Research Interests
Our general research interest is the molecular basis of cell motility and muscle contraction. We have two primary interests -- the molecular basis of energy transduction that leads to ATP-driven myosin movement on actin and the molecular basis of cytokinesis, including the spatial and temporal control of assembly of the actin-myosin based contractile ring. We work on two experimental systems, mammalian muscle and Dictyostelium, each of which has its special advantages. Skeletal muscle has the most highly organized contractile apparatus of any cell type, and the chemistry and biochemistry of muscle actin and myosin are most advanced. Dictyostelium, the cell that commands most of our attention, exhibits all of the behavior of nonmuscle mammalian cells, and, unlike other eukaryotic cells, can be grown in large amounts for biochemical work. Furthermore, DNA-mediated transformation is being applied to this organism, and our discovery of high-frequency homologous recombination in this organism has proved to be general. Our approaches include biochemical and structural studies of actin, myosin, and associated regulatory proteins. In addition, we have designed and developed in vitro assays for ATP-dependent movement of purified myosin on filaments reconstituted from purified actin. These assays allow us to analyze mutant myosin molecules for altered function. The site-directed mutagenized forms of myosin are obtained by gene cloning and expression in Dictyostelium. Our demonstration that the Dictyostelium myosin gene can undergo homologous recombination allows us to also probe the effects of the altered myosin forms on the phenotype of the cell.
Membership Type
Member
Election Year
1991
Primary Section
Section 22: Cellular and Developmental Biology
Secondary Section
Section 21: Biochemistry