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Dive into the research topics where Trina A. Schroer is active.

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Featured researches published by Trina A. Schroer.


Nature | 1997

ER-to-Golgi transport visualized in living cells

John F. Presley; Nelson B. Cole; Trina A. Schroer; Koret Hirschberg; Kristien Zaal; Jennifer Lippincott-Schwartz

Newly synthesized proteins that leave the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) are funnelled through the Golgi complex before being sorted for transport to their different final destinations. Traditional approaches have elucidated the biochemical requirements for such transport and have established a role for transport intermediates. New techniques for tagging proteins fluorescently have made it possible to follow the complete life history of single transport intermediates in living cells, including their formation, path and velocity en route to the Golgi complex. We have now visualized ER-to-Golgi transport using the viral glycoprotein ts045 VSVG tagged with green fluorescent protein (VSVG-GFP). Upon export from the ER, VSVG-GFP became concentrated in many differently shaped, rapidly forming pre-Golgi structures, which translocated inwards towards the Golgi complex along microtubules by using the microtubule minus-end-directed motor complex of dynein/dynactin. No loss of fluorescent material from pre-Golgi structures occurred during their translocation to the Golgi complex and they frequently stretched into tubular shapes. Together, our results indicate that these pre-Golgi carrier structures moving unidirectionally along microtubule tracks are responsible for transporting VSVG-GFP through the cytoplasm to the Golgi complex. This contrasts with the traditional focus on small vesicles as the primary vehicles for ER-to-Golgi transport.


Nature Cell Biology | 2000

Dynactin increases the processivity of the cytoplasmic dynein motor

Stephen J. King; Trina A. Schroer

Cytoplasmic dynein supports long-range intracellular movements of cargo in vivo but does not appear to be a processive motor protein by itself. We show here that the dynein activator, dynactin, binds microtubules and increases the average length of cytoplasmic-dynein-driven movements without affecting the velocity or microtubule-stimulated ATPase kinetics of cytoplasmic dynein. Enhancement of microtubule binding and motility by dynactin are both inhibited by an antibody to dynactin’s microtubule-binding domain. These results indicate that dynactin acts as a processivity factor for cytoplasmic-dynein-based motility and provide the first evidence that cytoskeletal motor processivity can be affected by extrinsic factors.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2003

Phagosomes Fuse with Late Endosomes and/or Lysosomes by Extension of Membrane Protrusions along Microtubules: Role of Rab7 and RILP

Rene E. Harrison; Cecilia Bucci; Otilia V. Vieira; Trina A. Schroer; Sergio Grinstein

ABSTRACT Nascent phagosomes must undergo a series of fusion and fission reactions to acquire the microbicidal properties required for the innate immune response. Here we demonstrate that this maturation process involves the GTPase Rab7. Rab7 recruitment to phagosomes was found to precede and to be essential for their fusion with late endosomes and/or lysosomes. Active Rab7 on the phagosomal membrane associates with the effector protein RILP (Rab7-interacting lysosomal protein), which in turn bridges phagosomes with dynein-dynactin, a microtubule-associated motor complex. The motors not only displace phagosomes in the centripetal direction but, strikingly, promote the extension of phagosomal tubules toward late endocytic compartments. Fusion of tubules with these organelles was documented by fluorescence and electron microscopy. Tubule extension and fusion with late endosomes and/or lysosomes were prevented by expression of a truncated form of RILP lacking the dynein-dynactin-recruiting domain. We conclude that full maturation of phagosomes requires the retrograde emission of tubular extensions, which are generated by activation of Rab7, recruitment of RILP, and consequent association of phagosomes with microtubule-associated motors.


Cell | 2002

Cytoplasmic Dynein as a Facilitator of Nuclear Envelope Breakdown

Davide Salina; Khaldon Bodoor; D. Mark Eckley; Trina A. Schroer; Jerome B. Rattner; Brian Burke

During prophase in higher cells, centrosomes localize to deep invaginations in the nuclear envelope in a microtubule-dependent process. Loss of nuclear membranes in prometaphase commences in regions of the nuclear envelope that lie outside of these invaginations. Dynein and dynactin complex components concentrate on the nuclear envelope prior to any changes in nuclear envelope organization. These observations suggest a model in which dynein facilitates nuclear envelope breakdown by pulling nuclear membranes and associated proteins poleward along astral microtubules leading to nuclear membrane detachment. Support for this model is provided by the finding that interference with dynein function drastically alters nuclear membrane dynamics in prophase and prometaphase.


Cell | 1990

Microtubule- and motor-dependent fusion in vitro between apical and basolateral endocytic vesicles from MDCK cells

Morgane Bomsel; Robert G. Parton; Sergei A. Kuznetsov; Trina A. Schroer; Jean Gruenberg

The pathways of endocytosis from the apical and the basolateral domains of epithelial MDCK cells are known to converge at the level of late endosomes in vivo. We have now reconstituted the meeting process in a cell-free assay that measures the fusion of apically and basolaterally derived endocytic vesicles with late endosomes. Our results show that this in vitro process requires the presence of polymerized microtubules, as does the convergence of the two pathways in vivo, and also depends on the presence of microtubule binding proteins, in particular the mechanochemical motors kinesin and cytoplasmic dynein.


Cell | 1989

Cytoplasmic dynein is a minus end-directed motor for membranous organelles

Trina A. Schroer; Eric R. Steuer; Michael P. Sheetz

The role of cytoplasmic dynein in microtubule-based organelle transport was examined using a reconstituted assay developed from chick embryo fibroblasts. Factors present in a high-speed cytosol caused the movement of purified organelles on microtubules predominantly in the minus end direction. Inactivation of cytoplasmic dynein in the high-speed cytosol by vanadate-mediated UV photocleavage inhibited minus end-directed organelle motility by over 90%. Addition of purified cytoplasmic dynein to the inactive cytosol restored minus end-directed organelle motility, although purified cytoplasmic dynein by itself did not support organelle movement. We propose that cytoplasmic dynein is the motor for minus end-directed organelle movement, but that additional cytosolic factors are also required to produce organelle motility.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2005

Cytoplasmic dynein nomenclature

K. Kevin Pfister; Elizabeth M. C. Fisher; Ian R. Gibbons; Thomas S. Hays; Erika L.F. Holzbaur; J. Richard McIntosh; Mary E. Porter; Trina A. Schroer; Kevin T. Vaughan; George B. Witman; Stephen M. King; Richard B. Vallee

A variety of names has been used in the literature for the subunits of cytoplasmic dynein complexes. Thus, there is a strong need for a more definitive consensus statement on nomenclature. This is especially important for mammalian cytoplasmic dyneins, many subunits of which are encoded by multiple genes. We propose names for the mammalian cytoplasmic dynein subunit genes and proteins that reflect the phylogenetic relationships of the genes and the published studies clarifying the functions of the polypeptides. This nomenclature recognizes the two distinct cytoplasmic dynein complexes and has the flexibility to accommodate the discovery of new subunits and isoforms.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2002

Distinct cell cycle–dependent roles for dynactin and dynein at centrosomes

Nicholas J. Quintyne; Trina A. Schroer

Centrosomal dynactin is required for normal microtubule anchoring and/or focusing independently of dynein. Dynactin is present at centrosomes throughout interphase, but dynein accumulates only during S and G2 phases. Blocking dynein-based motility prevents recruitment of dynactin and dynein to centrosomes and destabilizes both centrosomes and the microtubule array, interfering with cell cycle progression during mitosis. Destabilization of the centrosomal pool of dynactin does not inhibit dynein-based motility or dynein recruitment to centrosomes, but instead causes abnormal G1 centriole separation and delayed entry into S phase. The correct balance of centrosome-associated dynactin subunits is apparently important for satisfaction of the cell cycle mechanism that monitors centrosome integrity before centrosome duplication and ultimately governs the G1 to S transition. Our results suggest that, in addition to functioning as a microtubule anchor, dynactin contributes to the recruitment of important cell cycle regulators to centrosomes.


Traffic | 2005

Kinesin-2 is a motor for late endosomes and lysosomes.

Christa L. Brown; Kerstin C. Maier; Tobias Stauber; Laura M. Ginkel; Linda Wordeman; Isabelle Vernos; Trina A. Schroer

The bidirectional nature of late endosome/lysosome movement suggests involvement of at least two distinct motors, one minus‐end directed and one plus‐end directed. Previous work has identified dynein as the minus‐end‐directed motor for late endosome/lysosome localization and dynamics. Conventional kinesin (kinesin‐1) has been implicated in plus‐end‐directed late endosome/lysosome movement, but other kinesin family members may also be involved. Kinesin‐2 is known to drive the movement of pigment granules, a type of lysosomally derived organelle, and was recently found to be associated with purified late endosomes. To determine whether kinesin‐2 might also power endosome movement in non‐pigmented cells, we overexpressed dominant negative forms of the KIF3A motor subunit and KAP3 accessory subunit and knocked down KAP3 levels using RNAi. We found kinesin‐2 to be required for the normal steady‐state localization of late endosomes/lysosomes but not early endosomes or recycling endosomes. Despite the abnormal subcellular distribution of late endosomes/lysosomes, the uptake and trafficking of molecules through the conventional endocytic pathway appeared to be unaffected. The slow time–course of inhibition suggests that both kinesin‐2 itself and its attachment to membranes do not turn over quickly.


Traffic | 2008

Dynamic Behavior of Salmonella-Induced Membrane Tubules in Epithelial Cells

Dan Drecktrah; Seamus Levine-Wilkinson; Tapen Dam; Seth Winfree; Leigh A. Knodler; Trina A. Schroer; Olivia Steele-Mortimer

Salmonella Typhimurium is a facultative intracellular pathogen that causes acute gastroenteritis in man. Intracellular Salmonella survive and replicate within a modified phagosome known as the Salmonella‐containing vacuole (SCV). The onset of intracellular replication is accompanied by the appearance of membrane tubules, called Salmonella‐induced filaments (Sifs), extending from the SCV. Sifs are enriched in late endosomal/lysosomal membrane proteins such as lysosome‐associated membrane protein 1, but their formation and ability to interact with endosomal compartments are not characterized. In this study, we use live cell imaging techniques to define the dynamics of Sif formation in infected epithelial cells. At early time‐points, Sifs are simple tubules extending from the surface of SCVs. These tubules are highly dynamic and exhibit bidirectional, microtubule‐dependent movement. At the distal ends of individual Sif tubules, furthest from the SCV, a distinct ‘leader’ domain was often observed. At later times, Sifs develop into highly complex tubular networks that extend throughout the cell and appear less dynamic than nascent Sifs; however, individual tubules continue to display bidirectional dynamics. Sifs can acquire endocytic content by fusion, indicating a sustained interaction with the endocytic pathway. Together, these results show that these Salmonella‐induced tubules form a highly dynamic network that involves both microtubule‐dependent motility and interactions with endosomal compartments.

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Steven R. Gill

University of Rochester Medical Center

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Eric R. Steuer

Washington University in St. Louis

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Gabriel C. Lander

Scripps Research Institute

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Michael S. Marks

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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Saikat Chowdhury

Scripps Research Institute

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Stephen J. King

University of Central Florida

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