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Dive into the research topics where Joseph A. DeGiorgis is active.

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Featured researches published by Joseph A. DeGiorgis.


Aging Cell | 2003

Fast anterograde transport of Herpes Simplex Virus: Role for the amyloid precursor protein of Alzheimer's disease

Prasanna Satpute-Krishnan; Joseph A. DeGiorgis; Elaine L. Bearer

Anterograde transport of herpes simplex virus (HSV) from its site of synthesis in the neuronal cell body out the neuronal process to the mucosal membrane is crucial for transmission of the virus from one person to another, yet the molecular mechanism is not known. By injecting GFP‐labeled HSV into the giant axon of the squid, we reconstitute fast anterograde transport of human HSV and use this as an assay to uncover the underlying molecular mechanism. HSV travels by fast axonal transport at velocities four‐fold faster (0.9 µm/sec average, 1.2 µm/sec maximal) than that of mitochondria moving in the same axon (0.2 µm/sec) and ten‐fold faster than negatively charged beads (0.08 µm/sec). Transport of HSV utilizes cellular transport mechanisms because it appears to be driven from inside cellular membranes as revealed by negative stain electron microscopy and by the association of TGN46, a component of the cellular secretory pathway, with GFP‐labeled viral particles. Finally, we show that amyloid precursor protein (APP), a putative receptor for the microtubule motor, kinesin, is a major component of viral particles, at least as abundant as any viral encoded protein, while another putative motor receptor, JIP 1/2, is not detected. Conventional kinesin is also associated with viral particles. This work links fast anterograde transport of the common pathogen, HSV, with the neurodegenerative Alzheimers disease. This novel connection should prompt new ideas for treatment and prevention strategies.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2006

A peptide zipcode sufficient for anterograde transport within amyloid precursor protein

Prasanna Satpute-Krishnan; Joseph A. DeGiorgis; Michael P. Conley; Marcus K. Jang; Elaine L. Bearer

Fast anterograde transport of membrane-bound organelles delivers molecules synthesized in the neuronal cell body outward to distant synapses. Identification of the molecular “zipcodes” on organelles that mediate attachment and activation of microtubule-based motors for this directed transport is a major area of inquiry. Here we identify a short peptide sequence (15 aa) from the cytoplasmic C terminus of amyloid precursor protein (APP-C) sufficient to mediate the anterograde transport of peptide-conjugated beads in the squid giant axon. APP-C beads travel at fast axonal transport rates (0.53 μm/s average velocity, 0.9 μm/s maximal velocity) whereas beads coupled to other peptides coinjected into the same axon remain stationary at the injection site. This transport appears physiologic, because it mimics behavior of endogenous squid organelles and of beads conjugated to C99, a polypeptide containing the full-length cytoplasmic domain of amyloid precursor protein (APP). Beads conjugated to APP lacking the APP-C domain are not transported. Coinjection of APP-C peptide reduces C99 bead motility by 75% and abolishes APP-C bead motility, suggesting that the soluble peptide competes with protein-conjugated beads for axoplasmic motor(s). The APP-C domain is conserved (13/15 aa) from squid to human, and peptides from either squid or human APP behave similarly. Thus, we have identified a conserved peptide zipcode sufficient to direct anterograde transport of exogenous cargo and suggest that one of APPs roles may be to recruit and activate axonal machinery for endogenous cargo transport.


Cytoskeleton | 1996

Actin‐based motility of isolated axoplasmic organelles

Elaine L. Bearer; Joseph A. DeGiorgis; Nelson A. Medeiros; Thomas S. Reese

We previously showed that axoplasmic organelles from the squid giant axon move toward the barbed ends of actin filaments and that KI-washed organelles separated from soluble proteins by sucrose density fractionation retain a 235-kDa putative myosin. Here, we examine the myosin-like activities of KI-washed organelles after sucrose density fractionation to address the question whether the myosin on these organelles is functional. By electron microscopy KI-washed organelles bound to actin filaments in the absence of ATP but not in its presence. Analysis of organelle-dependent ATPase activity over time and with varying amounts of organelles revealed a basal activity of 350 (range: 315-384) nmoles Pi/mg/min and an actin-activated activity of 774 (range: 560-988) nmoles/mg/min, a higher specific activity than for the other fractions. By video microscopy washed organelles moved in only one direction on actin filaments with a net velocity of 1.11 +/- .03 microns/s and an instantaneous velocity of 1.63 +/- 0.29 microns/s. By immunogold electronmicroscopy, 7% of KI-washed organelles were decorated with an anti-myosin antibody as compared to 0.5% with non-immune serum. Thus, some axoplasmic organelles have a tightly associated myosin-like activity.


Cytoskeleton | 2011

Identification of molecular motors in the Woods Hole squid, Loligo pealei: an expressed sequence tag approach.

Joseph A. DeGiorgis; Kimberly R. Cavaliere; J. Peter H. Burbach

The squid giant axon and synapse are unique systems for studying neuronal function. While a few nucleotide and amino acid sequences have been obtained from squid, large scale genetic and proteomic information is lacking. We have been particularly interested in motors present in axons and their roles in transport processes. Here, to obtain genetic data and to identify motors expressed in squid, we initiated an expressed sequence tag project by single‐pass sequencing mRNAs isolated from the stellate ganglia of the Woods Hole Squid, Loligo pealei. A total of 22,689 high quality expressed sequence tag (EST) sequences were obtained and subjected to basic local alignment search tool analysis. Seventy six percent of these sequences matched genes in the National Center for Bioinformatics databases. By CAP3 analysis this library contained 2459 contigs and 7568 singletons. Mining for motors successfully identified six kinesins, six myosins, a single dynein heavy chain, as well as components of the dynactin complex, and motor light chains and accessory proteins. This initiative demonstrates that EST projects represent an effective approach to obtain sequences of interest.


Cell Biology International | 1998

PRIMARY PEPTIDE SEQUENCES FROM SQUID MUSCLE AND OPTIC LOBE MYOSIN IIs: A STRATEGY TO IDENTIFY AN ORGANELLE MYOSIN

Nelson A. Medeiros; Thomas S. Reese; Howard Jaffe; Joseph A. DeGiorgis; Elaine L. Bearer

The squid giant axon provides an excellent model system for the study of actin‐based organelle transport likely to be mediated by myosins, but the identification of these motors has proven to be difficult. Here the authors purified and obtained primary peptide sequence of squid muscle myosin as a first step in a strategy designed to identify myosins in the squid nervous system. Limited digestion yielded fourteen peptides derived from the muscle myosin which possess high amino acid sequence identities to myosin II from scallop (60–95%) and chick pectoralis muscle (31–83%). Antibodies generated to this purified muscle myosin were used to isolate a potential myosin from squid optic lobe which yielded 11 peptide fragments. Sequences from six of these fragments identified this protein as a myosin II. The other five sequences matched myosin II (50–60%, identities), and some also matched unconventional myosins (33–50%). A single band that has a molecular weight similar to the myosin purified from optic lobe copurifies with axoplasmic organelles, and, like the optic lobe myosin, this band is also recognized by the antibodies raised against squid muscle myosin II. Hence, this strategy provides an approach to the identification of a myosin associated with motile axoplasmic organelles.


The Biological Bulletin | 2011

Isolation and Ultrastructural Characterization of Squid Synaptic Vesicles

Gulcin Pekkurnaz; Andrea Fera; Jessica Zimmerberg-Helms; Joseph A. DeGiorgis; Ludmila Bezrukov; Paul S. Blank; Julia Mazar; Thomas S. Reese; Joshua Zimmerberg

Synaptic vesicles contain a variety of proteins and lipids that mediate fusion with the pre-synaptic membrane. Although the structures of many synaptic vesicle proteins are known, an overall picture of how they are organized at the vesicle surface is lacking. In this paper, we describe a better method for the isolation of squid synaptic vesicles and characterize the results. For highly pure and intact synaptic vesicles from squid optic lobe, glycerol density gradient centrifugation was the key step. Different electron microscopic methods show that vesicle membrane surfaces are largely covered with structures corresponding to surface proteins. Each vesicle contains several stalked globular structures that extend from the vesicle surface and are consistent with the V-ATPase. BLAST search of a library of squid expressed sequence tags identifies 10 V-ATPase subunits, which are expressed in the squid stellate ganglia. Negative-stain tomography demonstrates directly that vesicles flatten during the drying step of negative staining, and furthermore shows details of individual vesicles and other proteins at the vesicle surface.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1993

Evidence for myosin motors on organelles in squid axoplasm

Elaine L. Bearer; Joseph A. DeGiorgis; R A Bodner; Aimee W. Kao; Thomas S. Reese


Journal of Proteome Research | 2005

Phosphoproteomic Analysis of Synaptosomes from Human Cerebral Cortex

Joseph A. DeGiorgis; Howard Jaffe; Jorge E. Moreira; Carlos Gilberto Carlotti; João Pereira Leite; Harish C. Pant; Ayse Dosemeci


Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2002

Association of a Nonmuscle Myosin II with Axoplasmic Organelles

Joseph A. DeGiorgis; Thomas S. Reese; Elaine L. Bearer


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1996

An axoplasmic myosin with a calmodulin-like light chain

Elaine L. Bearer; Joseph A. DeGiorgis; Howard Jaffe; Nelson A. Medeiros; Thomas S. Reese

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Thomas S. Reese

National Institutes of Health

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Howard Jaffe

National Institutes of Health

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Nelson A. Medeiros

Marine Biological Laboratory

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Aimee W. Kao

University of California

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Andrea Fera

National Institutes of Health

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Ayse Dosemeci

National Institutes of Health

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Gulcin Pekkurnaz

National Institutes of Health

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Harish C. Pant

Michigan State University

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