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Dive into the research topics where David R. Sherwood is active.

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Featured researches published by David R. Sherwood.


Cell | 2005

FOS-1 Promotes Basement-Membrane Removal during Anchor-Cell Invasion in C. elegans

David R. Sherwood; James A Butler; James M. Kramer; Paul W. Sternberg

Cell invasion through basement membranes is crucial during morphogenesis and cancer metastasis. Here, we genetically dissect this process during anchor-cell invasion into the vulval epithelium in C. elegans. We have identified the fos transcription factor ortholog fos-1 as a critical regulator of basement-membrane removal. In fos-1 mutants, the gonadal anchor cell extends cellular processes normally toward vulval cells, but these processes fail to remove the basement membranes separating the gonad from the vulval epithelium. fos-1 is expressed in the anchor cell and controls invasion cell autonomously. We have identified ZMP-1, a membrane-type matrix metalloproteinase, CDH-3, a Fat-like protocadherin, and hemicentin, a fibulin family extracellular matrix protein, as transcriptional targets of FOS-1 that promote invasion. These results reveal a key genetic network that controls basement-membrane removal during cell invasion.


Developmental Cell | 2003

Anchor Cell Invasion into the Vulval Epithelium in C. elegans

David R. Sherwood; Paul W. Sternberg

An understanding of cell-invasive behavior has been limited by the lack of in vivo models where this activity can be clearly visualized and manipulated. We show that a single cell in the Caenorhabditis elegans gonad, the anchor cell (AC), initiates uterine-vulval contact through a cell invasion event. Using genetic analysis, laser ablations, and cell-specific markers, we demonstrate that AC invasion is predominantly stimulated by the 1 degrees vulval lineage cells, which generate a diffusible signal that promotes AC invasive behavior toward these cells and further targets invasive processes between the two central 1 degrees vulval lineage cells. We also show that AC invasion is regulated by the AC response to this cue, as well as a vulval-independent mechanism that weakly drives invasion. These studies dissect the regulatory mechanisms that underlie a simple cell-invasive behavior in vivo, and introduce AC invasion as a model for understanding key checkpoints controlling cell invasion.


Nature Cell Biology | 2009

UNC-6 (netrin) orients the invasive membrane of the anchor cell in C. elegans.

Joshua W. Ziel; Elliott J. Hagedorn; Anjon Audhya; David R. Sherwood

Despite their profound importance in the development of cancer, the extracellular cues that target cell invasion through basement membrane barriers remain poorly understood. A central obstacle has been the difficulty of studying the interactions between invading cells and basement membranes in vivo. Using the genetically and visually tractable model of Caenorhabditis elegans anchor cell (AC) invasion, we show that UNC-6 (netrin) signalling, a pathway not previously implicated in controlling cell invasion in vivo, is a key regulator of this process. Site of action studies reveal that before invasion, localized UNC-6 secretion directs its receptor, UNC-40, to the plasma membrane of the AC, in contact with the basement membrane. There, UNC-40 polarizes a specialized invasive membrane domain through the enrichment of actin regulators, F-actin and phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PtdIns(4,5)P2). Cell ablation experiments indicate that UNC-6 promotes the formation of invasive protrusions from the AC that break down the basement membrane in response to a subsequent vulval cue. Together, these results characterize an invasive membrane domain in vivo, and reveal a role for UNC-6 (netrin) in polarizing this domain towards its basement membrane target.


Developmental Cell | 2009

Integrin Acts Upstream of Netrin Signaling to Regulate Formation of the Anchor Cell's Invasive Membrane in C. elegans

Elliott J. Hagedorn; Hanako Yashiro; Joshua W. Ziel; Shinji Ihara; Zheng Wang; David R. Sherwood

Integrin expression and activity have been strongly correlated with developmental and pathological processes involving cell invasion through basement membranes. The role of integrins in mediating these invasions, however, remains unclear. Utilizing the genetically and visually accessible model of anchor cell (AC) invasion in C. elegans, we have recently shown that netrin signaling orients a specialized invasive cell membrane domain toward the basement membrane. Here, we demonstrate that the integrin heterodimer INA-1/PAT-3 plays a crucial role in AC invasion, in part by targeting the netrin receptor UNC-40 (DCC) to the ACs plasma membrane. Analyses of the invasive membrane components phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate, the Rac GTPase MIG-2, and F-actin further indicate that INA-1/PAT-3 plays a broad role in promoting the plasma membrane association of these molecules. Taken together, these studies reveal a role for integrin in regulating the plasma membrane targeting and netrin-dependent orientation of a specialized invasive membrane domain.


Mechanisms of Development | 2002

Gene expression markers for Caenorhabditis elegans vulval cells

Takao Inoue; David R. Sherwood; Gudrun Aspöck; James A Butler; Bhagwati P. Gupta; Martha Kirouac; Minqin Wang; Pei-Yun Lee; James M. Kramer; Ian A. Hope; Thomas R. Bürglin; Paul W. Sternberg

The analysis of cell fate patterning during the vulval development of Caenorhabditis elegans has relied mostly on the direct observation of cell divisions and cell movements (cell lineage analysis). However, reconstruction of the developing vulva from EM serial sections has suggested seven different cell types (vulA, vulB1, vulB2, vulC, vulD, vulE, and vulF), many of which cannot be distinguished based on such observations. Here we report the vulval expression of seven genes, egl-17, cdh-3, ceh-2, zmp-1, B0034.1, T04B2.6 and F47B8.6 based on gfp, cfp and yfp (green fluorescent protein and color variants) reporter fusions. Each gene expresses in a specific subset of vulval cells, and is therefore useful as a marker for vulval cell fates. Together, expressions of markers distinguish six cell types, and reveal a strict temporal control of gene expression in the developing vulva.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2014

Traversing the basement membrane in vivo: A diversity of strategies

Laura C. Kelley; Lauren L. Lohmer; Elliott J. Hagedorn; David R. Sherwood

The basement membrane is a dense, highly cross-linked, sheet-like extracellular matrix that underlies all epithelia and endothelia in multicellular animals. During development, leukocyte trafficking, and metastatic disease, cells cross the basement membrane to disperse and enter new tissues. Based largely on in vitro studies, cells have been thought to use proteases to dissolve and traverse this formidable obstacle. Surprisingly, recent in vivo studies have uncovered a remarkably diverse range of cellular- and tissue-level strategies beyond proteolysis that cells use to navigate through the basement membrane. These fascinating and unexpected mechanisms have increased our understanding of how cells cross this matrix barrier in physiological and disease settings.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2013

The netrin receptor DCC focuses invadopodia-driven basement membrane transmigration in vivo

Elliott J. Hagedorn; Joshua W. Ziel; Meghan A. Morrissey; Lara M. Linden; Zheng Wang; Qiuyi Chi; Sam A. Johnson; David R. Sherwood

Localized activation of netrin signaling induces focused F-actin formation and the protrusive force necessary for physical displacement of basement membrane during cell transmigration.


Nature Cell Biology | 2011

Basement membrane sliding and targeted adhesion remodels tissue boundaries during uterine–vulval attachment in Caenorhabditis elegans

Shinji Ihara; Elliott J. Hagedorn; Meghan A. Morrissey; Qiuyi Chi; Fumio Motegi; James M. Kramer; David R. Sherwood

Large gaps in basement membrane occur at sites of cell invasion and tissue remodelling in development and cancer. Though never followed directly in vivo, basement membrane dissolution or reduced synthesis have been postulated to create these gaps. Using landmark photobleaching and optical highlighting of laminin and type IV collagen, we find that a new mechanism, basement membrane sliding, underlies basement membrane gap enlargement during uterine–vulval attachment in Caenorhabditis elegans. Laser ablation and mutant analysis reveal that the invaginating vulval cells promote basement membrane movement. Further, an RNA interference and expression screen identifies the integrin INA-1/PAT-3 and VAB-19, homologue of the tumour suppressor Kank, as regulators of basement membrane opening. Both concentrate within vulval cells at the basement membrane gap boundary and halt expansion of the shifting basement membrane. Basement membrane sliding followed by targeted adhesion represents a new mechanism for creating precise basement membrane breaches that can be used by cells to break down compartment boundaries.


Current Opinion in Cell Biology | 2011

Cell invasion through basement membrane: the anchor cell breaches the barrier.

Elliott J. Hagedorn; David R. Sherwood

Cell invasion through basement membrane (BM) is a specialized cellular behavior critical to many normal developmental events, immune surveillance, and cancer metastasis. A highly dynamic process, cell invasion involves a complex interplay between cell-intrinsic elements that promote the invasive phenotype, and cell-cell and cell-BM interactions that regulate the timing and targeting of BM transmigration. The intricate nature of these interactions has made it challenging to study cell invasion in vivo and model in vitro. Anchor cell invasion in Caenorhabditis elegans is emerging as an important experimental paradigm for comprehensive analysis of BM invasion, revealing the gene networks that specify invasive behavior and the interactions that occur at the cell-BM interface.


Science Signaling | 2010

In vivo identification of regulators of cell invasion across basement membranes.

David Q. Matus; Xiao Yan Li; Sarah Durbin; Daniel Agarwal; Qiuyi Chi; Stephen J. Weiss; David R. Sherwood

A Caenorhabditis elegans screen provides insight into cell invasion and metastasis. Crossing the Basement Membrane The basement membrane is a fibrous, sheet-like layer of the extracellular matrix located underneath epithelial or endothelial cell layers. Cell invasion through basement membranes is required during development and also during metastasis, when tumor cells leave their tissue of origin and enter lymphatic or blood vessels to migrate to secondary sites. During development of the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans, a specialized gonadal cell known as the anchor cell invades the gonadal and ventral epidermal basement membranes to initiate the formation of the female reproductive tract. Matus et al. identified and characterized genes encoding factors that promoted the ability of the anchor cell to invade basement membranes in C. elegans, most of which had not been previously implicated in cell invasion. Two of these genes, cct-5 (encoding a member of a chaperonin complex) and lit-1 (encoding a NEMO-like kinase), have human orthologs that, when knocked down in breast or colon carcinoma cells, prevented basement membrane invasion in an ex vivo system. Thus, the pro-invasive genes identified in this nematode screen could be therapeutically targeted in the treatment of metastatic cancer. Cell invasion through basement membranes during development, immune surveillance, and metastasis remains poorly understood. To gain further insight into this key cellular behavior, we performed an in vivo screen for regulators of cell invasion through basement membranes, using the simple model of Caenorhabditis elegans anchor cell invasion, and identified 99 genes that promote invasion, including the genes encoding the chaperonin complex cct. Notably, most of these genes have not been previously implicated in invasive cell behavior. We characterized members of the cct complex and 11 other gene products, determining the distinct aspects of the invasive cascade that they regulate, including formation of a specialized invasive cell membrane and its ability to breach the basement membrane. RNA interference–mediated knockdown of the human orthologs of cct-5 and lit-1, which had not previously been implicated in cell invasion, reduced the invasiveness of metastatic carcinoma cells, suggesting that a conserved genetic program underlies cell invasion. These results increase our understanding of the genetic underpinnings of cell invasion and also provide new potential therapeutic targets to limit this behavior.

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Elliott J. Hagedorn

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

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Paul W. Sternberg

California Institute of Technology

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