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Dive into the research topics where Anutosh Ganguly is active.

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Featured researches published by Anutosh Ganguly.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010

Inhibition of Cell Migration and Cell Division Correlates with Distinct Effects of Microtubule Inhibiting Drugs

Hailing Yang; Anutosh Ganguly; Fernando Cabral

Drugs that target microtubules are thought to inhibit cell division and cell migration by suppressing dynamic instability, a “search and capture” behavior that allows microtubules to probe their environment. Here, we report that subtoxic drug concentrations are sufficient to inhibit plus-end microtubule dynamic instability and cell migration without affecting cell division or microtubule assembly. The higher drug concentrations needed to inhibit cell division act through a novel mechanism that generates microtubule fragments by stimulating microtubule minus-end detachment from their organizing centers. The frequency of microtubule detachment in untreated cells increases at prophase suggesting that it is a regulated cellular process important for spindle assembly and function. We conclude that drugs produce differential dose-dependent effects at microtubule plus and minus-ends to inhibit different microtubule-mediated functions.


Molecular Cancer Therapeutics | 2010

Paclitaxel-Dependent Cell Lines Reveal a Novel Drug Activity

Anutosh Ganguly; Hailing Yang; Fernando Cabral

We previously described the isolation of Tax 18 and Tax 11-6, two paclitaxel-dependent cell lines that assemble low amounts of microtubule polymer and require the drug for cell division. In the present studies, fluorescence time-lapse microscopy was used to measure microtubule dynamic instability behavior in these cells. The mutations were found to cause small decreases in microtubule growth and shortening, but the changes seemed unable to explain the defects in microtubule polymer levels or cell division. Moreover, paclitaxel further suppressed microtubule dynamics at low drug concentrations that were insufficient to rescue the mutant phenotype. Wild-type (WT) cells treated with similar low drug concentrations also had highly suppressed microtubules, yet experienced no problems with cell division. Thus, the effects of paclitaxel on microtubule dynamics seemed to be unrelated to cell division in both WT and mutant cell lines. The higher drug concentrations needed to rescue the mutant phenotype instead inhibited the formation of unstable microtubule fragments that appeared at high frequency in the drug-dependent, but not WT, cell lines. Live cell imaging revealed that the fragments were generated by microtubule detachment from centrosomes, a process that was reversed by paclitaxel. We conclude that paclitaxel rescues mutant cell division by inhibiting the detachment of microtubule minus ends from centrosomes rather than by altering plus-end microtubule dynamics. Mol Cancer Ther; 9(11); 2914–23. ©2010 AACR.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2012

The Role of Microtubules and Their Dynamics in Cell Migration

Anutosh Ganguly; Hailing Yang; Ritu Sharma; Kamala D. Patel; Fernando Cabral

Background: Microtubule effects on cell migration are poorly understood. Results: Tubulin mutations or drug treatments that suppress microtubule dynamics impede cell locomotion. Depolymerizing microtubules does not inhibit movement, but it becomes random. Conclusion: Microtubules act to restrain cell movement and specify directionality. Significance: Drugs have dose-dependent effects on microtubule behavior, cell migration, and mitosis. Understanding these actions will lead to more effective drug use. Although microtubules have long been implicated in cell locomotion, the mechanism of their involvement remains controversial. Most studies have concluded that microtubules play a positive role by regulating actin polymerization, transporting membrane vesicles to the leading edge, and/or facilitating the turnover of adhesion plaques. Here we used wild-type and mutant CHO cell lines with alterations in tubulin to demonstrate that microtubules can also act to restrain cell motility. Tubulin mutations or low concentrations of drugs that suppress microtubule dynamics without affecting the amount of microtubule polymer inhibited the rate of migration by preventing microtubule reorganization in the trailing portion of the cells where the more dynamic microtubules are normally found. Under these conditions, cells along the edge of a wound still extended lamellipodia and elongated toward the wound but were inhibited in their ability to retract their tails, thus retarding forward progress. The idea that microtubules normally act to restrain cell locomotion was confirmed by treating cells with high concentrations of nocodazole to depolymerize the microtubule network. In the absence of microtubules, wild-type CHO and HeLa cells could still move at near normal speeds, but the movement became more random. We conclude that microtubules act both to restrain cell movement and to establish directionality.


Molecular Cancer Therapeutics | 2011

Overexpression of Mitotic Centromere–Associated Kinesin Stimulates Microtubule Detachment and Confers Resistance to Paclitaxel

Anutosh Ganguly; Hailing Yang; Fernando Cabral

Numerous studies have implicated mutations in tubulin or the overexpression of specific tubulin genes in resistance to microtubule-targeted drugs. Much less is known about the role of accessory proteins that modulate microtubule behavior in the genesis of drug resistance. Here, we examine mitotic centromere–associated kinesin (MCAK), a member of the kinesin family of microtubule motor proteins that has the ability to stimulate microtubule depolymerization, and show that overexpressing the protein confers resistance to paclitaxel and epothilone A, but increases sensitivity to colcemid. Cells transfected with FLAG-tagged MCAK cDNA using a tet-off–regulated expression system had a disrupted microtubule cytoskeleton and were able to survive a toxic concentration of paclitaxel in the absence, but not in the presence of tetracycline, showing that drug resistance was caused by ectopic MCAK production. Moreover, a population that was heterogeneous with respect to FLAG-MCAK expression became enriched with cells that produced the ectopic protein when it was placed under paclitaxel selection. Similar to previously isolated mutants with altered tubulin, paclitaxel resistant cells resulting from MCAK overexpression were found to have decreased microtubule polymer and a seven-fold increase in the frequency of microtubule detachment from centrosomes. These data are consistent with a model for paclitaxel resistance that is based on stability of the attachment of microtubules to their nucleating centers, and they implicate MCAK in the mechanism of microtubule detachment. Mol Cancer Ther; 10(6); 929–37. ©2011 AACR.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2011

New insights into mechanisms of resistance to microtubule inhibitors

Anutosh Ganguly; Fernando Cabral

Mechanisms to explain tumor cell resistance to drugs that target the microtubule cytoskeleton have relied on the assumption that the drugs act either to suppress microtubule dynamics or to perturb the balance between assembled and nonassembled tubulin. Recently, however, it was found that these drugs also alter the stability of microtubule attachment to centrosomes, and do so at the same concentrations that are needed to inhibit cell division. Based on this new information, a new model is presented that explains resistance resulting from a variety of molecular changes that have been reported in the literature. The improved understanding of drug action and resistance has important implications for chemotherapy with these agents.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011

Mitotic Centromere-associated Kinesin (MCAK) Mediates Paclitaxel Resistance

Anutosh Ganguly; Hailing Yang; Mesias Pedroza; Rajat Bhattacharya; Fernando Cabral

Background: Mutations causing paclitaxel resistance stimulate microtubule detachment from centrosomes. Results: Depletion of mitotic centromere-associated kinesin (MCAK) reverses microtubule detachment and paclitaxel resistance. Conclusion: MCAK plays a pivotal role in the mechanism of microtubule detachment and drug resistance. Significance: The ability of MCAK to reverse paclitaxel resistance identifies modulators of microtubule detachment as important new drug targets. Paclitaxel has powerful anticancer activity, but some tumors are inherently resistant to the drug, whereas others are initially sensitive but acquire resistance during treatment. To deal with this problem, it will be necessary to understand the mechanisms of drug action and resistance. Recent studies indicate that paclitaxel blocks cell division by inhibiting the detachment of microtubules from centrosomes. Here, we demonstrate that mitotic centromere-associated kinesin (MCAK), a kinesin-related protein that destabilizes microtubules, plays an important role in microtubule detachment. Depletion of MCAK altered mitotic spindle morphology, increased the frequency of lagging chromosomes, and inhibited the proliferation of WT CHO cells, confirming that it is an essential protein for cell division. In contrast, MCAK depletion rescued the proliferation of mutant paclitaxel-dependent cell lines that are unable to divide because of defective spindle function resulting from altered α-tubulin or class III β-tubulin overexpression. In concert with the correction of mitotic defects, loss of MCAK reversed an aberrantly high frequency of microtubule detachment in the mutant cells and increased their sensitivity to paclitaxel. The results indicate that MCAK affects cell sensitivity to mitotic inhibitors by modulating the frequency of microtubule detachment, and they demonstrate that changes in a microtubule-interacting protein can reverse the effects of mutant tubulin expression.


Journal of Visualized Experiments | 2012

Isolation of Human Umbilical Vein Endothelial Cells and Their Use in the Study of Neutrophil Transmigration Under Flow Conditions

Anutosh Ganguly; Hong Zhang; Ritu Sharma; Sean A. Parsons; Kamala D. Patel

Neutrophils are the most abundant type of white blood cell. They form an essential part of the innate immune system. During acute inflammation, neutrophils are the first inflammatory cells to migrate to the site of injury. Recruitment of neutrophils to an injury site is a stepwise process that includes first, dilation of blood vessels to increase blood flow; second, microvascular structural changes and escape of plasma proteins from the bloodstream; third, rolling, adhesion and transmigration of the neutrophil across the endothelium; and fourth accumulation of neutrophils at the site of injury. A wide array of in vivo and in vitro methods has evolved to enable the study of these processes. This method focuses on neutrophil transmigration across human endothelial cells. One popular method for examining the molecular processes involved in neutrophil transmigration utilizes human neutrophils interacting with primary human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC). Neutrophil isolation has been described visually elsewhere; thus this article will show the method for isolation of HUVEC. Once isolated and grown to confluence, endothelial cells are activated resulting in the upregulation of adhesion and activation molecules. For example, activation of endothelial cells with cytokines like TNF-α results in increased E-selectin and IL-8 expression. E-selectin mediates capture and rolling of neutrophils and IL-8 mediates activation and firm adhesion of neutrophils. After adhesion neutrophils transmigrate. Transmigration can occur paracellularly (through endothelial cell junctions) or transcellularly (through the endothelial cell itself). In most cases, these interactions occur under flow conditions found in the vasculature. The parallel plate flow chamber is a widely used system that mimics the hydrodynamic shear stresses found in vivo and enables the study of neutrophil recruitment under flow condition in vitro. Several companies produce parallel plate flow chambers and each have advantages and disadvantages. If fluorescent imaging is needed, glass or an optically similar polymer needs to be used. Endothelial cells do not grow well on glass. Here we present an easy and rapid method for phase-contrast, DIC and fluorescent imaging of neutrophil transmigration using a low volume ibidi channel slide made of a polymer that supports the rapid adhesion and growth of human endothelial cells and has optical qualities that are comparable to glass. In this method, endothelial cells were grown and stimulated in an ibidi μslide. Neutrophils were introduced under flow conditions and transmigration was assessed. Fluorescent imaging of the junctions enabled real-time determination of the extent of paracellular versus transcellular transmigration.


Cytoskeleton | 2011

Megakaryocyte Lineage Specific Class VI β-Tubulin Suppresses Microtubule Dynamics, Fragments Microtubules, and Blocks Cell Division

Hailing Yang; Anutosh Ganguly; Shanghua Yin; Fernando Cabral

Class VI β‐tubulin (β6) is the most divergent tubulin produced in mammals and is found only in platelets and mature megakaryocytes. To determine how this unique tubulin isotype affects microtubule assembly and organization, we expressed the cDNA in tissue culture cells under the control of a tetracycline regulated promoter. The β6 coassembled with other endogenous β‐tubulin isotypes into a normal microtubule array; but once the cells entered mitosis it caused extensive fragmentation of the microtubules, disrupted the formation of the spindle apparatus, and allowed entry into G1 phase without cytokinesis to produce large multinucleated cells. The microtubule fragments persisted into subsequent cell cycles and accumulated around the membrane in a marginal band‐like appearance. The persistence of the fragments could be traced to a pronounced suppression of microtubule dynamic instability. Impairment of centrosomal nucleation also contributed to the loss of a normal microtubule cytoskeleton. Incorporation of β6 allowed microtubules to resist the effects of colcemid and maytansine, but not vinblastine or paclitaxel; however, cellular resistance to colcemid or maytansine did not occur because expression of β6 prevented cell division. The results indicate that many of the morphological features of megakaryocyte differentiation can be recapitulated in non‐hematopoietic cells by β6 expression and they provide a mechanistic basis for understanding these changes.


Cell Cycle | 2008

Cell cycle dependent degradation of MCAK: evidence against a role in anaphase chromosome movement.

Anutosh Ganguly; Rajat Bhattacharya; Fernando Cabral

MCAK, a kinesin related motor protein with microtubule depolymerizing activity, is known to play an important role in spindle assembly and correcting errors in mitotic chromosome alignment. Experiments to determine how cellular levels of the protein are regulated demonstrate that MCAK accumulates during cell cycle progression, reaches a maximum at G2/M phase, and is rapidly degraded by the proteasome during mitosis. Immunofluorescence microscopy further indicates that MCAK largely disappears from kinetochores and spindle poles at the metaphase to anaphase transition. A phosphorylated form of MCAK appears during mitosis and seems to be preferentially degraded, but degradation does not appear to depend on Aurora B, a kinase reported to be involved in regulating the error correcting activity of the protein. These studies indicate that MCAK activity is limited during the latter stages of mitosis by protein degradation, and argue against a role for the protein in anaphase chromosome movement.


Cytoskeleton | 2012

Control of MCAK Degradation and Removal from Centromeres

Anutosh Ganguly; Rajat Bhattacharya; Fernando Cabral

Mitotic centromere associated kinesin (MCAK) is a kinesin related protein with the ability to stimulate microtubule depolymerization. It is found at spindle poles, where it may be involved in poleward microtubule flux, and at kinetochores and centromeres where it plays a role in correcting chromosome alignment errors. Its microtubule depolymerase activity and recruitment to centromeres is regulated by phosphorylation, but little is known about how MCAK is maintained at appropriate levels. We previously reported that MCAK accumulates during the cell cycle and is then degraded during mitosis. Using proteomic analysis, we have now identified a new phosphorylation site on MCAK that is responsible for its degradation. Mutation of the site to prevent phosphorylation prolonged the stability of the protein beyond the metaphase to anaphase transition and into the subsequent cell cycle whereas a phosphomimetic mutation accelerated degradation. Unexpectedly, the mutation that prevented phosphorylation also inhibited the removal of MCAK from centromeres causing it to remain attached throughout the cell cycle. Even low expression of phosphorylation‐resistant MCAK delayed mitosis and interfered with cell division. Mitotic defects were also observed by overexpressing a green fluorescent protein‐tagged version of wild‐type MCAK that similarly escaped degradation and accumulated to toxic levels, but did not remain associated with kinetochores during interphase. The results demonstrate that degradation is an important mechanism for controlling the activity of MCAK.

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Fernando Cabral

University of Texas at Austin

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Hailing Yang

University of Texas at Austin

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Rajat Bhattacharya

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Mesias Pedroza

University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

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Shanghua Yin

University of Texas at Austin

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