Marvin Bentley
Oregon Health & Science University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Marvin Bentley.
Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2010
Nandhakumar Thayanidhi; Jared R. Helm; Deborah C. Nycz; Marvin Bentley; Yingjian Liang; Jesse C. Hay
This work demonstrates that α-synuclein inhibits the biosynthetic secretory pathway of mammalian cells potently and directly under nontoxic conditions and in the absence of insoluble α-synuclein aggregates. A potential mechanism involving α-synuclein binding to ER/Golgi SNAREs and inhibiting fusogenic SNARE complex assembly is elucidated.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006
Marvin Bentley; Yingjian Liang; Karl Mullen; Dalu Xu; Elizabeth Sztul; Jesse C. Hay
In mammals, coat complex II (COPII)-coated transport vesicles deliver secretory cargo to vesicular tubular clusters (VTCs) that facilitate cargo sorting and transport to the Golgi. We documented in vitro tethering and SNARE-dependent homotypic fusion of endoplasmic reticulum-derived COPII transport vesicles to form larger cargo containers characteristic of VTCs ( Xu, D., and Hay, J. C. (2004) J. Cell Biol. 167, 997-1003 ). COPII vesicles thus appear to contain all necessary components for homotypic tethering and fusion, providing a pathway for de novo VTC biogenesis. Here we demonstrate that antibodies against the endoplasmic reticulum/Golgi SNARE Syntaxin 5 inhibit COPII vesicle homotypic tethering as well as fusion, implying an unanticipated role for SNAREs upstream of fusion. Inhibition of SNARE complex access and/or disassembly with dominant-negative α-soluble NSF attachment protein (SNAP) also inhibited tethering, implicating SNARE status as a critical determinant in COPII vesicle tethering. The tethering-defective vesicles generated in the presence of dominant-negative α-SNAP specifically lacked the Rab1 effectors p115 and GM130 but not other peripheral membrane proteins. Furthermore, Rab effectors, including p115, were shown to be required for homotypic COPII vesicle tethering. Thus, our results demonstrate a requirement for SNARE-dependent tether recruitment and function in COPII vesicle fusion. We anticipate that recruitment of tether molecules by an upstream SNARE signal ensures that tethering events are initiated only at focal sites containing appropriately poised fusion machinery.
Nature Reviews Neuroscience | 2016
Marvin Bentley; Gary Banker
As polarized cells, neurons maintain different sets of resident plasma membrane proteins in their axons and dendrites, which is consistent with the different roles that these neurites have in electrochemical signalling. Axonal and dendritic proteins are synthesized together within the somatodendritic domain; this raises a fundamental question: what is the nature of the intracellular trafficking machinery that ensures that these proteins reach the correct domain? Recent studies have advanced our understanding of the processes underlying the selective sorting and selective transport of axonal and dendritic proteins and have created potential avenues for future progress.
Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2010
Marvin Bentley; Deborah C. Nycz; Ashwini P. Joglekar; Ismene Fertschai; Roland Malli; Wolfgang F. Graier; Jesse C. Hay
This study establishes a role for luminal Ca2+ in ER/Golgi transport organelles and elucidates an effector mechanism involving the EF-hand protein ALG-2 and regulation of COPII coat retention.
Journal of Cell Biology | 2012
Brian Jenkins; Helena Decker; Marvin Bentley; Julie Luisi; Gary Banker
A novel split kinesin assay identifies three Kinesin-3 family members that specifically interact with dendritic vesicle populations in neurons.
Journal of Cell Biology | 2015
Marvin Bentley; Helena Decker; Julie Luisi; Gary Banker
A novel assay based on expressing FRB-tagged candidate vesicle-binding protein reveals that KIF13A and KIF13B bind preferentially to early endosomes, whereas KIF1A and KIF1Bβ bind preferentially to late endosomes and lysosomes.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2014
Jared R. Helm; Marvin Bentley; Kevin Thorsen; Ting Wang; Lauren Foltz; Viola Oorschot; Judith Klumperman; Jesse C. Hay
Background: Whether ER to Golgi transport requires calcium, the source of calcium, and its mechanism is unknown. Results: A requirement for luminal calcium is demonstrated, and evidence is presented for a molecular effector pathway. Conclusion: Luminal calcium may regulate transport by activating these protein interactions. Significance: The described calcium effector pathway may lead to greater insight into calcium action at multiple transport steps. Luminal calcium released from secretory organelles has been suggested to play a regulatory role in vesicle transport at several steps in the secretory pathway; however, its functional roles and effector pathways have not been elucidated. Here we demonstrate for the first time that specific luminal calcium depletion leads to a significant decrease in endoplasmic reticulum (ER)-to-Golgi transport rates in intact cells. Ultrastructural analysis revealed that luminal calcium depletion is accompanied by increased accumulation of intermediate compartment proteins in COPII buds and clusters of unfused COPII vesicles at ER exit sites. Furthermore, we present several lines of evidence suggesting that luminal calcium affected transport at least in part through calcium-dependent interactions between apoptosis-linked gene-2 (ALG-2) and the Sec31A proline-rich region: 1) targeted disruption of ALG-2/Sec31A interactions caused severe defects in ER-to-Golgi transport in intact cells; 2) effects of luminal calcium and ALG-2/Sec31A interactions on transport mutually required each other; and 3) Sec31A function in transport required luminal calcium. Morphological phenotypes of disrupted ALG-2/Sec31A interactions were characterized. We found that ALG-2/Sec31A interactions were not required for the localization of Sec31A to ER exit sites per se but appeared to acutely regulate the stability and trafficking of the cargo receptor p24 and the distribution of the vesicle tether protein p115. These results represent the first outline of a mechanism that connects luminal calcium to specific protein interactions regulating vesicle trafficking machinery.
Current protocols in pharmacology | 2015
Marvin Bentley; Gary Banker
Here we describe a method capable of identifying interactions between candidate trafficking proteins and a defined vesicle population in intact cells. The assay involves the expression of an FKBP12‐rapamycin binding domain (FRB)–tagged candidate vesicle‐binding protein that can be inducibly linked to an FKBP‐tagged molecular motor. If the FRB‐tagged candidate protein binds the labeled vesicles, then linking the FRB and FKBP domains recruits motors to the vesicles and causes a predictable, highly distinctive change in vesicle trafficking. We describe two versions of the assay: a general protocol for use in cells with a typical microtubule‐organizing center and a specialized protocol designed to detect protein‐vesicle interactions in cultured neurons. We have successfully used this assay to identify kinesins and Rabs that bind to a variety of different vesicle populations. In principle, this assay could be used to investigate interactions between any category of vesicle trafficking proteins and any vesicle population that can be specifically labeled.
Methods in Cell Biology | 2016
Rui Yang; Marvin Bentley; Chung Fang Huang; Gary Banker
Neuronal microtubules are subject to extensive posttranslational modifications and are bound by MAPs, tip-binding proteins, and other accessory proteins. All of these features, which are difficult to replicate in vitro, are likely to influence the translocation of kinesin motors. Here we describe assays for evaluating the translocation of a population of fluorescently labeled kinesin motor domains, based on their accumulation in regions of the cell enriched in microtubule plus ends. Neurons lend themselves to these experiments because of their microtubule organization. In axons, microtubules are oriented with their plus ends out; dendrites contain a mixed population of microtubules, but those near the tips are also plus end out. The assays involve the expression of constitutively active kinesins that can walk processively, but that lack the autoinhibitory domain in the tail that normally prevents their binding to microtubules until they attach to vesicles. The degree to which such motor domains accumulate at neurite tips serves as a measure of the efficiency of their translocation. Although these assays cannot provide the kind of quantitative kinetic information obtained from in vitro assays, they offer a simple way to examine kinesin translocation in living neurons. They can be used to compare the translocation efficiency of different kinesin motors and to evaluate how mutations or posttranslational modifications within the motor domain influence kinesin translocation. Changes to motor domain accumulation in these assays can also serve as readout for changes in the microtubule cytoskeleton that affect kinesin translocation.
Neuron | 2012
Marvin Bentley; Helena Decker; Gary Banker