Publications by authors named "Edna Hardeman"

Unambiguous targeting of cellular structures for in situ cryo-electron microscopy in the heterogeneous, dense and compacted environment of the cytoplasm remains challenging. Here, we have developed a cryogenic correlative light and electron microscopy (cryo-CLEM) workflow that utilizes thin cells grown on a mechanically defined substratum for rapid analysis of organelles and macromolecular complexes by cryo-electron tomography (cryo-ET). We coupled these advancements with optogenetics to redistribute perinuclear-localised organelles to the cell periphery, allowing visualisation of organelles that would otherwise be positioned in cellular regions too thick for cryo-ET.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Membrane remodeling drives a broad spectrum of cellular functions, and it is regulated through mechanical forces exerted on the membrane by cytoplasmic complexes. Here, we investigate how actin filaments dynamically tune their structure to control the active transfer of membranes between cellular compartments with distinct compositions and biophysical properties. Using intravital subcellular microscopy in live rodents we show that a lattice composed of linear filaments stabilizes the granule membrane after fusion with the plasma membrane and a network of branched filaments linked to the membranes by Ezrin, a regulator of membrane tension, initiates and drives to completion the integration step.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Tissue tension encompasses the mechanical forces exerted on solid tissues within animal bodies, originating from various sources such as cellular contractility, interactions with neighboring cells and the extracellular matrix. Emerging evidence indicates that an imbalance in such forces can influence structural organization, homeostasis, and potentially contribute to disease. For instance, heightened tissue tension can impede apical cell extrusion, leading to the retention of apoptotic or transformed cells.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The actin cytoskeleton is composed of both branched and unbranched actin filaments. In mammals, the unbranched actin filaments are primarily copolymers of actin and tropomyosin. Biochemical and imaging studies indicate that different tropomyosin isoforms are segregated to different actin filament populations in cells and tissues, providing isoform-specific functionality to the actin filament.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Phenotypic plasticity, defined as the ability of individual cells with stable genotypes to exert different phenotypes upon exposure to specific environmental cues, represent the quintessential hallmark of the cancer cell en route from the primary lesion to distant organ sites where metastatic colonization will occur. Phenotypic plasticity is driven by a broad spectrum of epigenetic mechanisms that allow for the reversibility of epithelial-to-mesenchymal and mesenchymal-to-epithelial transitions (EMT/MET). By taking advantage of the co-existence of epithelial and quasi-mesenchymal cells within immortalized cancer cell lines, we have analyzed the role of EMT-related gene isoforms in the regulation of epithelial mesenchymal plasticity (EMP) in high grade serous ovarian cancer.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Membrane remodeling drives a broad spectrum of cellular functions, and it is regulated through mechanical forces exerted on the membrane by cytoplasmic complexes. Here, we investigate how actin filaments dynamically tune their structure to control the active transfer of membranes between cellular compartments with distinct compositions and biophysical properties. Using intravital subcellular microscopy in live rodents we show that: a lattice composed of linear filaments stabilizes the granule membrane after fusion with the plasma membrane; and a network of branched filaments linked to the membranes by Ezrin, a regulator of membrane tension, initiates and drives to completion the integration step.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Apical extrusion is a tissue-intrinsic process that allows epithelia to eliminate unfit or surplus cells. This is exemplified by the early extrusion of apoptotic cells, which is critical to maintain the epithelial barrier and prevent inflammation. Apoptotic extrusion is an active mechanical process, which involves mechanotransduction between apoptotic cells and their neighbors, as well as local changes in tissue mechanics.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Mechanical force generation plays an essential role in many cellular functions, including mitosis. Actomyosin contractile forces mediate changes in cell shape in mitosis and are implicated in mitotic spindle integrity via cortical tension. An unbiased screen of 150 small molecules that impact actin organization and 32 anti-mitotic drugs identified two molecular targets, Rho kinase (ROCK) and tropomyosin 3.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Platelets are tiny cells in our blood that help stop bleeding, and they come from larger cells called megakaryocytes.
  • Researchers found that when they send megakaryocytes through mouse lungs, they can produce a huge number of platelets, sometimes up to 3000 from one cell!
  • The study also looked at how things like oxygen and the lungs' structure help in making platelets, and they discovered that a special protein, Tropomyosin 4, is important for the final stage of making platelets.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

ACTA1 encodes skeletal muscle-specific α-actin, which polymerizes to form the thin filament of the sarcomere. Mutations in ACTA1 are responsible for approximately 30% of nemaline myopathy (NM) cases. Previous studies of weakness in NM have focused on muscle structure and contractility, but genetic issues alone do not explain the phenotypic heterogeneity observed in patients with NM or NM mouse models.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The negative impact of irradiation or diet on the metabolic and immune profiles of cancer survivors have been previously demonstrated. The gut microbiota plays a critical role in regulating these functions and is highly sensitive to cancer therapies. The aim of this study was to investigate the effect of irradiation and diet on the gut microbiota and metabolic or immune functions.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The actin cytoskeleton is the primary driver of cellular adhesion and mechanosensing due to its ability to generate force and sense the stiffness of the environment. At the cell's leading edge, severing of the protruding Arp2/3 actin network generates a specific actin/tropomyosin (Tpm) filament population that controls lamellipodial persistence. The interaction between these filaments and adhesion to the environment is unknown.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Anti-microtubule agents are widely used to treat ovarian cancers, but the efficacy is often compromised by drug resistance. We investigated co-targeting the actin/tropomyosin cytoskeleton and microtubules to increase treatment efficacy in ovarian cancers and potentially overcome resistance.

Methods: The presence of tropomyosin-3.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • APEX is a powerful genetic tag that helps visualize proteins in cells using electron microscopy (EM), making it easier to locate proteins in various cellular structures.* -
  • The APEX-Gold method converts APEX's reaction product into silver/gold particles, enhancing detection accuracy and quantifiability for tagged proteins in EM studies.* -
  • This method is versatile, applicable to various types of proteins, and allows for sensitive detection even at low expression levels, especially in CRISPR-edited mice.*
View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Terminally differentiated mouse osteocytes and adipocytes can be transformed into multipotent stem cells using specific growth factors and chemicals.
  • The research has refined methods for reprogramming human adipocytes into induced multipotent stem (iMS) cells and highlighted their unique molecular traits.
  • In various injury models, these iMS cells successfully contributed to the regeneration of muscle, bone, and other tissues without causing abnormal tissue growth or tumors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Tropomyosins are elongated alpha-helical proteins that form co-polymers with most actin filaments within a cell and play important roles in the structural and functional diversification of the actin cytoskeleton. How the assembly of tropomyosins along an actin filament is regulated and the kinetics of tropomyosin association with an actin filament is yet to be fully determined. A recent series of publications have used total internal reflection fluorescence (TIRF) microscopy in combination with advanced surface and protein chemistry to visualise the molecular assembly of actin/tropomyosin filaments in vitro.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The axon initial segment (AIS) is the site of action potential initiation and serves as a cargo transport filter and diffusion barrier that helps maintain neuronal polarity. The AIS actin cytoskeleton comprises actin patches and periodic sub-membranous actin rings. We demonstrate that tropomyosin isoform Tpm3.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Antimicrotubule vinca alkaloids are widely used in the clinic but their toxicity is often dose limiting. Strategies that enhance their effectiveness at lower doses are needed. We show that combining vinca alkaloids with compounds that target a specific population of actin filaments containing the cancer-associated tropomyosin Tpm3.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Metabolic complications are highly prevalent in cancer survivors treated with irradiation but the underlying mechanisms remain unknown.

Methods: Chow or high fat-fed C57Bl/6J mice were irradiated (6Gy) before investigating the impact on whole-body or skeletal muscle metabolism and profiling their lipidomic signature. Using a transgenic mouse model (Tg:Pax7-nGFP), we isolated muscle progenitor cells (satellite cells) and characterised their metabolic functions.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • The study of actin filaments is complicated due to the widespread effects of disrupting the actin cytoskeleton, but tropomyosin isoforms provide a useful means to investigate these functions.
  • Actin filaments in animal cells often form co-polymers with specific tropomyosin isoforms, which influence the filaments' functional characteristics and roles.
  • Genetic manipulation of tropomyosins has revealed that these isoforms have distinct, non-redundant physiological roles in key processes like development, cell migration, and the functioning of specialized tissues, as well as implications for human diseases.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Although F-actin has a large number of binding partners and regulators, the number of phenotypic states available to the actin cytoskeleton is unknown. Here, we quantified 74 features defining filamentous actin (F-actin) and cellular morphology in >25 million cells after treatment with a library of 114,400 structurally diverse compounds. After reducing the dimensionality of these data, only ∼25 recurrent F-actin phenotypes emerged, each defined by distinct quantitative features that could be machine learned.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Tropomyosins (Tpm) determine the functional capacity of actin filaments in an isoform-specific manner. The primary isoform in cancer cells is Tpm3.1 and compounds that target Tpm3.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Actomyosin networks, the cell's major force production machineries, remodel cellular membranes during myriad dynamic processes by assembling into various architectures with distinct force generation properties. While linear and branched actomyosin architectures are well characterized in cell-culture and cell-free systems, it is not known how actin and myosin networks form and function to remodel membranes in complex three-dimensional mammalian tissues. Here, we use four-dimensional spinning-disc confocal microscopy with image deconvolution to acquire macromolecular-scale detail of dynamic actomyosin networks in exocrine glands of live mice.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Co-polymers of tropomyosin and actin make up a major fraction of the actin cytoskeleton. Tropomyosin isoforms determine the function of an actin filament by selectively enhancing or inhibiting the association of other actin binding proteins, altering the stability of an actin filament and regulating myosin activity in an isoform-specific manner. Previous work has implicated specific roles for at least five different tropomyosin isoforms in stress fibres, as depletion of any of these five isoforms results in a loss of stress fibres.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF