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Posts by Felix Randow

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DNA-protein cross-links promote cGAS-STING–driven premature aging and embryonic lethality DNA-protein cross-links (DPCs) are highly toxic DNA lesions that block replication and transcription, but their impact on organismal physiology is unclear. We identified a role for the metalloprotease...

Our Science paper is out! 😃

www.science.org/doi/10.1126/...

2 months ago 38 18 0 0
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Mike Davey and Gisela Otten join Board of Directors | Cambridge United F.C.

Gisela Otten has joined the Board of Directors and will Chair the Board of the Women’s team at Cambridge United Football Club. Gisela joined @felixrandow.bsky.social's group at the LMB in 2017 and spent 6 years playing for Cambridge United Women. #LMBAlumni
www.cambridgeunited.com/news/mike-da...

9 months ago 9 1 0 0
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Shigella flexneri evades LPS ubiquitylation through IpaH1.4-mediated degradation of RNF213 - Nature Structural & Molecular Biology Naydenova, Boyle and Pathe et al. report that Shigella uses the ubiquitin E3 ligase IpaH1.4 to evade lipopolysaccharide ubiquitylation in infected cells by degrading the host E3 ligase RNF213. Using c...

Another insightful piece recently out @natsmb.nature.com delineating how Shigella utilises its effector IpaH1.4 to counteract host RNF213-induced LPS ubiquitylation. Very interesting work by the lab of @felixrandow.bsky.social. If you want to, have a go at it: www.nature.com/articles/s41...

1 year ago 8 2 0 0
Comparison of Salmonella and Shigella host cell invasion. Salmonella are targeted by the host E3 ligase RNF213, which ubiquitylates bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS), marking bacteria for autophagic destruction. Shigella employs its effector proteins IpaH1.4 - an E3 ubiquitin ligase itself - to ubiquitylate RNF213, leading to its proteasomal degradation and thus preventing the host from tagging Shigella for destruction.

Comparison of Salmonella and Shigella host cell invasion. Salmonella are targeted by the host E3 ligase RNF213, which ubiquitylates bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS), marking bacteria for autophagic destruction. Shigella employs its effector proteins IpaH1.4 - an E3 ubiquitin ligase itself - to ubiquitylate RNF213, leading to its proteasomal degradation and thus preventing the host from tagging Shigella for destruction.

Cryo-EM structure showing how the leucine-rich repeat (LRR) domain of IpaH1.4 binds to the RING domain of RNF213

Cryo-EM structure showing how the leucine-rich repeat (LRR) domain of IpaH1.4 binds to the RING domain of RNF213

How do cytosol-invading bacteria evade LPS ubiquitylation by the host's defence machinery?

@felixrandow.bsky.social's group determined that Shigella flexneri uses IpaH1.4 to degrade the LPS ligase RNF213, inhibiting the cell's ubiquitylation abilities.
Read more: tinyurl.com/3y4kv2bp

#LMBResearch🧪

1 year ago 46 15 1 0
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Don't miss similar findings from the Coers and Pan labs in BiorXiv and NatComm. Also note that Burkholderia antagonizes LPS ubiquitylation through DUB action (Thurston lab) and that Chlamydia deploys GarD (Coers lab). Conclusion: Bacteria decided RNF213 is a hot target in host–pathogen warfare!

1 year ago 6 0 0 0
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Remarkably, IpaH1.4 doesn’t stop at RNF213—it targets several host E3 ligases via their RING domains. Individual RINGs bind overlapping sites on IpaH1.4 through unique interactions, explaining specificity of IpaH1.4 towards select RING domains. A clever strategy!

1 year ago 5 0 2 0
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Cryo-EM reveals IpaH1.4 binds the RING domain of RNF213—a region with no known E3 activity in RNF213. However, despite pressure from IpaH1.4, the RING is highly conserved, hinting at a key function. Intriguingly, Moyamoya disease–linked mutations also occur in this domain.

1 year ago 3 0 1 0
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Shigella flexneri evades LPS ubiquitylation through IpaH1.4-mediated degradation of RNF213 - Nature Structural & Molecular Biology Naydenova, Boyle and Pathe et al. report that Shigella uses the ubiquitin E3 ligase IpaH1.4 to evade lipopolysaccharide ubiquitylation in infected cells by degrading the host E3 ligase RNF213. Using c...

RNF213, a host E3 ligase, ubiquitylates LPS to mark cytosol-invading bacteria for autophagy. But how do cytosol-adapted bacteria escape? We found that Shigella's E3 ligase IpaH1.4 blocks LPS ubiquitylation by degrading RNF213 via the proteasome.
www.nature.com/articles/s41...

1 year ago 41 10 4 1
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Not long until the deadline for this faculty position @dunnschool.bsky.social...

Are you the one to lead a group doing great research in a special environment, while teaching outstanding students?

www.path.ox.ac.uk/vacancy/asso...

1 year ago 18 18 0 0
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Joint 2025 Autophagy UK and Proteostasis UK conference | University of Dundee, UK Welcome to the 2025 joint “Autophagy UK and Proteostasis UK” conference!

Exciting news: Registration for the 2025 UK Proteotasis & Autophagy meeting (3-5th June) is open: tinyurl.com/mr3p49f9

1 year ago 5 3 0 0
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There are few moments more rewarding in running a lab than having a student defend their PhD thesis. Congratulations Dr. @marianapdc.bsky.social for this amazing achievement. And thanks to @lloydlab.bsky.social and Bart Lambrecht for being the examiners.

1 year ago 27 5 2 2
Lara Krüger, stood in the LMB atrium, smiling.

Lara Krüger, stood in the LMB atrium, smiling.

Congratulations to @lara-kruger.bsky.social, postdoc in @deriverylab.bsky.social in @cellbiol-mrclmb.bsky.social, who is leaving the LMB to establish her own research group at @institutcurie.bsky.social in Paris!
Best of luck to you Lara!
#LMBAlumni

1 year ago 30 5 0 3
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C-terminal amides mark proteins for degradation via SCF–FBXO31 - Nature SCF–FBXO31 scans proteins for C-terminal amidation and marks them for subsequent proteasomal degradation.

How do cells recognise disease- and stress-affected proteins for clearance by ubiquitination? Work @nature shows that such proteins are marked with C-terminal amides, allowing their targeting by SCF/FBXO31 ubiquitin ligase for degradation. shorturl.at/B3rmR
& NV
shorturl.at/fImjA

1 year ago 12 4 0 0

Guess what? You got it, another @plosbiology.org focus issue of thought-provoking Perspectives and Essays on an issue relevant to this Keystone Symposium

What can I say? We clearly care a lot about many of the topics at these joint meetings

Take a look and let us know what you think! 👀⬇️
🧪

1 year ago 11 9 0 0

We made it to 100! 📢💯 The #ubiquitin and #ubl Starter Pack now includes 100 profiles to follow if you’re interested in any aspect of the field: signalling, structure and biochemistry, biology, mechanisms, proteostasis, TPD, chemical biology… Check out the list and let me know if you are missing.

1 year ago 32 13 1 1

Who’ll get the second popcorn??

1 year ago 1 0 1 0
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Isolation of a polypeptide that has lymphocyte-differentiating properties and is probably represented universally in living cells. | PNAS A polypeptide of 8500 molecular weight is described that induces the differentiation of T (thymus-derived) cell and B (bone-marrow-derived) cell im...

By my reckoning, yesterday marked the 50th anniversary of ubiquitin's discovery! 🎈🎉🎁🥂
www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/...

1 year ago 18 9 0 0
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We just can't stop recruiting!

Associate professor in cell and molecular biology @dunnschool, with a preference for immunology, inflammation and/or infection - all defined broadly

Come and be our colleague

Deadline 28 Feb, please spread the word

www.path.ox.ac.uk/vacancy/asso...

1 year ago 48 59 0 1
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After lots of teasing by @npariente.bsky.social I updated my profile picture. No more impersonation of my younger self!

1 year ago 6 0 0 0

PhDs in biochemistry, structural biology, pharmacology, or similar, located in the US and with strong publication track records and a high motivation to solve Parkinson's, please send CV directly to me at jimhurley@berkeley.edu.
Repost appreciated.

1 year ago 70 56 0 1
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Real-time map from Surfers Against Sewage app. For those in blissful ignorance, this is what happens after normal heavy rains in Britain: huge swathes of UK coastline rendered unswimmable by water companies’ discharges. I know it’s old news but I refuse to become desensitized to the sheer awfulness

1 year ago 13 7 1 0
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Bacteria use exogenous peptidoglycan as a danger signal to trigger biofilm formation - Nature Microbiology Peptidoglycan released by neighbouring kin or non-kin cell lysis induces physiological changes that protect from a range of stresses, including phage predation.

We found that many bacterial species use exogenous peptidoglycan fragments - released by lysis of neighboring cells - as a general danger signal, triggering a danger response that protects bacteria against many dangers: biofilm formation.

Details here 👇
www.nature.com/articles/s41...

1 year ago 142 56 0 0
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Autophagy Unveiled: The Dagdas Group is shining a light on cellular recycling Autophagy keeps cells clean from harmful components. The group of Yasin Dagdas at the GMI studies how selective autophagy detects and removes damaged or unwanted cellular structures. In 2024, the Dagd...

As we go through various steps of the peer-review process, @gmivienna.bsky.social comms team put together a nice summary of our recent #preprints : www.oeaw.ac.at/gmi/detail/n... Thx @philippdexheimer.bsky.social for the illustration

1 year ago 37 12 2 0
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On Jan 6 1912, Alfred Wegener presented his theory of continental drift and supercontinent Pangaea's breakup into today's continents. Despite initial rejection, modern seismology and ocean drilling in the 1950s/60s validated his ideas, leading to the current understanding of plate tectonics. ⚒🧪

1 year ago 754 100 23 8

Happy New Year! Let’s start with an updated starter pack. Now with 94 profiles to follow if you are interested in anything #ubiquitin or #Ubl: signalling, structure and biochemistry, biology, mechanisms, proteostasis, TPD, chemical biology, etc. Let me know if you or anyone else is missing.

1 year ago 13 7 3 0
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Bacteria use exogenous peptidoglycan as a danger signal to trigger biofilm formation - Nature Microbiology Peptidoglycan released by neighbouring kin or non-kin cell lysis induces physiological changes that protect from a range of stresses, including phage predation.

Peptidoglycan as danger signal promotes biofilm formation - great article by the Drescher lab

www.nature.com/articles/s41...

1 year ago 29 6 0 0
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ATG9A facilitates the closure of mammalian autophagosomes ATG9A contributes to the final stage in autophagosome biogenesis by directing autophagosome closure. It does so by recruiting ESCRT protein CHMP2A via IQGA

New paper out from Deretic’s lab!!! rupress.org/jcb/article/...

1 year ago 5 2 0 0

The pleasure was mine!

1 year ago 1 0 0 0
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Today in A Coruña. It has become a nice tradition for us to visit their annual photo exhibition.

1 year ago 4 0 2 0

Believe it or not, GRC has told me we need more registered applicants or this meeting might not survive! Please don't let that happen if you can afford to attend 🙏

1 year ago 25 29 2 2