Publications by authors named "Emily D Egan"

Article Synopsis
  • Mammalian Notch signaling is initiated when Delta or Jagged proteins bind to the Notch receptor, leading to the release of the Notch intracellular domain (NICD) that influences gene expression in the nucleus.
  • Researchers used fluorescent tagging to observe the interactions between Notch and Delta in real-time as they interacted between sender and receiver cells after contact.
  • The study revealed that Notch and Delta formed synapses quickly, with a peak NICD accumulation in the nucleus of the receiver cell after about 45 minutes, highlighting the precise timing and sequence of events in Notch signaling.
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Article Synopsis
  • Notch signaling in mammals is activated when Delta or Jagged proteins bind to Notch, leading to the release of the Notch intracellular domain (NICD) which then regulates gene expression in the nucleus.
  • Researchers fluorescently tagged Notch and Delta to study their interactions, finding that both proteins rapidly joined together at cell contact sites, forming synapses that peaked at a 1:1 ratio.
  • The study revealed that the formation of these synapses occurs before NICD enters the nucleus, with NICD levels peaking around 45 minutes post-contact, highlighting a precise timing relationship between Notch-Delta interactions and NICD production.
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Article Synopsis
  • Notch signaling is crucial for cell fate decisions, involving the cleavage of the Notch receptor to release its active intracellular domain (NICD) that promotes gene transcription in the nucleus.
  • The process begins when a ligand binds to Notch, triggering its cleavage by proteases ADAM10 and γ-secretase, leading to NICD's translocation to the nucleus.
  • Using advanced mass spectrometry, researchers mapped the timing and location of Notch's cleavage and movement, revealing significant nuclear complex formation and enzymatic recruitment within 45 minutes after γ-secretase inhibition removal, highlighting potential targets for influencing Notch signaling.
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The endopeptidase ADAM10 is a critical catalyst for the regulated proteolysis of key drivers of mammalian development, physiology, and non-amyloidogenic cleavage of APP as the primary α-secretase. ADAM10 function requires the formation of a complex with a C8-tetraspanin protein, but how tetraspanin binding enables positioning of the enzyme active site for membrane-proximal cleavage remains unknown. We present here a cryo-EM structure of a vFab-ADAM10-Tspan15 complex, which shows that Tspan15 binding relieves ADAM10 autoinhibition and acts as a molecular measuring stick to position the enzyme active site about 20 Å from the plasma membrane for membrane-proximal substrate cleavage.

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The Notch pathway regulates cell fate decisions and is an emerging target for regenerative and cancer therapies. Recombinant Notch ligands are attractive candidates for modulating Notch signaling; however, their intrinsically low receptor-binding affinity restricts their utility in biomedical applications. To overcome this limitation, we evolved variants of the ligand Delta-like 4 with enhanced affinity and cross-reactivity.

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Mastermind proteins are required for transcription of Notch target genes, yet the molecular basis for mastermind function remains incompletely understood. Previous work has shown that Notch can induce transcriptional responses by binding to promoters but more often by binding to enhancers, with and as representative mammalian examples of promoter and enhancer responsiveness, respectively. Here, we show that mastermind dependence of the Notch response at these loci is differentially encoded in Jurkat T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL) cells.

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Protein O-fucosyltransferase-1 (POFUT1), which transfers fucose residues to acceptor sites on serine and threonine residues of epidermal growth factor-like repeats of recipient proteins, is essential for Notch signal transduction in mammals. Here, we examine the consequences of POFUT1 loss on the oncogenic signaling associated with certain leukemia-associated mutations of human Notch1, report the structures of human POFUT1 in free and GDP-fucose bound states, and assess the effects of Dowling-Degos mutations on human POFUT1 function. CRISPR-mediated knockout of POFUT1 in U2OS cells suppresses both normal Notch1 signaling, and the ligand-independent signaling associated with leukemogenic mutations of Notch1.

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RNA is a central component of gene-silencing pathways that regulate diverse cellular processes. In the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe, an RNA-based mechanism represses meiotic gene expression during vegetative growth. This pathway depends on the zinc finger protein Red1, which is required to degrade meiotic mRNAs as well as to target histone H3 lysine 9 (H3K9) methylation, a repressive chromatin mark, to a subset of meiotic genes.

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Telomerase adds simple-sequence repeats to the ends of linear chromosomes to counteract the loss of end sequence inherent in conventional DNA replication. Catalytic activity for repeat synthesis results from the cooperation of the telomerase reverse transcriptase protein (TERT) and the template-containing telomerase RNA (TER). TERs vary widely in sequence and structure but share a set of motifs required for TERT binding and catalytic activity.

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The integral telomerase RNA subunit templates the synthesis of telomeric repeats. The biological accumulation of human telomerase RNA (hTR) requires hTR H/ACA domain assembly with the same proteins that assemble on other human H/ACA RNAs. Despite this shared RNP composition, hTR accumulation is particularly sensitized to disruption by disease-linked H/ACA protein variants.

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The H/ACA motif of human telomerase RNA (hTR) directs specific pathways of endogenous telomerase holoenzyme assembly, function, and regulation. Similarities between hTR and other H/ACA RNAs have been established, but differences have not been explored even though unique features of hTR H/ACA RNP assembly give rise to telomerase deficiency in human disease. Here, we define hTR H/ACA RNA and RNP architecture using RNA accumulation, RNP affinity purification, and primer extension activity assays.

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