Allison L. Zajac
University of Pennsylvania
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Publication
Featured researches published by Allison L. Zajac.
Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2011
Juliane P. Caviston; Allison L. Zajac; Mariko Tokito; Erika L.F. Holzbaur
We investigated the role of the membrane-associated scaffolding protein huntingtin (Htt) in the dynein-mediated transport of early, recycling, and late endosomes and lysosomes. Our observations support a model of Htt as a facilitator of dynein-mediated trafficking that can regulate the cytoskeletal association of dynamic organelles.
Current Biology | 2013
Allison L. Zajac; Yale E. Goldman; Erika L.F. Holzbaur; E. Michael Ostap
BACKGROUND In the intracellular environment, motor-driven cargo must navigate a dense cytoskeletal network among abundant organelles. RESULTS We investigated the effects of the crowded intracellular environment on early endosomal trafficking. Live-cell imaging of an endosomal cargo (endocytosed epidermal growth factor-conjugated quantum dots) combined with high-resolution tracking was used to analyze the heterogeneous motion of individual endosomes. The motile population of endosomes moved toward the perinuclear region in directed bursts of microtubule-based, dynein-dependent transport interrupted by longer periods of diffusive motion. Actin network density did not affect motile endosomes during directed runs or diffusive interruptions. Simultaneous two-color imaging was used to correlate changes in endosomal movement with potential obstacles to directed runs. Termination of directed runs spatially correlated with microtubule-dense regions, encounters with other endosomes, and interactions with the endoplasmic reticulum. During a subset of run terminations, we also observed merging and splitting of endosomes, deformation of the endoplasmic reticulum, and directional reversals at speeds up to 10-fold greater than characteristic in vitro motor velocities. These observations suggest that endosomal membrane tension is high during directed run termination. CONCLUSIONS Our results indicate that the crowded cellular environment significantly impacts the motor-driven motility of organelles. Rather than simply acting as impediments to movement, interactions of trafficking cargos with intracellular obstacles may facilitate communication between membrane-bound compartments or contribute to the generation of membrane tension necessary for fusion and fission of endosomal membranes or remodeling of the endoplasmic reticulum.
Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2010
Aneta Skwarek-Maruszewska; Malgorzata Boczkowska; Allison L. Zajac; Elena Kremneva; Tatyana Svitkina; Roberto Dominguez; Pekka Lappalainen
Lmod is a muscle-specific actin nucleator that displays structural similarity to the filament pointed-end–capping protein, Tmod. The mechanisms of localizations of Lmod and Tmod in muscle sarcomeres are strikingly different. Lmod contributes to the organization of mature myofibrils through a mechanism that requires interaction with tropomyosin.
Current Biology | 2015
David J. Kast; Allison L. Zajac; Erika L.F. Holzbaur; E. Michael Ostap; Roberto Dominguez
Nucleation-promoting factors (NPFs) control the spatio-temporal activity of Arp2/3 complex in cells]. Thus, WASP and the WAVE complex direct the formation of branched actin networks at the leading edge during cell motility and endo/exocytosis, whereas the WASH complex is involved in endosomal transport. Less understood are WHAMM and JMY, two NPFs with similar domain architecture. JMY is found in the nucleus and the cytosol and is involved in transcriptional regulation, cell motility, and trans-Golgi transport. WHAMM was reported to bind microtubules and to be involved in ER to cis-Golgi transport. Here, we show that WHAMM directs the activity of Arp2/3 complex for autophagosome biogenesis through an actin-comet tail motility mechanism. Macroautophagy--the process by which cytosolic material is engulfed into autophagosomes for degradation and/or recycling--was recently shown to involve actin, but the mechanism is unknown. We found that WHAMM forms puncta that colocalize and comigrate with the autophagy markers LC3, DFCP1, and p62 through a WHAMM-dependent actin-comet tail mechanism. Under starvation, WHAMM and actin are observed at the interface between neighboring autophagosomes, whose number and size increase with WHAMM expression. Interfering with actin polymerization, inhibiting Arp2/3 complex, knocking down WHAMM, or blocking its interaction with Arp2/3 complex through mutagenesis all inhibit comet tail formation and reduce the size and number of autophagosomes. Finally, JMY shows similar localization to WHAMM and could be involved in similar processes. These results reveal a link between Arp2/3-complex-dependent actin assembly and autophagy.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014
Adriana R. Mantegazza; Allison L. Zajac; Alison E. Twelvetrees; Erika L.F. Holzbaur; Sebastian Amigorena; Michael S. Marks
Significance Dendritic cells (DCs) ingest bacteria at sites of infection, signal the presence of invaders via phagosomal Toll-like receptors (TLRs), and present bacterial antigens to the adaptive immune system. We show that TLR signaling from maturing phagosomes in DCs stimulates the formation of membrane tubules that facilitate content transfer with other signaling phagosomes and thereby promote optimal presentation of phagocytosed antigens. The phagosomal tubules are thus functionally distinct from those of lysosomes and link innate immune signaling to enhanced adaptive immune responses. Dendritic cells (DCs) phagocytose large particles like bacteria at sites of infection and progressively degrade them within maturing phagosomes. Phagosomes in DCs are also signaling platforms for pattern recognition receptors, such as Toll-like receptors (TLRs), and sites for assembly of cargo-derived peptides with major histocompatibility complex class II (MHC-II) molecules. Although TLR signaling from phagosomes stimulates presentation of phagocytosed antigens, the mechanisms underlying this enhancement and the cell surface delivery of MHC-II–peptide complexes from phagosomes are not known. We show that in DCs, maturing phagosomes extend numerous long tubules several hours after phagocytosis. Tubule formation requires an intact microtubule and actin cytoskeleton and MyD88-dependent phagosomal TLR signaling, but not phagolysosome formation or extensive proteolysis. In contrast to the tubules that emerge from endolysosomes after uptake of soluble ligands and TLR stimulation, the late-onset phagosomal tubules are not essential for delivery of phagosome-derived MHC-II–peptide complexes to the plasma membrane. Rather, tubulation promotes MHC-II presentation by enabling maximal cargo transfer among phagosomes that bear a TLR signature. Our data show that phagosomal tubules in DCs are functionally distinct from those that emerge from lysosomes and are unique adaptations of the phagocytic machinery that facilitate cargo exchange and antigen presentation among TLR-signaling phagosomes.
European Journal of Cell Biology | 2011
Shamik Sen; Manorama Tewari; Allison L. Zajac; Elisabeth R. Barton; H. Lee Sweeney; Dennis E. Discher
Anchorage to matrix is mediated for many cells not only by integrin-based focal adhesions but also by a parallel assembly of integral and peripheral membrane proteins known as the Dystroglycan Complex. Deficiencies in either dystrophin (mdx mice) or γ-sarcoglycan (γSG(-/-) mice) components of the Dystroglycan Complex lead to upregulation of numerous focal adhesion proteins, and the phosphoprotein paxillin proves to be among the most prominent. In mdx muscle, paxillin-Y31 and Y118 are both hyper-phosphorylated as are key sites in focal adhesion kinase (FAK) and the stretch-stimulatable pro-survival MAPK pathway, whereas γSG(-/-) muscle exhibits more erratic hyper-phosphorylation. In cultured myotubes, cell tension generated by myosin-II appears required for localization of paxillin to adhesions while vinculin appears more stably integrated. Overexpression of wild-type (WT) paxillin has no obvious effect on focal adhesion density or the physical strength of adhesion, but WT and a Y118F mutant promote contractile sarcomere formation whereas a Y31F mutant shows no effect, implicating Y31 in striation. Self-peeling of cells as well as Atomic Force Microscopy (AFM) probing of cells with or without myosin-II inhibition indicate an increase in cell tension within paxillin-overexpressing cells. However, prednisolone, a first-line glucocorticoid for muscular dystrophies, decreases cell tension without affecting paxillin at adhesions, suggesting a non-linear relationship between paxillin and cell tension. Hypertension that results from upregulation of integrin adhesions is thus a natural and treatable outcome of Dystroglycan Complex down-regulation.
Molecular Pharmaceutics | 2009
David A. Christian; Shenshen Cai; Olga B. Garbuzenko; Takamasa Harada; Allison L. Zajac; Tamara Minko; Dennis E. Discher
Integrative Biology | 2012
Florian Rehfeldt; André E. X. Brown; Matthew Raab; Shenshen Cai; Allison L. Zajac; Assaf Zemel; Dennis E. Discher
Current Opinion in Cell Biology | 2008
Allison L. Zajac; Dennis E. Discher
Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2005
Allison L. Zajac; Xiaoli Sun; Jian Zhang; Wei Guo