50 research outputs found
Drosophila comes of age as a model system for understanding the function of cytoskeletal proteins in cells, tissues, and organisms
available in PMC 2016 June 30For the last 100 years, Drosophila melanogaster has been a powerhouse genetic system for understanding mechanisms of inheritance, development, and behavior in animals. In recent years, advances in imaging and genetic tools have led to Drosophila becoming one of the most effective systems for unlocking the subcellular functions of proteins (and particularly cytoskeletal proteins) in complex developmental settings. In this review, written for non-Drosophila experts, we will discuss critical technical advances that have enabled these cell biological insights, highlighting three examples of cytoskeletal discoveries that have arisen as a result: (1) regulation of Arp2/3 complex in myoblast fusion, (2) cooperation of the actin filament nucleators Spire and Cappuccino in establishment of oocyte polarity, and (3) coordination of supracellular myosin cables. These specific examples illustrate the unique power of Drosophila both to uncover new cytoskeletal structures and functions, and to place these discoveries in a broader in vivo context, providing insights that would have been impossible in a cell culture model or in vitro. Many of the cellular structures identified in Drosophila have clear counterparts in mammalian cells and tissues, and therefore elucidating cytoskeletal functions in Drosophila will be broadly applicable to other organisms.National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (NIH/NINDS (DP2 NS082127))Pew Scholars Program in the Biomedical SciencesNational Institutes of Health (U.S.) (NIH/NIGMS (R01-GM084947))American Cancer Society (Research Scholar Award
Fast solver for diffusive transport times on dynamic intracellular networks
The transport of particles in cells is influenced by the properties of
intracellular networks they traverse while searching for localized target
regions or reaction partners. Moreover, given the rapid turnover in many
intracellular structures, it is crucial to understand how temporal changes in
the network structure affect diffusive transport. In this work, we use network
theory to characterize complex intracellular biological environments across
scales. We develop an efficient computational method to compute the mean first
passage times for simulating a particle diffusing along two-dimensional planar
networks extracted from fluorescence microscopy imaging. We first benchmark
this methodology in the context of synthetic networks, and subsequently apply
it to live-cell data from endoplasmic reticulum tubular networks.Comment: 14 pages, 6 figure
A presynaptic endosomal trafficking pathway controls synaptic growth signaling
Association of Nwk with SNX16 promotes down-regulation of synaptic growth signaling at the interface between early and recycling endosomes
dOCRL maintains immune cell quiescence in Drosophila by regulating endosomal traffic
Lowe Syndrome is a developmental disorder characterized by eye, kidney, and neurological pathologies, and is caused by mutations in the phosphatidylinositol-5-phosphatase OCRL. OCRL plays diverse roles in endocytic and endolysosomal trafficking, cytokinesis, and ciliogenesis, but it is unclear which of these cellular functions underlie specific patient symptoms. Here, we show that mutation of Drosophila OCRL causes cell-autonomous activation of hemocytes, which are macrophage-like cells of the innate immune system. Among many cell biological defects that we identified in docrl mutant hemocytes, we pinpointed the cause of innate immune cell activation to reduced Rab11-dependent recycling traffic and concomitantly increased Rab7-dependent late endosome traffic. Loss of docrl amplifies multiple immune-relevant signals, including Toll, Jun kinase, and STAT, and leads to Rab11-sensitive mis-sorting and excessive secretion of the Toll ligand Spåtzle. Thus, docrl regulation of endosomal traffic maintains hemocytes in a poised, but quiescent state, suggesting mechanisms by which endosomal misregulation of signaling may contribute to symptoms of Lowe syndrome
Tissue-specific tagging of endogenous loci in Drosophila melanogaster
Fluorescent protein tags have revolutionized cell and developmental biology, and in combination with binary expression systems they enable diverse tissue-specific studies of protein function. However these binary expression systems often do not recapitulate endogenous protein expression levels, localization, binding partners and/or developmental windows of gene expression. To address these limitations, we have developed a method called T-STEP (tissue-specific tagging of endogenous proteins) that allows endogenous loci to be tagged in a tissue specific manner. T-STEP uses a combination of efficient CRISPR/Cas9-enhanced gene targeting and tissue-specific recombinase-mediated tag swapping to temporally and spatially label endogenous proteins. We have employed this method to GFP tag OCRL (a phosphoinositide-5-phosphatase in the endocytic pathway) and Vps35 (a Parkinson's disease-implicated component of the endosomal retromer complex) in diverse Drosophila tissues including neurons, glia, muscles and hemocytes. Selective tagging of endogenous proteins allows, for the first time, cell type-specific live imaging and proteomics in complex tissues