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Dive into the research topics where Paul Dalhaimer is active.

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Featured researches published by Paul Dalhaimer.


Nature Nanotechnology | 2007

Shape effects of filaments versus spherical particles in flow and drug delivery

Yan Geng; Paul Dalhaimer; Shenshen Cai; Richard K. Tsai; Manorama Tewari; Tamara Minko; Dennis E. Discher

Interaction of spherical particles with cells and within animals has been studied extensively, but the effects of shape have received little attention. Here we use highly stable, polymer micelle assemblies known as filomicelles to compare the transport and trafficking of flexible filaments with spheres of similar chemistry. In rodents, filomicelles persisted in the circulation up to one week after intravenous injection. This is about ten times longer than their spherical counterparts and is more persistent than any known synthetic nanoparticle. Under fluid flow conditions, spheres and short filomicelles are taken up by cells more readily than longer filaments because the latter are extended by the flow. Preliminary results further demonstrate that filomicelles can effectively deliver the anticancer drug paclitaxel and shrink human-derived tumours in mice. Although these findings show that long-circulating vehicles need not be nanospheres, they also lend insight into possible shape effects of natural filamentous viruses.


Biophysical Journal | 2003

Cooperativity in Forced Unfolding of Tandem Spectrin Repeats

Richard Law; Philippe Carl; Sandy Harper; Paul Dalhaimer; David W. Speicher; Dennis E. Discher

Force-driven conformational changes provide a broad basis for protein extensibility, and multidomain proteins broaden the possibilities further by allowing for a multiplicity of forcibly extended states. Red cell spectrin is prototypical in being an extensible, multidomain protein widely recognized for its contribution to erythrocyte flexibility. Atomic force microscopy has already shown that single repeats of various spectrin family proteins can be forced to unfold reversibly under extension. Recent structural data indicates, however, that the linker between triple-helical spectrin repeats is often a contiguous helix, thus raising questions as to what the linker contributes and what defines a domain mechanically. We have examined the extensible unfolding of red cell spectrins as monomeric constructs of just two, three, or four repeats from the actin-binding ends of both alpha- and beta-chains, i.e., alpha(18-21) and beta(1-4) or their subfragments. In addition to single repeat unfolding evident in sawtooth patterns peaked at relatively low forces (<50 pN at 1 nm/ms extension rates), tandem repeat unfolding is also demonstrated in ensemble-scale analyses of thousands of atomic force microscopy contacts. Evidence for extending two chains and loops is provided by force versus length scatterplots which also indicate that tandem repeat unfolding occurs at a significant frequency relative to single repeat unfolding. Cooperativity in forced unfolding of spectrin is also clearly demonstrated by a common force scale for the unfolding of both single and tandem repeats.


Traffic | 2012

Lipid droplet de novo formation and fission are linked to the cell cycle in fission yeast.

Allan P. Long; Anna Manneschmidt; Bobby VerBrugge; Mary R. Dortch; Steven C. Minkin; Keith E. Prater; John Biggerstaff; John R. Dunlap; Paul Dalhaimer

Cells sequester neutral lipids in bodies called lipid droplets. Thus, the formation and breakdown of the droplets are important for cellular metabolism; unfortunately, these processes are difficult to quantify. Here, we used time‐lapse confocal microscopy to track the formation, movement and size changes of lipid droplets throughout the cell cycle in fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe. In theory, the number of lipid droplets in these cells must increase for daughter cells to have the same number of droplets as the parent at a reference point in the cell cycle. We observed stable droplet formation events in G2 phase that were divided evenly between de novo formation of nascent droplets and fission of preexisting droplets. The observations that lipid droplet number is linked to the cell cycle and that droplets can form via fission were both new discoveries. Thus, we scrutinized each fission event for multiple signatures to eliminate possible artifacts from our microscopy. We augmented our time‐lapse confocal microscopy with electron microscopy, which showed lipid droplet ‘intermediates’: droplets shaped like dumbbells that are potentially in transition states between two spherical droplets. Using these complementary microscopy techniques and also dynamic simulations, we show that lipid droplets can form by fission.


Physical Review Letters | 2004

Elongation and Fluctuations of Semiflexible Polymers in a Nematic Solvent

Zvonimir Dogic; Jun Zhang; A. W. C. Lau; Helim Aranda-Espinoza; Paul Dalhaimer; Dennis E. Discher; Paul A. Janmey; Randall D. Kamien; T. C. Lubensky; Arjun G. Yodh

We directly visualize single polymers with persistence lengths l(p), ranging from 0.05 to 16 microm, dissolved in the nematic phase of rodlike fd virus. Polymers with a sufficiently large persistence length undergo a coil-rod transition at the isotropic-nematic transition of the background solvent. We quantitatively analyze the transverse fluctuations of the semiflexible polymers and show that at long wavelengths they are driven by the fluctuating nematic background. We extract the Odijk deflection length and the elastic constant of the background nematic phase from the data.


Biophysical Journal | 2000

Actin Protofilament Orientation in Deformation of the Erythrocyte Membrane Skeleton

Catherine Picart; Paul Dalhaimer; Dennis E. Discher

The red cells spectrin-actin network is known to sustain local states of shear, dilation, and condensation, and yet the short actin filaments are found to maintain membrane-tangent and near-random azimuthal orientations. When calibrated with polarization results for single actin filaments, imaging of micropipette-deformed red cell ghosts has allowed an assessment of actin orientations and possible reorientations in the network. At the hemispherical cap of the aspirated projection, where the network can be dilated severalfold, filaments have the same membrane-tangent orientation as on a relatively unstrained portion of membrane. Likewise, over the length of the network projection pulled into the micropipette, where the network is strongly sheared in axial extension and circumferential contraction, actin maintains its tangent orientation and is only very weakly aligned with network extension. Similar results are found for the integral membrane protein Band 3. Allowing for thermal fluctuations, we deduce a bound for the effective coupling constant, alpha, between network shear and azimuthal orientation of the protofilament. The finding that alpha must be about an order of magnitude or more below its tight-coupling value illustrates how nanostructural kinematics can decouple from more macroscopic responses. Monte Carlo simulations of spectrin-actin networks at approximately 10-nm resolution further support this conclusion and substantiate an image of protofilaments as elements of a high-temperature spin glass.


Comptes Rendus Physique | 2003

Synthetic cell elements from block copolymers – hydrodynamic aspects

Paul Dalhaimer; Frank S. Bates; Helim Aranda-Espinoza; Dennis E. Discher

Amphiphilic block copolymers can self-assemble in water into various stable morphologies which resemble key cell structures, notably filaments and membranes. Filamentous ‘worms’ of copolymer, microns-long, are briefly introduced, and related dynamics of copolymer vesicle ‘polymersomes’ are reviewed. Fluorescence visualization of single worms stretched under flow demonstrates their stability as well as a means to control conformation. Polymersome membranes have been more thoroughly studied, especially copolymer molecular weight effects. We summarize results suggestive of a transition from Rouselike behavior to entangled chains. Viewed together, the results ask the question: what physics are needed next to mimic cell activities such as crawling? To cite this article: P. Dalhaimer et al., C. R. Physique 4 (2003).  2003 Academie des sciences/Editions scientifiques et medicales Elsevier SAS. All rights reserved.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2012

Key Structural Features of the Actin Filament Arp2/3 Complex Branch Junction Revealed by Molecular Simulation

Jim Pfaendtner; Niels Volkmann; Dorit Hanein; Paul Dalhaimer; Thomas D. Pollard; Gregory A. Voth

We investigated the structure, properties and dynamics of the actin filament branch junction formed by actin-related protein (Arp) 2/3 complex using all-atom molecular dynamics (MD) simulations based on a model fit to a reconstruction from electron tomograms. Simulations of the entire structure consisting of 31 protein subunits together with solvent molecules containing ∼3 million atoms were performed for an aggregate time of 175 ns. One 75-ns simulation of the original reconstruction was compared to two 50-ns simulations of alternate structures, showing that the hypothesized branch junction structure is very stable. Our simulations revealed that the interface between Arp2/3 complex and the mother actin filament features a large number of salt bridges and hydrophobic contacts, many of which are dynamic and formed/broken on the timescale of the simulation. The simulations suggest that the DNase binding loops in Arp3, and possibly Arp2, form stabilizing contacts with the mother filament. Unbiased comparison of models sampled from the MD simulation trajectory with the primary experimental electron tomography data identified regions were snapshots from the simulation provide atomic details of the model structures and also pinpoints regions where the initial modeling based on the electron tomogram reconstruction may be suboptimal.


Biophysical Journal | 2010

Molecular Dynamics Simulations of Arp2/3 Complex Activation

Paul Dalhaimer; Thomas D. Pollard

Actin-related protein 2 and 3 (Arp2/3) complex forms a dendritic network of actin filaments during endocytosis and cellular locomotion by nucleating branches on the sides of preexisting actin filaments. Reconstructions of electron tomograms of branch junctions show how Arp2/3 complex anchors the branch, with Arp2 and Arp3 serving as the first two subunits of the branch. Our aim was to characterize the massive conformational change that moves Arp2 ∼30 Å from its position in crystal structures of inactive Arp2/3 complex to its position in branch junctions. Starting with the inactive crystal structure, we used atomistic-scale molecular dynamics simulations to drive Arp2 toward the position observed in branch junctions. When we applied forces to Arp2 while restraining Arp3, one block of structure (Arp2, subunit ARPC1, the globular domain of ARPC4 and ARPC5) rotated counterclockwise by 30° around a pivot point in an α-helix of ARPC4 (Glu⁸¹-Asn¹⁰⁰) to align Arp2 next to Arp3 in a second block of structure including ARPC3 and the globular domains of ARPC2. This active structure buried more surface area than the inactive conformation. The complex was stable in all simulations. In most simulations, collisions of subdomain 2 of Arp2 with Arp3 impeded the movement of Arp2.


Traffic | 2016

Lipid Droplets Form from Distinct Regions of the Cell in the Fission Yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe

Alex Meyers; Zuania Pacheco del Rio; Rachael A. Beaver; Ryan M. Morris; Taylor M. Weiskittel; Amany K. Alshibli; Jaana Männik; Jennifer L. Morrell-Falvey; Paul Dalhaimer

Eukaryotic cells store cholesterol/sterol esters (SEs) and triacylglycerols (TAGs) in lipid droplets, which form from the contiguous endoplasmic reticulum (ER) network. However, it is not known if droplets preferentially form from certain regions of the ER over others. Here, we used fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe cells where the nuclear and cortical/peripheral ER domains are distinguishable by light microscopy to show that SE‐enriched lipid droplets form away from the nucleus at the cell tips, whereas TAG‐enriched lipid droplets form around the nucleus. Sterols localize to the regions of the cells where droplets enriched in SEs are observed. TAG droplet formation around the nucleus appears to be a strong function of diacylglycerol (DAG) homeostasis with Cpt1p, which coverts DAG into phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylethanolamine localized exclusively to the nuclear ER. Also, Dgk1p, which converts DAG into phosphatidic acid localized strongly to the nuclear ER over the cortical/peripheral ER. We also show that TAG more readily translocates from the ER to lipid droplets than do SEs. The results augment the standard lipid droplet formation model, which has SEs and TAGs flowing into the same nascent lipid droplet regardless of its biogenesis point in the cell.


Lipids | 2017

Lipid Droplets: Formation to Breakdown

Alex Meyers; Taylor M. Weiskittel; Paul Dalhaimer

One of the most exciting areas of cell biology during the last decade has been the study of lipid droplets. Lipid droplets allow cells to store non-polar molecules such as neutral lipids in specific compartments where they are sequestered from the aqueous environment of the cell yet can be accessed through regulated mechanisms. These structures are highly conserved, appearing in organisms throughout the phylogenetic tree. Until somewhat recently, lipid droplets were widely regarded as inert, however progress in the field has continued to demonstrate their vast roles in a number of cellular processes in both mitotic and post-mitotic cells. No doubt the increase in the attention given to lipid droplet research is due to their central role in current pressing human diseases such as obesity, type-2 diabetes, and atherosclerosis. This review provides a mechanistic timeline from neutral lipid synthesis through lipid droplet formation and size augmentation to droplet breakdown.

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Dennis E. Discher

University of Pennsylvania

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Alex Meyers

University of Tennessee

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T. C. Lubensky

University of Pennsylvania

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Paul A. Janmey

University of Pennsylvania

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A. W. C. Lau

University of Pennsylvania

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Alex J. Levine

University of California

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