School of Mathematics and Statistics - Research Publications

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    An aspartyl protease defines a novel pathway for export of Toxoplasma proteins into the host cell
    Coffey, MJ ; Sleebs, BE ; Uboldi, AD ; Garnham, A ; Franco, M ; Marino, ND ; Panas, MW ; Ferguson, DJP ; Enciso, M ; O'Neill, MT ; Lopaticki, S ; Stewart, RJ ; Dewson, G ; Smyth, GK ; Smith, BJ ; Masters, SL ; Boothroyd, JC ; Boddey, JA ; Tonkin, CJ (ELIFE SCIENCES PUBLICATIONS LTD, 2015-11-18)
    Infection by Toxoplasma gondii leads to massive changes to the host cell. Here, we identify a novel host cell effector export pathway that requires the Golgi-resident aspartyl protease 5 (ASP5). We demonstrate that ASP5 cleaves a highly constrained amino acid motif that has similarity to the PEXEL-motif of Plasmodium parasites. We show that ASP5 matures substrates at both the N- and C-terminal ends of proteins and also controls trafficking of effectors without this motif. Furthermore, ASP5 controls establishment of the nanotubular network and is required for the efficient recruitment of host mitochondria to the vacuole. Assessment of host gene expression reveals that the ASP5-dependent pathway influences thousands of the transcriptional changes that Toxoplasma imparts on its host cell. All these changes result in attenuation of virulence of Δasp5 tachyzoites in vivo. This work characterizes the first identified machinery required for export of Toxoplasma effectors into the infected host cell.
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    Genome-wide analysis reveals no evidence of trans chromosomal regulation of mammalian immune development
    Johanson, TM ; Coughlan, HD ; Lun, ATL ; Bediaga, NG ; Naselli, G ; Garnham, AL ; Harrison, LC ; Smyth, GK ; Allan, RS ; Barsh, GS (PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE, 2018-06)
    It has been proposed that interactions between mammalian chromosomes, or transchromosomal interactions (also known as kissing chromosomes), regulate gene expression and cell fate determination. Here we aimed to identify novel transchromosomal interactions in immune cells by high-resolution genome-wide chromosome conformation capture. Although we readily identified stable interactions in cis, and also between centromeres and telomeres on different chromosomes, surprisingly we identified no gene regulatory transchromosomal interactions in either mouse or human cells, including previously described interactions. We suggest that advances in the chromosome conformation capture technique and the unbiased nature of this approach allow more reliable capture of interactions between chromosomes than previous methods. Overall our findings suggest that stable transchromosomal interactions that regulate gene expression are not present in mammalian immune cells and that lineage identity is governed by cis, not trans chromosomal interactions.
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    Acute myeloid leukemia requires Hhex to enable PRC2-mediated epigenetic repression of Cdkn2a
    Shields, BJ ; Jackson, JT ; Metcalf, D ; Shi, W ; Huang, Q ; Garnham, AL ; Glaser, SP ; Beck, D ; Pimanda, JE ; Bogue, CW ; Smyth, GK ; Alexander, WS ; McCormack, MP (COLD SPRING HARBOR LAB PRESS, PUBLICATIONS DEPT, 2016-01-01)
    Unlike clustered HOX genes, the role of nonclustered homeobox gene family members in hematopoiesis and leukemogenesis has not been extensively studied. Here we found that the hematopoietically expressed homeobox gene Hhex is overexpressed in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and is essential for the initiation and propagation of MLL-ENL-induced AML but dispensable for normal myelopoiesis, indicating a specific requirement for Hhex for leukemic growth. Loss of Hhex leads to expression of the Cdkn2a-encoded tumor suppressors p16(INK4a) and p19(ARF), which are required for growth arrest and myeloid differentiation following Hhex deletion. Mechanistically, we show that Hhex binds to the Cdkn2a locus and directly interacts with the Polycomb-repressive complex 2 (PRC2) to enable H3K27me3-mediated epigenetic repression. Thus, Hhex is a potential therapeutic target that is specifically required for AML stem cells to repress tumor suppressor pathways and enable continued self-renewal.