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Dive into the research topics where Samantha J. Stehbens is active.

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Featured researches published by Samantha J. Stehbens.


Journal of Cell Science | 2006

Dynamic microtubules regulate the local concentration of E-cadherin at cell-cell contacts.

Samantha J. Stehbens; Andrew D. Paterson; Matthew S. Crampton; Annette M. Shewan; Charles Ferguson; Anna Akhmanova; Robert G. Parton; Alpha S. Yap

In contrast to the well-established relationship between cadherins and the actin cytoskeleton, the potential link between cadherins and microtubules (MTs) has been less extensively investigated. We now identify a pool of MTs that extend radially into cell-cell contacts and are inhibited by manoeuvres that block the dynamic activity of MT plus-ends (e.g. in the presence of low concentrations of nocodazole and following expression of a CLIP-170 mutant). Blocking dynamic MTs perturbed the ability of cells to concentrate and accumulate E-cadherin at cell-cell contacts, as assessed both by quantitative immunofluorescence microscopy and fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (FRAP) analysis, but did not affect either transport of E-cadherin to the plasma membrane or the amount of E-cadherin expressed at the cell surface. This indicated that dynamic MTs allow cells to concentrate E-cadherin at cell-cell contacts by regulating the regional distribution of E-cadherin once it reaches the cell surface. Importantly, dynamic MTs were necessary for myosin II to accumulate and be activated at cadherin adhesive contacts, a mechanism that supports the focal accumulation of E-cadherin. We propose that this population of MTs represents a novel form of cadherin-MT cooperation, where cadherin adhesions recruit dynamic MTs that, in turn, support the local concentration of cadherin molecules by regulating myosin II activity at cell-cell contacts.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2012

Targeting and transport: how microtubules control focal adhesion dynamics.

Samantha J. Stehbens; Torsten Wittmann

Directional cell migration requires force generation that relies on the coordinated remodeling of interactions with the extracellular matrix (ECM), which is mediated by integrin-based focal adhesions (FAs). Normal FA turnover requires dynamic microtubules, and three members of the diverse group of microtubule plus-end-tracking proteins are principally involved in mediating microtubule interactions with FAs. Microtubules also alter the assembly state of FAs by modulating Rho GTPase signaling, and recent evidence suggests that microtubule-mediated clathrin-dependent and -independent endocytosis regulates FA dynamics. In addition, FA-associated microtubules may provide a polarized microtubule track for localized secretion of matrix metalloproteases (MMPs). Thus, different aspects of the molecular mechanisms by which microtubules control FA turnover in migrating cells are beginning to emerge.


Nature Cell Biology | 2014

CLASPs link focal-adhesion-associated microtubule capture to localized exocytosis and adhesion site turnover

Samantha J. Stehbens; Matthew Paszek; Hayley Pemble; Andreas Ettinger; Sarah Gierke; Torsten Wittmann

Turnover of integrin-based focal adhesions (FAs) with the extracellular matrix (ECM) is essential for coordinated cell movement. In collectively migrating human keratinocytes, FAs assemble near the leading edge, grow and mature as a result of contractile forces and disassemble underneath the advancing cell body. We report that clustering of microtubule-associated CLASP1 and CLASP2 proteins around FAs temporally correlates with FA turnover. CLASPs and LL5β (also known as PHLDB2), which recruits CLASPs to FAs, facilitate FA disassembly. CLASPs are further required for FA-associated ECM degradation, and matrix metalloprotease inhibition slows FA disassembly similarly to CLASP or PHLDB2 (LL5β) depletion. Finally, CLASP-mediated microtubule tethering at FAs establishes an FA-directed transport pathway for delivery, docking and localized fusion of exocytic vesicles near FAs. We propose that CLASPs couple microtubule organization, vesicle transport and cell interactions with the ECM, establishing a local secretion pathway that facilitates FA turnover by severing cell–matrix connections.


Traffic | 2009

Touch, Grasp, Deliver and Control: Functional Cross‐Talk Between Microtubules and Cell Adhesions

Anna Akhmanova; Samantha J. Stehbens; Alpha S. Yap

Cross‐talk between microtubule networks and sites of cell–matrix and cell–cell adhesion has profound impact on these structures and is essential for proper cell organization, polarization and motility. Components of adhesion sites can interact directly with microtubules or with proteins that specifically associate with microtubule plus ends and minus ends and in this way capture, stabilize or destabilize microtubules. In their turn, microtubules can serve as routes for delivery of structural and regulatory factors that control adhesion site turnover. In addition, the microtubule lattice or growing microtubule plus ends can serve as diffusional sinks that accumulate and scaffold regulatory molecules, thereby affecting their activity in the vicinity of adhesions. Combination of these mechanisms underlies the functional co‐operation between microtubules and adhesion sites and defines their dynamic behavior.


Methods in Enzymology | 2012

Imaging intracellular protein dynamics by spinning disk confocal microscopy.

Samantha J. Stehbens; Hayley Pemble; Lyndsay Murrow; Torsten Wittmann

The palette of fluorescent proteins (FPs) has grown exponentially over the past decade, and as a result, live imaging of cells expressing fluorescently tagged proteins is becoming more and more mainstream. Spinning disk confocal (SDC) microscopy is a high-speed optical sectioning technique and a method of choice to observe and analyze intracellular FP dynamics at high spatial and temporal resolution. In an SDC system, a rapidly rotating pinhole disk generates thousands of points of light that scan the specimen simultaneously, which allows direct capture of the confocal image with low-noise scientific grade-cooled charge-coupled device cameras, and can achieve frame rates of up to 1000 frames per second. In this chapter, we describe important components of a state-of-the-art spinning disk system optimized for live cell microscopy and provide a rationale for specific design choices. We also give guidelines of how other imaging techniques such as total internal reflection microscopy or spatially controlled photoactivation can be coupled with SDC imaging and provide a short protocol on how to generate cell lines stably expressing fluorescently tagged proteins by lentivirus-mediated transduction.


Frontiers in Bioscience | 2009

Microtubules and cadherins: A neglected partnership

Samantha J. Stehbens; Anna Akhmanova; Alpha S. Yap

Classical cadherins are fundamental determinants of tissue organization both in health and disease. It has long been recognized that cadherins function in close cooperation with the cytoskeleton, particularly with actin. Less appreciated is the capacity for cadherins to also interact functionally and biochemically with microtubules and their associated proteins. In this review, we aim to highlight the potential for cooperativity between cadherins and microtubules. Cadherins can regulate the organization and dynamics of microtubules through mechanisms such as anchorage of minus ends and cortical capture of plus ends. Such cadherin-induced reorganization of microtubules may then affect cadherin biology by diverse processes that include directed vesicular traffic by microtubule-based motors and regulation of cortical signaling and organization. Ultimately, we hope this will stimulate fresh interest and research to understand a neglected partnership.


Nature Neuroscience | 2015

EAG2 potassium channel with evolutionarily conserved function as a brain tumor target

Xi Huang; Ye He; Adrian Dubuc; Rintaro Hashizume; Wei Zhang; Jüri Reimand; Huanghe Yang; Tongfei Wang; Samantha J. Stehbens; Susan Younger; Suzanne Barshow; Sijun Zhu; Michael K. Cooper; John Peacock; Vijay Ramaswamy; Livia Garzia; Xiaochong Wu; Marc Remke; Craig M. Forester; Charles C. Kim; William A. Weiss; C. David James; Marc A. Shuman; Gary D. Bader; Sabine Mueller; Michael D. Taylor; Yuh Nung Jan; Lily Yeh Jan

Over 20% of the drugs for treating human diseases target ion channels, but no cancer drug approved by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is intended to target an ion channel. We found that the EAG2 (Ether-a-go-go 2) potassium channel has an evolutionarily conserved function for promoting brain tumor growth and metastasis, delineate downstream pathways, and uncover a mechanism for different potassium channels to functionally cooperate and regulate mitotic cell volume and tumor progression. EAG2 potassium channel was enriched at the trailing edge of migrating medulloblastoma (MB) cells to regulate local cell volume dynamics, thereby facilitating cell motility. We identified the FDA-approved antipsychotic drug thioridazine as an EAG2 channel blocker that reduces xenografted MB growth and metastasis, and present a case report of repurposing thioridazine for treating a human patient. Our findings illustrate the potential of targeting ion channels in cancer treatment.


Methods in Cell Biology | 2014

Analysis of focal adhesion turnover: A quantitative live cell imaging example

Samantha J. Stehbens; Torsten Wittmann

Recent advances in optical and fluorescent protein technology have rapidly raised expectations in cell biology, allowing quantitative insights into dynamic intracellular processes like never before. However, quantitative live-cell imaging comes with many challenges including how best to translate dynamic microscopy data into numerical outputs that can be used to make meaningful comparisons rather than relying on representative data sets. Here, we use analysis of focal adhesion turnover dynamics as a straightforward specific example on how to image, measure, and analyze intracellular protein dynamics, but we believe this outlines a thought process and can provide guidance on how to understand dynamic microcopy data of other intracellular structures.


Journal of Cell Science | 2018

FGFR2-activating mutations disrupt cell polarity to potentiate migration and invasion in endometrial cancer cell models

Samantha J. Stehbens; Robert J. Ju; Mark N. Adams; Samuel R. Perry; Nikolas K. Haass; David M. Bryant; Pamela M. Pollock

ABSTRACT Fibroblast growth factor receptors (FGFRs) are a family of receptor tyrosine kinases that control a diverse range of biological processes during development and in adult tissues. We recently reported that somatic FGFR2 mutations are associated with shorter survival in endometrial cancer. However, little is known about how these FGFR2 mutations contribute to endometrial cancer metastasis. Here, we report that expression of the activating mutations FGFR2N550K and FGFR2Y376C in an endometrial cancer cell model induce Golgi fragmentation, and loss of polarity and directional migration. In mutant FGFR2-expressing cells, this was associated with an inability to polarise intracellular pools of FGFR2 towards the front of migrating cells. Such polarization defects were exacerbated in three-dimensional culture, where FGFR2 mutant cells were unable to form well-organised acini, instead undergoing exogenous ligand-independent invasion. Our findings uncover collective cell polarity and invasion as common targets of disease-associated FGFR2 mutations that lead to poor outcome in endometrial cancer patients. Highlighted Article: Two different disease-associated FGFR2 mutations that lead to poor outcome in endometrial cancer patients, both affect collective cell polarity and invasion.


Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2005

Myosin 2 Is a Key Rho Kinase Target Necessary for the Local Concentration of E-Cadherin at Cell–Cell Contacts

Annette M. Shewan; Madhavi P. Maddugoda; Astrid Kraemer; Samantha J. Stehbens; Suzie Verma; Eva M. Kovacs; Alpha S. Yap

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Alpha S. Yap

University of Queensland

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Hayley Pemble

University of California

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Lyndsay Murrow

University of California

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Astrid Kraemer

University of Queensland

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Eva M. Kovacs

University of Queensland

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Pamela M. Pollock

Queensland University of Technology

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Suzie Verma

University of Queensland

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