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Dive into the research topics where Lisa A. Cameron is active.

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Featured researches published by Lisa A. Cameron.


Nature | 2003

Determining the position of the cell division plane

Julie C. Canman; Lisa A. Cameron; Paul S. Maddox; Aaron F. Straight; Jennifer S. Tirnauer; Timothy J. Mitchison; Guowei Fang; Tarun M. Kapoor; E. D. Salmon

Proper positioning of the cell division plane during mitosis is essential for determining the size and position of the two daughter cells—a critical step during development and cell differentiation. A bipolar microtubule array has been proposed to be a minimum requirement for furrow positioning in mammalian cells, with furrows forming at the site of microtubule plus-end overlap between the spindle poles. Observations in other species have suggested, however, that this may not be true. Here we show, by inducing mammalian tissue cells with monopolar spindles to enter anaphase, that furrow formation in cultured mammalian cells does not require a bipolar spindle. Unexpectedly, cytokinesis occurs at high frequency in monopolar cells. Division always occurs at a cortical position distal to the chromosomes. Analysis of microtubules during cytokinesis in cells with monopolar and bipolar spindles shows that a subpopulation of stable microtubules extends past chromosomes and binds to the cell cortex at the site of furrow formation. Our data are consistent with a model in which chromosomes supply microtubules with factors that promote microtubule stability and furrowing.


Current Biology | 2004

Anaphase Spindle Mechanics Prevent Mis-Segregation of Merotelically Oriented Chromosomes

Daniela Cimini; Lisa A. Cameron; E. D. Salmon

Merotelic kinetochore orientation is a kinetochore misattachment in which a single kinetochore is attached to microtubules from both spindle poles instead of just one. It can be favored in specific circumstances, is not detected by the mitotic checkpoint, and induces lagging chromosomes in anaphase. In mammalian cells, it occurs at high frequency in early mitosis, but few anaphase cells show lagging chromosomes. We developed live-cell imaging methods to determine whether and how the mitotic spindle prevents merotelic kinetochores from producing lagging chromosomes. We found that merotelic kinetochores entering anaphase never lost attachment to the spindle poles; they remained attached to both microtubule bundles, but this did not prevent them from segregating correctly. The two microtubule bundles usually showed different fluorescence intensities, the brighter bundle connecting the merotelic kinetochore to the correct pole. During anaphase, the dimmer bundle lengthened much more than the brighter bundle as spindle elongation occurred. This resulted in correct segregation of the merotelically oriented chromosome. We propose a model based on the ratios of microtubules to the correct versus incorrect pole for how anaphase spindle dynamics and microtubule polymerization at kinetochores prevent potential segregation errors deriving from merotelic kinetochore orientation.


Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2009

Condensin Regulates the Stiffness of Vertebrate Centromeres

Susana A. Ribeiro; Jesse C. Gatlin; Yimin Dong; Ajit P. Joglekar; Lisa A. Cameron; Damien F. Hudson; Christine J. Farr; Bruce F. McEwen; E. D. Salmon; William C. Earnshaw; Paola Vagnarelli

When chromosomes are aligned and bioriented at metaphase, the elastic stretch of centromeric chromatin opposes pulling forces exerted on sister kinetochores by the mitotic spindle. Here we show that condensin ATPase activity is an important regulator of centromere stiffness and function. Condensin depletion decreases the stiffness of centromeric chromatin by 50% when pulling forces are applied to kinetochores. However, condensin is dispensable for the normal level of compaction (rest length) of centromeres, which probably depends on other factors that control higher-order chromatin folding. Kinetochores also do not require condensin for their structure or motility. Loss of stiffness caused by condensin-depletion produces abnormal uncoordinated sister kinetochore movements, leads to an increase in Mad2(+) kinetochores near the metaphase plate and delays anaphase onset.


Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B | 2005

Merotelic kinetochores in mammalian tissue cells

E. D. Salmon; Daniela Cimini; Lisa A. Cameron; Jennifer G. DeLuca

Merotelic kinetochore attachment is a major source of aneuploidy in mammalian tissue cells in culture. Mammalian kinetochores typically have binding sites for about 20–25 kinetochore microtubules. In prometaphase, kinetochores become merotelic if they attach to microtubules from opposite poles rather than to just one pole as normally occurs. Merotelic attachments support chromosome bi-orientation and alignment near the metaphase plate and they are not detected by the mitotic spindle checkpoint. At anaphase onset, sister chromatids separate, but a chromatid with a merotelic kinetochore may not be segregated correctly, and may lag near the spindle equator because of pulling forces toward opposite poles, or move in the direction of the wrong pole. Correction mechanisms are important for preventing segregation errors. There are probably more than 100 times as many PtK1 tissue cells with merotelic kinetochores in early mitosis, and about 16 times as many entering anaphase as the 1% of cells with lagging chromosomes seen in late anaphase. The role of spindle mechanics and potential functions of the Ndc80/Nuf2 protein complex at the kinetochore/microtubule interface is discussed for two correction mechanisms: one that functions before anaphase to reduce the number of kinetochore microtubules to the wrong pole, and one that functions after anaphase onset to move merotelic kinetochores based on the ratio of kinetochore microtubules to the correct versus incorrect pole.


Current Biology | 2004

XRHAMM Functions in Ran-Dependent Microtubule Nucleation and Pole Formation during Anastral Spindle Assembly

Aaron C. Groen; Lisa A. Cameron; Margaret Coughlin; David T. Miyamoto; Timothy J. Mitchison; Ryoma Ohi

BACKGROUND The regulated assembly of microtubules is essential for bipolar spindle formation. Depending on cell type, microtubules nucleate through two different pathways: centrosome-driven or chromatin-driven. The chromatin-driven pathway dominates in cells lacking centrosomes. RESULTS Human RHAMM (receptor for hyaluronic-acid-mediated motility) was originally implicated in hyaluronic-acid-induced motility but has since been shown to associate with centrosomes and play a role in astral spindle pole integrity in mitotic systems. We have identified the Xenopus ortholog of human RHAMM as a microtubule-associated protein that plays a role in focusing spindle poles and is essential for efficient microtubule nucleation during spindle assembly without centrosomes. XRHAMM associates both with gamma-TuRC, a complex required for microtubule nucleation and with TPX2, a protein required for microtubule nucleation and spindle pole organization. CONCLUSIONS XRHAMM facilitates Ran-dependent, chromatin-driven nucleation in a process that may require coordinate activation of TPX2 and gamma-TuRC.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2006

Kinesin 5–independent poleward flux of kinetochore microtubules in PtK1 cells

Lisa A. Cameron; Ge Yang; Daniela Cimini; Julie C. Canman; Olga Kisurina-Evgenieva; Alexey Khodjakov; Gaudenz Danuser; E. D. Salmon

Forces in the spindle that align and segregate chromosomes produce a steady poleward flux of kinetochore microtubules (MTs [kMTs]) in higher eukaryotes. In several nonmammalian systems, flux is driven by the tetrameric kinesin Eg5 (kinesin 5), which slides antiparallel MTs toward their minus ends. However, we find that the inhibition of kinesin 5 in mammalian cultured cells (PtK1) results in only minor reduction in the rate of kMT flux from ∼0.7 to ∼0.5 μm/min, the same rate measured in monopolar spindles that lack antiparallel MTs. These data reveal that the majority of poleward flux of kMTs in these cells is not driven by Eg5. Instead, we favor a polar “pulling-in” mechanism in which a depolymerase localized at kinetochore fiber minus ends makes a major contribution to poleward flux. One candidate, Kif2a (kinesin 13), was detected at minus ends of fluxing kinetochore fibers. Kif2a remains associated with the ends of K fibers upon disruption of the spindle by dynein/dynactin inhibition, and these K fibers flux.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2008

Regional variation of microtubule flux reveals microtubule organization in the metaphase meiotic spindle

Ge Yang; Lisa A. Cameron; Paul S. Maddox; E. D. Salmon; Gaudenz Danuser

Continuous poleward movement of tubulin is a hallmark of metaphase spindle dynamics in higher eukaryotic cells and is essential for stable spindle architecture and reliable chromosome segregation. We use quantitative fluorescent speckle microscopy to map with high resolution the spatial organization of microtubule flux in Xenopus laevis egg extract meiotic spindles. We find that the flux velocity decreases near spindle poles by ∼20%. The regional variation is independent of functional kinetochores and centrosomes and is suppressed by inhibition of dynein/dynactin, kinesin-5, or both. Statistical analysis reveals that tubulin flows in two distinct velocity modes. We propose an association of these modes with two architecturally distinct yet spatially overlapping and dynamically cross-linked arrays of microtubules: focused polar microtubule arrays of a uniform polarity and slower flux velocities are interconnected by a dense barrel-like microtubule array of antiparallel polarities and faster flux velocities.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2009

Synchronizing chromosome segregation by flux-dependent force equalization at kinetochores

Irina Matos; António J. Pereira; Mariana Lince-Faria; Lisa A. Cameron; E. D. Salmon; Helder Maiato

The synchronous movement of chromosomes during anaphase ensures their correct inheritance in every cell division. This reflects the uniformity of spindle forces acting on chromosomes and their simultaneous entry into anaphase. Although anaphase onset is controlled by the spindle assembly checkpoint, it remains unknown how spindle forces are uniformly distributed among different chromosomes. In this paper, we show that tension uniformity at metaphase kinetochores and subsequent anaphase synchrony in Drosophila S2 cells are promoted by spindle microtubule flux. These results can be explained by a mechanical model of the spindle where microtubule poleward translocation events associated with flux reflect relaxation of the kinetochore–microtubule interface, which accounts for the redistribution and convergence of kinetochore tensions in a timescale comparable to typical metaphase duration. As predicted by the model, experimental acceleration of mitosis precludes tension equalization and anaphase synchrony. We propose that flux-dependent equalization of kinetochore tensions ensures a timely and uniform maturation of kinetochore–microtubule interfaces necessary for error-free and coordinated segregation of chromosomes in anaphase.


Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2012

The coupling between sister kinetochore directional instability and oscillations in centromere stretch in metaphase PtK1 cells

Xiaohu Wan; Daniela Cimini; Lisa A. Cameron; E. D. Salmon

High-resolution kinetochore tracking reveals that oscillations in centromere stretch occur at twice the frequency of kinetochore oscillations because of the nonlinear kinetics of kinetochore directional instability, which produce poleward and away-from-the-pole kinetochore oscillations.


CSH Protocols | 2011

Fluorescent speckle microscopy.

Lisa A. Cameron; Benjamin R. Houghtaling; Ge Yang

INTRODUCTION Fluorescent speckle microscopy (FSM) is a live imaging and quantitative measurement technique used for analyzing motion and turnover of macromolecular assemblies in vivo and in vitro. It differs from related imaging techniques such as photobleaching and photoactivation in its use of substantially lower concentrations of fluorescently labeled assembly subunits. When small numbers of labeled subunits and large numbers of unlabeled subunits become randomly incorporated together into a macromolecular structure, the random distribution of fluorophores generates nonuniform fluorescence intensity patterns that appear as distinct puncta against low background fluorescence. These puncta, called speckles, serve as fiduciary markers so that motion and turnover of the structure are visualized. Computational analysis of speckle image data transforms FSM into a powerful tool for high-resolution quantitative analysis of macromolecular assembly dynamics. Successful application of FSM depends on the ability to reliably generate and image speckles, which are characterized by their weak emission signals, and to effectively extract quantitative information through computational analysis of speckle image data, which are characterized by their stochastic fluctuations, low signal-to-noise ratios, and high spatiotemporal complexity. This article aims to provide a practical introduction to basic principles, experimental implementation, and computational data analysis of FSM. Examples are used to show the application of FSM in analyzing the dynamic organization and assembly/disassembly of cytoskeletal filament networks, an area in which FSM analysis has found great success.

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E. D. Salmon

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Ge Yang

Carnegie Mellon University

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Paul S. Maddox

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Gaudenz Danuser

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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