Junmin Pan

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Organization: Tsinghua University
Department: Protein Science Laboratory of the Ministry of Education, School of Life Sciences
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Co-reporter:Limei Wang, Lixiao Gu, Dan Meng, Qiong Wu, Haiteng Deng, and Junmin Pan
Journal of Proteome Research July 7, 2017 Volume 16(Issue 7) pp:2410-2410
Publication Date(Web):May 23, 2017
DOI:10.1021/acs.jproteome.6b01048
Primary cilia are assembled and disassembled during cell cycle progression. During ciliary disassembly, ciliary axonemal microtubules (MTs) are depolymerized accompanied by extensive posttranslational protein modifications of ciliary proteins including protein phosphorylation, methylation, and ubiquitination. These events are hypothesized to involve transport of effectors or regulators into cilia at the time of ciliary disassembly from the cell body. To prove this hypothesis and identify new proteins involved in ciliary disassembly, we analyzed disassembling flagella in Chlamydomonas using comparative proteomics with TMT labeling. Ninety-one proteins were found to increase more than 1.4-fold in four replicates. The proteins of the IFT machinery not only increase but also exhibit stoichiometric changes. The other proteins that increase include signaling molecules, chaperones, and proteins involved in microtubule dynamics or stability. In particular, we have identified a ciliopathy protein C21orf2, the AAA-ATPase CDC48, that is involved in segregating polypeptides from large assemblies or cellular structures, FAP203 and FAP236, which are homologous to stabilizers of axonemal microtubules. Our data demonstrate that ciliary transport of effectors or regulators is one of the mechanisms underlying ciliary disassembly. Further characterization of the proteins identified will provide new insights into our understanding of ciliary disassembly and likely ciliopathy.Keywords: Chlamydomonas; cilia and flagella; ciliary disassembly; comparative proteomics; intraflagellar transport (IFT);
Co-reporter:Junmin Pan;Bianca Naumann-Busch;Liang Wang;Michael Specht;Martin Scholz;Kerstin Trompelt;Michael Hippler
Journal of Proteome Research August 5, 2011 Volume 10(Issue 8) pp:3830-3839
Publication Date(Web):2017-2-22
DOI:10.1021/pr200428n
Cilia are disassembled prior to cell division, which is proposed to regulate proper cell cycle progression. The signaling pathways that regulate cilia disassembly are not well-understood. Recent biochemical and genetic data demonstrate that protein phosphorylation plays important roles in cilia disassembly. Here, we analyzed the phosphoproteins in the membrane/matrix fraction of flagella undergoing shortening as well as flagella from steady state cells of Chlamydomonas. The phosphopeptides were enriched by a combination of IMAC and titanium dioxide chromatography with a strategy of sequential elution from IMAC (SIMAC) and analyzed by tandem mass spectrometry. A total of 224 phosphoproteins derived from 1296 spectral counts of phosphopeptides were identified. Among the identified phosphoproteins are flagellar motility proteins such as outer dynein arm, intraflagellar transport proteins as well as signaling molecules including protein kinases, phosphatases, G proteins, and ion channels. Eighty-nine of these phosphoproteins were only detected in shortening flagella, whereas 29 were solely in flagella of steady growing cells, indicating dramatic changes of protein phosphorylation during flagellar shortening. Our data indicates that protein phosphorylation is a key event in flagellar disassembly, and paves the way for further study of flagellar assembly and disassembly controlled by protein phosphorylation.Keywords: Chlamydomonas; cilia; flagella; phosphoproteomics; protein phosphorylation;
Co-reporter:Xin Zhu;Yinwen Liang;Feng Gao
Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences 2017 Volume 74( Issue 18) pp:3425-3437
Publication Date(Web):17 April 2017
DOI:10.1007/s00018-017-2525-x
Intraflagellar transport (IFT) is required for ciliogenesis by ferrying ciliary components using IFT complexes as cargo adaptors. IFT54 is a component of the IFT-B complex and is also associated with cytoplasmic microtubules (MTs). Loss of IFT54 impairs cilia assembly as well as cytoplasmic MT dynamics. The N-terminal calponin homology (CH) domain of IFT54 interacts with tubulins/MTs and has been proposed to transport tubulin during ciliogenesis, whereas the C-terminal coiled-coil (CC) domain binds IFT20. However, the precise function of these domains in vivo is not well understood. We showed that in Chlamydomonas, loss of IFT54 completely blocks ciliogenesis but does not affect spindle formation and proper cell cycle progression, even though IFT54 interacts with mitotic MTs. Interestingly, IFT54 lacking the CH domain allows proper flagellar assembly. The CH domain is required for the association of IFT54 with the axoneme but not with mitotic MTs, and also regulates the flagellar import of IFT54 but not IFT81 and IFT46. The C-terminal CC domain is essential for IFT54 to bind IFT20, and for its recruitment to the basal body and incorporation into IFT complexes. Complete loss of IFT54 or the CC domain destabilizes IFT20. ift54 mutant cells expressing the CC domain alone rescue the stability of IFT20 and form stunted flagella with accumulation of both IFT-A component IFT43 and IFT-B component IFT46, indicating that IFT54 also functions in IFT turn-around at the flagellar tip.
Co-reporter:Yinwen Liang;Dan Meng;Bing Zhu
Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences 2016 Volume 73( Issue 9) pp:1787-1802
Publication Date(Web):2016 May
DOI:10.1007/s00018-016-2148-7
As motile organelles and sensors, cilia play pivotal roles in cell physiology, development and organ homeostasis. Ciliary defects are associated with a class of cilia-related diseases or developmental disorders, termed ciliopathies. Even though the presence of cilia is required for diverse functions, cilia can be removed through ciliary shortening or resorption that necessitates disassembly of the cilium, which occurs normally during cell cycle progression, cell differentiation and in response to cellular stress. The functional significance of ciliary resorption is highlighted in controlling the G1-S transition during cell cycle progression. Internal or external cues that trigger ciliary resorption initiate signaling cascades that regulate several downstream events including depolymerization of axonemal microtubules, dynamic changes in actin and the ciliary membrane, regulation of intraflagellar transport and posttranslational modifications of ciliary proteins. To ensure ciliary resorption, both the active disassembly of the cilium and the simultaneous inhibition of ciliary assembly must be coordinately regulated.
Co-reporter:Junmin Pan;Tamina Seeger-Nukpezah
Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences 2013 Volume 70( Issue 11) pp:1849-1874
Publication Date(Web):2013/06/01
DOI:10.1007/s00018-012-1052-z
The primary cilium protrudes from the cell surface and acts as a sensor for chemical and mechanical growth cues, with receptors for a number of growth factors (PDGFα, Hedgehog, Wnt, Notch) concentrated within the ciliary membrane. In normal tissues, the cilium assembles after cells exit mitosis and is resorbed as part of cell cycle re-entry. Although regulation of the cilium by cell cycle transitions has been appreciated for over 100 years, only recently have data emerged to indicate the cilium also exerts influence on the cell cycle. The resorption/protrusion cycle, regulated by proteins including Aurora-A, VHL, and GSK-3β, influences cell responsiveness to growth cues involving cilia-linked receptors; further, resorption liberates the ciliary basal body to differentiate into the centrosome, which performs discrete functions in S-, G2-, and M-phase. Besides these roles, the cilium provides a positional cue that regulates polarity of cell division, and thus directs cells towards fates of differentiation versus proliferation. In this review, we summarize the specific mechanisms mediating the cilia-cell cycle dialog. We then emphasize the examples of polycystic kidney disease (PKD), nephronopthisis (NPHP), and VHL-linked renal cysts as cases in which defects of ciliary function influence disease pathology, and may also condition response to treatment.
Co-reporter:Muqing Cao;Dan Meng;Liang Wang;Shuqing Bei;William J. Snell
PNAS 2013 Volume 110 (Issue 30 ) pp:12337-12342
Publication Date(Web):2013-07-23
DOI:10.1073/pnas.1302364110
Specification of organelle size is crucial for cell function, yet we know little about the molecular mechanisms that report and regulate organelle growth and steady-state dimensions. The biflagellated green alga Chlamydomonas requires continuous-length feedback to integrate the multiple events that support flagellar assembly and disassembly and at the same time maintain the sensory and motility functions of the organelle. Although several length mutants have been characterized, the requisite molecular reporter of length has not been identified. Previously, we showed that depletion of Chlamydomonas aurora-like protein kinase CALK inhibited flagellar disassembly and that a gel-shift–associated phosphorylation of CALK marked half-length flagella during flagellar assembly. Here, we show that phosphorylation of CALK on T193, a consensus phosphorylation site on the activation loop required for kinase activity, is distinct from the gel-shift–associated phosphorylation and is triggered when flagellar shortening is induced, thereby implicating CALK protein kinase activity in the shortening arm of length control. Moreover, CALK phosphorylation on T193 is dynamically related to flagellar length. It is reduced in cells with short flagella, elevated in the long flagella mutant, lf4, and dynamically tracks length during both flagellar assembly and flagellar disassembly in WT, but not in lf4. Thus, phosphorylation of CALK in its activation loop is implicated in the disassembly arm of a length feedback mechanism and is a continuous and dynamic molecular marker of flagellar length during both assembly and disassembly.
Co-reporter:Zheng Kou;Shuqing Bei;Juan Sun
Journal of Applied Phycology 2013 Volume 25( Issue 6) pp:1633-1641
Publication Date(Web):2013 December
DOI:10.1007/s10811-013-0011-x
The green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii is one of the most studied microalgae, which has the potential to be used as a model system to study lipid metabolism. Establishment of a method in this organism for rapid and simple measurement of neutral lipids is desirable. Fluorescent measurement of neural lipids by Nile Red staining has been widely used in various cell types including microalgae. However, a systematic study of Nile Red staining to measure neutral lipids in Chlamydomonas has not been reported. Here, we show that Nile Red staining is suitable for relative and absolute quantification of neutral lipids as well as for possible large-scale screening for mutants defective in lipid accumulation. We have compared and optimized the factors involved Nile Red staining including solvents, cell concentration, staining time, and Nile Red concentration. We determined that 5 % DMSO with 1 μg mL−1 Nile Red and 5–15-min time window after staining was optimal for measuring lipid content of cells within the range of 1 to 8 × 106 cells mL−1. The absolute quantification of neutral lipids could be achieved by standard addition method. In addition, we developed a protocol that could be potentially used for large-scale screening for cells with different lipid content. Thus, the work reported here provides timely needed techniques to facilitate Chlamydomonas to be used as a model organism for studying lipid metabolism for biodiesel production.
Co-reporter:Tian Piao;Minna Luo;Liang Wang;Yan Guo;De Li;Peng Li;William J. Snell
PNAS 2009 Volume 106 (Issue 12 ) pp:4713-4718
Publication Date(Web):2009-03-24
DOI:10.1073/pnas.0808671106
Cilia and flagella are dynamic organelles that are assembled and disassembled during cell differentiation, during stress, and during the cell cycle. Although intraflagellar transport (IFT) is well documented to be responsible for transport of ciliary/flagellar precursors from the cell body to the flagella, little is known about the molecular mechanisms for mobilizing the cell body-localized precursors to make them available for transport during organelle assembly or for disassembling the microtubule-based axoneme during shortening. Here, we show that Chlamydomonas kinesin-13 (CrKinesin-13), a member of the kinesin-13 family of microtubule depolymerizing kinesins best known for their roles in the cell cycle, functions in flagellar disassembly and flagellar assembly. Activation of a cell to generate new flagella induces rapid phosphorylation of CrKinesin-13, and activation of flagellar shortening induces the immediate transport of CrKinesin-13 via intraflagellar transport from the cell body into the flagella. Cells depleted of CrKinesin-13 by RNAi assemble flagella after cell division but are incapable of the rapid assembly of flagella that normally occurs after flagellar detachment. Furthermore, they are inhibited in flagellar shortening. Thus, CrKinesin-13 is dynamically regulated during flagellar assembly and disassembly in Chlamydomonas and functions in each.
Co-reporter:Muqing Cao;Yu Fu;Yan Guo
Protoplasma 2009 Volume 235( Issue 1-4) pp:107-110
Publication Date(Web):2009 March
DOI:10.1007/s00709-009-0036-9
The ease and effectiveness of colony polymerase chain reaction (PCR) has allowed rapid amplification of DNA fragments and screening of large number of colonies of interest including transformants and mutants with genetic manipulations. Here, we evaluated colony PCR in Chlamydomonas. Individual colonies were treated with 10 mM ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA) or Chelex-100 and the resulting clear cell lysate was used for PCR reaction. Either genomic DNA or plasmid DNA incorporated into the genome was equally amplified. We found that the Chelex method is superior to EDTA method in certain cases. This colony PCR technique will bypass the tedious process of isolating genomic DNA for PCR reaction and will make it possible for rapid amplification of genomic DNA fragments as well as rapid large-scale screening of transformants.
Co-reporter:Yinwen Liang, Yunong Pang, Qiong Wu, Zhangfeng Hu, ... Junmin Pan
Developmental Cell (8 September 2014) Volume 30(Issue 5) pp:585-597
Publication Date(Web):8 September 2014
DOI:10.1016/j.devcel.2014.07.019
•FLA8/KIF3B is phosphorylated by CrCDPK1 on the conserved site S663•IFT-B loading and kinesin-II/IFT ciliary entry require FLA8 dephosphorylation•FLA8 phosphorylation is needed for IFT-B unloading at the ciliary tip•Changes of the level of phosphorylated FLA8 are associated with the IFT entry rateThe assembly and maintenance of cilia depends on intraflagellar transport (IFT). Activated IFT motor kinesin-II enters the cilium with loaded IFT particles comprising IFT-A and IFT-B complexes. At the ciliary tip, kinesin-II becomes inactivated, and IFT particles are released. Moreover, the rate of IFT entry is dynamically regulated during cilium assembly. However, the regulatory mechanism of IFT entry and loading/unloading of IFT particles remains elusive. We show that the kinesin-II motor subunit FLA8, a homolog of KIF3B, is phosphorylated on the conserved S663 by a calcium-dependent kinase in Chlamydomonas. This phosphorylation disrupts the interaction between kinesin-II and IFT-B, inactivates kinesin-II and inhibits IFT entry, and is also required for IFT-B unloading at the ciliary tip. Furthermore, our data suggest that the IFT entry rate is controlled by regulation of the cellular level of phosphorylated FLA8. Therefore, FLA8 phosphorylation acts as a molecular switch to control IFT entry and turnaround.Download high-res image (272KB)Download full-size image
4-(prop-2-en-1-yl)piperazine-1-carbodithioic acid