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Full-Text Articles in Life Sciences

Oligodendrocyte 2phatal Reveals Dynamics Of Myelin Degeneration And Repair, Timothy W. Chapman Sep 2023

Oligodendrocyte 2phatal Reveals Dynamics Of Myelin Degeneration And Repair, Timothy W. Chapman

Dartmouth College Ph.D Dissertations

Oligodendrocytes are responsible for producing myelin in the central nervous system. This lipid-rich coating along axons helps to increase action potential velocity, provide metabolic support to axons, and facilitate fine-tuning of neuronal circuitry. Demyelination and/or myelin dysfunction is widespread in neurodegenerative diseases and aging. Despite this, we know very little about how individual oligodendrocytes, or the myelin sheaths they produce, degenerate. Myelin repair, carried out by resident oligodendrocyte precursor cells (OPCs), is known to occur following myelin damage in certain contexts. We sought to investigate the cellular dynamics of oligodendrocyte degeneration and repair by developing a non-inflammatory demyelination model, combining …


Proteomic Approaches To Identify Unique And Shared Substrates Among Kinase Family Members, Charles Lincoln Howarth Jul 2023

Proteomic Approaches To Identify Unique And Shared Substrates Among Kinase Family Members, Charles Lincoln Howarth

Dartmouth College Ph.D Dissertations

Protein phosphorylation is a reversible post-translational modification that is a critical component of almost all signaling pathways. Kinases regulate substrate proteins through phosphorylation, and nearly all proteins are phosphorylated to some extent. Crucially, breakdown in phosphorylation signaling is an underlying factor in many diseases, including cancer. Understanding how phosphorylation signaling mediates cellular pathways is crucial for understanding cell biology and human disease.

Targeted protein degradation (TPD) is a strategy to rapidly deplete a protein of interest (POI) and is applicable to any gene that is amenable to CRISPR-Cas9 editing. One TPD approach is the auxin-inducible degron (AID) system, which relies …


Regulation Of The Wnt/Wingless Receptor Lrp6/Arrow By The Deubiquitylating Complex Usp46, Zachary T. Spencer Jun 2023

Regulation Of The Wnt/Wingless Receptor Lrp6/Arrow By The Deubiquitylating Complex Usp46, Zachary T. Spencer

Dartmouth College Ph.D Dissertations

The evolutionarily conserved Wnt/Wingless signal transduction pathway is critical for the proper development of all animals and implicated in numerous diseases in adulthood. Upon binding of the Wnt/Wingless ligand, a cascade of events culminates in inactivation of the destruction complex, a negative regulator of the pathway, and the subsequent formation of singalosomes which mediate pathway activation. A critical component of signalosome formation is the Wnt/Wingless receptor LRP6/Arrow. Upon canonical pathway activation, LRP6/Arrow undergoes activation via phosphorylation by several kinases and complexes with another Wnt/Wingless receptor Frizzled, along with several cytoplasmic components. While many studies have investigated the regulatory mechanisms of …


Measuring How Kinetochore-Microtubule Detachment Contributes To Chromosome Movement And The Correction Of Attachment Errors, Melissa K. Parks Jan 2023

Measuring How Kinetochore-Microtubule Detachment Contributes To Chromosome Movement And The Correction Of Attachment Errors, Melissa K. Parks

Dartmouth College Ph.D Dissertations

The goal of mitosis is to achieve faithful chromosome segregation; ensuring that the daughter cells inherit equal numbers of chromosomes. This is vital to cell health and viability and if mis-regulated can result in birth defects and disease such as cancer. There are many intricately regulated processes that occur throughout mitosis to achieve proper chromosome segregation, and one such example is the dynamic attachments formed between cytoskeletal structures, known as microtubules, and chromosomes, the carriers of genetic material. These attachments occur at structures called kinetochores, and the microtubules attached here are referred to as kinetochore-microtubules (k-MTs). These k-MTs are inherently …


Regulation Of Tissue Mechanics And Adherens Junctions By Small Gtpase Rhoa During Drosophila Embryogenesis, Hanqing Guo Nov 2022

Regulation Of Tissue Mechanics And Adherens Junctions By Small Gtpase Rhoa During Drosophila Embryogenesis, Hanqing Guo

Dartmouth College Ph.D Dissertations

Actomyosin contractility plays an important role at both the cell and tissue level during developments. In this study, we developed an optogenetic tool that can acutely inhibit actomyosin contractility by targeting its main activator Rho1. This optogenetic tool can achieve myosin inhibition within one minute and thus enable further dissection of actomyosin function in development. In my first two projects, I used Drosophila mesoderm invagination (also known as ventral furrow formation) as a model to study epithelial folding, a fundamental mechanism for constructing complex 3D tissues. Apical constriction mediated by actomyosin contractility is a common mechanism for epithelial folding. However, …


Mechanisms And Roles Of Dynamic Actin Assembly Around Dysfunctional Mitochondria, Tak Shun Fung Aug 2022

Mechanisms And Roles Of Dynamic Actin Assembly Around Dysfunctional Mitochondria, Tak Shun Fung

Dartmouth College Ph.D Dissertations

Possessing the ability to efficiently generate ATP required to sustain cellular functions, mitochondria are often considered the ‘powerhouses of the cell’. However, our understanding of mitochondria in cell biology was further expanded when we recognized that communication between this unique organelle and the rest of the cell regulates cellular bioenergetics, metabolism and signaling processes such as mitophagy and apoptosis. Here, I investigate signaling between mitochondria and the actin cytoskeleton, and how this signaling regulates mitochondrial dynamics and cellular function. Specifically, I find that, upon mitochondrial dysfunction, actin polymerizes rapidly around the dysfunctional organelle, which we term ‘acute damage-induced actin’ (ADA). …


Novel Functions For Arp2/3 Complex-Mediated Actin Networks Discovered In Chlamydomonas Reinhardtii, Brae M. Bigge Jul 2022

Novel Functions For Arp2/3 Complex-Mediated Actin Networks Discovered In Chlamydomonas Reinhardtii, Brae M. Bigge

Dartmouth College Ph.D Dissertations

Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, a unicellular member of the Chlorophyta or Green Algae phylum, has been used for decades as a model for ciliary studies. Using this tool, previous work from our lab found a role for actin in ciliary assembly and maintenance. However, while the microtubule-based, membrane-ensheathed cilia of Chlamydomonas are highly conserved in relation to mammalian cells, the actin cytoskeleton is not as simple. Chlamydomonas contains two actin genes: IDA5, a conventional actin, and NAP1, a divergent actin. Here, we find that despite the divergence of NAP1, it is still able to interact with the actin nucleator, the Arp2/3 complex. …


Deciphering Phosphoprotein Phosphatase Signaling Networks Using Proteomics Approaches, Brooke Brauer Jun 2022

Deciphering Phosphoprotein Phosphatase Signaling Networks Using Proteomics Approaches, Brooke Brauer

Dartmouth College Ph.D Dissertations

Protein phosphorylation is a highly regulated mechanism of cell signaling control and its deregulation is implicated in disease. The kinases that catalyze the addition of phosphate groups onto their substrate proteins have been well studied, their signaling pathways mapped, and their effects on cell and organismal health observed. Knowledge of the phosphatases that reverse the reaction only recently began to come into focus. Phosphoprotein phosphatases (PPPs), long thought to be housekeeping enzymes, are now known to be exquisitely specific towards their substrates, but the exact nature of phosphatase regulation—both upstream and downstream of the phosphatase—is unclear.

PPPs recognize substrates through …