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Dive into the research topics where Dibyendu Bhattacharyya is active.

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Featured researches published by Dibyendu Bhattacharyya.


Biochemistry | 2009

A rapidly maturing far-red derivative of DsRed-Express2 for whole-cell labeling.

Rita Strack; Birka Hein; Dibyendu Bhattacharyya; Stefan W. Hell; Robert J. Keenan; Benjamin S. Glick

Fluorescent proteins (FPs) with far-red excitation and emission are desirable for multicolor labeling and live-animal imaging. We describe E2-Crimson, a far-red derivative of the tetrameric FP DsRed-Express2. Unlike other far-red FPs, E2-Crimson is noncytotoxic in bacterial and mammalian cells. E2-Crimson is brighter than other far-red FPs and matures substantially faster than other red and far-red FPs. Approximately 40% of the E2-Crimson fluorescence signal is remarkably photostable. With an excitation maximum at 611 nm, E2-Crimson is the first FP that is efficiently excited with standard far-red lasers. We show that E2-Crimson has unique applications for flow cytometry and stimulated emission depletion (STED) microscopy.


Nature Methods | 2008

A Noncytotoxic Dsred Variant for Whole-Cell Labeling.

Rita Strack; Daniel E. Strongin; Dibyendu Bhattacharyya; Wen Tao; Allison Berman; Hal E. Broxmeyer; Robert J. Keenan; Benjamin S. Glick

A common application of fluorescent proteins is to label whole cells, but many RFPs are cytotoxic when used with standard high-level expression systems. We engineered a rapidly maturing tetrameric fluorescent protein called DsRed-Express2 that has minimal cytotoxicity. DsRed-Express2 exhibits strong and stable expression in bacterial and mammalian cells, and it outperforms other available RFPs with regard to photostability and phototoxicity.


Fluorescence In Vivo Imaging Based on Genetically Engineered Probes: From Living Cells to Whole Body Imaging IV | 2009

A noncytotoxic DsRed variant for whole-cell labeling

Rita Strack; Daniel E. Strongin; Dibyendu Bhattacharyya; Wen Tao; Allison Berman; Hal E. Broxmeyer; Robert J. Keenan; Benjamin S. Glick

Fluorescent proteins (FPs) are extremely useful tools for whole-cell, tissue, and animal labeling. For these purposes, FPs may be monomeric or oligomeric, but should meet the criteria of being tolerated at high expression levels in cells and having desirable photophysical properties. Our goal was to create a variant of DsRed-Express that maintains the brightness, fast-maturation, and photostability of this protein, while exhibiting decreased cytotoxicity. For this purpose, we mutated the surface of DsRed-Express to decrease aggregation and created DsRed-Express2. DsRed-Express2 retains the favorable photophysical properties of DsRed-Express while showing dramatically reduced cytotoxicity and higher expression in bacterial and mammalian systems. Further, it was shown that DsRed-Express2 outperforms other red FPs as a label for bacterial and mammalian cells.


Developmental Cell | 2004

The Transitional ER Localization Mechanism of Pichia pastoris Sec12

Jon Soderholm; Dibyendu Bhattacharyya; Daniel E. Strongin; Vida Markovitz; Pamela L. Connerly; Catherine A. Reinke; Benjamin S. Glick

COPII vesicles assemble at ER subdomains called transitional ER (tER) sites, but the mechanism that generates tER sites is unknown. To study tER biogenesis, we analyzed the transmembrane protein Sec12, which initiates COPII vesicle formation. Sec12 is concentrated at discrete tER sites in the budding yeast Pichia pastoris. We find that P. pastoris Sec12 exchanges rapidly between tER sites and the general ER. The tER localization of Sec12 is saturable and is mediated by interaction of the Sec12 cytosolic domain with a partner component. This interaction apparently requires oligomerization of the Sec12 lumenal domain. Redistribution of P. pastoris Sec12 to the general ER does not perturb the localization of downstream tER components, suggesting that Sec12 and other COPII proteins associate with a tER scaffold. These results provide evidence that tER sites form by a network of dynamic associations at the cytosolic face of the ER.


Traffic | 2010

The Yeast GRASP Grh1 Colocalizes with COPII and Is Dispensable for Organizing the Secretory Pathway

Stephanie K. Levi; Dibyendu Bhattacharyya; Rita Strack; Jotham R. Austin; Benjamin S. Glick

In mammalian cells, the ‘Golgi reassembly and stacking protein’ (GRASP) family has been implicated in Golgi stacking, but the broader functions of GRASP proteins are still unclear. The yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae contains a single non‐essential GRASP homolog called Grh1. However, Golgi cisternae in S. cerevisiae are not organized into stacks, so a possible structural role for Grh1 has been difficult to test. Here, we examined the localization and function of Grh1 in S. cerevisiae and in the related yeast Pichia pastoris, which has stacked Golgi cisternae. In agreement with earlier studies indicating that Grh1 interacts with coat protein II (COPII) vesicle coat proteins, we find that Grh1 colocalizes with COPII at transitional endoplasmic reticulum (tER) sites in both yeasts. Deletion of P. pastoris Grh1 had no obvious effect on the structure of tER–Golgi units. To test the role of S. cerevisiae Grh1, we exploited the observation that inhibiting ER export in S. cerevisiae generates enlarged tER sites that are often associated with the cis Golgi. This tER–Golgi association was preserved in the absence of Grh1. The combined data suggest that Grh1 acts early in the secretory pathway, but is dispensable for the organization of secretory compartments.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Sec12 binds to Sec16 at transitional ER sites.

Elisabeth A. Montegna; Madhura Bhave; Yang Liu; Dibyendu Bhattacharyya; Benjamin S. Glick

COPII vesicles bud from an ER domain known as the transitional ER (tER). Assembly of the COPII coat is initiated by the transmembrane guanine nucleotide exchange factor Sec12. In the budding yeast Pichia pastoris, Sec12 is concentrated at tER sites. Previously, we found that the tER localization of P. pastoris Sec12 requires a saturable binding partner. We now show that this binding partner is Sec16, a peripheral membrane protein that functions in ER export and tER organization. One line of evidence is that overexpression of Sec12 delocalizes Sec12 to the general ER, but simultaneous overexpression of Sec16 retains overexpressed Sec12 at tER sites. Additionally, when P. pastoris Sec12 is expressed in S. cerevisiae, the exogenous Sec12 localizes to the general ER, but when P. pastoris Sec16 is expressed in the same cells, the exogenous Sec12 is recruited to tER sites. In both of these experimental systems, the ability of Sec16 to recruit Sec12 to tER sites is abolished by deleting a C-terminal fragment of Sec16. Biochemical experiments confirm that this C-terminal fragment of Sec16 binds to the cytosolic domain of Sec12. Similarly, we demonstrate that human Sec12 is concentrated at tER sites, likely due to association with a C-terminal fragment of Sec16A. These results suggest that a Sec12–Sec16 interaction has a conserved role in ER export.


Journal of Cell Science | 2014

Golgi enlargement in Arf-depleted yeast cells is due to altered dynamics of cisternal maturation

Madhura Bhave; Effrosyni Papanikou; Prasanna Iyer; Koushal Pandya; Bhawik Kumar Jain; Abira Ganguly; Chandrakala Sharma; Ketakee Pawar; Jotham R. Austin; Kasey J. Day; Olivia W. Rossanese; Benjamin S. Glick; Dibyendu Bhattacharyya

ABSTRACT Regulation of the size and abundance of membrane compartments is a fundamental cellular activity. In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, disruption of the ADP-ribosylation factor 1 (ARF1) gene yields larger and fewer Golgi cisternae by partially depleting the Arf GTPase. We observed a similar phenotype with a thermosensitive mutation in Nmt1, which myristoylates and activates Arf. Therefore, partial depletion of Arf is a convenient tool for dissecting mechanisms that regulate Golgi structure. We found that in arf1&Dgr; cells, late Golgi structure is particularly abnormal, with the number of late Golgi cisternae being severely reduced. This effect can be explained by selective changes in cisternal maturation kinetics. The arf1&Dgr; mutation causes early Golgi cisternae to mature more slowly and less frequently, but does not alter the maturation of late Golgi cisternae. These changes quantitatively explain why late Golgi cisternae are fewer in number and correspondingly larger. With a stacked Golgi, similar changes in maturation kinetics could be used by the cell to modulate the number of cisternae per stack. Thus, the rates of processes that transform a maturing compartment can determine compartmental size and copy number.


Methods of Molecular Biology | 2010

High-Quality Immunofluorescence of Cultured Cells

Dibyendu Bhattacharyya; Adam T. Hammond; Benjamin S. Glick

Immunofluorescence microscopy of cultured cells often gives poor preservation of delicate structures. We have obtained dramatically improved results with a simple modification of a standard protocol. Cells growing on a coverslip are rapidly dehydrated in a cold organic solvent and then are rehydrated in a solution containing a homobifunctional crosslinker. The crosslinking reaction stabilizes cellular structures during subsequent incubation and wash steps, usually without compromising antigenicity. This method reproducibly yields high-quality images of endomembrane compartments and cytoskeletal elements.


Molecular Cancer | 2015

Inhibition of nucleoporin member Nup214 expression by miR-133b perturbs mitotic timing and leads to cell death

Sumana Bhattacharjya; Kumar Singha Roy; Abira Ganguly; Shreya Sarkar; Chinmay Kumar Panda; Dibyendu Bhattacharyya; Nitai P. Bhattacharyya; Susanta Roychoudhury

BackgroundNucleoporins mediate nucleocytoplasmic exchange of macromolecules and several have been assigned active mitotic functions. Nucleoporins can participate in various mitotic functions like spindle assembly, kinetochore organisation and chromosome segregation- important for genome integrity. Pathways to genome integrity are frequently deregulated in cancer and many are regulated in part by microRNAs. Indeed, altered levels of numerous microRNAs have frequently been associated with tumorigenesis. Here, we unveil a microRNA-mediated regulation of the nucleoporin Nup214 and its downstream effect on genome integrity.MethodsDatabases/bioinformatic tools such as miRBase, Oncomine and RNAhybrid predicted Nup214 as a miR-133b target. To validate this, we used luciferase reporter assays, Real-Time PCR and immuno-blotting. Flow cytometry and immuno-blots of mitotic markers were used to analyse cell cycle pattern upon thymidine synchronization and miR-133b treatment. Mitotic indices and chromosomal abnormalities were assessed by immuno-fluorescence for FITC-tagged phospho-H3 as well as video-microscopy for GFP-tagged histone H4. Annexin V/propidium iodide staining, caspase3/PARP cleavage and colony formation assays were done to investigate cell death upon either miR-133b transfection or NUP214 knockdown by siRNA. UPCI:SCC084, HCT116, HeLa-H4-pEGFP and HEK293 (human oral squamous cell carcinoma, colorectal, cervical carcinomas and embryonic kidney cell lines, respectively) were used. miR-133b and NUP214 expressions were validated in cancer cell lines and tissues by Real-Time PCR.ResultsExamination of head and neck tumour tissues and cancer cell lines revealed that Nup214 and miR-133b expressions are negatively correlated. In vitro, Nup214 was significantly downregulated by ectopic miR-133b. This downregulation elevated mitotic indices and delayed degradation of mitotic marker proteins cyclinB1 and cyclinA and dephosphorylation of H3. Moreover, this mitotic delay enhanced chromosomal abnormalities and apoptosis.ConclusionsWe have identified NUP214, a member of the massive nuclear pore complex, as a novel miR-133b target. Thus, we have shown a hitherto unknown microRNA regulation of mitosis mediated by a member of the nucleoporin family. Based on observations, we also raise some hypotheses regarding transport-dependent/independent functions of Nup214 in this study. Our results hence attempt to explain why miR-133b is generally downregulated in tumours and lay out the potential for Nup214 as a therapeutic target in the treatment of cancer.


Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2015

A comprehensive model to predict mitotic division in budding yeasts

Sabyasachi Sutradhar; Vikas Yadav; Shreyas Sridhar; Lakshmi Sreekumar; Dibyendu Bhattacharyya; Santanu Kumar Ghosh; Raja Paul; Kaustuv Sanyal

A mechanistic in silico model predicts mitotic events and effects of perturbation in budding yeasts belonging to Ascomycota and Basidiomycota. The model identifies distinct pathways based on the population of cytoplasmic microtubules and cortical dyneins as determinants of nuclear and spindle positioning in these phyla.

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Abhishek Chowdhury

Indian Institute of Chemical Biology

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Sanjib Dey

Indian Institute of Chemical Biology

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Somsubhra Nath

Indian Institute of Chemical Biology

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Susanta Roychoudhury

Indian Institute of Chemical Biology

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