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Dive into the research topics where Christopher C. DuFort is active.

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Featured researches published by Christopher C. DuFort.


Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology | 2011

Balancing forces: architectural control of mechanotransduction.

Christopher C. DuFort; Matthew J. Paszek; Valerie M. Weaver

All cells exist within the context of a three-dimensional microenvironment in which they are exposed to mechanical and physical cues. These cues can be disrupted through perturbations to mechanotransduction, from the nanoscale-level to the tissue-level, which compromises tensional homeostasis to promote pathologies such as cardiovascular disease and cancer. The mechanisms of such perturbations suggest that a complex interplay exists between the extracellular microenvironment and cellular function. Furthermore, sustained disruptions in tensional homeostasis can be caused by alterations in the extracellular matrix, allowing it to serve as a mechanically based memory-storage device that can perpetuate a disease or restore normal tissue behaviour.


Nature | 2014

The cancer glycocalyx mechanically primes integrin-mediated growth and survival

Matthew J. Paszek; Christopher C. DuFort; Olivier Rossier; Russell Bainer; Janna K. Mouw; Kamil Godula; Jason E. Hudak; Jonathon N. Lakins; Amanda C. Wijekoon; Luke Cassereau; Matthew G. Rubashkin; Mark Jesus M. Magbanua; Kurt S. Thorn; Michael W. Davidson; Hope S. Rugo; John W. Park; Daniel A. Hammer; Grégory Giannone; Carolyn R. Bertozzi; Valerie M. Weaver

Malignancy is associated with altered expression of glycans and glycoproteins that contribute to the cellular glycocalyx. We constructed a glycoprotein expression signature, which revealed that metastatic tumours upregulate expression of bulky glycoproteins. A computational model predicted that these glycoproteins would influence transmembrane receptor spatial organization and function. We tested this prediction by investigating whether bulky glycoproteins in the glycocalyx promote a tumour phenotype in human cells by increasing integrin adhesion and signalling. Our data revealed that a bulky glycocalyx facilitates integrin clustering by funnelling active integrins into adhesions and altering integrin state by applying tension to matrix-bound integrins, independent of actomyosin contractility. Expression of large tumour-associated glycoproteins in non-transformed mammary cells promoted focal adhesion assembly and facilitated integrin-dependent growth factor signalling to support cell growth and survival. Clinical studies revealed that large glycoproteins are abundantly expressed on circulating tumour cells from patients with advanced disease. Thus, a bulky glycocalyx is a feature of tumour cells that could foster metastasis by mechanically enhancing cell-surface receptor function.


Nature Methods | 2012

Scanning angle interference microscopy reveals cell dynamics at the nanoscale

Matthew J. Paszek; Christopher C. DuFort; Matthew G. Rubashkin; Michael W. Davidson; Kurt S. Thorn; Jan Liphardt; Valerie M. Weaver

Emerging questions in cell biology necessitate nanoscale imaging in live cells. Here we present scanning angle interference microscopy, which is capable of localizing fluorescent objects with nanoscale precision along the optical axis in motile cellular structures. We use this approach to resolve nanotopographical features of the cell membrane and cytoskeleton as well as the temporal evolution, three-dimensional architecture and nanoscale dynamics of focal adhesion complexes.


Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2017

Integrin-mediated traction force enhances paxillin molecular associations and adhesion dynamics that increase the invasiveness of tumor cells into a three-dimensional extracellular matrix

Armen H. Mekhdjian; FuiBoon Kai; Matthew G. Rubashkin; Louis S. Prahl; Laralynne Przybyla; Alexandra L. McGregor; Emily S. Bell; J. Matthew Barnes; Christopher C. DuFort; Guanqing Ou; Alice C. Chang; Luke Cassereau; Steven J. Tan; Michael W. Pickup; Jonathan N. Lakins; Xin Ye; Michael W. Davidson; Jan Lammerding; David J. Odde; Alexander R. Dunn; Valerie M. Weaver

Mammary tumor cells adopt a basal-like phenotype when invading through a dense, stiffened, 3D matrix. These cells exert higher integrin-mediated traction forces, consistent with a physical motor-clutch model, display an altered molecular organization at the nanoscale, and recruit a suite of paxillin-associated proteins implicated in metastasis.


Nature Cell Biology | 2013

YAP forces fibroblasts to feel the tension.

Ori Maller; Christopher C. DuFort; Valerie M. Weaver

Cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs) may contribute to tissue tension and cancer progression by increasing extracellular matrix (ECM) deposition and remodelling. However, how CAFs become activated and their roles in tumour mechanics have remained unclear. YAP is now identified as a tension-stimulated CAF activator that promotes malignancy through a mechanically reinforced feed-forward loop.


eLife | 2015

Discrete spatial organization of TGFβ receptors couples receptor multimerization and signaling to cellular tension.

Joanna P. Rys; Christopher C. DuFort; David A. Monteiro; Michelle A. Baird; Juan A. Oses-Prieto; Shreya Chand; Alma L. Burlingame; Michael W. Davidson; Tamara Alliston

Cell surface receptors are central to the cells ability to generate coordinated responses to the multitude of biochemical and physical cues in the microenvironment. However, the mechanisms by which receptors enable this concerted cellular response remain unclear. To investigate the effect of cellular tension on cell surface receptors, we combined novel high-resolution imaging and single particle tracking with established biochemical assays to examine TGFβ signaling. We find that TGFβ receptors are discretely organized to segregated spatial domains at the cell surface. Integrin-rich focal adhesions organize TβRII around TβRI, limiting the integration of TβRII while sequestering TβRI at these sites. Disruption of cellular tension leads to a collapse of this spatial organization and drives formation of heteromeric TβRI/TβRII complexes and Smad activation. This work details a novel mechanism by which cellular tension regulates TGFβ receptor organization, multimerization, and function, providing new insight into the mechanisms that integrate biochemical and physical cues. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.09300.001


Nature Materials | 2012

Morphogenesis: Laying down the tracks

Luke Cassereau; Christopher C. DuFort; Valerie M. Weaver

To drive the formation of tubular structures, cells remodel their extracellular microenvironment to induce coordinated migration. It is now found that a mechanical feedback loop, involving the interaction of cell traction forces with collagen fibres, facilitates the formation of long epithelial tubules.


Methods in Cell Biology | 2014

Nanoscale cellular imaging with scanning angle interference microscopy.

Christopher C. DuFort; Matthew J. Paszek

Fluorescence microscopy is among the most widely utilized tools in cell and molecular biology due to its ability to noninvasively obtain time-resolved images of live cells with molecule-specific contrast. In this chapter, we describe a simple high-resolution technique, scanning angle interference microscopy (SAIM), for the imaging and localization of fluorescent molecules with nanometer precision along the optical axis. In SAIM, samples above a reflective surface are sequentially scanned with an excitation laser at varying angles of incidence. Interference patterns generated between the incident and reflected lights result in an emission intensity that depends on the height of a fluorophore above the silicon surface and the angle of the incident radiation. The measured fluorescence intensities are then fit to an optical model to localize the labeled molecules along the z-axis with 5-10 nm precision and diffraction-limited lateral resolution. SAIM is easily implemented on widely available commercial total internal reflection fluorescence microscopes, offering potential for widespread use in cell biology. Here, we describe the setup of SAIM and its application for imaging cellular structures near (<1 μm) the sample substrate.


Cancer Research | 2014

Force Engages Vinculin and Promotes Tumor Progression by Enhancing PI3K Activation of Phosphatidylinositol (3,4,5)-Triphosphate

Matthew G. Rubashkin; Luke Cassereau; Russell Bainer; Christopher C. DuFort; Yoshihiro Yui; Guanqing Ou; Matthew J. Paszek; Michael W. Davidson; Yunn-Yi Chen; Valerie M. Weaver


Integrative Biology | 2016

Visualizing mechanical modulation of nanoscale organization of cell-matrix adhesions

Guanqing Ou; Dhruv Thakar; Jason C. Tung; Yekaterina A. Miroshnikova; Christopher C. DuFort; Edgar Gutierrez; Alex Groisman; Valerie M. Weaver

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Guanqing Ou

University of California

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Luke Cassereau

University of California

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Kurt S. Thorn

University of California

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Russell Bainer

University of California

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Alex Groisman

University of California

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