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Dive into the research topics where Alan F. Horwitz is active.

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Featured researches published by Alan F. Horwitz.


Cell | 1996

Cell Migration: A Physically Integrated Molecular Process

Douglas A. Lauffenburger; Alan F. Horwitz

The authors are grateful for financial support from the National Institutes of Health (grants GM23244 and GM53905), and to very helpful comments on the manuscript from Elliot Elson, Vlodya Gelfand, Paul Matsudaira, Julie Theriot, and Sally Zigmond. D. A. L. and A. F. H. would also like to thank Alan Wells, and Anna Huttenlocher and Rebecca Sandborg, respectively, for stimulating conversations on this subject, and Sean Palecek for Figure 2Figure 2. Finally, we extend our apologies to all our colleagues in the field whose work we were unable to cite formally because of imposed reference limitations.


Nature Cell Biology | 2004

FAK–Src signalling through paxillin, ERK and MLCK regulates adhesion disassembly

Donna J. Webb; Karen Donais; Leanna Whitmore; Sheila M. Thomas; Christopher E. Turner; J. Thomas Parsons; Alan F. Horwitz

Cell migration is a complex, highly regulated process that involves the continuous formation and disassembly of adhesions (adhesion turnover). Adhesion formation takes place at the leading edge of protrusions, whereas disassembly occurs both at the cell rear and at the base of protrusions. Despite the importance of these processes in migration, the mechanisms that regulate adhesion formation and disassembly remain largely unknown. Here we develop quantitative assays to measure the rate of incorporation of molecules into adhesions and the departure of these proteins from adhesions. Using these assays, we show that kinases and adaptor molecules, including focal adhesion kinase (FAK), Src, p130CAS, paxillin, extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) and myosin light-chain kinase (MLCK) are critical for adhesion turnover at the cell front, a process central to migration.


Cell | 1986

Structure of integrin, a glycoprotein involved in the transmembrane linkage between fibronectin and actin

J W Tamkun; Deborah Fonda; Ramila S. Patel; Clayton A. Buck; Alan F. Horwitz; Richard O. Hynes

We describe the isolation, characterization, and sequence of cDNA clones encoding one subunit of the complex of membrane glycoproteins that forms part of the transmembrane connection between the extracellular matrix and the cytoskeleton. The cDNA sequence encodes a polypeptide of 89 kd that has features strongly suggesting the presence of a large N-terminal extracellular domain, a single transmembrane segment, and a small C-terminal cytoplasmic domain. The extracellular domain contains a threefold repeat of a novel 40 residue cysteine-rich segment, and the cytoplasmic domain contains a tyrosine residue that is a potential site for phosphorylation by tyrosine kinases. We propose the name integrin for this protein complex to denote its role as an integral membrane complex involved in the transmembrane association between the extracellular matrix and the cytoskeleton.


Nature Cell Biology | 2002

Adhesion assembly, disassembly and turnover in migrating cells -- over and over and over again.

Donna J. Webb; J. Thomas Parsons; Alan F. Horwitz

Cell migration is an integrated process that requires the continuous, coordinated formation and disassembly of adhesions. These processes are complex and require a regulated interaction of numerous molecules, and the activation of specific signalling pathways. Even though understanding these processes is challenging, important insights are beginning to emerge, and the technology to facilitate significant advances in this area is now in place.


Current Opinion in Cell Biology | 1995

ADHESION IN CELL MIGRATION

Anna Huttenlocher; Rebecca R Sandborg; Alan F. Horwitz

Adhesive interactions play a central role in cell migration. The regulation of these interactions requires the coordination of a multiplicity of signals, both spatially and temporally. The role of the integrin family has received considerable recent attention. Progress has been made in the elucidation of the mechanisms by which growth factors and other motogenic factors stimulate migration. Major advances have also been made in understanding the mechanisms by which the formation and breakdown of adhesive complexes are regulated, including the participation of members of the rho family. Despite these advances, many important questions remain, and the field seems well positioned to answer them.


Current Opinion in Cell Biology | 1993

Integrin cytoplasmic domains: mediators of cytoskeletal linkages and extra- and intracellular initiated transmembrane signaling.

Sarita K. Sastry; Alan F. Horwitz

The integrin cytoplasmic domains are generally short amino acid sequences that are highly divergent among alpha-subunits and partially conserved among beta-subunits. Interest in them has increased over the past few years as they have been shown to mediate several kinds of transmembrane signaling events as well as structural connections between the extracellular matrix and the cytoskeleton.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1997

Regulation of Cell Migration by the Calcium-dependent Protease Calpain

Anna Huttenlocher; Sean P. Palecek; Qin Lu; Wenli Zhang; Ronald L. Mellgren; Douglas A. Lauffenburger; Mark H. Ginsberg; Alan F. Horwitz

Integrin receptors play an important role during cell migration by mediating linkages and transmitting forces between the extracellular matrix and the actin cytoskeleton. The mechanisms by which these linkages are regulated and released during migration are not well understood. We show here that cell-permeable inhibitors of the calcium-dependent protease calpain inhibit both β1 and β3 integrin-mediated cell migration. Calpain inhibition specifically stabilizes peripheral focal adhesions, increases adhesiveness, and decreases the rate of cell detachment. Furthermore, these inhibitors alter the fate of integrin receptors at the rear of the cell during migration. A Chinese hamster ovary cell line expressing low levels of calpain I also shows reduced migration rates with similar morphological changes, further implicating calpain in this process. Taken together, the data suggest that calpain inhibition modulates cell migration by stabilizing cytoskeletal linkages and decreasing the rate of retraction of the cell’s rear. Inhibiting calpain-mediated proteolysis may therefore be a potential therapeutic approach to control pathological cell migration such as tumor metastasis.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2007

Regulation of protrusion, adhesion dynamics, and polarity by myosins IIA and IIB in migrating cells

Miguel Vicente-Manzanares; Jessica Zareno; Leanna Whitmore; Colin K. Choi; Alan F. Horwitz

We have used isoform-specific RNA interference knockdowns to investigate the roles of myosin IIA (MIIA) and MIIB in the component processes that drive cell migration. Both isoforms reside outside of protrusions and act at a distance to regulate cell protrusion, signaling, and maturation of nascent adhesions. MIIA also controls the dynamics and size of adhesions in central regions of the cell and contributes to retraction and adhesion disassembly at the rear. In contrast, MIIB establishes front–back polarity and centrosome, Golgi, and nuclear orientation. Using ATPase- and contraction-deficient mutants of both MIIA and MIIB, we show a role for MIIB-dependent actin cross-linking in establishing front–back polarity. From these studies, MII emerges as a master regulator and integrator of cell migration. It mediates each of the major component processes that drive migration, e.g., polarization, protrusion, adhesion assembly and turnover, polarity, signaling, and tail retraction, and it integrates spatially separated processes.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2005

A GIT1/PIX/Rac/PAK Signaling Module Regulates Spine Morphogenesis and Synapse Formation through MLC

Huaye Zhang; Donna J. Webb; Hannelore Asmussen; Shuang Niu; Alan F. Horwitz

Three of seven recently identified genes mutated in nonsyndromic mental retardation are involved in Rho family signaling. Two of the gene products, α-p-21-activated kinase (PAK) interacting exchange factor (αPIX) and PAK3, form a complex with the synaptic adaptor protein G-protein-coupled receptor kinase-interacting protein 1 (GIT1). Using an RNA interference approach, we show that GIT1 is critical for spine and synapse formation. We also show that Rac is locally activated in dendritic spines using fluorescence resonance energy transfer. This local activation of Rac is regulated by PIX, a Rac guanine nucleotide exchange factor. PAK1 and PAK3 serve as downstream effectors of Rac in regulating spine and synapse formation. Active PAK promotes the formation of spines and dendritic protrusions, which correlates with an increase in the number of excitatory synapses. These effects are dependent on the kinase activity of PAK, and PAK functions through phosphorylating myosin II regulatory light chain (MLC). Activated MLC causes an increase in dendritic spine and synapse formation, whereas inhibiting myosin ATPase activity results in decreased spine and synapse formation. Finally, both activated PAK and activated MLC can rescue the defects of GIT1 knockdown, suggesting that PAK and MLC are downstream of GIT1 in regulating spine and synapse formation. Our results point to a signaling complex, consisting of GIT1, PIX, Rac, and PAK, that plays an essential role in the regulation of dendritic spine and synapse formation and provides a potential mechanism by which αPIX and PAK3 mutations affect cognitive functions in mental retardation.


Biophysical Journal | 2008

Mapping the number of molecules and brightness in the laser scanning microscope.

Michelle A. Digman; Rooshin Dalal; Alan F. Horwitz; Enrico Gratton

We describe a technique based on moment-analysis for the measurement of the average number of molecules and brightness in each pixel in fluorescence microscopy images. The average brightness of the particle is obtained from the ratio of the variance to the average intensity at each pixel. To obtain the average number of fluctuating particles, we divide the average intensity at one pixel by the brightness. This analysis can be used in a wide range of concentrations. In cells, the intensity at any given pixel may be due to bright immobile structures, dim fast diffusing particles, and to autofluorescence or scattering. The total variance is given by the variance of each of the above components in addition to the variance due to detector noise. Assuming that all sources of variance are independent, the total variance is the sum of the variances of the individual components. The variance due to the particles fluctuating in the observation volume is proportional to the square of the particle brightness while the variance of the immobile fraction, the autofluorescence, scattering, and that of the detector is proportional to the intensity of these components. Only the fluctuations that depend on the square of the brightness (the mobile particles) will have a ratio of the variance to the intensity >1. Furthermore, changing the fluorescence intensity by increasing the illumination power, distinguishes between these possible contributions. We show maps of molecular brightness and number of cell migration proteins obtained using a two-photon scanning microscope operating with a photon-counting detector. These brightness maps reveal binding dynamics at the focal adhesions with pixel resolution and provide a picture of the binding and unbinding process in which dim molecules attach to the adhesions or large molecular aggregates dissociate from adhesion.

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Sean P. Palecek

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Anna Huttenlocher

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Karen A. Knudsen

Lankenau Institute for Medical Research

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Alice Sessions

University of Pennsylvania

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