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| Daniel P Kiehart, Professor of Biology
 We use a multidisciplinary approach to investigate the molecular mechanisms of cell sheet movements and actin appendage formation in morphogenesis and the cytoskeleton and motor proteins in hearing. Our studies range in scale from individual molecules to intact tissues in living animals.
- Contact Info:
- Office Hours:
- 5:30 to 6:30 PM Mondays
- Education:
| Postdoctoral Fellow | Johns Hopkins University Medical School (Thomas D. Pollard, Advisor) | 1982 |
| Ph.D., Biology | University of Pennsylvania (Shinya Inoue, Advisor) | 1979 |
| B.A., Biology | University of Pennsylvania | 1973 |
- Specialties:
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Cell and Molecular Biology
Developmental Biology Genetics Biophysics Genomics
- Research Interests: Biophysical approaches to cellular, molecular and developmental biology
Current projects:
Cytoskeleton and motor protein function in morphogenesis and wound healing, Light activated gene expression, Filopodia function in morphogenesis and wound healing, Protein complex function in hearing
Our intellectual focus is on identifying determinants of
cell shape that function during development and wound
healing. We utilize novel biophysical strategies (in collaboration with Glenn Edwards' group in Physics and with Stephanos Venakide's and John Harer's groups in Mathematics) in concert with modern molecular genetic and reverse
genetic approaches in Drosophila to explore the forces that are responsible for cell shape change and movements. We
show that both the amnioserosa and a "supracellular
purse string" in the leading edge of the lateral
epidermis contribute to the movements of dorsal
closure. Dorsal closure proceeds even if we ablate one (but NOT both!)of the tissues responsible for closure, indicating that this model cell (epithelial) sheet movement depends on redundant forces that in concert drive morphogenesis. We show that the magnitude of each force is significantly larger than their vector sum indicating that there is both potential for generating large forces and that successful morphogenesis requires that the forces applied be precisely balanced. We have also explored the molecules responsible for generating those movements. We showed that conventional nonmuscle myosin (myosin II) provides key contractile forces in different tissues where the supramolecular complexes that incorporate this motor protein are distinct. How molecular events are regulated such that large, opposing forces efficiently drive morphogenesis remains a mystery, but we are pursuing leads that point to two distinct pathways: the bidirectionally signaling integrin cell surface receptors and mechanically gated channels.
We are also pursuing the morphogenesis of actin-cytoskeleton based projections that are a key feature of a variety of cells, including those that are specialized for sensory reception in human vision and hearing. We have again turned to Drosophila as a model system where we study the morphogenesis of epidermal hairs and sensory bristles. Our work centers on an unconventional myosin (myosin VIIA) encoded by crinkled a gene that is required for the formation of epidermal hairs and bristles. We show that myosin VIIA is required for the coallescence of actin pre-hairs into the robust actin bundles that form the skeleton on which hairs and bristles can be built. In collaboration with Dan Eberl's lab (University of Iowa) we showed that myosin VIIA is also essential for fly hearing -- remarkably, its human homolog is also required for human hearing, even though the mechanisms of auditory sensory reception in these phylogenetically diverged systems are very different. We have begun to characterize myosin VIIA structurally using NMR of purified protein domains. With Jim Seller's lab at the NIH we have used fast time course kinetics and single molecule assays to analyze molecular function and show that this myosin VIIA is a processive motor. We are beginning to characterize the proteins that collaborate with both myosin II and myosin VIIA using biochemical strategies in vitro, yeast two hybrid approaches in vivo and genetic interaction strategies in fly.
Together, our experiments promise to reveal
the nature of cytoskeletal function in cell shape
determination for cell division and morphogenesis
throughout development and organismal homeostasis.
- Areas of Interest:
- morphogenesis
wound healing motor protein structure and function cytoskeleton molecular structure phylogeny of gene families
- Keywords:
- cell motility • morphogenesis • cytoskeleton • myosin • actin • motor protein • wound healing • dorsal closure • sensory reception • hearing
- Curriculum Vitae
- Current Ph.D. Students
(Former Students)
- Ginger Hunter
- Adrienne R. Wells
- Postdocs Mentored
- Ginger Hunter (May 14, 2012 - December 31, 2012)
- Jennifer Sallee (June, 2009 - present)
- Serdar Tulu (July, 2007 - present)
- O'neil Guthrie (December 15, 2006 - present)
- Franke, Josef D. (May, 2005 - December, 2005)
- Alice Rodriguez-Diaz (July 1, 2002 - March 31, 2008)
- Jackie C Swain (2000/07-2003/07)
- James M Bloor (May 1, 1997 - May 31, 2002)
- Susan R Halsell (1995/07-2000/07)
- Graham Thomas (1990 - 1993)
- Adam Richman (1990 - 1991)
- Christoph Schmidt (1989 - 1990)
- Tom Pesecreta (1988)
- Tung-ling Chen (1988 - 1991)
- Xiao-jia Chang (1987 - 1991)
- Ronald Dubreuil (1986 - 1989)
- Douglas Lutz (1985 - 1988)
- Recent Publications
(More Publications)
(search)
- Tulu, U.S., M.C. Beckerle and D.P. Kiehart, Cell Junctions and the Tension Sensitive, Supracellular Purse Strings in Drosophila Dorsal Closure,
J. Cell Biol.
(Submitted, June 20, 2012) (We are awaiting additional experimental data before resubmission..)
- Hunter, G., J. Crawford, J. Genkins and D.P. Kiehart, Ion channels function in the mechanoregulation of cell sheet forces during Drosophila morphogenesis,
Developmental Cell
(Submitted, May, 2012) [author's comments]
- Roh-Johnson, M., G. Shemer, C.D. Higgins, J.H. McClennan, A.D. Werts, U.S. Tulu, L. Gao, E. Betzig, D.P. Kiehart and B. Goldstein, Triggering a Cell Shape Change by Exploiting Pre-Existing Actomyosin Contractions,
Science, vol. In Press
(January 20, 2012) [abs]
- Sokolow, A, Y. Toyama, D.P. Kiehart and G. Edwards, Cell ingression and apical shape oscillations during dorsal closure in Drosophila,
Biophysical Journal, vol. In Press
(January 17, 2012) [abs]
- MJ Boyle, RL French, KA Cosand, JB Dorman, DP Kiehart, CA Berg, Division of labor: subsets of dorsal-appendage-forming cells control the shape of the entire tube.,
Developmental Biology, vol. 346 no. 1
(October, 2010),
pp. 68-79, ISSN 1095-564X [doi] [abs]
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