Publications by authors named "Triana Amen"

Bacteria and archaea deploy diverse, sophisticated defence systems to counter virus infection, yet many immunity mechanisms remain poorly understood. Here, we characterise the Kiwa defence system as a membrane-associated supercomplex that senses changes in the membrane induced by phage infection and plasmid conjugation. This supercomplex, comprising KwaA tetramers bound to KwaB dimers, as its basic repeating unit, detects structural stress via KwaA, activating KwaB, which binds ejected phage DNA through its DUF4868 domain, stalling phage DNA replication forks and thus disrupting replication and late transcription.

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Peroxisomes are eukaryotic organelles that are essential for multiple metabolic pathways, including fatty acid oxidation, degradation of amino acids, and biosynthesis of ether lipids. Consequently, peroxisome dysfunction leads to pediatric-onset neurodegenerative conditions, including Peroxisome Biogenesis Disorders (PBD). Due to the dynamic, tissue-specific, and context-dependent nature of their biogenesis and function, live cell imaging of peroxisomes is essential for studying peroxisome regulation, as well as for the diagnosis of PBD-linked abnormalities.

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To promote infections, pathogens exploit host cell machineries such as structural elements of the plasma membrane. Studying these interactions and identifying molecular players are ideal for gaining insights into the fundamental biology of the host cell. Here, we used the anthrax toxin to screen a library of 1,500 regulatory, cell-surface, and membrane trafficking genes for their involvement in the intoxication process.

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Stress granules (SGs) are ribonucleoprotein functional condensates that form under stress conditions in all eukaryotic cells. Although their stress-survival function is far from clear, SGs have been implicated in the regulation of many vital cellular pathways. Consequently, SG dysfunction is thought to be a mechanistic point of origin for many neurodegenerative disorders, including amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS).

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The formation of stress granules (SGs) is an essential aspect of the cellular response to many kinds of stress, but its adaptive role is far from clear. SG dysfunction is implicated in aging-onset neurodegenerative diseases, prompting interest in their physiological function. Here, we report that during starvation stress, SGs interact with mitochondria and regulate metabolic remodeling.

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Metabolic regulation is a necessary component of all stress response pathways, because all different mechanisms of stress-adaptation place high-energy demands on the cell. Mechanisms that integrate diverse stress response pathways with their metabolic components are therefore of great interest, but few are known. We show that stress granule (SG) formation, a common adaptive response to a variety of stresses, is reciprocally regulated by the pathways inducing lipid droplet accumulation.

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Article Synopsis
  • - Stress granules (SGs) are cellular structures that help manage stalled messenger RNAs and signaling factors during stress, playing a role in coordinating cell growth.
  • - Hsp90, a molecular chaperone, is essential for the dissolution of SGs by stabilizing the kinase DYRK3; when Hsp90 is inhibited, DYRK3 becomes inactive and either enters SGs or gets degraded.
  • - By keeping DYRK3 active, Hsp90 facilitates the disassembly of SGs, which helps restore mTORC1 signaling and protein translation, linking stress response to cell growth.
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Photoconversion enables real-time labeling of protein sub-populations inside living cells, which can then be tracked with submicrometer resolution. Here, we detail the protocol of comparing protein dynamics inside membraneless organelles in live HEK293T cells using a CRISPR-Cas9 PABPC1-Dendra2 marker of stress granules. Measuring internal dynamics of membraneless organelles provides insight into their functional state, physical properties, and composition.

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Vimentin is one of the first cytoplasmic intermediate filaments to be expressed in mammalian cells during embryogenesis, but its role in cellular fitness has long been a mystery. Vimentin is acknowledged to play a role in cell stiffness, cell motility, and cytoplasmic organization, yet it is widely considered to be dispensable for cellular function and organismal development. Here, we show that Vimentin plays a role in cellular stress response in differentiating cells, by recruiting aggregates, stress granules, and RNA-binding proteins, directing their elimination and asymmetric partitioning.

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Stress Granule formation has been linked to the resistance of some cancer cells to chemotherapeutic intervention. A number of studies have proposed that certain anti-tumor compounds promote cancer cell survival by inducing Stress Granule formation, leading to increased cellular fitness and apoptosis avoidance. Here we show that a potent fatty acid synthase inhibitor, fasnall, known for its anti-tumor capabilities, triggers the formation of atypical Stress Granules, independently of fatty acid synthase inhibition, characterized by high internal mobility and rapid turnover.

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As the physical barrier between the cell and the outside environment, the plasma membrane is well-positioned to be the first responder to stress. The membrane is also highly vulnerable to many types of perturbation, including heat, force, osmotic pressure, lipid shortage, and starvation. To determine whether the structural changes in the plasma membrane of brought about by nutrient stress can be communicated to regulatory networks within the cell, we identified proteins that interact with stress granules (SGs), subcellular structures composed of proteins, and nontranslated RNAs that form when cells are stressed.

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We present a set of vectors containing integrative modules for efficient genome integration into the commonly used selection marker loci of the yeast . A fragment for genome integration is generated via PCR with a unique set of short primers and integrated into , , , and loci. The desired level of expression can be achieved by using constitutive (, ), inducible (, ), and daughter-specific () promoters available in the modules.

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Age can be reset during mitosis in both yeast and stem cells to generate a young daughter cell from an aged and deteriorated one. This phenomenon requires asymmetry-generating genes (AGGs) that govern the asymmetrical inheritance of aggregated proteins. Using a genome-wide imaging screen to identify AGGs in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, we discovered a previously unknown role for endocytosis, vacuole fusion, and the myosin-dependent adaptor protein Vac17 in asymmetrical inheritance of misfolded proteins.

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Bacteria display an array of contact-dependent interaction systems that have evolved to facilitate direct cell-to-cell communication. We have previously identified a mode of bacterial communication mediated by nanotubes bridging neighboring cells. Here, we elucidate nanotube architecture, dynamics, and molecular components.

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Cells are often exposed to physical or chemical stresses that can damage the structures of essential biomolecules. Stress-induced cellular damage can become deleterious if not managed appropriately. Rapid and adaptive responses to stresses are therefore crucial for cell survival.

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The effect of yeast red pigment on amyloid-β (Aβ) aggregation and fibril growth was studied in yeasts, fruit flies and in vitro. Yeast strains accumulating red pigment (red strains) contained less amyloid and had better survival rates compared to isogenic strains without red pigment accumulation (white strains). Confocal and fluorescent microscopy was used to visualise fluorescent Aβ-GFP aggregates.

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The human von Hippel-Lindau (VHL) tumor suppressor is a marginally stable protein previously used as a model substrate of eukaryotic refolding and degradation pathways. When expressed in the absence of its cofactors, VHL cannot fold and is quickly degraded by the quality control machinery of the cell. We combined computational methods with in vivo experiments to examine the basis of the misfolding propensity of VHL.

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Exposing cells to folding stress causes a subset of their proteins to misfold and accumulate in inclusion bodies (IBs). IB formation and clearance are both active processes, but little is known about their mechanism. To shed light on this issue, we performed a screen with over 4,000 fluorescently tagged yeast proteins for co-localization with a model misfolded protein that marks IBs during folding stress.

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Neurodegenerative diseases and other proteinopathies constitute a class of several dozen illnesses etiologically linked to pathological protein misfolding and aggregation. Because of this strong association with disease pathology, cell death, and aging, accumulation of proteins in aggregates or aggregation-associated structures (inclusions) has come to be regarded by many as a deleterious process, to be avoided if possible. Recent work has led us to see inclusion structures and disordered aggregate-like protein mixtures (which we call dynamic droplets) in a new light: not necessarily as a result of a pathological breakdown of cellular order, but as an elaborate cellular architecture regulating function and stress response.

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Aging is associated with the accumulation of several types of damage: in particular, damage to the proteome. Recent work points to a conserved replicative rejuvenation mechanism that works by preventing the inheritance of damaged and misfolded proteins by specific cells during division. Asymmetric inheritance of misfolded and aggregated proteins has been shown in bacteria and yeast, but relatively little evidence exists for a similar mechanism in mammalian cells.

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Alpha-synuclein (aSyn) is the main component of proteinaceous inclusions known as Lewy bodies (LBs), the typical pathological hallmark of Parkinson's disease (PD) and other synucleinopathies. Although aSyn is phosphorylated at low levels under physiological conditions, it is estimated that ∼ 90% of aSyn in LBs is phosphorylated at S129 (pS129). Nevertheless, the significance of pS129 in the biology of aSyn and in PD pathogenesis is still controversial.

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