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Dive into the research topics where Vasudha Srivastava is active.

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Featured researches published by Vasudha Srivastava.


Biophysical Journal | 2012

Understanding the Cooperative Interaction between Myosin II and Actin Cross-Linkers Mediated by Actin Filaments during Mechanosensation

Tianzhi Luo; Krithika Mohan; Vasudha Srivastava; Yixin Ren; Pablo A. Iglesias; Douglas N. Robinson

Myosin II is a central mechanoenzyme in a wide range of cellular morphogenic processes. Its cellular localization is dependent not only on signal transduction pathways, but also on mechanical stress. We suggest that this stress-dependent distribution is the result of both the force-dependent binding to actin filaments and cooperative interactions between bound myosin heads. By assuming that the binding of myosin heads induces and/or stabilizes local conformational changes in the actin filaments that enhances myosin II binding locally, we successfully simulate the cooperative binding of myosin to actin observed experimentally. In addition, we can interpret the cooperative interactions between myosin and actin cross-linking proteins observed in cellular mechanosensation, provided that a similar mechanism operates among different proteins. Finally, we present a model that couples cooperative interactions to the assembly dynamics of myosin bipolar thick filaments and that accounts for the transient behaviors of the myosin II accumulation during mechanosensation. This mechanism is likely to be general for a range of myosin II-dependent cellular mechanosensory processes.


PLOS ONE | 2012

A Novel Role for Aquaporin-5 in Enhancing Microtubule Organization and Stability

Venkataramana K. Sidhaye; Eric Chau; Vasudha Srivastava; Srinivas Sirimalle; Chinmayee Balabhadrapatruni; Neil R. Aggarwal; Franco R. D'Alessio; Douglas N. Robinson; Landon S. King

Aquaporin-5 (AQP5) is a water-specific channel located on the apical surface of airway epithelial cells. In addition to regulating transcellular water permeability, AQP5 can regulate paracellular permeability, though the mechanisms by which this occurs have not been determined. Microtubules also regulate paracellular permeability. Here, we report that AQP5 promotes microtubule assembly and helps maintain the assembled microtubule steady state levels with slower turnover dynamics in cells. Specifically, reduced levels of AQP5 correlated with lower levels of assembled microtubules and decreased paracellular permeability. In contrast, overexpression of AQP5 increased assembly of microtubules, with evidence of increased MT stability, and promoted the formation of long straight microtubules in the apical domain of the epithelial cells. These findings indicate that AQP5-mediated regulation of microtubule dynamics modulates airway epithelial barrier properties and epithelial function.


Current Biology | 2015

Mechanical Stress and Network Structure Drive Protein Dynamics during Cytokinesis

Vasudha Srivastava; Douglas N. Robinson

Cell-shape changes associated with processes like cytokinesis and motility proceed on several-second timescales but are derived from molecular events, including protein-protein interactions, filament assembly, and force generation by molecular motors, all of which occur much faster [1-4]. Therefore, defining the dynamics of such molecular machinery is critical for understanding cell-shape regulation. In addition to signaling pathways, mechanical stresses also direct cytoskeletal protein accumulation [5-7]. A myosin-II-based mechanosensory system controls cellular contractility and shape during cytokinesis and under applied stress [6, 8]. In Dictyostelium, this system tunes myosin II accumulation by feedback through the actin network, particularly through the crosslinker cortexillin I. Cortexillin-binding IQGAPs are major regulators of this system. Here, we defined the short timescale dynamics of key cytoskeletal proteins during cytokinesis and under mechanical stress, using fluorescence recovery after photobleaching and fluorescence correlation spectroscopy, to examine the dynamic interplay between these proteins. Equatorially enriched proteins including cortexillin I, IQGAP2, and myosin II recovered much more slowly than actin and polar crosslinkers. The mobility of equatorial proteins was greatly reduced at the furrow compared to the interphase cortex, suggesting their stabilization during cytokinesis. This mobility shift did not arise from a single biochemical event, but rather from a global inhibition of protein dynamics by mechanical-stress-associated changes in the cytoskeletal structure. Mechanical tuning of contractile protein dynamics provides robustness to the cytoskeletal framework responsible for regulating cell shape and contributes to cytokinesis fidelity.


Seminars in Cell & Developmental Biology | 2016

Cytokinesis: Robust cell shape regulation

Vasudha Srivastava; Pablo A. Iglesias; Douglas N. Robinson

Cytokinesis, the final step of cell division, is a great example of robust cell shape regulation. A wide variety of cells ranging from the unicellular Dictyostelium to human cells in tissues proceed through highly similar, stereotypical cell shape changes during cell division. Typically, cells first round up forming a cleavage furrow in the middle, which constricts resulting in the formation of two daughter cells. Tight control of cytokinesis is essential for proper segregation of genetic and cellular materials, and its failure is deleterious to cell viability. Thus, biological systems have developed elaborate mechanisms to ensure high fidelity of cytokinesis, including the existence of multiple biochemical and mechanical pathways regulated through feedback. In this review, we focus on the built-in redundancy of the cytoskeletal machinery that allows cells to divide successfully in a variety of biological and mechanical contexts. Using Dictyostelium cytokinesis as an example, we demonstrate that the crosstalk between biochemical and mechanical signaling through feedback ensures correct assembly and function of the cell division machinery.


Applied Physics Letters | 2014

Mimicking the mechanical properties of the cell cortex by the self-assembly of an actin cortex in vesicles.

Tianzhi Luo; Vasudha Srivastava; Yixin Ren; Douglas N. Robinson

The composite of the actin cytoskeleton and plasma membrane plays important roles in many biological events. Here, we employed the emulsion method to synthesize artificial cells with biomimetic actin cortex in vesicles and characterized their mechanical properties. We demonstrated that the emulsion method provides the flexibility to adjust the lipid composition and protein concentrations in artificial cells to achieve the desired size distribution, internal microstructure, and mechanical properties. Moreover, comparison of the cortical elasticity measured for reconstituted artificial cells to that of real cells, including those manipulated using genetic depletion and pharmacological inhibition, strongly supports that actin cytoskeletal proteins are dominant over lipid molecules in cortical mechanics. Our study indicates that the assembly of biological systems in artificial cells with purified cellular components provides a powerful way to answer biological questions.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Cell Blebbing in Confined Microfluidic Environments

Markela Ibo; Vasudha Srivastava; Douglas N. Robinson; Zachary Gagnon

Migrating cells can extend their leading edge by forming myosin-driven blebs and F-actin-driven pseudopods. When coerced to migrate in resistive environments, Dictyostelium cells switch from using predominately pseudopods to blebs. Bleb formation has been shown to be chemotactic and can be influenced by the direction of the chemotactic gradient. In this study, we determine the blebbing responses of developed cells of Dictyostelium discoideum to cAMP gradients of varying steepness produced in microfluidic channels with different confining heights, ranging between 1.7 μm and 3.8 μm. We show that microfluidic confinement height, gradient steepness, buffer osmolarity and Myosin II activity are important factors in determining whether cells migrate with blebs or with pseudopods. Dictyostelium cells were observed migrating within the confines of microfluidic gradient channels. When the cAMP gradient steepness is increased from 0.7 nM/μm to 20 nM/μm, cells switch from moving with a mixture of blebs and pseudopods to moving only using blebs when chemotaxing in channels with confinement heights less than 2.4 μm. Furthermore, the size of the blebs increases with gradient steepness and correlates with increases in myosin-II localization at the cell cortex. Reduction of intracellular pressure by high osmolarity buffer or inhibition of myosin-II by blebbistatin leads to a decrease in bleb formation and bleb size. Together, our data reveal that the protrusion type formed by migrating cells can be influenced by the channel height and the steepness of the cAMP gradient, and suggests that a combination of confinement-induced myosin-II localization and cAMP-regulated cortical contraction leads to increased intracellular fluid pressure and bleb formation.


American Journal of Physiology-lung Cellular and Molecular Physiology | 2017

Cigarette smoke disrupts monolayer integrity by altering epithelial cell-cell adhesion and cortical tension

Kristine Nishida; Kieran Brune; Nirupama Putcha; Pooja Mandke; Wanda K. O’Neal; Danny Shade; Vasudha Srivastava; Menghan Wang; Hong Lam; Steven S. An; M. Bradley Drummond; Nadia N. Hansel; Douglas N. Robinson; Venkataramana K. Sidhaye

Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a major cause of morbidity and mortality. Cigarette smoke (CS) drives disease development and progression. The epithelial barrier is damaged by CS with increased monolayer permeability. However, the molecular changes that cause this barrier disruption and the interaction between adhesion proteins and the cytoskeleton are not well defined. We hypothesized that CS alters monolayer integrity by increasing cell contractility and decreasing cell adhesion in epithelia. Normal human airway epithelial cells and primary COPD epithelial cells were exposed to air or CS, and changes measured in protein levels. We measured the cortical tension of individual cells and the stiffness of cells in a monolayer. We confirmed that the changes in acute and subacute in vitro smoke exposure reflect protein changes seen in cell monolayers and tissue sections from COPD patients. Epithelial cells exposed to repetitive CS and those derived from COPD patients have increased monolayer permeability. E-cadherin and β-catenin were reduced in smoke exposed cells as well as in lung tissue sections from patients with COPD. Moreover, repetitive CS caused increased tension in individual cells and cells in a monolayer, which corresponded with increased polymerized actin without changes in myosin IIA and IIB total abundance. Repetitive CS exposure impacts the adhesive intercellular junctions and the tension of epithelial cells by increased actin polymer levels, to further destabilize cell adhesion. Similar changes are seen in epithelial cells from COPD patients indicating that these findings likely contribute to COPD pathology.


Microsystems & Nanoengineering | 2018

Characterizing cellular mechanical phenotypes with mechano-node-pore sensing

Junghyun Kim; Sewoon Han; Andy Lei; Masaru Miyano; Jessica Bloom; Vasudha Srivastava; Martha R. Stampfer; Zev J. Gartner; Mark A. LaBarge; Lydia L. Sohn

The mechanical properties of cells change with their differentiation, chronological age, and malignant progression. Consequently, these properties may be useful label-free biomarkers of various functional or clinically relevant cell states. Here, we demonstrate mechano-node-pore sensing (mechano-NPS), a multi-parametric single-cell-analysis method that utilizes a four-terminal measurement of the current across a microfluidic channel to quantify simultaneously cell diameter, resistance to compressive deformation, transverse deformation under constant strain, and recovery time after deformation. We define a new parameter, the whole-cell deformability index (wCDI), which provides a quantitative mechanical metric of the resistance to compressive deformation that can be used to discriminate among different cell types. The wCDI and the transverse deformation under constant strain show malignant MCF-7 and A549 cell lines are mechanically distinct from non-malignant, MCF-10A and BEAS-2B cell lines, and distinguishes between cells treated or untreated with cytoskeleton-perturbing small molecules. We categorize cell recovery time, ΔTr, as instantaneous (ΔTr~0 ms), transient (ΔTr⩽40 ms), or prolonged (ΔTr>40 ms), and show that the composition of recovery types, which is a consequence of changes in cytoskeletal organization, correlates with cellular transformation. Through the wCDI and cell-recovery time, mechano-NPS discriminates between sub-lineages of normal primary human mammary epithelial cells with accuracy comparable to flow cytometry, but without antibody labeling. Mechano-NPS identifies mechanical phenotypes that distinguishes lineage, chronological age, and stage of malignant progression in human epithelial cells. Supplementary information The online version of this article (doi:10.1038/micronano.2017.91) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.


bioRxiv | 2018

MULTI-seq: Scalable sample multiplexing for single-cell RNA sequencing using lipid-tagged indices

Christopher S McGinnis; David M. Patterson; Juliane Winkler; Marco Y. Hein; Vasudha Srivastava; Daniel N Conrad; Lyndsay Murrow; Jonathan S. Weissman; Zena Werb; Eric D. Chow; Zev J. Gartner

We describe MULTI-seq: A rapid, modular, and universal scRNA-seq sample multiplexing strategy using lipid-tagged indices. MULTI-seq reagents can barcode any cell type from any species with an accessible plasma membrane. The method is compatible with enzymatic tissue dissociation, and also preserves viability and endogenous gene expression patterns. We leverage these features to multiplex the analysis of multiple solid tissues comprising human and mouse cells isolated from patient-derived xenograft mouse models. We also utilize MULTI-seq’s modular design to perform a 96-plex perturbation experiment with human mammary epithelial cells. MULTI-seq also enables robust doublet identification, which improves data quality and increases scRNA-seq cell throughput by minimizing the negative effects of Poisson loading. We anticipate that the sample throughput and reagent savings enabled by MULTI-seq will expand the purview of scRNA-seq and democratize the application of these technologies within the scientific community.


Biophysical Journal | 2014

Mechanical Stress-Driven Changes in the Dynamics of Cytoskeletal Proteins

Vasudha Srivastava; Shantel Angstadt; Douglas N. Robinson

Physical forces drive cell shape across diverse processes such as cytokinesis, cell migration and tissue invasion. The actin cytoskeleton provides the framework for regulating cell shape in response to mechanical stress. In the social amoeba Dictyostelium discoideum, a myosin II-based mechanosensory system controls cellular contractility and cell shape. The IQGAP proteins bind to the actin crosslinker, cortexillin I, and regulate myosin accumulation under stress. To determine how these proteins interact to regulate contractility, we studied the protein dynamics using fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (FRAP). We observe mechanical stress-dependent reduction in the mobility and network release of these proteins from the cytoskeleton. These altered dynamics could reflect a new mechanism for the accumulation of the mechanosensory proteins under stress by local rearrangement of the actin cytoskeleton microstructure. Additionally, IQGAP2 regulates the dynamics of cortexillin I under stress, indicating a functional relevance for the biochemical interaction between these proteins. These studies will help determine how cell shape is regulated various mechanical contexts, which will be valuable for understanding processes such as metastasis and tissue remodeling.

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Tianzhi Luo

Johns Hopkins University

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Yixin Ren

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

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Krithika Mohan

Johns Hopkins University

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Cathryn Kabacoff

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

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Zev J. Gartner

University of California

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Andy Lei

University of California

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Chinmayee Balabhadrapatruni

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

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