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Mesfin Gonit

Lentigen Technology (United States)

Publishes on Prostate Cancer Treatment and Research, Estrogen and related hormone effects, Ubiquitin and proteasome pathways. 14 papers and 310 citations.

14Publications
310Total Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

C/EBPγ Is a Critical Regulator of Cellular Stress Response Networks through Heterodimerization with ATF4
Christopher J. Huggins, Manasi K. Mayekar, Nancy Martín et al.|Molecular and Cellular Biology|2015
Cited by 106Open Access

The integrated stress response (ISR) controls cellular adaptations to nutrient deprivation, redox imbalances, and endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress. ISR genes are upregulated in stressed cells, primarily by the bZIP transcription factor ATF4 through its recruitment to cis-regulatory C/EBP:ATF response elements (CAREs) together with a dimeric partner of uncertain identity. Here, we show that C/EBPγ:ATF4 heterodimers, but not C/EBPβ:ATF4 dimers, are the predominant CARE-binding species in stressed cells. C/EBPγ and ATF4 associate with genomic CAREs in a mutually dependent manner and coregulate many ISR genes. In contrast, the C/EBP family members C/EBPβ and C/EBP homologous protein (CHOP) were largely dispensable for induction of stress genes. Cebpg(-/-) mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs) proliferate poorly and exhibit oxidative stress due to reduced glutathione levels and impaired expression of several glutathione biosynthesis pathway genes. Cebpg(-/-) mice (C57BL/6 background) display reduced body size and microphthalmia, similar to ATF4-null animals. In addition, C/EBPγ-deficient newborns die from atelectasis and respiratory failure, which can be mitigated by in utero exposure to the antioxidant, N-acetyl-cysteine. Cebpg(-/-) mice on a mixed strain background showed improved viability but, upon aging, developed significantly fewer malignant solid tumors than WT animals. Our findings identify C/EBPγ as a novel antioxidant regulator and an obligatory ATF4 partner that controls redox homeostasis in normal and cancerous cells.

The ETS Domain Transcription Factor ELK1 Directs a Critical Component of Growth Signaling by the Androgen Receptor in Prostate Cancer Cells
Mugdha Patki, Venkatesh Chari, Suneethi Sivakumaran et al.|Journal of Biological Chemistry|2013
Cited by 66Open Access

The androgen receptor (AR) is essential for diverse aspects of prostate development and function. Molecular mechanisms by which prostate cancer (PC) cells redirect AR signaling to genes that primarily support growth are unclear. A systematic search for critical AR-tethering proteins led to ELK1, an ETS transcription factor of the ternary complex factor subfamily. Although genetically redundant, ELK1 was obligatory for AR-dependent growth and clonogenic survival in both hormone-dependent PC and castration-recurrent PC cells but not for AR-negative cell growth. AR required ELK1 to up-regulate a major subset of its target genes that was strongly and primarily enriched for cell growth functions. AR functioned as a coactivator of ELK1 by association through its A/B domain, bypassing the classical mechanism of ELK1 activation by phosphorylation and without inducing ternary complex target genes. The ELK1-AR synergy per se was ligand-independent, although it required ligand for nuclear localization of AR as targeting the AR A/B domain to the nucleus recapitulated the action of hormone; accordingly, Casodex was a poor antagonist of the synergy. ELK3, the closest substitute for ELK1 in structure/function and genome recognition, did not interact with AR. ELK1 thus directs selective and sustained gene induction that is a substantial and critical component of growth signaling by AR in PC cells. The ELK1-AR interaction offers a functionally tumor-selective drug target.

Hormone Depletion-Insensitivity of Prostate Cancer Cells Is Supported by the AR Without Binding to Classical Response Elements
Mesfin Gonit, Juan Zhang, Marcela D Salazar et al.|Molecular Endocrinology|2011
Cited by 29Open Access

A need for androgen response elements (AREs) for androgen receptor (AR)-dependent growth of hormone depletion-insensitive prostate cancer is generally presumed. In such cells, androgen-independent activation by AR of certain genes has been attributed to selective increases in basal associations of AR with putative enhancers. We examined the importance of AR binding to DNA in prostate cancer cells in which proliferation in the absence of hormone was profoundly (∼ 90%) dependent on endogenous AR and where the receptor was not up-regulated or mutated but was predominantly nuclear. Here, ARE-mediated promoter activation and the binding of AR to a known ARE in the chromatin remained entirely androgen dependent, and the cells showed an androgen-responsive gene expression profile with an unaltered sensitivity to androgen dose. In the same cells, a different set of genes primarily enriched for cell division functions was activated by AR independently of hormone and significantly overlapped the signature gene overexpression profile of hormone ablation-insensitive clinical tumors. After knockdown of endogenous AR, hormone depletion-insensitive cell proliferation and AR apoprotein-dependent gene expression were rescued by an AR mutant that was unable to bind to ARE but that could transactivate through a well-established AR tethering protein. Hormone depletion-insensitive AR binding sites in the chromatin were functional, binding, and responding to both the wild-type and the mutant AR and lacked enrichment for canonical or noncanonical ARE half-sites. Therefore, a potentially diverse set of ARE-independent mechanisms of AR interactions with target genes must underlie truly hormone depletion-insensitive gene regulation and proliferation in prostate cancer.

Regulation of Folate Receptor Internalization by Protein Kinase C α
Hala Elnakat, Mesfin Gonit, Marcela D Salazar et al.|Biochemistry|2009
Cited by 19

The glycosyl-phosphatidylinositol anchored folate receptor (FR) mediates selective delivery of a broad range of experimental drugs to the receptor-rich tumors, but molecular mechanisms controlling FR internalization have not been adequately studied. FR quantitatively recycles between the cell surface and endocytic compartments via a Cdc42-dependent pinocytic pathway. Protein kinase C (PKC) activators including diacylglycerol and phorbol ester have previously been reported to increase the proportion of FR on the cell surface. Here we identify the alpha-subtype of PKC as the mediator of phorbol ester action on FR recycling and provide evidence that activated PKCalpha is recruited to FR-rich membrane microdomains where, in association with its receptor RACK1, it inhibits FR internalization; the activation state of Cdc42 remains unaltered. We also show that the PKC substrate, annexin II, is required for FR internalization. The studies clarify a molecular mechanism for the regulation of FR recycling through PKC which could potentially be exploited for effective drug delivery.