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Dive into the research topics where Lawrence M. Lifshitz is active.

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Featured researches published by Lawrence M. Lifshitz.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2007

Insulin Stimulates Membrane Fusion and GLUT4 Accumulation in Clathrin Coats on Adipocyte Plasma Membranes

Shaohui Huang; Lawrence M. Lifshitz; Christine Jones; Karl D. Bellve; Clive Standley; Sonya G. Fonseca; Silvia Corvera; Kevin E. Fogarty; Michael P. Czech

ABSTRACT Total internal reflection fluorescence (TIRF) microscopy reveals highly mobile structures containing enhanced green fluorescent protein-tagged glucose transporter 4 (GLUT4) within a zone about 100 nm beneath the plasma membrane of 3T3-L1 adipocytes. We developed a computer program (Fusion Assistant) that enables direct analysis of the docking/fusion kinetics of hundreds of exocytic fusion events. Insulin stimulation increases the fusion frequency of exocytic GLUT4 vesicles by ∼4-fold, increasing GLUT4 content in the plasma membrane. Remarkably, insulin signaling modulates the kinetics of the fusion process, decreasing the vesicle tethering/docking duration prior to membrane fusion. In contrast, the kinetics of GLUT4 molecules spreading out in the plasma membrane from exocytic fusion sites is unchanged by insulin. As GLUT4 accumulates in the plasma membrane, it is also immobilized in punctate structures on the cell surface. A previous report suggested these structures are exocytic fusion sites (Lizunov et al., J. Cell Biol. 169:481-489, 2005). However, two-color TIRF microscopy using fluorescent proteins fused to clathrin light chain or GLUT4 reveals these structures are clathrin-coated patches. Taken together, these data show that insulin signaling accelerates the transition from docking of GLUT4-containing vesicles to their fusion with the plasma membrane and promotes GLUT4 accumulation in clathrin-based endocytic structures on the plasma membrane.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2002

Visualization of Ca2+ entry through single stretch-activated cation channels

Hui Zou; Lawrence M. Lifshitz; Richard A. Tuft; Kevin E. Fogarty; Joshua J. Singer

Stretch-activated channels (SACs) have been found in smooth muscle and are thought to be involved in myogenic responses. Although SACs have been shown to be Ca2+ permeable when Ca2+ is the only charge carrier, it has not been clearly demonstrated that significant Ca2+ passes through SACs in physiological solutions. By imaging at high temporal and spatial resolution the single-channel Ca2+ fluorescence transient (SCCaFT) arising from Ca2+ entry through a single SAC opening, we provide direct evidence that significant Ca2+ can indeed pass through SACs and increase the local [Ca2+]. Results were obtained under conditions where the only source of Ca2+ was the physiological salt solution in the patch pipette containing 2 mM Ca2+. Single smooth muscle cells were loaded with fluo-3 acetoxymethyl ester, and the fluorescence was recorded by using a wide-field digital imaging microscope while SAC currents were simultaneously recorded from cell-attached patches. Fluorescence increases at the cell-attached patch were clearly visualized before the simultaneous global Ca2+ increase that occurred because of Ca2+ influx through voltage-gated Ca2+ channels when the membrane was depolarized by inward SAC current. From measurements of total fluorescence (“signal mass”) we determined that about 18% of the SAC current is carried by Ca2+ at membrane potentials more negative than the resting level. This would translate into at least a 0.35-pA unitary Ca2+ current at the resting potential. Such Ca2+ currents passing through SACs are sufficient to activate large-conductance Ca2+-activated K+ channels and, as shown previously, to trigger Ca2+ release from intracellular stores.


Journal of Cell Science | 2008

Sorting of EGF and transferrin at the plasma membrane and by cargo-specific signaling to EEA1-enriched endosomes.

Deborah M. Leonard; Akira Hayakawa; Deirdre C. Lawe; David G. Lambright; Karl D. Bellve; Clive Standley; Lawrence M. Lifshitz; Kevin E. Fogarty; Silvia Corvera

The biological function of receptors is determined by their appropriate trafficking through the endosomal pathway. Following internalization, the transferrin (Tf) receptor quantitatively recycles to the plasma membrane, whereas the epidermal growth factor (EGF) receptor undergoes degradation. To determine how Tf and EGF engage these two different pathways we imaged their binding and early endocytic pathway in live cells using total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy (TIRF-M). We find that EGF and Tf bind to distinct plasma membrane regions and are incorporated into different endocytic vesicles. After internalization, both EGF-enriched and Tf-enriched vesicles interact with endosomes containing early endosome antigen 1 (EEA1). EGF is incorporated and retained in these endosomes, while Tf-containing vesicles rapidly dissociate and move to a juxtanuclear compartment. Endocytic vesicles carrying EGF recruit more Rab5 GTPase than those carrying Tf, which, by strengthening their association with EEA1-enriched endosomes, may provide a mechanism for the observed cargo-specific sorting. These results reveal pre-endocytic sorting of Tf and EGF, a specialized role for EEA1-enriched endosomes in EGF trafficking, and a potential mechanism for cargo-specified sorting of endocytic vesicles by these endosomes.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2004

Ca2+ Syntillas, Miniature Ca2+ Release Events in Terminals of Hypothalamic Neurons, Are Increased in Frequency by Depolarization in the Absence of Ca2+ Influx

Valerie De Crescenzo; Ronghua ZhuGe; Cristina Velázquez-Marrero; Lawrence M. Lifshitz; Edward E. Custer; Jeffrey Carmichael; F. Anthony Lai; Richard A. Tuft; Kevin E. Fogarty; José R. Lemos; John V. Walsh

Localized, brief Ca2+ transients (Ca2+ syntillas) caused by release from intracellular stores were found in isolated nerve terminals from magnocellular hypothalamic neurons and examined quantitatively using a signal mass approach to Ca2+ imaging. Ca2+ syntillas (scintilla, L., spark, from a synaptic structure, a nerve terminal) are caused by release of ∼250,000 Ca ions on average by a Ca2+ flux lasting on the order of tens of milliseconds and occur spontaneously at a membrane potential of –80 mV. Syntillas are unaffected by removal of extracellular Ca2+, are mediated by ryanodine receptors (RyRs) and are increased in frequency, in the absence of extracellular Ca2+, by physiological levels of depolarization. This represents the first direct demonstration of mobilization of Ca2+ from intracellular stores in neurons by depolarization without Ca2+ influx. The regulation of syntillas by depolarization provides a new link between neuronal activity and cytosolic [Ca2+] in nerve terminals.


PLOS Biology | 2013

The cellular and molecular basis of bitter tastant-induced bronchodilation.

Cheng-Hai Zhang; Lawrence M. Lifshitz; Karl Uy; Mitsuo Ikebe; Kevin E. Fogarty; Ronghua ZhuGe

Bitter tastants can activate bitter taste receptors on constricted smooth muscle cells to inhibit L-type calcium channels and induce bronchodilation.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2009

Mutant Huntingtin Impairs Vesicle Formation from Recycling Endosomes by Interfering with Rab11 Activity

Xueyi Li; Clive Standley; Ellen Sapp; Antonio Valencia; Zheng-Hong Qin; Kimberly B. Kegel; Jennifer Yoder; Laryssa A. Comer-Tierney; Miguel Esteves; Kathryn Chase; Jonathan Alexander; Nicholas Masso; Lindsay Sobin; Karl D. Bellve; Richard A. Tuft; Lawrence M. Lifshitz; Kevin E. Fogarty; Neil Aronin; Marian DiFiglia

ABSTRACT Huntingtin (Htt) localizes to endosomes, but its role in the endocytic pathway is not established. Recently, we found that Htt is important for the activation of Rab11, a GTPase involved in endosomal recycling. Here we studied fibroblasts of healthy individuals and patients with Huntingtons disease (HD), which is a movement disorder caused by polyglutamine expansion in Htt. The formation of endocytic vesicles containing transferrin at plasma membranes was the same in control and HD patient fibroblasts. However, HD fibroblasts were delayed in recycling biotin-transferrin back to the plasma membrane. Membranes of HD fibroblasts supported less nucleotide exchange on Rab11 than did control membranes. Rab11-positive vesicular and tubular structures in HD fibroblasts were abnormally large, suggesting that they were impaired in forming vesicles. We used total internal reflection fluorescence imaging of living fibroblasts to monitor fluorescence-labeled transferrin-carrying transport intermediates that emerged from recycling endosomes. HD fibroblasts had fewer small vesicles and more large vesicles and long tubules than did control fibroblasts. Dominant active Rab11 expressed in HD fibroblasts normalized the recycling of biotin-transferrin. We propose a novel mechanism for cellular dysfunction by the HD mutation arising from the inhibition of Rab11 activity and a deficit in vesicle formation at recycling endosomes.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006

Plasma Membrane Domains Specialized for Clathrin-mediated Endocytosis in Primary Cells

Karl D. Bellve; Deborah M. Leonard; Clive Standley; Lawrence M. Lifshitz; Richard A. Tuft; Akira Hayakawa; Silvia Corvera; Kevin E. Fogarty

Clathrin assembly at the plasma membrane is a fundamental process required for endocytosis. In cultured cells, most of the clathrin is localized to large patches that display little lateral mobility. The functional role of these regions is not clear, and it has been thought that they may represent artifacts of cell adhesion of cultured cells. Here we have analyzed clathrin organization in primary adipose cells isolated from mice, which are nonadherent and fully differentiated. The majority of clathrin on the plasma membrane of these cells (>60%) was found in large clathrin patches that displayed virtually no lateral mobility and persisted for many minutes, and a smaller amount was found in small spots that appeared and disappeared rapidly. Direct visualization of transferrin revealed that it bound onto large arrays of clathrin, internalizing through vesicles that emerge from these domains. High resolution imaging (50 images/s) revealed fluorescence intensity fluctuations consistent with the formation and detachment of coated vesicles from within large patches. These results reveal that large clathrin assemblies are active regions of endocytosis in mammalian cells and highlight the importance of understanding the mechanistic basis for this organization.


Methods in Enzymology | 2003

Visualization of single molecules of mRNA in situ

Andrea M. Femino; Kevin E. Fogarty; Lawrence M. Lifshitz; Walter A. Carrington; Robert H. Singer

Publisher Summary The chapter discusses methods and concepts that facilitate the detection and identification of single molecules of mRNA in situ using fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH). FISH is a very widely used technique in cell biology. The sensitivity of detection is the major concern when implementing the FISH technology. The methodology employs stringent imaging requirements that include a carefully calibrated quantitative epifluorescence digital imaging microscope, three-dimensional (3D) optical sectioning, constrained iterative deconvolution, and 3D interactive analysis software. The analysis of point sources representing one hybridized probe has provided additional information concerning the nature of the imaging process. The pixel does not suffice as the unit for analysis of a digital image involving fluorescence in situ hybridization. The detailed characterization of biological molecules in situ is now possible using FISH. Unprecedented detail can be revealed from a hybridized cell that has been interrogated with carefully engineered, quantitatively accurate probes, followed by three-dimensional imaging and deconvolution.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2006

Dihydropyridine Receptors and Type 1 Ryanodine Receptors Constitute the Molecular Machinery for Voltage-Induced Ca2+ Release in Nerve Terminals

Valerie De Crescenzo; Kevin E. Fogarty; Ronghua ZhuGe; Richard A. Tuft; Lawrence M. Lifshitz; Jeffrey Carmichael; Karl D. Bellve; Stephen P. Baker; Spyros Zissimopoulos; F. Anthony Lai; José R. Lemos; John V. Walsh

Ca2+ stores were studied in a preparation of freshly dissociated terminals from hypothalamic magnocellular neurons. Depolarization from a holding level of −80 mV in the absence of extracellular Ca2+ elicited Ca2+ release from intraterminal stores, a ryanodine-sensitive process designated as voltage-induced Ca2+ release (VICaR). The release took one of two forms: an increase in the frequency but not the quantal size of Ca2+ syntillas, which are brief, focal Ca2+ transients, or an increase in global [Ca2+]. The present study provides evidence that the sensors of membrane potential for VICaR are dihydropyridine receptors (DHPRs). First, over the range of −80 to −60 mV, in which there was no detectable voltage-gated inward Ca2+ current, syntilla frequency was increased e-fold per 8.4 mV of depolarization, a value consistent with the voltage sensitivity of DHPR-mediated VICaR in skeletal muscle. Second, VICaR was blocked by the dihydropyridine antagonist nifedipine, which immobilizes the gating charge of DHPRs but not by Cd2+ or FPL 64176 (methyl 2,5 dimethyl-4[2-(phenylmethyl)benzoyl]-1H-pyrrole-3-carboxylate), a non-dihydropyridine agonist specific for L-type Ca2+ channels, having no effect on gating charge movement. At 0 mV, the IC50 for nifedipine blockade of VICaR in the form of syntillas was 214 nm in the absence of extracellular Ca2+. Third, type 1 ryanodine receptors, the type to which DHPRs are coupled in skeletal muscle, were detected immunohistochemically at the plasma membrane of the terminals. VICaR may constitute a new link between neuronal activity, as signaled by depolarization, and a rise in intraterminal Ca2+.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2011

The plasma membrane-associated GTPase Rin interacts with the dopamine transporter and is required for protein kinase C-regulated dopamine transporter trafficking.

Deanna M. Navaroli; Zachary H. Stevens; Zeljko Uzelac; Luke R. Gabriel; Michael J. King; Lawrence M. Lifshitz; Harald H. Sitte; Haley E. Melikian

Dopaminergic signaling and plasticity are essential to numerous CNS functions and pathologies, including movement, cognition, and addiction. The amphetamine- and cocaine-sensitive dopamine (DA) transporter (DAT) tightly controls extracellular DA concentrations and half-life. DAT function and surface expression are not static but are dynamically modulated by membrane trafficking. We recently demonstrated that the DAT C terminus encodes a PKC-sensitive internalization signal that also suppresses basal DAT endocytosis. However, the cellular machinery governing regulated DAT trafficking is not well defined. In work presented here, we identified the Ras-like GTPase, Rin (for Ras-like in neurons) (Rit2), as a protein that interacts with the DAT C-terminal endocytic signal. Yeast two-hybrid, GST pull down and FRET studies establish that DAT and Rin directly interact, and colocalization studies reveal that DAT/Rin associations occur primarily in lipid raft microdomains. Coimmunoprecipitations demonstrate that PKC activation regulates Rin association with DAT. Perturbation of Rin function with GTPase mutants and shRNA-mediated Rin knockdown reveals that Rin is critical for PKC-mediated DAT internalization and functional downregulation. These results establish that Rin is a DAT-interacting protein that is required for PKC-regulated DAT trafficking. Moreover, this work suggests that Rin participates in regulated endocytosis.

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Kevin E. Fogarty

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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Richard A. Tuft

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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Ronghua ZhuGe

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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Karl D. Bellve

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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Clive Standley

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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Silvia Corvera

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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John V. Walsh

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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Walter A. Carrington

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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Fredric S. Fay

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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