Professor

Brian Raught

PhD, Baylor College of Medicine

Location
Princess Margaret Cancer Research Tower
Address
MaRS Centre, 101 College Street, Room 9-805, Toronto, Ontario Canada M5G 1L8
Research Interests
Cancer Diagnosis and Therapy, Cancer Mechanisms and Models

Research Interests

  • Mass spectrometry
  • Proteomics
  • Post-translational modifications
  • Ubiquitin
  • Ubiquitin-like modifiers
  • Sumo

Research Synopsis

Proteomic approaches to the study of ubiquitin and ubiquitin-like modifiers

Ubiquitin, a small and ancient signaling protein, is chemically attached to other proteins in the cell to mark them for destruction (in addition to other critical functions). Malfunctions in the ubiquitin system have been implicated in many disease states, including neurodegenerative disorders (e.g. Alzhemer’s and Parkinson’s diseases) and cancer.

The ubiquitin-like modifiers (ULMs) comprise a diverse group of small polypeptides (SUMO, ISG15, NEDD8/RUB1, URM1, FAT10, etc.) which, like ubiquitin, are also covalently conjugated to “target” proteins (or other biomolecules) in a reversible manner. While these modifiers appear to play many critical roles in cell function, most of them remain very poorly understood.

Mass spectrometry (MS) has emerged as an extremely powerful tool to screen complex biological samples for many different types of post-translational modifications. Using a combination of MS and a novel software tool (SUMmOn), my colleagues and I developed the first automated approach for the identification of ULM target proteins and ULM attachment sites. Using this technology, along with high throughput and quantitative proteomics approaches, my laboratory is focused on:

  1. defining ubiquitin and ULM target protein populations in normal cells, and characterizing how these target populations differ between cell types, how they change throughout the cell cycle, and how they are altered in response to extracellular stress or stimuli. These data will help us to better define the cellular processes modulated by each of the different ULMs.
  2. defining how ubiquitin and ULM target protein populations are altered in various disease states. This information will shed light on how ubiquitin and the ULMs are affected by, or contribute to, various types of pathologies.
  3. characterizing how modification by ubiquitin or a ULM alters the activity of specific proteins involved in vital cellular processes. This will provide us with more specific knowledge regarding how a particular modification alters the function of an individual protein.
  4. better understanding the amino acid sequence or structural elements that define the recognition sites for ubiquitin or ULM attachment. This information will help us to better understand and predict ubiquitin/ULM modification sites.

For further information, please visit the Raught Lab website.


Graduate Students

Laili Jing
Alison Medina Cruz
Mahdi Tabatabaie Yazdi
Alaleh Zamiri