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Dive into the research topics where Scott D. Hansen is active.

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Featured researches published by Scott D. Hansen.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2010

VASP is a processive actin polymerase that requires monomeric actin for barbed end association.

Scott D. Hansen; R. Dyche Mullins

Visualization of VASP tetramers interacting with static and growing actin filaments in vitro by TIRF microscopy leads to a new model for VASP-mediated actin filament assembly.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

H-Ras forms dimers on membrane surfaces via a protein–protein interface

Wan-Chen Lin; Lars Iversen; Hsiung-Lin Tu; Christopher J. Rhodes; Sune M. Christensen; Jeffrey S. Iwig; Scott D. Hansen; William C. Huang; Jay T. Groves

Significance Ras is a key signaling molecule in living cells, and mutations in Ras are involved in 30% of human cancers. It is becoming progressively more clear that the spatial arrangement of proteins within a cell, not just their chemical structure, is an important aspect of their function. In this work, we use a series of quantitative physical techniques to map out the tendency of two Ras molecules to bind together to form a dimer on membrane surfaces. Insights from this work, as well as the technical assays developed, may help to discover new therapeutic drugs capable of modulating the errant behavior of Ras in cancer. The lipid-anchored small GTPase Ras is an important signaling node in mammalian cells. A number of observations suggest that Ras is laterally organized within the cell membrane, and this may play a regulatory role in its activation. Lipid anchors composed of palmitoyl and farnesyl moieties in H-, N-, and K-Ras are widely suspected to be responsible for guiding protein organization in membranes. Here, we report that H-Ras forms a dimer on membrane surfaces through a protein–protein binding interface. A Y64A point mutation in the switch II region, known to prevent Son of sevenless and PI3K effector interactions, abolishes dimer formation. This suggests that the switch II region, near the nucleotide binding cleft, is either part of, or allosterically coupled to, the dimer interface. By tethering H-Ras to bilayers via a membrane-miscible lipid tail, we show that dimer formation is mediated by protein interactions and does not require lipid anchor clustering. We quantitatively characterize H-Ras dimerization in supported membranes using a combination of fluorescence correlation spectroscopy, photon counting histogram analysis, time-resolved fluorescence anisotropy, single-molecule tracking, and step photobleaching analysis. The 2D dimerization Kd is measured to be ∼1 × 103 molecules/µm2, and no higher-order oligomers were observed. Dimerization only occurs on the membrane surface; H-Ras is strictly monomeric at comparable densities in solution. Analysis of a number of H-Ras constructs, including key changes to the lipidation pattern of the hypervariable region, suggest that dimerization is a general property of native H-Ras on membrane surfaces.


Science | 2014

Ras activation by SOS: Allosteric regulation by altered fluctuation dynamics

Lars Iversen; Hsiung-Lin Tu; Wan-Chen Lin; Sune M. Christensen; Steven M. Abel; Jeffrey S. Iwig; Hung-Jen Wu; Jodi Gureasko; Christopher Rhodes; Rebecca S. Petit; Scott D. Hansen; Peter Daniel Thill; Cheng-han Yu; Dimitrios Stamou; Arup K. Chakraborty; John Kuriyan; Jay T. Groves

Outliers dominate signaling at cell membrane SOS enzymes act at cell membranes to activate Ras, a regulatory protein often overactive in cancer cells. Iversen et al. devised a system where they could observe the activity of individual enzymes at work. The single SOS molecules occupied stable states that varied greatly in their catalytic activity. Regulation appeared to occur by altering the time spent in active states. The overall activity of SOS was determined by just a few molecules that achieved the highest catalytic activity. The methods described should allow further detailed kinetic analysis of this and other signaling events that occur at the cell membrane — properties that it is not possible to discern from bulk biochemical measurements. Science, this issue p. 50 Single-molecule measurements reveal insights into regulation of the small GTPase Ras. Activation of the small guanosine triphosphatase H-Ras by the exchange factor Son of Sevenless (SOS) is an important hub for signal transduction. Multiple layers of regulation, through protein and membrane interactions, govern activity of SOS. We characterized the specific activity of individual SOS molecules catalyzing nucleotide exchange in H-Ras. Single-molecule kinetic traces revealed that SOS samples a broad distribution of turnover rates through stochastic fluctuations between distinct, long-lived (more than 100 seconds), functional states. The expected allosteric activation of SOS by Ras–guanosine triphosphate (GTP) was conspicuously absent in the mean rate. However, fluctuations into highly active states were modulated by Ras-GTP. This reveals a mechanism in which functional output may be determined by the dynamical spectrum of rates sampled by a small number of enzymes, rather than the ensemble average.


Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2013

αE-catenin actin-binding domain alters actin filament conformation and regulates binding of nucleation and disassembly factors

Scott D. Hansen; Adam V. Kwiatkowski; Ouyang Cy; Liu H; Sabine Pokutta; Simon C. Watkins; Niels Volkmann; Dorit Hanein; William I. Weis; Mullins Rd; W J Nelson

αE-catenin regulates transitions in actin organization between cell migration and cell–cell adhesion by controlling barbed-end polymerization of unbranched actin filaments and inhibiting Arp2/3 complex and cofilin regulation of actin filament branching and disassembly.


Current Opinion in Cell Biology | 2013

In vitro studies of actin filament and network dynamics.

R. Dyche Mullins; Scott D. Hansen

Now that many genomes have been sequenced, a central concern of cell biology is to understand how the proteins they encode work together to create living matter. In vitro studies form an essential part of this program because understanding cellular functions of biological molecules often requires isolating them and reconstituting their activities. In particular, many elements of the actin cytoskeleton were first discovered by biochemical methods and their cellular functions deduced from in vitro experiments. We highlight recent advances that have come from in vitro studies, beginning with studies of actin filaments, and ending with multi-component reconstitutions of complex actin-based processes, including force-generation and cell spreading. We describe both scientific results and the technical innovations that made them possible.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2014

Structural and Thermodynamic Characterization of Cadherin·β-Catenin·α-Catenin Complex Formation

Sabine Pokutta; Hee Jung Choi; Göran Ahlsén; Scott D. Hansen; William I. Weis

Background: Cadherin cell adhesion molecules are linked to the actin cytoskeleton by the proteins β- and α-catenin. Results: The interactions of α-catenins in the cadherin·β-catenin·α-catenin complex have been thermodynamically and structurally defined. Conclusion: The architecture of α-catenin enables regulation of its interactions in the adhesive complex. Significance: The data provide molecular insights into the regulation of the cadherin·catenin complex. The classical cadherin·β-catenin·α-catenin complex mediates homophilic cell-cell adhesion and mechanically couples the actin cytoskeletons of adjacent cells. Although α-catenin binds to β-catenin and to F-actin, β-catenin significantly weakens the affinity of α-catenin for F-actin. Moreover, α-catenin self-associates into homodimers that block β-catenin binding. We investigated quantitatively and structurally αE- and αN-catenin dimer formation, their interaction with β-catenin and the cadherin·β-catenin complex, and the effect of the α-catenin actin-binding domain on β-catenin association. The two α-catenin variants differ in their self-association properties: at physiological temperatures, αE-catenin homodimerizes 10× more weakly than does αN-catenin but is kinetically trapped in its oligomeric state. Both αE- and αN-catenin bind to β-catenin with a Kd of 20 nm, and this affinity is increased by an order of magnitude when cadherin is bound to β-catenin. We describe the crystal structure of a complex representing the full β-catenin·αN-catenin interface. A three-dimensional model of the cadherin·β-catenin·α-catenin complex based on these new structural data suggests mechanisms for the enhanced stability of the ternary complex. The C-terminal actin-binding domain of α-catenin has no influence on the interactions with β-catenin, arguing against models in which β-catenin weakens actin binding by stabilizing inhibitory intramolecular interactions between the actin-binding domain and the rest of α-catenin.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2005

A novel role for the CBF3 kinetochore-scaffold complex in regulating septin dynamics and cytokinesis.

Amethyst N. Gillis; Scott Thomas; Scott D. Hansen; Kenneth B. Kaplan

In budding yeast, the kinetochore scaffold complex centromere binding factor 3 (CBF3) is required to form kinetochores on centromere DNA and to allow proper chromosome segregation. We have previously shown that SKP1 and SGT1 balance the assembly and turnover of CBF3 complexes, a cycle that we suggest is independent of its role in chromosome segregation (Rodrigo-Brenni, M.C., S. Thomas, D.C. Bouck, and K.B. Kaplan. 2004. Mol. Biol. Cell. 15:3366–3378). We provide evidence that this cycle contributes to a second, kinetochore-independent function of CBF3. In this study, we show that inhibiting the assembly of CBF3 causes disorganized septins and defects in cell polarity that give rise to cytokinesis failures. Specifically, we show that septin ring separation and disassembly is delayed in anaphase, suggesting that CBF3 regulates septin dynamics. Only mutations that affect the CBF3 cycle, and not mutants in outer kinetochore subunits, cause defects in septins. These results demonstrate a novel role for CBF3 in regulating cytokinesis, a role that is reminiscent of passenger proteins. Consistent with this possibility, we find that CBF3 interacts with Bir1p, the homologue of the passenger protein Survivin. Mutants in Bir1p similarly affect septin organization, leading us to propose that CBF3 and Bir1p act as passenger proteins to coordinate chromosome segregation with cytokinesis.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2011

Chromosome passenger complexes control anaphase duration and spindle elongation via a kinesin-5 brake

Daniel K. Rozelle; Scott D. Hansen; Kenneth B. Kaplan

Chromosome passenger complexes and bipolar kinesins act together to coordinate spindle elongation, spindle breakdown, and mitotic exit.


eLife | 2015

Lamellipodin promotes actin assembly by clustering Ena/VASP proteins and tethering them to actin filaments

Scott D. Hansen; R. Dyche Mullins

Enabled/Vasodilator (Ena/VASP) proteins promote actin filament assembly at multiple locations, including: leading edge membranes, focal adhesions, and the surface of intracellular pathogens. One important Ena/VASP regulator is the mig-10/Lamellipodin/RIAM family of adaptors that promote lamellipod formation in fibroblasts and drive neurite outgrowth and axon guidance in neurons. To better understand how MRL proteins promote actin network formation we studied the interactions between Lamellipodin (Lpd), actin, and VASP, both in vivo and in vitro. We find that Lpd binds directly to actin filaments and that this interaction regulates its subcellular localization and enhances its effect on VASP polymerase activity. We propose that Lpd delivers Ena/VASP proteins to growing barbed ends and increases their polymerase activity by tethering them to filaments. This interaction represents one more pathway by which growing actin filaments produce positive feedback to control localization and activity of proteins that regulate their assembly. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.06585.001


Methods of Molecular Biology | 2013

Cytoplasmic actin: purification and single molecule assembly assays.

Scott D. Hansen; J. Bradley Zuchero; R. Dyche Mullins

The actin cytoskeleton is essential to all eukaryotic cells. In addition to playing important structural roles, assembly of actin into filaments powers diverse cellular processes, including cell motility, cytokinesis, and endocytosis. Actin polymerization is tightly regulated by its numerous cofactors, which control spatial and temporal assembly of actin as well as the physical properties of these filaments. Development of an in vitro model of actin polymerization from purified components has allowed for great advances in determining the effects of these proteins on the actin cytoskeleton. Here we describe how to use the pyrene actin assembly assay to determine the effect of a protein on the kinetics of actin assembly, either directly or as mediated by proteins such as nucleation or capping factors. Secondly, we show how fluorescently labeled phalloidin can be used to visualize the filaments that are created in vitro to give insight into how proteins regulate actin filament structure. Finally, we describe a method for visualizing dynamic assembly and disassembly of single actin filaments and fluorescently labeled actin binding proteins using total internal reflection fluorescence (TIRF) microscopy.

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Jay T. Groves

University of California

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Hsiung-Lin Tu

University of California

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Wan-Chen Lin

University of California

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Jean K. Chung

University of California

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John Kuriyan

University of California

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Dyche Mullins

University of California

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