Dail Chapman
University of California, Irvine
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Publication
Featured researches published by Dail Chapman.
Nature Communications | 2016
Babu J.N. Reddy; Michelle K. Mattson; Caitlin L. Wynne; Omid Vadpey; Abdo Durra; Dail Chapman; Richard B. Vallee; Steven P. Gross
Most sub-cellular cargos are transported along microtubules by kinesin and dynein molecular motors, but how transport is regulated is not well understood. It is unknown whether local control is possible, for example, by changes in specific cargo-associated motor behaviour to react to impediments. Here we discover that microtubule-associated lipid droplets (LDs) in COS1 cells respond to an optical trap with a remarkable enhancement in sustained force production. This effect is observed only for microtubule minus-end-moving LDs. It is specifically blocked by RNAi for the cytoplasmic dynein regulators LIS1 and NudE/L (Nde1/Ndel1), but not for the dynactin p150Glued subunit. It can be completely replicated using cell-free preparations of purified LDs, where duration of LD force production is more than doubled. These results identify a novel, intrinsic, cargo-associated mechanism for dynein-mediated force adaptation, which should markedly improve the ability of motor-driven cargoes to overcome subcellular obstacles.
Traffic | 2017
Babu J.N. Reddy; Suvranta K. Tripathy; Michael Vershinin; Marvin E. Tanenbaum; Jing Xu; Michelle K. Mattson-Hoss; Karim Arabi; Dail Chapman; Tory Doolin; Changbong Hyeon; Steven P. Gross
The kinesin family proteins are often studied as prototypical molecular motors; a deeper understanding of them can illuminate regulation of intracellular transport. It is typically assumed that they function identically. Here we find that this assumption of homogeneous function appears incorrect: variation among motors’ velocities in vivo and in vitro is larger than the stochastic variation expected for an ensemble of “identical” motors. When moving on microtubules, slow and fast motors are persistently slow, and fast, respectively. We develop theory that provides quantitative criteria to determine whether the observed single‐molecule variation is too large to be generated from an ensemble of identical molecules. To analyze such heterogeneity, we group traces into homogeneous sub‐ensembles. Motility studies varying the temperature, pH and glycerol concentration suggest at least 2 distinct functional states that are independently affected by external conditions. We end by investigating the functional ramifications of such heterogeneity through Monte‐Carlo multi‐motor simulations.
RSC Advances | 2016
Amanda J. Tan; Dail Chapman; Linda S. Hirst; Jing Xu
We examined the sensitivity of microtubule spools to transport velocity. Perhaps surprisingly, we determined that the steady-state number and size of spools remained constant over a seven-fold range of velocities. Our data on the kinetics of spool assembly further suggest that the main mechanisms underlying spool growth vary during assembly.
Traffic | 2015
Mitra Shojania Feizabadi; Babu Reddy Janakaloti Narayanareddy; Omid Vadpey; Yonggun Jun; Dail Chapman; Steven S. Rosenfeld; Steven P. Gross
Biophysical Journal | 2018
Babu Reddy Janakaloti Narayanareddy; Dail Chapman; Deanna Smith; Steven P. Gross
Biophysical Journal | 2018
Joseph Lopes; David Quint; Dail Chapman; Ajay Gopinathan; Linda S. Hirst; Jing Xu
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2017
Joseph Lopes; Dail Chapman; Linda S. Hirst; Jing Xu
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2016
Amanda Tan; Dail Chapman; Linda S. Hirst; Jing Xu
Biophysical Journal | 2016
Amanda Tan; Dail Chapman; Linda S. Hirst; Jing Xu
Biophysical Journal | 2016
Joseph Lopes; Dail Chapman; Linda S. Hirst; Jing Xu