David J. Mitchell
University of Virginia
3 Papers
11 Citations
David J. Mitchell is an academic researcher from University of Virginia. The author has contributed to research in topics: Dynein & Axoplasmic transport. The author has an hindex of 2, co-authored 3 publications.
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Papers
Live cell imaging reveals differential modifications to cytoplasmic dynein properties by phospho- and dephosphomimic mutations of the intermediate chain 2C S84.
Kiev R. Blasier,Michael K. Humsi,Junghoon Ha,Mitchell W. Ross,W. Russell Smiley,Nirja A. Inamdar,David J. Mitchell,Kevin W.-H. Lo,K. Kevin Pfister +8 more
TL;DR: Data suggest that the IC‐2C S84 has a role in modulating dynein properties, which are found to be capable of microtubule minus‐end‐directed movement in axons and to be passively transported in the anterograde direction.
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Live cell imaging of cytoplasmic dynein movement in transfected embryonic rat neurons.
TL;DR: A method to study its location and motility in living cells using the long thin axons of cultured hippocampal neurons and fluorescent subunit probes, which can be used to identify specific cargos of dynein complexes with different IC isoforms as well as the kinetic properties of cytoplasmic Dynein.
2
Trk activation of the ERK1/2 kinase pathway stimulates intermediate chain phosphorylation and recruits cytoplasmic dynein to signaling endosomes for retrograde axonal transport.
David J. Mitchell,Kiev R. Blasier,Erin D. Jeffery,Mitchell W. Ross,Ashok K. Pullikuth,Dong Suo,Jin Ho Park,W. R. Smiley,Kevin W.-H. Lo,Jeffrey Shabanowitz,Christopher D. Deppmann,Jonathan C. Trinidad,Donald F. Hunt,Andrew D. Catling,K. Kevin Pfister +14 more
TL;DR: Results demonstrate that neurotrophin binding to Trk initiates the recruitment of cytoplasmic dynein to signaling endosomes through ERK1/2 phosphorylation of intermediate chains for their subsequent retrograde transport in axons.