Research Interests
Microtubule-Based Motors and Cytoarchitecture
My lab is interested in how microtubule-based motors contribute
to a subcellular organization and motility. Our work focuses
on the motor, cytoplasmic dynein, and its activator, dynactin.
Together, these proteins provide the majority of minus end-directed
motor activity in interphase cells. Dynein and dynactin drive
the centripetal movement of the endomembrane systems that support
membrane protein biosynthesis and recycling, and also contribute
significantly to the organization of the microtubule cytoskeleton
during interphase and mitosis. Both dynein and dynactin are
large, multisubunit complexes. Dynein provides the "brawn" for
movement, while dynactin acts as the "brains" that controls
motility, serving as both a linker between dynein and its cargoes,
and as a processivity factor that allows dynein to move over
longer distances. Because dynein's cargoes include structures
as diverse as membranes, microtubules, chromosomes and possibly
cell signaling molecules, we are interested in understanding
the mechanisms by which dynactin interacts with each.
To better understand dynein and dynactin structure and function,
our lab has taken broad approach, using biochemical,biophysical,
molecular biological and microscopy-based techniques. To study
dynactin function in vivo, we work in the model systems of fibroblasts,
neurons, polarized epithelia and phagocytic cells, each of which
highlights a different type of dynein-based motility. Using
sophisticated microscopy techniques, we study subcellular dynamics
in vivo and in vitro.
Biochemical and molecular biological methods have provided
us with large quantities of native dynactin and recombinant
subunits for enzymological, structural and biophysical studies.
These efforts have provided a clear picture of dynactin subunit
organization. The dynein and cargo binding subdomains of dynactin
have been identified and we are in the process of defining cargo
receptors and the molecular details of the dynein-dynactin and
dynactin-microtubule interaction.

Representative
Publications
Berezuk, M.A., and Schroer, T.A. 2007. Dynactin is a processivity factor for kinesin-2. Traffic. 8:124-129.
Schramm B, de Haan CA, Young J, Doglio L, Schleich S, Reese C, Popov AV, Steffen W, Schroer T, Locker JK. (2006). Vaccinia-Virus-Induced Cellular Contractility Facilitates the Subcellular Localization of the Viral Replication Sites. Traffic.
Imai H, Narita A, Schroer TA, Maeda Y. (2006). Two-dimensional averaged images of the dynactin complex revealed by single particle analysis. J Mol Biol. Jun 16;359(4):833-9.
Brown CL, Maier KC, Stauber T, Ginkel LM, Wordeman L, Vernos I, Schroer TA. (2005). Kinesin-2 is a motor for late endosomes and lysosomes. Traffic. (12):1114-24.
Pfister KK, Fisher EM, Gibbons IR, Hays TS, Holzbaur EL, McIntosh JR, Porter ME, Schroer TA, Vaughan KT, Witman GB, King SM, Vallee RB. (2005). Cytoplasmic dynein nomenclature. J Cell Biol. 71(3):411-3.
Schroer TA. (2004) Dynactin. Annu Rev Cell Dev Biol. 20:759-79. Review.
Berezuk, M., and Schroer, T.A. (2004). Isolation and characterization of
native kinesin II from brain. Traffic, 5, 503-513.
King SJ, Brown CL, Maier KC, Quintyne NJ, Schroer TA. (2003 ). Analysis of the dynein-dynactin interaction in vitro and in vivo. Mol Biol Cell.14(12):5089-97.
Eckley, D.M. and Schroer, T.A.(2003) Interactions between the
evolutionarily conserved, actin-related protein, Arp11, actin and Arp1. Mol. Biol. Cell, 14, 2645-2654.
Goodson HV, Skube SB, Stalder R, Valetti C, Kreis TE, Morrison EE, Schroer TA.(2003) CLIP-170 interacts with dynactin complex and the APC-binding protein EB1 by different mechanisms. Cell Motil Cytoskeleton. 55(3):156-73.
Quintyne, N.J. and Schroer, T.A. (2002). Distinct cell cycle-dependent
roles for dynactin and dynein at centrosomes. J. Cell Biol., 159,
245-254.
Salina, D., Boldoor, K., Eckley, D.M., Schroer, T.A., Rattner, J.B.,
Burke, B.(2002) Cytoplasmic dynein as a facilitator of nuclear envelope
breakdown. Cell, 108, 97-107.
Habermann, A., Schroer, T.A., Griffiths, G. and Burkhardt, J. K. (2001) Immunolocalization of cytoplasmic dynein and
dynactin subunits in cultured macrophages: Enrichment on early endocytic organelles, J. Cell Sci., 114, 229-240.
Schroer, T.A,. (2001) Microtubules don and doff their caps: dynamic attachments at microtubule ends. Curr. Op.
Cell Biol., 13, 92-93.
King, S.J. and Schroer, T.A. (2000). Dynactin increases the processivity of the cytoplasmic dynein motor. Nature Cell Biology, 2, 20-24.
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