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Dive into the research topics where Laurie S. Minamide is active.

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Featured researches published by Laurie S. Minamide.


Nature Cell Biology | 2000

Neurodegenerative stimuli induce persistent ADF/cofilin-actin rods that disrupt distal neurite function

Laurie S. Minamide; Amanda M. Striegl; Judith A. Boyle; Peter J. Meberg; James R. Bamburg

Inclusions containing actin-depolymerizing factor (ADF) and cofilin, abundant proteins in adult human brain, are prominent in hippocampal and cortical neurites of the post-mortem brains of Alzheimers patients, especially in neurites contacting amyloid deposits. The origin and role of these inclusions in neurodegeneration are, however, unknown. Here we show that mediators of neurodegeneration induce the rapid formation of transient or persistent rod-like inclusions containing ADF/cofilin and actin in axons and dendrites of cultured hippocampal neurons. Rods form spontaneously within neurons overexpressing active ADF/cofilin, suggesting that the activation (by dephosphorylation) of ADF/cofilin that occurs in response to neurodegenerative stimuli is sufficient to induce rod formation. Persistent rods that span the diameter of the neurite disrupt microtubules and cause degeneration of the distal neurite without killing the neuron. These findings suggest a common pathway that can lead to loss of synapses.


Cytoskeleton | 1998

Actin depolymerizing factor and cofilin phosphorylation dynamics: response to signals that regulate neurite extension.

Peter J. Meberg; Shoichiro Ono; Laurie S. Minamide; Masami Takahashi; James R. Bamburg

The actin assembly-regulating activity of actin depolymerizing factor (ADF)/ cofilin is inhibited by phosphorylation. Studies were undertaken to characterize the signaling pathways and phosphatases involved in activating phosphorylated ADF (pADF), emphasizing signals related to neuronal process extension. Western blots using antibodies to ADF and cofilin, as well as an ADF/cofilin phosphoepitope-specific antibody characterized in this paper, were used to measure changes in the phosphorylation state and phosphate turnover of ADF/cofilin in response to inhibitors and agents known to influence growth cone motility. Increases in both [Ca2+]i and cAMP levels induced rapid pADF dephosphorylation in HT4 and cortical neurons. Calcium-dependent dephosphorylation depended on the activation of protein phosphatase 2B (PP2B), while cAMP-dependent dephosphorylation was likely through activation of PP1. Growth factors such as NGF and insulin also induced rapid pADF/pcofilin dephosphorylation, with NGF-stimulated dephosphorylation in PC12 cells correlated with the translocation of ADF/cofilin to ruffling membranes. Of special interest was the finding that the rate of phosphate turnover on both pADF and pcofilin could be enhanced by growth factors without changing net pADF levels, demonstrating that growth factors can activate bifurcating pathways that promote both phosphorylation and dephosphorylation of ADF/cofilin. All experimental results indicated that dynamics of phosphorylation on ADF and cofilin are coordinately regulated. Signals that decreased pADF levels are associated with increased process extension, while agents that increased pADF levels, such as lysophosphatidic acid, inhibit process extension. These data indicate that dephosphorylation/activation of pADF is a significant response to the activation of signal pathways that regulate actin dynamics and alter cell morphology and neuronal outgrowth.


Current Biology | 2003

ADF/Cofilin Controls Cell Polarity during Fibroblast Migration

Helen R. Dawe; Laurie S. Minamide; James R. Bamburg; Louise P. Cramer

To migrate, normally a cell must establish morphological polarity and continuously protrude a single lamellipodium, polarized in the direction of migration. We have previously shown that actin filament disassembly is necessary for protrusion of the lamellipodium during fibroblast migration. As ADF/cofilin (AC) proteins are essential for the catalysis of filament disassembly in cells, we assessed their role in polarized lamellipodium protrusion in migrating fibroblasts. We compared the spatial distribution of AC and the inactive, phosphorylated AC (pAC) in migrating cells. AC, but not pAC, localized to the lamellipodium. To investigate a role for AC in cell polarity, we increased the proportion of pAC in migrating fibroblasts by overexpressing constitutively active (CA) LIM kinase 1. In 87% of cells expressing CA LIM kinase, cell polarity was abolished. In such cells, the single polarized lamellipodium was replaced by multiple nonpolarized lamellipodia, which, in contrast to nonexpressing migrating cells, stained for pAC. Cell polarity was rescued by coexpressing an active, nonphosphorylatable Xenopus AC (CA XAC) with the CA LIMK. Furthermore, overexpressing a pseudophosphorylated (less active) XAC by itself also abolished cell polarity. We conclude that locally maintaining ADF/cofilin in the active, nonphosphorylated state within the lamellipodium is necessary to maintain polarized protrusion during cell migration.


Journal of Neurobiology | 2000

Regulating actin dynamics in neuronal growth cones by ADF/cofilin and rho family GTPases.

Thomas B. Kuhn; Peter J. Meberg; Michael D. Brown; Barbara W. Bernstein; Laurie S. Minamide; John R. Jensen; Kyoko Okada; Elizabeth A. Soda; James R. Bamburg

Growth cone motility and navigation in response to extracellular signals are regulated by actin dynamics. To better understand actin involvement in these processes we determined how and in what form actin reaches growth cones, and once there, how actin assembly is regulated. A continuous supply of actin is maintained at the axon tip by slow transport, the mobile component consisting of an unassembled form of actin. Actin is co-transported with actin-binding proteins, including ADF and cofilin, structurally related proteins essential for rapid turnover of actin filaments in vivo. ADF and cofilin activity is regulated through phosphorylation by LIM kinases, downstream effectors of the Rho family of GTPases, Cdc42, Rac and Rho. Attractive and repulsive extracellular guidance cues might locally alter actin dynamics by binding specific GTPase-linked receptors, activating LIM kinases, and subsequently modulating the activity of ADF/cofilin. ADF is enriched in growth cones and is required for neurite outgrowth. In addition, signals that influence growth cone behavior alter ADF/cofilin phosphorylation, and overexpression of ADF enhances neurite outgrowth. Growth promoting effects of laminin are mimicked by expression of constitutively active Cdc42 and blocked by expression of the dominant negative Cdc42. Repulsive effects of myelin and sema3D on growth cones are blocked by expression of constitutively active Rac1 and dominant negative Rac1, respectively. Thus a series of complex pathways must exist for regulating effectors of actin dynamics. The bifurcating nature of the ADF/cofilin phosphorylation pathway may provide the integration necessary for this complex regulation.


Cytoskeleton | 2000

Intracellular pH modulation of ADF/cofilin proteins.

Barbara W. Bernstein; W.B. Painter; H. Chen; Laurie S. Minamide; Hiroshi Abe; James R. Bamburg

The ADF/cofilin (AC) proteins are necessary for the high rates of actin filament turnover seen in vivo. Their regulation is complex enough to underlie the precision in filament dynamics needed by stimulated cells. Disassembly of actin by AC proteins is inhibited in vitro by phosphorylation of ser3 and pH<7.1. This study of Swiss 3T3 cells demonstrates that pH also affects AC behavior in vivo: (1) Wounded cells show pH-dependent AC translocation to alkaline-induced ruffling membrane; (2) The Triton extractable (soluble) ADF from Swiss 3T3 cells decreases from 42+/-4% to 23+/-4% when the intracellular pH (pH(i)) is reduced from 7.4 to 6.6; (3) Covariance and colocalization analyses of immunostained endogenous proteins show that ADF partitions more with monomeric actin and less with polymeric actin when pH(i) increases. However, the distribution of cofilin, a less pH-sensitive AC in vitro, does not change with pH; (4) Only the unphosphorylatable AC mutant (A3), when overexpressed as a GFP chimera, uniquely produces aberrant cellular phenotypes and only if the pH is shifted from 7.1 to 6.6 or 7.4. A mechanism is proposed that explains why AC(A3)-GFP and AC(wt)-GFP chimeras generate different phenotypes in response to pH changes. Phospho-AC levels increase with cell density, and in motile cells, phospho-AC increases with alkalization, suggesting a homeostatic mechanism that compensates for increased AC activity and filament turnover. These results show that the behavior of AC proteins with pH-sensitivity in vitro is affected by pH in vivo.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2005

β-Secretase-Cleaved Amyloid Precursor Protein Accumulates at Actin Inclusions Induced in Neurons by Stress or Amyloid β: A Feedforward Mechanism for Alzheimer's Disease

Michael T. Maloney; Laurie S. Minamide; Andrew W. Kinley; Judith A. Boyle; James R. Bamburg

Rod-like inclusions (rods), composed of actin saturated with actin depolymerizing factor (ADF)/cofilin, are induced in hippocampal neurons by ATP depletion, oxidative stress, and excess glutamate and occur in close proximity to senile plaques in human Alzheimers disease (AD) brain (Minamide et al., 2000). Here, we show rods are found in brains from transgenic AD mice. Soluble forms of amyloid β (Aβ1–42) induce the formation of rods in a maximum of 19% of cultured hippocampal neurons in a time- and concentration-dependent manner. Approximately one-half of the responding neurons develop rods within 6 h or with as little as 10 nm Aβ1–42. Aβ1–42 induces the activation (dephosphorylation) of ADF/cofilin in neurons that form rods. Vesicles containing amyloid precursor protein (APP), β-amyloid cleavage enzyme, and presenilin-1, a component of the γ-secretase complex, accumulate at rods. The β-secretase-cleaved APP (either β-C-terminal fragment of APP or Aβ) also accumulates at rods. These results suggest that rods, formed in response to either Aβ or some other stress, block the transport of APP and enzymes involved in its processing to Aβ. These stalled vesicles may provide a site for producing Aβ1–42, which may in turn induce more rods in surrounding neurons, and expand the degenerative zone resulting in plaque formation.


Developmental Cell | 2008

Chronophin Mediates an ATP-Sensing Mechanism for Cofilin Dephosphorylation and Neuronal Cofilin-Actin Rod Formation

Timothy Y. Huang; Laurie S. Minamide; James R. Bamburg; Gary M. Bokoch

Actin and its key regulatory component, cofilin, are found together in large rod-shaped assemblies in neurons subjected to energy stress. Such inclusions are also enriched in Alzheimers disease brain, and appear in transgenic models of neurodegeneration. Neuronal insults, such as energy loss and/or oxidative stress, result in rapid dephosphorylation of the cellular cofilin pool prior to its assembly into rod-shaped inclusions. Although these events implicate a role for phosphatases in cofilin rod formation, a mechanism linking energy stress, phosphocofilin turnover, and subsequent rod assembly has been elusive. We demonstrate the ATP-sensitive interaction of the cofilin phosphatase chronophin (CIN) with the chaperone hsp90 to form a biosensor that mediates cofilin/actin rod formation. Our results suggest a model whereby attenuated interactions between CIN and hsp90 during ATP depletion enhance CIN-dependent cofilin dephosphorylation and consequent rod assembly, thereby providing a mechanism for the formation of pathological actin/cofilin aggregates during neurodegenerative energy flux.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2009

Activated actin-depolymerizing factor/cofilin sequesters phosphorylated microtubule-associated protein during the assembly of alzheimer-like neuritic cytoskeletal striations.

Ineka T. Whiteman; Othon L. Gervasio; Karen M. Cullen; Gilles J. Guillemin; Erica V. Jeong; Paul K. Witting; Shane T. Antao; Laurie S. Minamide; James R. Bamburg; Claire Goldsbury

In Alzheimers disease (AD), rod-like cofilin aggregates (cofilin–actin rods) and thread-like inclusions containing phosphorylated microtubule-associated protein (pMAP) tau form in the brain (neuropil threads), and the extent of their presence correlates with cognitive decline and disease progression. The assembly mechanism of these respective pathological lesions and the relationship between them is poorly understood, yet vital to understanding the causes of sporadic AD. We demonstrate that, during mitochondrial inhibition, activated actin-depolymerizing factor (ADF)/cofilin assemble into rods along processes of cultured primary neurons that recruit pMAP/tau and mimic neuropil threads. Fluorescence resonance energy transfer analysis revealed colocalization of cofilin-GFP (green fluorescent protein) and pMAP in rods, suggesting their close proximity within a cytoskeletal inclusion complex. The relationship between pMAP and cofilin–actin rods was further investigated using actin-modifying drugs and small interfering RNA knockdown of ADF/cofilin in primary neurons. The results suggest that activation of ADF/cofilin and generation of cofilin–actin rods is required for the subsequent recruitment of pMAP into the inclusions. Additionally, we were able to induce the formation of pMAP-positive ADF/cofilin rods by exposing cells to exogenous amyloid-β (Aβ) peptides. These results reveal a common pathway for pMAP and cofilin accumulation in neuronal processes. The requirement of activated ADF/cofilin for the sequestration of pMAP suggests that neuropil thread structures in the AD brain may be initiated by elevated cofilin activation and F-actin bundling that can be caused by oxidative stress, mitochondrial dysfunction, or Aβ peptides, all suspected initiators of synaptic loss and neurodegeneration in AD.


Molecular Neurodegeneration | 2011

Amyloid beta dimers/trimers potently induce cofilin-actin rods that are inhibited by maintaining cofilin-phosphorylation.

Richard C. Davis; Ian T. Marsden; Michael T. Maloney; Laurie S. Minamide; Marcia B. Podlisny; Dennis J. Selkoe; James R. Bamburg

BackgroundPreviously we reported 1 μM synthetic human amyloid beta1-42 oligomers induced cofilin dephosphorylation (activation) and formation of cofilin-actin rods within rat hippocampal neurons primarily localized to the dentate gyrus.ResultsHere we demonstrate that a gel filtration fraction of 7PA2 cell-secreted SDS-stable human Aβ dimers and trimers (Aβd/t) induces maximal neuronal rod response at ~250 pM. This is 4,000-fold more active than traditionally prepared human Aβ oligomers, which contain SDS-stable trimers and tetramers, but are devoid of dimers. When incubated under tyrosine oxidizing conditions, synthetic human but not rodent Aβ1-42, the latter lacking tyrosine, acquires a marked increase (620 fold for EC50) in rod-inducing activity. Gel filtration of this preparation yielded two fractions containing SDS-stable dimers, trimers and tetramers. One, eluting at a similar volume to 7PA2 Aβd/t, had maximum activity at ~5 nM, whereas the other, eluting at the void volume (high-n state), lacked rod inducing activity at the same concentration. Fractions from 7PA2 medium containing Aβ monomers are not active, suggesting oxidized SDS-stable Aβ1-42 dimers in a low-n state are the most active rod-inducing species. Aβd/t-induced rods are predominantly localized to the dentate gyrus and mossy fiber tract, reach significance over controls within 2 h of treatment, and are reversible, disappearing by 24 h after Aβd/t washout. Overexpression of cofilin phosphatases increase rod formation when expressed alone and exacerbate rod formation when coupled with Aβd/t, whereas overexpression of a cofilin kinase inhibits Aβd/t-induced rod formation.ConclusionsTogether these data support a mechanism by which Aβd/t alters the actin cytoskeleton via effects on cofilin in neurons critical to learning and memory.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1997

Differential Regulation of Actin Depolymerizing Factor and Cofilin in Response to Alterations in the Actin Monomer Pool

Laurie S. Minamide; William B. Painter; Galina Schevzov; Peter Gunning; James R. Bamburg

Myoblasts, transfected with a human gene encoding a β-actin point mutation, down-regulate expression of actin depolymerizing factor (ADF) and its mRNA. Regulation is posttranscriptional. Expression of cofilin, a structurally similar protein, and profilin, CapG, and tropomodulin is not altered with increasing mutant β-actin expression. Myoblasts expressing either human γ-actin or the mutant β-actin down-regulate the endogenous mouse actin genes to keep a constant level of actin mRNA, whereas the γ-actin transfectants do not down-regulate ADF. Thus, ADF expression is regulated differently from actin expression. The mutant β-actin binds to ADF with about the same affinity as normal actin; however, it does not assemble into normal actin filaments. The decrease in ADF expression correlates with an increase in the unassembled actin pool. When the actin monomer pool in untransfected myoblasts is increased 70% by treatment with latrunculin A, synthesis of ADF and actin are down-regulated compared with cofilin and 19 other proteins selected at random. Increasing the actin monomer pool also results in nearly complete phosphorylation of both ADF and cofilin. Thus, ADF and cofilin are coordinately regulated by posttranslational modification, but their expression is differentially regulated. Furthermore, expression of ADF is responsive to the utilization of actin by the cell.

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Alisa E. Shaw

Colorado State University

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Judith A. Boyle

Colorado State University

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Chi W. Pak

Colorado State University

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Ian T. Marsden

Colorado State University

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