maintenance during latency and more generally for genome maintenance of repetitive DNA.
Journal Article
Shifting the paradigms for tumor suppression: lessons from the p53 field
by
Barnoud, Thibaut
,
Indeglia, Alexandra
,
Murphy, Maureen E.
in
631/67/1059
,
631/67/68
,
631/67/70
2021
The
TP53
gene continues to hold distinction as the most frequently mutated gene in cancer. Since its discovery in 1979, hundreds of research groups have devoted their efforts toward understanding why this gene is so frequently selected against by tumors, with the hopes of harnessing this information toward the improved therapy of cancer. The result is that this protein has been meticulously analyzed in tumor and normal cells, resulting in over 100,000 publications, with an average of 5000 papers published on p53 every year for the past decade. The journey toward understanding p53 function has been anything but straightforward; in fact, the field is notable for the numerous times that established paradigms not only have been shifted, but in fact have been shattered or reversed. In this review, we will discuss the manuscripts, or series of manuscripts, that have most radically changed our thinking about how this tumor suppressor functions, and we will delve into the emerging challenges for the future in this important area of research. It is hoped that this review will serve as a useful historical reference for those interested in p53, and a useful lesson on the need to be flexible in the face of established paradigms.
Journal Article
Functional interplay among thiol-based redox signaling, metabolism, and ferroptosis unveiled by a genetic variant of TP53
by
Leu, Julia I-Ju
,
George, Donna L.
,
Murphy, Maureen E.
in
Activating Transcription Factor 4 - metabolism
,
Animals
,
Antioxidants
2020
The p53 tumor suppressor protein is a transcription factor and master stress response mediator, and it is subject to reduction-oxidation (redox)-dependent regulation. The P47S variant of TP53, which exists primarily in African-descent populations, associates with an elevated abundance of low molecular weight (LMW) thiols, including glutathione (GSH) and coenzyme A (CoA). Here we show that S47 and P47 cells exhibit distinct metabolic profiles, controlled by their different redox states and expression of Activating Transcription Factor-4 (ATF4). We find that S47 cells exhibit decreased catabolic glycolysis but increased use of the pentose phosphate pathway (PPP), and an enhanced abundance of the antioxidant, NADPH. We identify ATF4 as differentially expressed in P47 and S47 cells and show that ATF4 can reverse the redox status and rescue metabolism of S47 cells, as well as increase sensitivity to ferroptosis. This adaptive metabolic switch is rapid, reversible, and accompanied by thiol-mediated changes in the structures and activities of key glycolytic signaling pathway proteins, including GAPDH and G6PD. The results presented here unveil the important functional interplay among pathways regulating thiol-redox status, metabolic adaptation, and cellular responses to oxidative stress.
Journal Article
Crystal Structure of the Stress-Inducible Human Heat Shock Protein 70 Substrate-Binding Domain in Complex with Peptide Substrate
by
Leu, Julia I-Ju
,
George, Donna L.
,
Murphy, Maureen E.
in
Adenosine Triphosphatases - chemistry
,
Bacterial Proteins - chemistry
,
Binding
2014
The HSP70 family of molecular chaperones function to maintain protein quality control and homeostasis. The major stress-induced form, HSP70 (also called HSP72 or HSPA1A) is considered an important anti-cancer drug target because it is constitutively overexpressed in a number of human cancers and promotes cancer cell survival. All HSP70 family members contain two functional domains: an N-terminal nucleotide binding domain (NBD) and a C-terminal protein substrate-binding domain (SBD); the latter is subdivided into SBDα and SBDβ subdomains. The NBD and SBD structures of the bacterial ortholog, DnaK, have been characterized, but only the isolated NBD and SBDα segments of eukaryotic HSP70 proteins have been determined. Here we report the crystal structure of the substrate-bound human HSP70-SBD to 2 angstrom resolution. The overall fold of this SBD is similar to the corresponding domain in the substrate-bound DnaK structures, confirming a similar overall architecture of the orthologous bacterial and human HSP70 proteins. However, conformational differences are observed in the peptide-HSP70-SBD complex, particularly in the loop L(α, β) that bridges SBDα to SBDβ, and the loop L(L,1) that connects the SBD and NBD. The interaction between the SBDα and SBDβ subdomains and the mode of substrate recognition is also different between DnaK and HSP70. This suggests that differences may exist in how different HSP70 proteins recognize their respective substrates. The high-resolution structure of the substrate-bound-HSP70-SBD complex provides a molecular platform for the rational design of small molecule compounds that preferentially target this C-terminal domain, in order to modulate human HSP70 function.
Journal Article
Dion Boucicault: showman and Shaughraun
2020
Dion Boucicault’s three Irish plays: The Colleen Bawn (1860), Arrah-na-Pogue (1864) and The Shaughraun (1874), while not critically significant, owe their perennial popularity to their appeal to Irish romantic nationalism and to their memorable character types. While Boucicault’s character Myles Murphy or Myles na gCopaleen (Myles of the Ponies), an example of his native Irish hero, was the first of a series of rogue heroes that John Millington Synge developed in his character of Christy Mahon, Boucicault also owes the character of Myles to American native heroes like Sam Patch, Davy Crockett and Mose the Bowery B’hoy. While the plays are not great drama, they are good theatre and a less self-conscious national theatre has found room for both Boucicault and Synge.
Journal Article
No safe place: Prevalence and correlates of violence against conflict-affected women and girls in South Sudan
by
Murphy, Maureen
,
Stennes, Julianne
,
Blackwell, Alexandra
in
Aggression
,
Assaults
,
Biology and Life Sciences
2020
Conflict and humanitarian crises increase the risk of both intimate partner violence and non-partner sexual violence against women and girls. We measured the prevalence and risk factors of different forms of violence against women and girls in South Sudan, which has suffered decades of conflict, most recently in 2013. A population-based survey was conducted among women aged 15-64 in three conflict-affected sites in South Sudan: Juba, Rumbek, and the Protection of Civilian Sites (PoCs) in Juba between 2015 and 2016. A total of 2,244 women between the ages of 15-64 were interviewed. Fifty percent (in the Juba PoCs) to 65% (in Juba and Rumbek) of all female respondents experienced either physical or sexual violence from a partner or non-partner in the course of their lifetimes. Approximately 35% of respondents have experienced rape, attempted rape or other forms of sexual violence by a non-partner during their lifetime. For ever-partnered women, lifetime prevalence of physical and/or sexual partner violence ranged between 54% in the Juba PoCs and 73% in Rumbek. Restrictive marital practices and gender norms, and experiences of conflict were major drivers of both partner and non-partner violence. Women and girls in South Sudan suffer among the highest levels of physical and sexual violence in the world. Although the prevalence of sexual assault by non-partners is four times the global average, women are still at greatest risk of physical and sexual assault from intimate partners. Conflict-related and intimate partner violence reinforce each other and are upheld by restrictive gender norms and marital practices. Expansion of comprehensive services, including health and psycho-social support for survivors is urgently needed. Moreover, policies and laws to prevent violence against women and provide survivors with access to justice should be given high priority within the ongoing peacebuilding process in South Sudan.
Journal Article