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Joan
E. Hooper
Associate Professor
Cell and Developmental Biology
Ph.D., University of California - San Francisco, 1983
Campus Box 8108
Cancer Research Tower (RC1-South), Room 12103
Cell and Developmental Biology
Phone: 303-724-3417
Fax: 303-724-3420
Joan.Hooper@uchsc.edu
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Research Interests:
We are interested in the cellular and molecular mechanisms that
underlie pattern formation in embryos and tissue maintenance in
adults. The short-range cell interactions that mediate these processes
often involve the evolutionarily conserved Hedgehog (Hh) signaling
pathway (Hooper and Scott, 2005). Dysfunction of the Hh pathway
during fetal development leads to many common birth defects, while
its inappropriate activation later in life can cause cancer. We
are integrating genetic, molecular genetic, and biochemical approaches
to understand regulation within the Hh signal transduction pathway;
how Hh generates dose dependent responses and how multiple signals
are integrated to select different cell fates, to direct growth,
and/or to drive apoptosis.
We have identified two cell surface transmembrane proteins, Patched
and Smoothened, which cooperate to regulate intracellular responses
to Hh (Hooper and Scott 1989, Alcedo et. al. 1996, Stone et. al.
1996). Smoothened is an integral membrane protein belonging to the
serpentine receptor family while Patched is a pioneer protein with
12 transmembrane segments. Smoothened activates intracellular Hedgehog
responses, Patched inhibits those responses, and is in turn, regulated
by binding Hedgehog.
We have shown that the zinc-finger protein encoded by the cubitus
interruptus gene (ci) is the transcriptional effector of Hh signaling
(Von Ohlen et. al. 1997, Von Ohlen and Hooper 1997). Ci is post-translationally
regulated by Hh; modest levels of Hh prevent Ci from becoming a
transcriptional repressor, while high levels of Hh allow Ci to become
a transcriptional activator. The choice is mediated by a regulatory
complex that includes Costal (kinesin-like), Fused (S/T kinase),
and Sufu. We have recently shown that Smoothened controls activity
of the regulatory complex via direct interaction with Costal (Ogden
et al., 2003). Moreover, two distinct activities of Smoothened control
production of Ci-repressor and Ci-activator (Hooper, 2003). Current
work is focusing on which aspects of Smoothened contribute to each
of these activities.
We have identified roadkill as a gene involved in feedback inhibition
of Hedgehog signaling. roadkill, a transcriptional target for Ci,
encodes a protein which acts as part of an E3 ubiquitin ligase to
degrade Ci (Kent, submitted). We are currently asking whether the
human homologue for Roadkill plays a similar role in regulating
the human homologues of Ci. These studies should provide a molecular
mechanism for how different levels of Hedgehog acts through Smoothened
to activate distinct responses. In the longer term they will identify
potential targets for therapeutic intervention in Hedgehog-related
pathologies.
Selected Publications
Hooper, J.E, and M.P. Scott. (1989) The Drosophila
patched gene encodes a putative membrane protein required for segmental
patterning. Cell
59: 751-765.
Alcedo, J, M Ayzenzon, T Von Ohlen, M Noll, and JE
Hooper. (1996) The Drosophila smoothened gene encodes a seven-pass
membrane protein, a putative receptor for the Hedgehog signal. Cell
86:221-232.
Stone, D M., M Hynes, M Armanini, TA. Swanson, Q Gu,
RL. Johnson, MP. Scott, D Pennica, A Goddard, H Phillips, M Noll,
JE. Hooper, F de Sauvage, and A Rosenthal. (1996) The vertebrate
homologue of Patched as a candidate receptor for Sonic Hedgehog.
Nature
384:129-134.
Von Ohlen, T, D. Lessing, R. Nusse and Hooper, J.E.
(1997) Hedgehog signaling regulates transcription through Cubitus
Interruptus, a sequence specific DNA binding protein. PNAS
94:2404-2409.
Von Ohlen, T and JE Hooper (1997) Hedgehog regulates
transcription through GLI/CI binding sites in the wingless promoter.
Mech
Dev. 68:149-156.
Hooper, JE. (2003). Smoothened translates Hedgehog
levels into distinct responses. Development
130:3952-3963.
Ogden, SK, M Ascanco Jr., MA Stegman, LM Suber, JE
Hooper and DJ Robbins. (2003) Identification of a functional interaction
between the transmembrane protein Smoothened and the kinesin related
protein Costal2. Current
Biology, 13; 1996-2003.
Hooper, J.E, and M. P. Scott (2005) Communicating with
Hedgehogs. Nature
Reviews in Mol Cell Biol. 6:304-317.
Kent, D, E. Bush, S. and JE Hooper. (2006) Roadkill attenuates Hedgehog responses through degradation of Cubitus Interruptus. Development, 133: 2001-2010.
Latest
Publications in PubMed

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