Ingrid Brust-Mascher
University of California, Davis
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Ingrid Brust-Mascher.
Nature Cell Biology | 2004
Joshua J. Snow; Guangshuo Ou; Amy L. Gunnarson; M. Regina S. Walker; H. Mimi Zhou; Ingrid Brust-Mascher; Jonathan M. Scholey
Cilia have diverse roles in motility and sensory reception and their dysfunction contributes to cilia-related diseases. Assembly and maintenance of cilia depends on the intraflagellar transport (IFT) of axoneme, membrane, matrix and signalling proteins to appropriate destinations within the organelle. In the current model, these diverse cargo proteins bind to multiple sites on macromolecular IFT particles, which are moved by a single anterograde IFT motor, kinesin-II, from the ciliary base to its distal tip, where cargo-unloading occurs. Here, we describe the observation of fluorescent IFT motors and IFT particles moving along distinct domains within sensory cilia of wild-type and IFT-motor-mutant Caenorhabditis elegans. We show that two anterograde IFT motor holoenzymes, kinesin-II and Osm-3–kinesin, cooperate in a surprising way to control two pathways of IFT that build distinct parts of cilia. Instead of each motor independently moving its own specific cargo to a distinct destination, the two motors function redundantly to transport IFT particles along doublet microtubules adjacent to the transition zone to form the axoneme middle segment. Next, Osm-3–kinesin alone transports IFT particles along the distal singlet microtubules to stabilize the distal segment. Thus, the subtle coordinate activity of these IFT motors creates two sequential transport pathways.
Nature Cell Biology | 2011
Limin Hao; Melanie Thein; Ingrid Brust-Mascher; Gul Civelekoglu-Scholey; Yun Lu; Seyda Acar; Bram Prevo; Shai Shaham; Jonathan M. Scholey
Sensory cilia are assembled and maintained by kinesin-2-dependent intraflagellar transport (IFT). We investigated whether two Caenorhabditis elegans α - and β-tubulin isotypes, identified through mutants that lack their cilium distal segments, are delivered to their assembly sites by IFT. Mutations in conserved residues in both tubulins destabilize distal singlet microtubules. One isotype, TBB-4, assembles into microtubules at the tips of the axoneme core and distal segments, where the microtubule tip tracker EB1 is found, and localizes all along the cilium, whereas the other, TBA-5, concentrates in distal singlets. IFT assays, fluorescence recovery after photobleaching analysis and modelling indicate that the continual transport of sub-stoichiometric numbers of these tubulin subunits by the IFT machinery can maintain sensory cilia at their steady-state length.
Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2009
Ingrid Brust-Mascher; Patrizia Sommi; Dhanya K. Cheerambathur; Jonathan M. Scholey
We used antibody microinjection and genetic manipulations to dissect the various roles of the homotetrameric kinesin-5, KLP61F, in astral, centrosome-controlled Drosophila embryo spindles and to test the hypothesis that it slides apart interpolar (ip) microtubules (MT), thereby controlling poleward flux and spindle length. In wild-type and Ncd null mutant embryos, anti-KLP61F dissociated the motor from spindles, producing a spatial gradient in the KLP61F content of different spindles, which was visible in KLP61F-GFP transgenic embryos. The resulting mitotic defects, supported by gene dosage experiments and time-lapse microscopy of living klp61f mutants, reveal that, after NEB, KLP61F drives persistent MT bundling and the outward sliding of antiparallel MTs, thereby contributing to several processes that all appear insensitive to cortical disruption. KLP61F activity contributes to the poleward flux of both ipMTs and kinetochore MTs and to the length of the metaphase spindle. KLP61F activity maintains the prometaphase spindle by antagonizing Ncd and another unknown force-generator and drives anaphase B, although the rate of spindle elongation is relatively insensitive to the motors concentration. Finally, KLP61F activity contributes to normal chromosome congression, kinetochore spacing, and anaphase A rates. Thus, a KLP61F-driven sliding filament mechanism contributes to multiple aspects of mitosis in this system.
Journal of Cell Biology | 2010
Gul Civelekoglu-Scholey; Li Tao; Ingrid Brust-Mascher; Roy Wollman; Jonathan M. Scholey
The lamin-B nuclear envelope stabilizes spindle microtubules by keeping the competitive motility of opposing-force kinesins in check.
Journal of Cell Biology | 2007
Dhanya K. Cheerambathur; Gul Civelekoglu-Scholey; Ingrid Brust-Mascher; Patrizia Sommi; Alex Mogilner; Jonathan M. Scholey
Anaphase B in Drosophila embryos is initiated by the inhibition of microtubule (MT) depolymerization at spindle poles, which allows outwardly sliding interpolar (ip) MTs to drive pole–pole separation. Using fluorescence recovery after photobleaching, we observed that MTs throughout the preanaphase B spindle are very dynamic and display complete recovery of fluorescence, but during anaphase B, MTs proximal to the poles stabilize and therefore display lower recovery than those elsewhere. Fluorescence microscopy of the MT tip tracker EB1 revealed that growing MT plus ends localize throughout the preanaphase B spindle but concentrate in the overlap region of interpolar MTs (ipMTs) at anaphase B onset. None of these changes occurred in the presence of nondegradable cyclin B. Modeling suggests that they depend on the establishment of a spatial gradient of MT plus-end catastrophe frequencies, decreasing toward the equator. The resulting redistribution of ipMT plus ends to the overlap zone, together with the suppression of minus-end depolymerization at the poles, could constitute a mechanical switch that initiates spindle elongation.
Biophysical Journal | 1999
Josh E. Baker; Leslie E. W. LaConte; Ingrid Brust-Mascher; David D. Thomas
Observed effects of inorganic phosphate (P(i)) on active isometric muscle may provide the answer to one of the fundamental questions in muscle biophysics: how are the free energies of the chemical species in the myosin-catalyzed ATP hydrolysis (ATPase) reaction coupled to muscle force? Pate and Cooke (1989. Pflugers Arch. 414:73-81) showed that active, isometric muscle force varies logarithmically with [P(i)]. Here, by simultaneously measuring electron paramagnetic resonance and the force of spin-labeled muscle fibers, we show that, in active, isometric muscle, the fraction of myosin heads in any given biochemical state is independent of both [P(i)] and force. These direct observations of mechanochemical coupling in muscle are immediately described by a muscle equation of state containing muscle force as a state variable. These results challenge the conventional assumption mechanochemical coupling is localized to individual myosin heads in muscle.
Journal of Cell Biology | 2008
Dhanya K. Cheerambathur; Ingrid Brust-Mascher; Gul Civelekoglu-Scholey; Jonathan M. Scholey
The dynamic behavior of homotetrameric kinesin-5 during mitosis is poorly understood. Kinesin-5 may function only by binding, cross-linking, and sliding adjacent spindle microtubules (MTs), or, alternatively, it may bind to a stable “spindle matrix” to generate mitotic movements. We created transgenic Drosophila melanogaster expressing fluorescent kinesin-5, KLP61F-GFP, in a klp61f mutant background, where it rescues mitosis and viability. KLP61F-GFP localizes to interpolar MT bundles, half spindles, and asters, and is enriched around spindle poles. In fluorescence recovery after photobleaching experiments, KLP61F-GFP displays dynamic mobility similar to tubulin, which is inconsistent with a substantial static pool of kinesin-5. The data conform to a reaction–diffusion model in which most KLP61F is bound to spindle MTs, with the remainder diffusing freely. KLP61F appears to transiently bind MTs, moving short distances along them before detaching. Thus, kinesin-5 motors can function by cross-linking and sliding adjacent spindle MTs without the need for a static spindle matrix.
Journal of Cell Biology | 2013
Haifeng Wang; Ingrid Brust-Mascher; Gul Civelekoglu-Scholey; Jonathan M. Scholey
Patronin counteracts KLP10A activity at spindle poles to stabilize microtubule minus ends and induce spindle elongation during anaphase B.
Cytoskeleton | 2010
Haifeng Wang; Ingrid Brust-Mascher; Dhanya K. Cheerambathur; Jonathan M. Scholey
Mitotic spindle length control requires coordination between microtubule (MT) dynamics and motor‐generated forces. To investigate how MT plus‐end polymerization contributes to spindle length in Drosophila embryos, we studied the dynamics of the MT plus‐end depolymerase, kinesin‐8, and the effects of kinesin‐8 inhibition using mutants and antibody microinjection. As expected, kinesin‐8 was found to contribute to anaphase A. Furthermore, kinesin‐8 depletion caused: (i) excessive polymerization of interpolar (ip) MT plus ends, which “overgrow” to penetrate distal half spindles; (ii) an increase in the poleward ipMT sliding rate that is coupled to MT plus‐end polymerization; (iii) premature spindle elongation during metaphase/anaphase A; and (iv) an increase in the anaphase B spindle elongation rate which correlates linearly with the MT sliding rate. This is best explained by a revised “ipMT sliding/minus‐end depolymerization” model for spindle length control which incorporates a coupling between ipMT plus end dynamics and the outward ipMT sliding that drives poleward flux and spindle elongation.
International Review of Cytology-a Survey of Cell Biology | 2007
Ingrid Brust-Mascher; Jonathan M. Scholey
Mitosis, the process by which the replicated chromosomes are segregated equally into daughter cells, has been studied for over a century. Drosophila melanogaster is an ideal organism for this research. Drosophila embryos are well suited to image mitosis, because during cycles 10-13 nuclei divide rapidly at the surface of the embryo, but mitotic cells during larval stages and spermatocytes are also used for the study of mitosis. Drosophila can be easily maintained, many mutant stocks exist, and transgenic flies expressing mutated or fluorescently labeled proteins can be made. In addition, the genome has been completed and RNA interference can be used in Drosophila tissue culture cells. Here, we review our current understanding of spindle dynamics, looking at the experiments and quantitative modeling on which it is based. Many molecular players in the Drosophila mitotic spindle are similar to those in mammalian spindles, so findings in Drosophila can be extended to other organisms.