15 research outputs found

    Étude protéomique et bioinformatique du phagosome de la drosophile

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    Mémoire numérisé par la Direction des bibliothèques de l'Université de Montréal

    L'évolution du phagosome

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    La phagocytose est un processus cellulaire par lequel de larges particules sont internalisées dans une vésicule, le phagosome. Lorsque formé, le phagosome acquiert ses propriétés fonctionnelles à travers un processus complexe de maturation nommé la biogénèse du phagolysosome. Cette voie implique une série d’interactions rapides avec les organelles de l’appareil endocytaire permettant la transformation graduelle du phagosome nouvellement formé en phagolysosome à partir duquel la dégradation protéolytique s’effectue. Chez l’amibe Dictyostelium discoideum, la phagocytose est employée pour ingérer les bactéries de son environnement afin de se nourrir alors que les organismes multicellulaires utilisent la phagocytose dans un but immunitaire, où des cellules spécialisées nommées phagocytes internalisent, tuent et dégradent les pathogènes envahissant de l’organisme et constitue la base de l’immunité innée. Chez les vertébrés à mâchoire cependant, la transformation des mécanismes moléculaires du phagosome en une organelle perfectionnée pour l’apprêtement et la présentation de peptides antigéniques place cette organelle au centre de l’immunité innée et de l’immunité acquise. Malgré le rôle crucial auquel participe cette organelle dans la réponse immunitaire, il existe peu de détails sur la composition protéique et l’organisation fonctionnelles du phagosome. Afin d’approfondir notre compréhension des divers aspects qui relient l’immunité innée et l’immunité acquise, il devient essentiel d’élargir nos connaissances sur les fonctions moléculaire qui sont recrutées au phagosome. Le profilage par protéomique à haut débit de phagosomes isolés fut extrêmement utile dans la détermination de la composition moléculaire de cette organelle. Des études provenant de notre laboratoire ont révélé les premières listes protéiques identifiées à partir de phagosomes murins sans toutefois déterminer le ou les rôle(s) de ces protéines lors du processus de la phagocytose (Brunet et al, 2003; Garin et al, 2001). Au cours de la première étude de cette thèse (Stuart et al, 2007), nous avons entrepris la caractérisation fonctionnelle du protéome entier du phagosome de la drosophile en combinant diverses techniques d’analyses à haut débit (protéomique, réseaux d’intéractions protéique et ARN interférent). En utilisant cette stratégie, nous avons identifié 617 protéines phagosomales par spectrométrie de masse à partir desquelles nous avons accru cette liste en construisant des réseaux d’interactions protéine-protéine. La contribution de chaque protéine à l’internalisation de bactéries fut ensuite testée et validée par ARN interférent à haut débit et nous a amené à identifier un nouveau régulateur de la phagocytose, le complexe de l’exocyst. En appliquant ce modèle combinatoire de biologie systémique, nous démontrons la puissance et l’efficacité de cette approche dans l’étude de processus cellulaire complexe tout en créant un cadre à partir duquel il est possible d’approfondir nos connaissances sur les différents mécanismes de la phagocytose. Lors du 2e article de cette thèse (Boulais et al, 2010), nous avons entrepris la caractérisation moléculaire des étapes évolutives ayant contribué au remodelage des propriétés fonctionnelles de la phagocytose au cours de l’évolution. Pour ce faire, nous avons isolé des phagosomes à partir de trois organismes distants (l’amibe Dictyostelium discoideum, la mouche à fruit Drosophila melanogaster et la souris Mus musculus) qui utilisent la phagocytose à des fins différentes. En appliquant une approche protéomique à grande échelle pour identifier et comparer le protéome et phosphoprotéome des phagosomes de ces trois espèces, nous avons identifié un cœur protéique commun à partir duquel les fonctions immunitaires du phagosome se seraient développées. Au cours de ce développement fonctionnel, nos données indiquent que le protéome du phagosome fut largement remodelé lors de deux périodes de duplication de gènes coïncidant avec l’émergence de l’immunité innée et acquise. De plus, notre étude a aussi caractérisée en détail l’acquisition de nouvelles protéines ainsi que le remodelage significatif du phosphoprotéome du phagosome au niveau des constituants du cœur protéique ancien de cette organelle. Nous présentons donc la première étude approfondie des changements qui ont engendré la transformation d’un compartiment phagotrophe à une organelle entièrement apte pour la présentation antigénique.Phagocytosis is a cellular process by which large particulate material are internalized in a newly formed vesicule, the phagosome. Once formed, the phagosome acquires its functional properties through a complex maturation process called phagolysosome biogenesis. This pathway involves a series of rapid interactions with organelles of the endocytic apparatus, enabling the gradual transformation of newly formed phagosomes into phagolysosomes in which proteolytic degradation occurs. The amoeba Dictyostelium discoideum uses phagocytosis as a predation mechanism for feeding, whereas multicellular organisms utilize this process as an immune mechanism where specialized cells named phagocytes internalize, kill and degrade phatogens found through the host, forming the basis of innate immunity. In jawed verterbrates however, the phagosome links innate and adaptive immunity by processing and presenting antigenic peptides. Despite its crucial role in immunity, little is known about the composition and the functional organization of the phagosome. It is therefore essential to characterize in details the functional properties that are recruited to the phagosome. High-throughput proteomics analysis of isolated phagosomes has been tremendously helpful for the molecular comprehension of this organelle. Studies of our lab notably have revealed the first proteomics identification of mouse phagosomes without determining the roles of these proteins through the complex process of phagocytosis (Brunet et al, 2003; Garin et al, 2001). In the first study of this thesis (Stuart et al, 2007), we characterized the functions of the entire drosophila phagosome proteome by combining high-throughput proteomics, interactive networks and RNAi. By applying this strategy, we’ve identified 617 phagosomal proteins by mass spectrometry from which we’ve expanded this list by building the phagosome interactome. The contribution of each protein to bacterial internalization was tested and validated by RNAi and led to the identification of a new regulator of phagocytosis, the exocyst complex. In generating this 'systems-based model', we show the power of applying this approach to the study of complex cellular processes and organelles and expect that this detailed model of the phagosome will provide a new framework for studying host-pathogen interactions and innate immunity. In the second study of this thesis (Boulais et al, 2010), we characterized some of the key steps that contributed to the remodeling of phagosomes functional properties during evolution. To do so, we isolated this organelle from three distant organisms: the amoeba Dictyostelium discoideum, the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster, and mouse (Mus musculus) that use phagocytosis for different purposes. By performing and comparing proteomics and phosphoproteomics analyses of isolated phagosomes from the three species, we identified an ancient core of phagosomal proteins around which the immune function of this organelle have likely organized. Our data indicate that a larger proportion of the phagosome proteome, has been acquired through gene duplication at periods coinciding with the emergence of innate and adaptive immunity. Our study also characterizes in detail the acquisition of novel proteins and the significant remodeling of the phagosome phosphoproteome that contributed to modify the core constituents of this organelle in evolution. Our work thus provides the first thorough analysis of the changes that enabled the transformation of the phagosome from a phagotrophic compartment into an organelle fully competent for antigen presentation

    Defining the interactomes of proteins involved in cytoskeletal dynamics using high-throughput proximity-dependent biotinylation in cellulo

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    Proximity-dependent biotinylation (BioID) screens are excellent tools to capture in cellulo interactomes for a large variety of baits, including transient and weak affinity interactions, as well as localization-specific proximity components, which are much harder to detect with conventional approaches. Here, we describe the major starting steps and a detailed protocol on how to perform BioID in mammalian cells. We also describe the mass spectrometry procedure and the bioinformatics pipeline for the data analysis. For complete details on the use and execution of this profile, please refer to Bagci et al. (2020).ISSN:2666-166

    The endosomal proteome of macrophage and dendritic cells.

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    International audienceThe essential roles of the endovacuolar system in health and disease call for the development of new tools allowing a better understanding of the complex molecular machinery involved in endocytic processes. We took advantage of the floating properties of small latex beads (sLB) on a discontinuous sucrose gradient to isolate highly purified endosomes following internalization of small latex beads in J774 macrophages and bone marrow-derived dendritic cells (DC). We particularly focused on the isolation of macrophages early endosomes and late endosomes/lysosomes (LE/LYS) as well as the isolation of LE/LYS from immature and lipopolysaccharide-activated (mature) DC. We subsequently performed a comparative analysis of their respective protein contents by MS. As expected, proteins already known to localize to the early endosomes were enriched in the earliest fraction of J774 endosomes, while proteins known to accumulate later in the process, such as hydrolases, were significantly enriched in the LE/LYS preparations. We next compared the LE/LYS protein contents of immature DC and mature DC, which are known to undergo massive reorganization leading to potent immune activation. The differences between the protein contents of endocytic organelles from macrophages and DC were underlined by focusing on previously poorly characterized biochemical pathways, which could have an unexpected but important role in the endosomal functions of these highly relevant immune cell types

    Molecular characterization of the evolution of phagosomes

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    First large-scale comparative proteomics/phosphoproteomics study characterizing some of the key steps that contributed to the remodeling of phagosomes that occurred during evolution. Comparison of profiling analyses of isolated phagosomes from three distant organisms (Dictyostelium, Drosophila, and mouse) revealed a protein core that defines a potential ‘ancient' phagosome and a set of 50 proteins that emerged while adaptive immunity was already well established.Gene duplication events of mouse phagosome paralogs occurred mostly in Bilateria and Euteleostomi, coinciding with the emergence of innate and adaptive immunity, and thus, provided the functional innovations needed for the establishment of these two crucial evolutionary steps of the immune system.Phosphoproteomics of isolated phagosomes from the same three distant species indicate that the phagosome phosphoproteome has been extensively modified during evolution. Still, some phosphosites have been maintained for >1.2 billion years, and thus, highlight their particular significance in the regulation of key phagosomal functions

    Natural selection contributed to immunological differences between hunter-gatherers and agriculturalists

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    The 1M SNP genotype data are available at the European Genome–Phenome archive, www.ebi.ac.uk/ega/ (accession numbers EGAS00001000605 and EGAS00001000908).International audienceThe shift from a hunter-gatherer to an agricultural mode of subsistence is believed to have been associated with profound changes in the burden and diversity of pathogens across human populations. Yet, the extent to which the advent of agriculture affected the evolution of the human immune system remains unknown. Here we present a comparative study of variation in the transcriptional responses of peripheral blood mononuclear cells to bacterial and viral stimuli between Batwa rainforest hunter-gatherers and Bakiga agriculturalists from Uganda. We observed increased divergence between hunter-gatherers and agriculturalists in the early transcriptional response to viruses compared with that for bacterial stimuli. We demonstrate that a significant fraction of these transcriptional differences are under genetic control and we show that positive natural selection has helped to shape population differences in immune regulation. Across the set of genetic variants underlying inter-population immune-response differences, however, the signatures of positive selection were disproportionately observed in the rainforest hunter-gatherers. This result is counter to expectations on the basis of the popularized notion that shifts in pathogen exposure due to the advent of agriculture imposed radically heightened selective pressures in agriculturalist populations

    Systematic proximal mapping of the classical RAD51 paralogs unravel functionally and clinically relevant interactors for genome stability.

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    Homologous recombination (HR) plays an essential role in the maintenance of genome stability by promoting the repair of cytotoxic DNA double strand breaks (DSBs). More recently, the HR pathway has emerged as a core component of the response to replication stress, in part by protecting stalled replication forks from nucleolytic degradation. In that regard, the mammalian RAD51 paralogs (RAD51B, RAD51C, RAD51D, XRCC2, and XRCC3) have been involved in both HR-mediated DNA repair and collapsed replication fork resolution. Still, it remains largely obscure how they participate in both processes, thereby maintaining genome stability and preventing cancer development. To gain better insight into their contribution in cellulo, we mapped the proximal interactome of the classical RAD51 paralogs using the BioID approach. Aside from identifying the well-established BCDX2 and CX3 sub-complexes, the spliceosome machinery emerged as an integral component of our proximal mapping, suggesting a crosstalk between this pathway and the RAD51 paralogs. Furthermore, we noticed that factors involved RNA metabolic pathways are significantly modulated within the BioID of the classical RAD51 paralogs upon exposure to hydroxyurea (HU), pointing towards a direct contribution of RNA processing during replication stress. Importantly, several members of these pathways have prognostic potential in breast cancer (BC), where their RNA expression correlates with poorer patient outcome. Collectively, this study uncovers novel functionally relevant partners of the different RAD51 paralogs in the maintenance of genome stability that could be used as biomarkers for the prognosis of BC

    AXL confers cell migration and invasion by hijacking a PEAK1-regulated focal adhesion protein network

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    Aberrant expression of receptor tyrosine kinase AXL is linked to metastasis. AXL can be activated by its ligand GAS6 or by other kinases, but the signaling pathways conferring its metastatic activity are unknown. Here, we define the AXL-regulated phosphoproteome in breast cancer cells. We reveal that AXL stimulates the phosphorylation of a network of focal adhesion (FA) proteins, culminating in faster FA disassembly. Mechanistically, AXL phosphorylates NEDD9, leading to its binding to CRKII which in turn associates with and orchestrates the phosphorylation of the pseudo-kinase PEAK1. We find that PEAK1 is in complex with the tyrosine kinase CSK to mediate the phosphorylation of PAXILLIN. Uncoupling of PEAK1 from AXL signaling decreases metastasis in vivo, but not tumor growth. Our results uncover a contribution of AXL signaling to FA dynamics, reveal a long sought-after mechanism underlying AXL metastatic activity, and identify PEAK1 as a therapeutic target in AXL positive tumors.ISSN:2041-172

    RBP Image Database: A resource for the systematic characterization of the subcellular distribution properties of human RNA binding proteins

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    Abstract RNA binding proteins (RBPs) are central regulators of gene expression implicated in all facets of RNA metabolism. As such, they play key roles in cellular physiology and disease etiology. Since different steps of post-transcriptional gene expression tend to occur in specific regions of the cell, including nuclear or cytoplasmic locations, defining the subcellular distribution properties of RBPs is an important step in assessing their potential functions. Here, we present the RBP Image Database, a resource that details the subcellular localization features of 301 RBPs in the human HepG2 and HeLa cell lines, based on the results of systematic immuno-fluorescence studies conducted using a highly validated collection of RBP antibodies and a panel of 12 markers for specific organelles and subcellular structures. The unique features of the RBP Image Database include: (i) hosting of comprehensive representative images for each RBP-marker pair, with ∼250,000 microscopy images; (ii) a manually curated controlled vocabulary of annotation terms detailing the localization features of each factor; and (iii) a user-friendly interface allowing the rapid querying of the data by target or annotation. The RBP Image Database is freely available at https://rnabiology.ircm.qc.ca/RBPImage/.</jats:p
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