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Dive into the research topics where Dawen Cai is active.

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Featured researches published by Dawen Cai.


Current Biology | 2006

Microtubule Acetylation Promotes Kinesin-1 Binding and Transport

Nathan A. Reed; Dawen Cai; T. Lynne Blasius; Gloria T. Jih; Edgar Meyhöfer; Jacek Gaertig; Kristen J. Verhey

Long-distance intracellular delivery is driven by kinesin and dynein motor proteins that ferry cargoes along microtubule tracks . Current models postulate that directional trafficking is governed by known biophysical properties of these motors-kinesins generally move to the plus ends of microtubules in the cell periphery, whereas cytoplasmic dynein moves to the minus ends in the cell center. However, these models are insufficient to explain how polarized protein trafficking to subcellular domains is accomplished. We show that the kinesin-1 cargo protein JNK-interacting protein 1 (JIP1) is localized to only a subset of neurites in cultured neuronal cells. The mechanism of polarized trafficking appears to involve the preferential recognition of microtubules containing specific posttranslational modifications (PTMs) by the kinesin-1 motor domain. Using a genetic approach to eliminate specific PTMs, we show that the loss of a single modification, alpha-tubulin acetylation at Lys-40, influences the binding and motility of kinesin-1 in vitro. In addition, pharmacological treatments that increase microtubule acetylation cause a redirection of kinesin-1 transport of JIP1 to nearly all neurite tips in vivo. These results suggest that microtubule PTMs are important markers of distinct microtubule populations and that they act to control motor-protein trafficking.


Current Opinion in Cell Biology | 2008

Tubulin modifications and their cellular functions.

Jennetta W. Hammond; Dawen Cai; Kristen J. Verhey

All microtubules are built from a basic alpha/beta-tubulin building block, yet subpopulations of microtubules can be differentially marked by a number of post-translational modifications. These modifications, conserved throughout evolution, are thought to act individually or in combination to control specific microtubule-based functions, analogous to how histone modifications regulate chromatin functions. Here we review recent studies demonstrating that tubulin modifications influence microtubule-associated proteins such as severing proteins, plus-end tracking proteins, and molecular motors. In this way, tubulin modifications play an important role in regulating microtubule properties, such as stability and structure, as well as microtubule-based functions, such as ciliary beating, cell division, and intracellular trafficking.


PLOS Biology | 2009

Single molecule imaging reveals differences in microtubule track selection between Kinesin motors.

Dawen Cai; Dyke P. McEwen; Jeffery R. Martens; Edgar Meyhofer; Kristen J. Verhey

Molecular motors differentially recognize and move cargo along discrete microtubule subpopulations in cells, resulting in preferential transport and targeting of subcellular cargoes.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2007

Two binding partners cooperate to activate the molecular motor Kinesin-1

T. Lynne Blasius; Dawen Cai; Gloria T. Jih; Christopher P. Toret; Kristen J. Verhey

The regulation of molecular motors is an important cellular problem, as motility in the absence of cargo results in futile adenosine triphosphate hydrolysis. When not transporting cargo, the microtubule (MT)-based motor Kinesin-1 is kept inactive as a result of a folded conformation that allows autoinhibition of the N-terminal motor by the C-terminal tail. The simplest model of Kinesin-1 activation posits that cargo binding to nonmotor regions relieves autoinhibition. In this study, we show that binding of the c-Jun N-terminal kinase–interacting protein 1 (JIP1) cargo protein is not sufficient to activate Kinesin-1. Because two regions of the Kinesin-1 tail are required for autoinhibition, we searched for a second molecule that contributes to activation of the motor. We identified fasciculation and elongation protein ζ1 (FEZ1) as a binding partner of kinesin heavy chain. We show that binding of JIP1 and FEZ1 to Kinesin-1 is sufficient to activate the motor for MT binding and motility. These results provide the first demonstration of the activation of a MT-based motor by cellular binding partners.


PLOS Biology | 2009

Mammalian Kinesin-3 Motors Are Dimeric In Vivo and Move by Processive Motility upon Release of Autoinhibition

Jennetta W. Hammond; Dawen Cai; T. Lynne Blasius; Zhe Li; Yuyang Jiang; Gloria T. Jih; Edgar Meyhofer; Kristen J. Verhey

Kinesin-3 motors drive the transport of synaptic vesicles and other membrane-bound organelles in neuronal cells. In the absence of cargo, kinesin motors are kept inactive to prevent motility and ATP hydrolysis. Current models state that the Kinesin-3 motor KIF1A is monomeric in the inactive state and that activation results from concentration-driven dimerization on the cargo membrane. To test this model, we have examined the activity and dimerization state of KIF1A. Unexpectedly, we found that both native and expressed proteins are dimeric in the inactive state. Thus, KIF1A motors are not activated by cargo-induced dimerization. Rather, we show that KIF1A motors are autoinhibited by two distinct inhibitory mechanisms, suggesting a simple model for activation of dimeric KIF1A motors by cargo binding. Successive truncations result in monomeric and dimeric motors that can undergo one-dimensional diffusion along the microtubule lattice. However, only dimeric motors undergo ATP-dependent processive motility. Thus, KIF1A may be uniquely suited to use both diffuse and processive motility to drive long-distance transport in neuronal cells.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2007

Kinesin-1 structural organization and conformational changes revealed by FRET stoichiometry in live cells

Dawen Cai; Adam D. Hoppe; Joel A. Swanson; Kristen J. Verhey

Kinesin motor proteins drive the transport of cellular cargoes along microtubule tracks. How motor protein activity is controlled in cells is unresolved, but it is likely coupled to changes in protein conformation and cargo association. By applying the quantitative method fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) stoichiometry to fluorescent protein (FP)–labeled kinesin heavy chain (KHC) and kinesin light chain (KLC) subunits in live cells, we studied the overall structural organization and conformation of Kinesin-1 in the active and inactive states. Inactive Kinesin-1 molecules are folded and autoinhibited such that the KHC tail blocks the initial interaction of the KHC motor with the microtubule. In addition, in the inactive state, the KHC motor domains are pushed apart by the KLC subunit. Thus, FRET stoichiometry reveals conformational changes of a protein complex in live cells. For Kinesin-1, activation requires a global conformational change that separates the KHC motor and tail domains and a local conformational change that moves the KHC motor domains closer together.


PLOS Pathogens | 2009

A Lipid Receptor Sorts Polyomavirus from the Endolysosome to the Endoplasmic Reticulum to Cause Infection

Mengding Qian; Dawen Cai; Kristen J. Verhey; Billy Tsai

The mechanisms by which receptors guide intracellular virus transport are poorly characterized. The murine polyomavirus (Py) binds to the lipid receptor ganglioside GD1a and traffics to the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) where it enters the cytosol and then the nucleus to initiate infection. How Py reaches the ER is unclear. We show that Py is transported initially to the endolysosome where the low pH imparts a conformational change that enhances its subsequent ER-to-cytosol membrane penetration. GD1a stimulates not viral binding or entry, but rather sorting of Py from late endosomes and/or lysosomes to the ER, suggesting that GD1a binding is responsible for ER targeting. Consistent with this, an artificial particle coated with a GD1a antibody is transported to the ER. Our results provide a rationale for transport of Py through the endolysosome, demonstrate a novel endolysosome-to-ER transport pathway that is regulated by a lipid, and implicate ganglioside binding as a general ER targeting mechanism.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2010

Autoinhibition of the kinesin-2 motor KIF17 via dual intramolecular mechanisms

Jennetta W. Hammond; T. Lynne Blasius; Virupakshi Soppina; Dawen Cai; Kristen J. Verhey

Kinesin-2 motor KIF17 autoinhibition is visualized in vivo; in the absence of cargo, this homodimer’s C-terminal tail blocks microtubule binding, and a coiled-coil segment blocks motility.


Nature Methods | 2017

Iterative expansion microscopy

Jae Byum Chang; Fei Chen; Young Gyu Yoon; Erica E. Jung; Hazen P. Babcock; Jeong Seuk Kang; Shoh Asano; Ho Jun Suk; Nikita Pak; Paul W. Tillberg; Asmamaw Wassie; Dawen Cai; Edward S. Boyden

We recently developed a method called expansion microscopy, in which preserved biological specimens are physically magnified by embedding them in a densely crosslinked polyelectrolyte gel, anchoring key labels or biomolecules to the gel, mechanically homogenizing the specimen, and then swelling the gel–specimen composite by ∼4.5× in linear dimension. Here we describe iterative expansion microscopy (iExM), in which a sample is expanded ∼20×. After preliminary expansion a second swellable polymer mesh is formed in the space newly opened up by the first expansion, and the sample is expanded again. iExM expands biological specimens ∼4.5 × 4.5, or ∼20×, and enables ∼25-nm-resolution imaging of cells and tissues on conventional microscopes. We used iExM to visualize synaptic proteins, as well as the detailed architecture of dendritic spines, in mouse brain circuitry.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2014

A method for multiprotein assembly in cells reveals independent action of kinesins in complex

Stephen R. Norris; Virupakshi Soppina; Aslan S. Dizaji; Kristin I. Schimert; David Sept; Dawen Cai; Sivaraj Sivaramakrishnan; Kristen J. Verhey

A new system for generating cellular protein assemblies of defined spacing and composition reveals that kinesin motors located near each other function independently rather than cooperatively and are influenced primarily by the characteristics of the microtubule track on which they are moving.

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Adam D. Hoppe

South Dakota State University

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Edward S. Boyden

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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