Publications by authors named "Deanna G Adams"

Estrogen promotes growth of estrogen receptor-positive (ER+) breast tumors. However, epidemiological studies examining the prognostic characteristics of breast cancer in postmenopausal women receiving hormone replacement therapy reveal a significant decrease in tumor dissemination, suggesting that estrogen has potential protective effects against cancer cell invasion. Here, we show that estrogen suppresses invasion of ER+ breast cancer cells by increasing transcription of the Ena/VASP protein, EVL, which promotes the generation of suppressive cortical actin bundles that inhibit motility dynamics, and is crucial for the ER-mediated suppression of invasion in vitro and in vivo.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

High-throughput cellular profiling has successfully stimulated early drug discovery pipelines by facilitating targeted as well as opportunistic lead finding, hit annotation and SAR analysis. While automation-friendly universal assay formats exist to address most established drug target classes like GPCRs, NHRs, ion channels or Tyr-kinases, no such cellular assay technology is currently enabling an equally broad and rapid interrogation of the Ser/Thr-kinase space. Here we present the foundation of an emerging cellular Ser/Thr-kinase platform that involves a) coexpression of targeted kinases with promiscuous peptide substrates and b) quantification of intracellular substrate phosphorylation by homogeneous TR-FRET.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Protein serine/threonine phosphatase 2A (PP2A) is a major cellular enzyme implicated in the control of a wide variety of biological processes. The predominant form of PP2A in cells is a heterotrimeric holoenzyme (ABC) consisting of a scaffolding (A) subunit, a regulatory (B) subunit, and a catalytic (C) subunit. Although numerous signal transduction pathways are known to be regulated by PP2A, the identity of the PP2A holoenzymes controlling each pathway remains unclear.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Protein serine/threonine phosphatase 2A (PP2A) is a critical regulator of numerous cellular signaling processes and a potential target for reactive electrophiles that dysregulate phosphorylation-dependent signal transduction cascades. The predominant cellular form of PP2A is a heterotrimeric holoenzyme consisting of a structural A, a variable B, and a catalytic C subunit. We studied the modification of two purified PP2A holoenzyme complexes (ABalpha(FLAG)C and ABdelta(FLAG)C) with two different thiol-reactive electrophiles, biotinyl-iodoacetamidyl-3,6-dioxaoctanediamine (PEO-IAB) and the biotinamido-4-[4'-(maleimidomethyl)cyclohexanecarboxamido]butane (BMCC).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

MAPK/ERK kinase kinase 3 (MEKK3) is a mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase kinase (MAP3K) that functions upstream of the MAP kinases and IkappaB kinase. Phosphorylation is believed to be a critical component for MEKK3-dependent signal transduction, but little is known about the phosphorylation sites of this MAP3K. To address this question, point mutations were introduced in the activation loop (T-loop), substituting alanine for serine or threonine, and the mutants were transfected into HEK293 Epstein-Barr virus nuclear antigen cells.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Protein serine/threonine phosphatase 2A (PP2A) regulates a wide variety of cellular signal transduction pathways. The predominant form of PP2A in cells is a heterotrimeric holoenzyme consisting of a scaffolding (A) subunit, a regulatory (B) subunit, and a catalytic (C) subunit. Although PP2A is known to regulate Raf1-MEK1/2-ERK1/2 signaling at multiple steps in this pathway, the specific PP2A holoenzymes involved remain unclear.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A key regulator of many kinase cascades, heterotrimeric protein serine/threonine phosphatase 2A (PP2A), is composed of catalytic (C), scaffold (A), and variable regulatory subunits (B, B', B'' gene families). In neuronal PC12 cells, PP2A acts predominantly as a gatekeeper of extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) activity, as shown by inducible RNA interference of the Aalpha scaffolding subunit and PP2A inhibition by okadaic acid. Although okadaic acid potentiates Akt/protein kinase B and ERK phosphorylation in response to epidermal, basic fibroblast, or nerve growth factor, silencing of Aalpha paradoxically has the opposite effect.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Much effort has focused on the identification of MAPK cascades that are activated by the MEKK family of protein kinases. However, direct phosphorylation and regulation of the MEKK proteins has not been shown. To address this question, we have expressed recombinant (His)6FLAG.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Associated with the metastatic progression of epithelial tumors is the dynamic regulation of cadherins. Whereas E-cadherin is expressed in most epithelium and carcinomas, recent studies suggest that the up-regulation of other cadherin subtypes in carcinomas, such as N-cadherin, may function in cancer progression. We demonstrate that a signal transduction cascade links the N-cadherin.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF