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Dive into the research topics where Dileep Varma is active.

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Featured researches published by Dileep Varma.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2008

Direct role of dynein motor in stable kinetochore-microtubule attachment, orientation, and alignment

Dileep Varma; Pascale Monzo; Stephanie A. Stehman; Richard B. Vallee

Cytoplasmic dynein has been implicated in diverse mitotic functions, several involving its association with kinetochores. Much of the supporting evidence comes from inhibition of dynein regulatory factors. To obtain direct insight into kinetochore dynein function, we expressed a series of dynein tail fragments, which we find displace motor-containing dynein heavy chain (HC) from kinetochores without affecting other subunits, regulatory factors, or microtubule binding proteins. Cells with bipolar mitotic spindles progress to late prometaphase-metaphase at normal rates. However, the dynein tail, dynactin, Mad1, and BubR1 persist at the aligned kinetochores, which is consistent with a role for dynein in self-removal and spindle assembly checkpoint inactivation. Kinetochore pairs also show evidence of misorientation relative to the spindle equator and abnormal oscillatory behavior. Further, kinetochore microtubule bundles are severely destabilized at reduced temperatures. Dynein HC RNAi and injection of anti-dynein antibody in MG132-arrested metaphase cells produced similar effects. These results identify a novel function for the dynein motor in stable microtubule attachment and maintenance of kinetochore orientation during metaphase chromosome alignment.


Journal of Cell Science | 2012

The KMN protein network - Chief conductors of the kinetochore orchestra

Dileep Varma; E. D. Salmon

Summary Successful completion of mitosis requires that sister kinetochores become attached end-on to the plus ends of spindle microtubules (MTs) in prometaphase, thereby forming kinetochore microtubules (kMTs) that tether one sister to one spindle pole and the other sister to the opposite pole. Sites for kMT attachment provide at least four key functions: robust and dynamic kMT anchorage; force generation that can be coupled to kMT plus-end dynamics; correction of errors in kMT attachment; and control of the spindle assembly checkpoint (SAC). The SAC typically delays anaphase until chromosomes achieve metaphase alignment with each sister kinetochore acquiring a full complement of kMTs. Although it has been known for over 30 years that MT motor proteins reside at kinetochores, a highly conserved network of protein complexes, called the KMN network, has emerged in recent years as the primary interface between the kinetochore and kMTs. This Commentary will summarize recent advances in our understanding of the role of the KMN network for the key kinetochore functions, with a focus on human cells.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2006

Role of the kinetochore/cell cycle checkpoint protein ZW10 in interphase cytoplasmic dynein function

Dileep Varma; Denis Dujardin; Stephanie A. Stehman; Richard B. Vallee

Zeste white 10 (ZW10) is a mitotic checkpoint protein and the anchor for cytoplasmic dynein at mitotic kinetochores, though it is expressed throughout the cell cycle. We find that ZW10 localizes to pericentriolar membranous structures during interphase and cosediments with Golgi membranes. Dominant-negative ZW10, anti-ZW10 antibody, and ZW10 RNA interference (RNAi) caused Golgi dispersal. ZW10 RNAi also dispersed endosomes and lysosomes. Live imaging of Golgi, endosomal, and lysosomal markers after reduced ZW10 expression showed a specific decrease in the frequency of minus end–directed movements. Golgi membrane–associated dynein was markedly decreased, suggesting a role for ZW10 in dynein cargo binding during interphase. We also find ZW10 enriched at the leading edge of migrating fibroblasts, suggesting that ZW10 serves as a general regulator of dynein function throughout the cell cycle.


Nature Cell Biology | 2012

Recruitment of the human Cdt1 replication licensing protein by the loop domain of Hec1 is required for stable kinetochore-microtubule attachment.

Dileep Varma; Srikripa Chandrasekaran; Lynsie J.R. Sundin; Karen T. Reidy; Xiaohu Wan; Dawn Chasse; Kathleen R. Nevis; Jennifer G. DeLuca; E. D. Salmon; Jeanette Gowen Cook

Cdt1, a protein critical for replication origin licensing in G1 phase, is degraded during S phase but re-accumulates in G2 phase. We now demonstrate that human Cdt1 has a separable essential mitotic function. Cdt1 localizes to kinetochores during mitosis through interaction with the Hec1 component of the Ndc80 complex. G2-specific depletion of Cdt1 arrests cells in late prometaphase owing to abnormally unstable kinetochore–microtubule (kMT) attachments and Mad1-dependent spindle-assembly-checkpoint activity. Cdt1 binds a unique loop extending from the rod domain of Hec1 that we show is also required for kMT attachment. Mutation of the loop domain prevents Cdt1 kinetochore localization and arrests cells in prometaphase. Super-resolution fluorescence microscopy indicates that Cdt1 binding to the Hec1 loop domain promotes a microtubule-dependent conformational change in the Ndc80 complex in vivo. These results support the conclusion that Cdt1 binding to Hec1 is essential for an extended Ndc80 configuration and stable kMT attachment.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2013

Spindle assembly checkpoint proteins are positioned close to core microtubule attachment sites at kinetochores

Dileep Varma; Xiaohu Wan; Dhanya K. Cheerambathur; Reto Gassmann; Aussie Suzuki; Josh Lawrimore; Arshad Desai; E. D. Salmon

Depletion analyses and nanometer-scale mapping of spindle assembly checkpoint proteins reveal how these proteins are integrated within the substructure of the kinetochore.


Cell Cycle | 2006

ZW10 function in mitotic checkpoint control, dynein targeting and membrane trafficking: Is dynein the unifying theme?

Richard B. Vallee; Dileep Varma; Denis Dujardin

ZW10 was initially identified as a mitotic checkpoint protein involved in chromosome segregation. It was subsequently implicated in targeting cytoplasmic dynein and dynactin to mitotic kinetochores, though the relationship between these functions remains incompletely understood. Recent studies have revealed that ZW10 performs important functions in non-dividing cells as well. These include cytoplasmic dynein targeting to Golgi and other membranes, but also SNARE-mediated ER-Golgi trafficking. Identifying a unifying function for ZW10 in these diverse contexts has been elusive, but likely involves cytoplasmic dynein, as discussed here.


Open Biology | 2015

The RZZ complex requires the N-terminus of KNL1 to mediate optimal Mad1 kinetochore localization in human cells

Gina V. Caldas; Tina R. Lynch; Ryan S. Anderson; Sana Afreen; Dileep Varma; Jennifer G. DeLuca

The spindle assembly checkpoint is a surveillance mechanism that blocks anaphase onset until all chromosomes are properly attached to microtubules of the mitotic spindle. Checkpoint activity requires kinetochore localization of Mad1/Mad2 to inhibit activation of the anaphase promoting complex/cyclosome in the presence of unattached kinetochores. In budding yeast and Caenorhabditis elegans, Bub1, recruited to kinetochores through KNL1, recruits Mad1/Mad2 by direct linkage with Mad1. However, in human cells it is not yet established which kinetochore protein(s) function as the Mad1/Mad2 receptor. Both Bub1 and the RZZ complex have been implicated in Mad1/Mad2 kinetochore recruitment; however, their specific roles remain unclear. Here, we investigate the contributions of Bub1, RZZ and KNL1 to Mad1/Mad2 kinetochore recruitment. We find that the RZZ complex localizes to the N-terminus of KNL1, downstream of Bub1, to mediate robust Mad1/Mad2 kinetochore localization. Our data also point to the existence of a KNL1-, Bub1-independent mechanism for RZZ and Mad1/Mad2 kinetochore recruitment. Based on our results, we propose that in humans, the primary mediator for Mad1/Mad2 kinetochore localization is the RZZ complex.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

Development and application of in vivo molecular traps reveals that dynein light chain occupancy differentially affects dynein-mediated processes

Dileep Varma; Amrita Dawn; Anindya Ghosh-Roy; Sarah J. Weil; Kassandra M. Ori-McKenney; Yanqiu Zhao; James H. Keen; Richard B. Vallee; John C. Williams

The ability to rapidly and specifically regulate protein activity combined with in vivo functional assays and/or imaging can provide unique insight into underlying molecular processes. Here we describe the application of chemically induced dimerization of FKBP to create nearly instantaneous high-affinity bivalent ligands capable of sequestering cellular targets from their endogenous partners. We demonstrate the specificity and efficacy of these inducible, dimeric “traps” for the dynein light chains LC8 (Dynll1) and TcTex1 (Dynlt1). Both light chains can simultaneously bind at adjacent sites of dynein intermediate chain at the base of the dynein motor complex, yet their specific function with respect to the dynein motor or other interacting proteins has been difficult to dissect. Using these traps in cultured mammalian cells, we observed that induction of dimerization of either the LC8 or TcTex1 trap rapidly disrupted early endosomal and lysosomal organization. Dimerization of either trap also disrupted Golgi organization, but at a substantially slower rate. Using either trap, the time course for disruption of each organelle was similar, suggesting a common regulatory mechanism. However, despite the essential role of dynein in cell division, neither trap had a discernable effect on mitotic progression. Taken together, these studies suggest that LC occupancy of the dynein motor complex directly affects some, but not all, dynein-mediated processes. Although the described traps offer a method for rapid inhibition of dynein function, the design principle can be extended to other molecular complexes for in vivo studies.


Cell Cycle | 2010

Emerging functions of force-producing kinetochore motors

Yinghui Mao; Dileep Varma; Richard B. Vallee

More than two decades of research has resulted in the identification of some 60 microtubule motor proteins, several of which have been implicated in mitosis. Although some kinesin superfamily proteins function as microtubule depolymerases at kinetochores, such as Kinesin-8 and -13, it is now appreciated that there are only two force-producing kinetochore associated motors, the plus end-directed microtubule motor CENP-E and the minus end-directed microtubule motor cytoplasmic dynein. Defining their roles at kinetochores has been hampered by the complexity of mitosis itself, and a multiplicity of mitotic roles, at least for cytoplasmic dynein. Nonetheless, recent advances have served to define the primary roles of the two kinetochore motors in detail.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2015

CDK1-dependent Inhibition of the E3 Ubiquitin Ligase CRL4CDT2 Ensures Robust Transition from S Phase to Mitosis

Lindsay F. Rizzardi; Kate E. Coleman; Dileep Varma; Jacob P. Matson; Seeun Oh; Jeanette Gowen Cook

Background: CRL4CDT2 mediates replication-coupled destruction during S phase. CRL4CDT2 substrates reaccumulate by an unexplored mechanism. Results: CDK1 activity blocks CRL4CDT2 by preventing chromatin recruitment of the substrate receptor, CDT2. Conclusion: CDK1 activity facilitates CRL4CDT2 substrate reaccumulation upon S phase exit; several of these substrates are then required for normal mitotic progression. Significance: We provide the first evidence that CDK1 regulates the activity of CRL4CDT2. Replication-coupled destruction of a cohort of cell cycle proteins ensures efficient and precise genome duplication. Three proteins destroyed during replication via the CRL4CDT2 ubiquitin E3 ligase, CDT1, p21, and SET8 (PR-SET7), are also essential or important during mitosis, making their reaccumulation after S phase a critical cell cycle event. During early and mid-S phase and during DNA repair, proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) loading onto DNA (PCNADNA) triggers the interaction between CRL4CDT2 and its substrates, resulting in their degradation. We have discovered that, beginning in late S phase, PCNADNA is no longer sufficient to trigger CRL4CDT2-mediated degradation. A CDK1-dependent mechanism that blocks CRL4CDT2 activity by interfering with CDT2 recruitment to chromatin actively protects CRL4CDT2 substrates. We postulate that deliberate override of replication-coupled destruction allows anticipatory accumulation in late S phase. We further show that (as for CDT1) de novo SET8 reaccumulation is important for normal mitotic progression. In this manner, CDK1-dependent CRL4CDT2 inactivation contributes to efficient transition from S phase to mitosis.

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E. D. Salmon

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Aussie Suzuki

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Xiaohu Wan

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Jeanette Gowen Cook

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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John C. Williams

City of Hope National Medical Center

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Kate E. Coleman

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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