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Dive into the research topics where Mark Terasaki is active.

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Featured researches published by Mark Terasaki.


Biophysical Journal | 2002

Three-Dimensional High-Resolution Second-Harmonic Generation Imaging of Endogenous Structural Proteins in Biological Tissues

Paul J. Campagnola; Andrew C. Millard; Mark Terasaki; Pamela E. Hoppe; Christian J. Malone; William A. Mohler

We find that several key endogenous protein structures give rise to intense second-harmonic generation (SHG)-nonabsorptive frequency doubling of an excitation laser line. Second-harmonic imaging microscopy (SHIM) on a laser-scanning system proves, therefore, to be a powerful and unique tool for high-resolution, high-contrast, three-dimensional studies of live cell and tissue architecture. Unlike fluorescence, SHG suffers no inherent photobleaching or toxicity and does not require exogenous labels. Unlike polarization microscopy, SHIM provides intrinsic confocality and deep sectioning in complex tissues. In this study, we demonstrate the clarity of SHIM optical sectioning within unfixed, unstained thick specimens. SHIM and two-photon excited fluorescence (TPEF) were combined in a dual-mode nonlinear microscopy to elucidate the molecular sources of SHG in live cells and tissues. SHG arose not only from coiled-coil complexes within connective tissues and muscle thick filaments, but also from microtubule arrays within interphase and mitotic cells. Both polarization dependence and a local symmetry cancellation effect of SHG allowed the signal from species generating the second harmonic to be decoded, by ratiometric correlation with TPEF, to yield information on local structure below optical resolution. The physical origin of SHG within these tissues is addressed and is attributed to the laser interaction with dipolar protein structures that is enhanced by the intrinsic chirality of the protein helices.


Science | 1996

Diffusional Mobility of Golgi Proteins in Membranes of Living Cells

Nelson B. Cole; Carolyn L. Smith; Noah Sciaky; Mark Terasaki; Michael Edidin; Jennifer Lippincott-Schwartz

The mechanism by which Golgi membrane proteins are retained within the Golgi complex in the midst of a continuous flow of protein and lipid is not yet understood. The diffusional mobilities of mammalian Golgi membrane proteins fused with green fluorescent protein from Aequorea victoria were measured in living HeLa cells with the fluorescence photobleaching recovery technique. The diffusion coefficients ranged from 3 × 10−9 square centimeters per second to 5 × 10−9 square centimeters per second, with greater than 90 percent of the chimeric proteins mobile. Extensive lateral diffusion of the chimeric proteins occurred between Golgi stacks. Thus, the chimeras diffuse rapidly and freely in Golgi membranes, which suggests that Golgi targeting and retention of these molecules does not depend on protein immobilization.


PLOS Biology | 2006

Dorsoventral Patterning in Hemichordates: Insights into Early Chordate Evolution

Christopher J. Lowe; Mark Terasaki; Michael M. A. Wu; Robert M. Freeman; Linda L. Runft; Kristen M. Kwan; Saori Haigo; Jochanan Aronowicz; Eric S. Lander; Chris Gruber; Smith M; Marc W. Kirschner; John C. Gerhart

We have compared the dorsoventral development of hemichordates and chordates to deduce the organization of their common ancestor, and hence to identify the evolutionary modifications of the chordate body axis after the lineages split. In the hemichordate embryo, genes encoding bone morphogenetic proteins (Bmp) 2/4 and 5/8, as well as several genes for modulators of Bmp activity, are expressed in a thin stripe of ectoderm on one midline, historically called “dorsal.” On the opposite midline, the genes encoding Chordin and Anti-dorsalizing morphogenetic protein (Admp) are expressed. Thus, we find a Bmp-Chordin developmental axis preceding and underlying the anatomical dorsoventral axis of hemichordates, adding to the evidence from Drosophila and chordates that this axis may be at least as ancient as the first bilateral animals. Numerous genes encoding transcription factors and signaling ligands are expressed in the three germ layers of hemichordate embryos in distinct dorsoventral domains, such as pox neuro, pituitary homeobox, distalless, and tbx2/3 on the Bmp side and netrin, mnx, mox, and single-minded on the Chordin-Admp side. When we expose the embryo to excess Bmp protein, or when we deplete endogenous Bmp by small interfering RNA injections, these expression domains expand or contract, reflecting their activation or repression by Bmp, and the embryos develop as dorsalized or ventralized limit forms. Dorsoventral patterning is independent of anterior/posterior patterning, as in Drosophila but not chordates. Unlike both chordates and Drosophila, neural gene expression in hemichordates is not repressed by high Bmp levels, consistent with their development of a diffuse rather than centralized nervous system. We suggest that the common ancestor of hemichordates and chordates did not use its Bmp-Chordin axis to segregate epidermal and neural ectoderm but to pattern many other dorsoventral aspects of the germ layers, including neural cell fates within a diffuse nervous system. Accordingly, centralization was added in the chordate line by neural-epidermal segregation, mediated by the pre-existing Bmp-Chordin axis. Finally, since hemichordates develop the mouth on the non-Bmp side, like arthropods but opposite to chordates, the mouth and Bmp-Chordin axis may have rearranged in the chordate line, one relative to the other.


Nature | 2005

A contractile nuclear actin network drives chromosome congression in oocytes

Péter Lénárt; Christian P. Bacher; Nathalie Daigle; Arthur R. Hand; Roland Eils; Mark Terasaki; Jan Ellenberg

Chromosome capture by microtubules is widely accepted as the universal mechanism of spindle assembly in dividing cells. However, the observed length of spindle microtubules and computer simulations of spindle assembly predict that chromosome capture is efficient in small cells, but may fail in cells with large nuclear volumes such as animal oocytes. Here we investigate chromosome congression during the first meiotic division in starfish oocytes. We show that microtubules are not sufficient for capturing chromosomes. Instead, chromosome congression requires actin polymerization. After nuclear envelope breakdown, we observe the formation of a filamentous actin mesh in the nuclear region, and find that contraction of this network delivers chromosomes to the microtubule spindle. We show that this mechanism is essential for preventing chromosome loss and aneuploidy of the egg—a leading cause of pregnancy loss and birth defects in humans.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2003

Nuclear envelope breakdown in starfish oocytes proceeds by partial NPC disassembly followed by a rapidly spreading fenestration of nuclear membranes

Péter Lénárt; Gwénaël Rabut; Nathalie Daigle; Arthur R. Hand; Mark Terasaki; Jan Ellenberg

Breakdown of the nuclear envelope (NE) was analyzed in live starfish oocytes using a size series of fluorescently labeled dextrans, membrane dyes, and GFP-tagged proteins of the nuclear pore complex (NPC) and the nuclear lamina. Permeabilization of the nucleus occurred in two sequential phases. In phase I the NE became increasingly permeable for molecules up to ∼40 nm in diameter, concurrent with a loss of peripheral nuclear pore components over a time course of 10 min. The NE remained intact on the ultrastructural level during this time. In phase II the NE was completely permeabilized within 35 s. This rapid permeabilization spread as a wave from one epicenter on the animal half across the nuclear surface and allowed free diffusion of particles up to ∼100 nm in diameter into the nucleus. While the lamina and nuclear membranes appeared intact at the light microscopic level, a fenestration of the NE was clearly visible by electron microscopy in phase II. We conclude that NE breakdown in starfish oocytes is triggered by slow sequential disassembly of the NPCs followed by a rapidly spreading fenestration of the NE caused by the removal of nuclear pores from nuclear membranes still attached to the lamina.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1999

Requirement of a Src Family Kinase for Initiating Calcium Release at Fertilization in Starfish Eggs

Andrew F. Giusti; David J. Carroll; Yama A. Abassi; Mark Terasaki; Kathy R. Foltz; Laurinda A. Jaffe

Signal transduction leading to calcium release in echinoderm eggs at fertilization requires phospholipase Cγ-mediated production of inositol trisphosphate (IP3), indicating that a tyrosine kinase is a likely upstream regulator. Because previous work has shown a fertilization-dependent association between the Src homology 2 (SH2) domains of phospholipase Cγ and a Src family kinase, we examined whether a Src family kinase was required for Ca2+ release at fertilization. To inhibit the function of kinases in this family, we injected starfish eggs with the SH2 domains of Src and Fyn kinases. This inhibited Ca2+ release in response to fertilization but not in response to injection of IP3. We further established the specificity of the inhibition by showing that the SH2 domains of several other tyrosine kinases (Abl, Syk, and ZAP-70), and the SH3 domain of Src, were not inhibitory. Also, a point-mutated Src SH2 domain, which has reduced affinity for phosphotyrosine, was a correspondingly less effective inhibitor of fertilization-induced Ca2+ release. These results indicate that a Src family kinase, by way of its SH2 domain, links sperm-egg interaction to IP3-mediated Ca2+ release at fertilization in starfish eggs.


Methods in Cell Biology | 1988

Chapter 8 Fluorescent Labeling of Endoplasmic Reticulum

Mark Terasaki

The fluorescent molecule, DiOC6(3), can be used to label the ER in living cultured cells. The labeling procedures are simple and rapid, and in optimum conditions, the staining is bright and clear and bleaches slowly. The main disadvantage of the technique is toxicity. Photodynamic damage is probably the most serious of the toxic effects, because the damage can be relatively rapid and because the extent and nature of the damage during exposure to the light cannot be determined. To lessen the damage, the exposure of cells to light should be minimized. For many applications, it would be best to verify that cell function is normal during the experimental observations.


Cell | 2013

Stacked Endoplasmic Reticulum Sheets Are Connected by Helicoidal Membrane Motifs

Mark Terasaki; Tom Shemesh; Narayanan Kasthuri; Robin W. Klemm; Richard Schalek; Kenneth J. Hayworth; Arthur R. Hand; Maya Yankova; Greg Huber; Jeff W. Lichtman; Michael M. Kozlov

The endoplasmic reticulum (ER) often forms stacked membrane sheets, an arrangement that is likely required to accommodate a maximum of membrane-bound polysomes for secretory protein synthesis. How sheets are stacked is unknown. Here, we used improved staining and automated ultrathin sectioning electron microscopy methods to analyze stacked ER sheets in neuronal cells and secretory salivary gland cells of mice. Our results show that stacked ER sheets form a continuous membrane system in which the sheets are connected by twisted membrane surfaces with helical edges of left- or right-handedness. The three-dimensional structure of tightly stacked ER sheets resembles a parking garage, in which the different levels are connected by helicoidal ramps. A theoretical model explains the experimental observations and indicates that the structure corresponds to a minimum of elastic energy of sheet edges and surfaces. The structure allows the dense packing of ER sheets in the restricted space of a cell.


Handbook of confocal microscopy, third edition. | 2006

Confocal Microscopy of Living Cells

Michael E. Dailey; Erik M. M. Manders; David R. Soll; Mark Terasaki

If a picture is worth a thousand words, then a movie may be worth a million words. Microcinematography and, later, video microscopy have provided great insight into biological phenomena. One limitation, however, has been the difficulty of imaging in three dimensions. In many cases, observations have been made on cultured cells that are thin to start with or tissue preparations that have been sectioned.


Methods in Cell Biology | 2004

Quantitative Microinjection of Oocytes, Eggs, and Embryos

Laurinda A. Jaffe; Mark Terasaki

Publisher Summary This chapter describes a method for microinjection of oocytes, eggs, and embryos with quantitative techniques initially used by Pierre de Fonbrune in the 1930s to inject amoeba. This chapter describes the version found in current laboratories. Microinjection is used to introduce precisely defined amounts of test substances into the cytoplasm without altering other components within the cell. The sources of the equipment and supplies needed for these microinjection methods are discussed in the chapter. The method applied for the preparation of the microinjection slide and for injecting solution into the cytoplasm of the cell is described. The microinjection slide is used as a culture and observation chamber until the embryos reach a stage where they swim away. For culturing, the slide is kept in a moist environment. The microinjection apparatus are set up in a quiet location, out of the way of traffic, vibration, and distractions.

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Laurinda A. Jaffe

University of Connecticut Health Center

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Beth Hinkle

University of Connecticut Health Center

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Arthur R. Hand

University of Connecticut

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Linda L. Runft

University of California

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Boris M. Slepchenko

University of Connecticut Health Center

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Lisa M. Mehlmann

University of Connecticut Health Center

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Paul J. Campagnola

University of Connecticut Health Center

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