| University of Nevada
Biology Department m/s 314
Reno NV 89557
email Dr. Patricia
Berninsone
Office phone
775-784-1391
FAX number
775-784-1302
University of Buenos Aires, Argentina, Biology,
B.S. 1983
University of Buenos Aires, Argentina, Biology,
Ph.D. 1991
University of Massachusetts Medical Center, Biochemistry
and Molecular Biology, Postdoctoral Fellow, 1991-1997
Boston University School of Dental Medicine, Instructor,
Research Assistant Professor, 1998-2006
Research Interests:
Glycoproteins are estimated to comprise 50% of eukaryotic proteomes.
In contrast to DNA, RNA and proteins, the biosynthesis of complex
carbohydrates is not driven by a “template”: the repertoire
of glycan structures in a given cell type is primarily regulated
by the activity of multiple and competitive enzymatic pathways.
The resulting modifications are extremely diverse in structure:
glycans have complex, branched structures and are intrinsically
heterogeneous. Many glycoproteins are localized on the cell surface
or secreted to the extracellular matrix, where they mediate molecular
interactions critical to cell growth, inflammation, immune defense,
fertilization and parasitic infection. These molecules reach their
destinations by organized intracellular trafficking; it is during
trafficking that they are modified by glycosylation.
The goal of our research is to gain insight into how the correct
assembly of glycans is regulated and how the glycosylation status
of proteins relates with their trafficking and –ultimately
- with their biological activities in the context of a multicellular
organism. To address these questions, we are using the nematode
Caenorhabditis elegans, a genetically tractable model organism.
Our research combines biochemical and genetic strategies to study
the roles of the glycosylation machinery in modulating extracellular
signaling pathways.
Selected Publications:
Caffaro C.E., Hirschberg C.B. and Berninsone P.M. In Press. Functional
redundancy between two C.elegans nucleotide sugar transporters with
a novel transport mechanism. J.Biol.Chem.
Berninsone, P.M. (2006) Carbohydrates and glycosylation, WormBook,
ed. The C. elegans Research Community, http://www.wormbook.org
Caffaro C.E., Hirschberg C.B. and Berninsone P.M. (2006) Independent
and simultaneous translocation of two substrates by a nucleotide
sugar transporter. Proc.Natl.Acad.Sci. USA 103: 16176-16181
Burket C.T, Higgins C.E., Hull L.C., Berninsone P. and Ryder E.F.
(2006) The C.elegans gene dig-1 encodes a giant member of the immunoglobulin
superfamily that promotes fasciculation of neuronal processes. Dev.
Biol. 299: 193-205
Hoflich J., Berninsone P., Gobel C., Gravato-Noble M.J., Libby
B.J., Darby C., Politz S.M., Hodgkin J., Hirschberg C.B. and Baumeister
R. (2004) Loss of srf-3 encoded nucleotide sugar transporter activity
in Caenorhabitis elegans alters surface antigenicity and prevents
bacterial adherence. J.Biol.Chem. 279: 30440-30448
Uccelletti D., O’Callaghan C., Berninsone P., Zemtseva I.,
Abeijon C., and Hirschberg C.B. (2004) ire-1 dependent transcriptional
upregulation of a lumenal uridine diphosphatase from Caenorhabditis
elegans. J.Biol.Chem. 279: 27390-27398
Berninsone P. and Hirschberg C.B. (2003) The nematode Caenorhabditis
elegans as a model to study the roles of proteoglycans. Glycoconj
.J. 19: 325-330 (Review)
Etzioni A., Sturla L., Antonellis A., Green E.D., Gersoni-Baruch
R., Berninsone P.M., Hirschberg C.B. and Tonetti M. (2002) Leukocyte
adhesion deficiency (LAD) type II/carbohydrate deficient glycoprotein
(CDG) IIc founder effect and genotype/phenotype correlation. Am.
J. Med. Genet. 110: 131-135
Berninsone P., Hwang H-Y., Zemtseva I., Horvitz H.R. and Hirschberg
C.B (2001) SQV-7, a protein involved in C. elegans epithelial invagination
and early embryogenesis, transports UDP-glucuronic acid, UDP-N-acetylgalactosamine
and UDP-galactose. Proc.Natl.Acad.Sci. USA 98: 3738-3743
Berninsone P. and Hirschberg C.B. (2000) Nucleotide sugar transporters
of the Golgi apparatus. Curr. Opin. Struct. Biol. 2000 10 (5): 542-547
(Review)
Links:
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