Brian Castle - Academia.edu (original) (raw)
Papers by Brian Castle
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. August 2014. Major:Biomedical Engineering . Advisor: ... more University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. August 2014. Major:Biomedical Engineering . Advisor: David J. Odde. 1 computer file (PDF); x, 134 pages.
Elsevier eBooks, 2016
Microtubules are linear intracellular polymers that self-assemble from subunits of αβ-tubulin het... more Microtubules are linear intracellular polymers that self-assemble from subunits of αβ-tubulin heterodimers, and serve as essential mediators of cellular processes including cell division, migration, as well as intracellular transport. Each of these functions is dependent on the microtubule structure and self-assembly dynamics. Here we discuss the dynamics of microtubule structure and subunit addition and loss in the process of microtubule self-assembly, highlighting how these nanometer/molecular-scale dynamics manifest themselves at the micrometer/cellular-scale.
Effective therapies for COVID-19 are urgently needed. Presently there are more than 800 COVID-19 ... more Effective therapies for COVID-19 are urgently needed. Presently there are more than 800 COVID-19 clinical trials globally, many with drug combinations, resulting in an empirical process with an enormous number of possible combinations. To identify the most promising potential therapies, we developed a biophysical model for the SARS-CoV-2 viral cycle and performed a sensitivity analysis for individual model parameters and all possible pairwise parameter changes (162 = 256 possibilities). We found that model-predicted virion production is fairly insensitive to changes in most viral entry, assembly, and release parameters, but highly sensitive to some viral transcription and translation parameters. Furthermore, we found a cooperative benefit to pairwise targeting of transcription and translation, predicting that combined targeting of these processes will be especially effective in inhibiting viral production.
Science Advances, 2019
Nanoscale analysis reveals the rapid and inefficient sickle hemoglobin self-assembly process.
Biophysical Journal, 2019
Current Opinion in Cell Biology, 2018
Microtubule self-assembly dynamics serve to facilitate many vital cellular functions, such as chr... more Microtubule self-assembly dynamics serve to facilitate many vital cellular functions, such as chromosome segregation during mitosis and synaptic plasticity. However, the detailed atomistic basis of assembly dynamics has remained an unresolved puzzle. A key challenge is connecting together the vast range of relevant length-time scales, events happening at time scales ranging from nanoseconds, such as tubulin molecular interactions (Å-nm), to minutes-hours, such as the cellular response to microtubule dynamics during mitotic progression (μm). At the same time, microtubule interactions with associated proteins and binding agents, such as anti-cancer drugs, can strongly affect this dynamic process through atomic-level mechanisms that remain to be elucidated. New high-resolution technologies for investigating these interactions, including cryoelectron microscopy (EM) techniques and total internal reflection fluorescence (TIRF) microscopy, are yielding important new insights. Here, we focus on recent studies of microtubule dynamics, both theoretical and experimental, and how these findings shed new light on this complex phenomenon across length-time scales, from Å to μm and from nanoseconds to minutes.
Molecular pharmaceutics, Jan 9, 2018
Multidrug resistance and toxic side effects are the major challenges in cancer treatment with mic... more Multidrug resistance and toxic side effects are the major challenges in cancer treatment with microtubule-targeting agents (MTAs), and thus, there is an urgent clinical need for new therapies. Chalcone, a common simple scaffold found in many natural products, is widely used as a privileged structure in medicinal chemistry. We have previously validated tubulin as the anticancer target for chalcone derivatives. In this study, an α-methyl-substituted indole-chalcone (FC77) was synthesized and found to exhibit an excellent cytotoxicity against the NCI-60 cell lines (average concentration causing 50% growth inhibition = 6 nM). More importantly, several multidrug-resistant cancer cell lines showed no resistance to FC77, and the compound demonstrated good selective toxicity against cancer cells versus normal CD34 blood progenitor cells. A further mechanistic study demonstrated that FC77 could arrest cells that relate to the binding to tubulin and inhibit the microtubule dynamics. The Natio...
Molecular biology of the cell, 2017
Microtubule-targeting agents (MTAs), widely used as biological probes and chemotherapeutic drugs,... more Microtubule-targeting agents (MTAs), widely used as biological probes and chemotherapeutic drugs, bind directly to tubulin subunits and "kinetically stabilize" microtubules, suppressing the characteristic self-assembly process of dynamic instability. However, the molecular-level mechanisms of kinetic stabilization are unclear, and the fundamental thermodynamic and kinetic requirements for dynamic instability and its elimination by MTAs have yet to be defined. Here we integrate a computational model for microtubule assembly with nanometer-scale fluorescence microscopy measurements to identify the kinetic and thermodynamic basis of kinetic stabilization by the MTAs paclitaxel, an assembly promoter, and vinblastine, a disassembly promoter. We identify two distinct modes of kinetic stabilization in live cells, one that truly suppresses on-off kinetics, characteristic of vinblastine, and the other a "pseudo" kinetic stabilization, characteristic of paclitaxel, that ne...
Current Biology, 2012
Microtubules (MTs) polymerize via net addition of GTPtubulin subunits to the MT plus end, which s... more Microtubules (MTs) polymerize via net addition of GTPtubulin subunits to the MT plus end, which subsequently hydrolyze to GDP-tubulin in the MT lattice. Relatively stable GTP-tubulin subunits create a ''GTP cap'' at the growing MT plus end that suppresses catastrophe. To understand MT assembly regulation, we need to understand GTP hydrolysis reaction kinetics and the GTP cap size. In vitro, the GTP cap has been estimated to be as small as one layer [1-3] (13 subunits) or as large as 100-200 subunits [4]. GTP cap size estimates in vivo have not yet been reported. Using EB1-EGFP as a marker for GTP-tubulin in epithelial cells, we find on average (1) 270 EB1 dimers bound to growing MT plus ends, and (2) a GTP cap size of w750 tubulin subunits. Thus, in vivo, the GTP cap is far larger than previous estimates in vitro, and w60-fold larger than a single layer cap. We also find that the tail of a large GTP cap promotes MT rescue and suppresses shortening. We speculate that a large GTP cap provides a locally concentrated scaffold for tip-tracking proteins and confers persistence to assembly in the face of physical barriers such as the cell cortex. Results and Discussion
Cell, 2015
Small molecule inhibitors of microtubule dynamics are widely used as cell biology research tools ... more Small molecule inhibitors of microtubule dynamics are widely used as cell biology research tools and clinically as cancer chemotherapeutics. By slight modification to the chemical structure of a known microtubule inhibitor, combretastatin A-4, Borowiak et al. develop a photoswitchable derivative that can be turned "on" and "off" with low-intensity light to spatially and temporally control microtubule dynamics.
Cellular and Molecular Bioengineering, 2011
Morphogen gradients dictate the spatial patterning of multicellular organisms and are established... more Morphogen gradients dictate the spatial patterning of multicellular organisms and are established via transport mechanisms. One of the best-characterized morphogens, Bicoid, acts as a polarity determinant in the Drosophila embryo through spatial-temporal control of gap gene expression. The prevailing model for establishment of the gradient has been localized anterior translation, subsequent diffusion, and spatially uniform degradation, consistent with the observed exponential anterior-posterior decay. However, a recent direct measurement of the Bicoid diffusion coefficient via fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (FRAP) resulted in a surprisingly low estimate, which challenged the prevailing model and led to more complicated active transport models. Here, we reassessed this conclusion using a detailed computational model of the FRAP experiment and analysis. In our model, we found disagreement between the input diffusion coefficient and the resulting estimated diffusion coefficient, as measured by previous methods. By using the model to reproduce the original data, we estimate that Bicoid's mitotic diffusion coefficient is 3-fold larger than the originally reported value. Thus, the long-standing diffusive transport model still holds.
Methods in Enzymology, 2014
Microtubules are dynamic polymers of the cytoskeleton, which play important roles in cell divisio... more Microtubules are dynamic polymers of the cytoskeleton, which play important roles in cell division, polarization, and intracellular transport. Self-assembly of microtubule polymer from αβ-tubulin heterodimers is highly variable, with stochastic switching between alternate states of net growth and net shortening, a phenomenon known as dynamic instability. Microtubule tip structures are also variable and directly influence the kinetics of assembly and vice versa. TipTracker, a semiautomated, image processing-based tool, permits high spatial and temporal resolution measurements from fluorescence microscopy images (~10-40 nm, or 1-5 dimer lengths, at 1-10 Hz) with simultaneous tip structure estimation. We provide a walkthrough of the TipTracker code to demonstrate methods used to (1) fit the coordinates of the microtubule backbone; (2) track microtubule tip position; and (3) estimate tip structure from the spatial decay of the tip fluorescence distribution, discuss possible sources of error, and include an example protocol for nanometer-scale tip tracking in living cells. Additionally, we evaluate TipTracker's accuracy on simulated digital images and fixed microtubules to estimate accuracy under realistic imaging conditions. In summary, this chapter demonstrates the use of TipTracker in making robust, high-resolution measurements of microtubule tip dynamics and structures, facilitating quantitative investigations into nanoscale/molecular control of microtubule assembly. Although our primary focus is on microtubules, these methods are, in principle, suitable for other polymer structures, such as F-actin.
Biophysical Journal, 2013
The structure and free energy of multistranded linear polymer ends evolves as individual subunits... more The structure and free energy of multistranded linear polymer ends evolves as individual subunits are added and lost. Thus, the energetic state of the polymer end is not constant, as assembly theory has assumed. Here we utilize a Brownian dynamics approach to simulate the addition and loss of individual subunits at the polymer tip. Using the microtubule as a primary example, we examined how the structure of the polymer tip dictates the rate at which units are added to and lost from individual protofilaments. We find that freely diffusing subunits arrive less frequently to lagging protofilaments but bind more efficiently, such that there is no kinetic difference between leading and lagging protofilaments within a tapered tip. However, local structure at the nanoscale has up to an order-of-magnitude effect on the rate of addition. Thus, the kinetic on-rate constant, integrated across the microtubule tip (kon,MT), is an ensemble average of the varying individual protofilament on-rate constants (kon,PF). Our findings have implications for both catastrophe and rescue of the dynamic microtubule end, and provide a subnanoscale framework for understanding the mechanism of action of microtubule-associated proteins and microtubule-directed drugs. Although we utilize the specific example of the microtubule here, the findings are applicable to multistranded polymers generally.
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. August 2014. Major:Biomedical Engineering . Advisor: ... more University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. August 2014. Major:Biomedical Engineering . Advisor: David J. Odde. 1 computer file (PDF); x, 134 pages.
Elsevier eBooks, 2016
Microtubules are linear intracellular polymers that self-assemble from subunits of αβ-tubulin het... more Microtubules are linear intracellular polymers that self-assemble from subunits of αβ-tubulin heterodimers, and serve as essential mediators of cellular processes including cell division, migration, as well as intracellular transport. Each of these functions is dependent on the microtubule structure and self-assembly dynamics. Here we discuss the dynamics of microtubule structure and subunit addition and loss in the process of microtubule self-assembly, highlighting how these nanometer/molecular-scale dynamics manifest themselves at the micrometer/cellular-scale.
Effective therapies for COVID-19 are urgently needed. Presently there are more than 800 COVID-19 ... more Effective therapies for COVID-19 are urgently needed. Presently there are more than 800 COVID-19 clinical trials globally, many with drug combinations, resulting in an empirical process with an enormous number of possible combinations. To identify the most promising potential therapies, we developed a biophysical model for the SARS-CoV-2 viral cycle and performed a sensitivity analysis for individual model parameters and all possible pairwise parameter changes (162 = 256 possibilities). We found that model-predicted virion production is fairly insensitive to changes in most viral entry, assembly, and release parameters, but highly sensitive to some viral transcription and translation parameters. Furthermore, we found a cooperative benefit to pairwise targeting of transcription and translation, predicting that combined targeting of these processes will be especially effective in inhibiting viral production.
Science Advances, 2019
Nanoscale analysis reveals the rapid and inefficient sickle hemoglobin self-assembly process.
Biophysical Journal, 2019
Current Opinion in Cell Biology, 2018
Microtubule self-assembly dynamics serve to facilitate many vital cellular functions, such as chr... more Microtubule self-assembly dynamics serve to facilitate many vital cellular functions, such as chromosome segregation during mitosis and synaptic plasticity. However, the detailed atomistic basis of assembly dynamics has remained an unresolved puzzle. A key challenge is connecting together the vast range of relevant length-time scales, events happening at time scales ranging from nanoseconds, such as tubulin molecular interactions (Å-nm), to minutes-hours, such as the cellular response to microtubule dynamics during mitotic progression (μm). At the same time, microtubule interactions with associated proteins and binding agents, such as anti-cancer drugs, can strongly affect this dynamic process through atomic-level mechanisms that remain to be elucidated. New high-resolution technologies for investigating these interactions, including cryoelectron microscopy (EM) techniques and total internal reflection fluorescence (TIRF) microscopy, are yielding important new insights. Here, we focus on recent studies of microtubule dynamics, both theoretical and experimental, and how these findings shed new light on this complex phenomenon across length-time scales, from Å to μm and from nanoseconds to minutes.
Molecular pharmaceutics, Jan 9, 2018
Multidrug resistance and toxic side effects are the major challenges in cancer treatment with mic... more Multidrug resistance and toxic side effects are the major challenges in cancer treatment with microtubule-targeting agents (MTAs), and thus, there is an urgent clinical need for new therapies. Chalcone, a common simple scaffold found in many natural products, is widely used as a privileged structure in medicinal chemistry. We have previously validated tubulin as the anticancer target for chalcone derivatives. In this study, an α-methyl-substituted indole-chalcone (FC77) was synthesized and found to exhibit an excellent cytotoxicity against the NCI-60 cell lines (average concentration causing 50% growth inhibition = 6 nM). More importantly, several multidrug-resistant cancer cell lines showed no resistance to FC77, and the compound demonstrated good selective toxicity against cancer cells versus normal CD34 blood progenitor cells. A further mechanistic study demonstrated that FC77 could arrest cells that relate to the binding to tubulin and inhibit the microtubule dynamics. The Natio...
Molecular biology of the cell, 2017
Microtubule-targeting agents (MTAs), widely used as biological probes and chemotherapeutic drugs,... more Microtubule-targeting agents (MTAs), widely used as biological probes and chemotherapeutic drugs, bind directly to tubulin subunits and "kinetically stabilize" microtubules, suppressing the characteristic self-assembly process of dynamic instability. However, the molecular-level mechanisms of kinetic stabilization are unclear, and the fundamental thermodynamic and kinetic requirements for dynamic instability and its elimination by MTAs have yet to be defined. Here we integrate a computational model for microtubule assembly with nanometer-scale fluorescence microscopy measurements to identify the kinetic and thermodynamic basis of kinetic stabilization by the MTAs paclitaxel, an assembly promoter, and vinblastine, a disassembly promoter. We identify two distinct modes of kinetic stabilization in live cells, one that truly suppresses on-off kinetics, characteristic of vinblastine, and the other a "pseudo" kinetic stabilization, characteristic of paclitaxel, that ne...
Current Biology, 2012
Microtubules (MTs) polymerize via net addition of GTPtubulin subunits to the MT plus end, which s... more Microtubules (MTs) polymerize via net addition of GTPtubulin subunits to the MT plus end, which subsequently hydrolyze to GDP-tubulin in the MT lattice. Relatively stable GTP-tubulin subunits create a ''GTP cap'' at the growing MT plus end that suppresses catastrophe. To understand MT assembly regulation, we need to understand GTP hydrolysis reaction kinetics and the GTP cap size. In vitro, the GTP cap has been estimated to be as small as one layer [1-3] (13 subunits) or as large as 100-200 subunits [4]. GTP cap size estimates in vivo have not yet been reported. Using EB1-EGFP as a marker for GTP-tubulin in epithelial cells, we find on average (1) 270 EB1 dimers bound to growing MT plus ends, and (2) a GTP cap size of w750 tubulin subunits. Thus, in vivo, the GTP cap is far larger than previous estimates in vitro, and w60-fold larger than a single layer cap. We also find that the tail of a large GTP cap promotes MT rescue and suppresses shortening. We speculate that a large GTP cap provides a locally concentrated scaffold for tip-tracking proteins and confers persistence to assembly in the face of physical barriers such as the cell cortex. Results and Discussion
Cell, 2015
Small molecule inhibitors of microtubule dynamics are widely used as cell biology research tools ... more Small molecule inhibitors of microtubule dynamics are widely used as cell biology research tools and clinically as cancer chemotherapeutics. By slight modification to the chemical structure of a known microtubule inhibitor, combretastatin A-4, Borowiak et al. develop a photoswitchable derivative that can be turned "on" and "off" with low-intensity light to spatially and temporally control microtubule dynamics.
Cellular and Molecular Bioengineering, 2011
Morphogen gradients dictate the spatial patterning of multicellular organisms and are established... more Morphogen gradients dictate the spatial patterning of multicellular organisms and are established via transport mechanisms. One of the best-characterized morphogens, Bicoid, acts as a polarity determinant in the Drosophila embryo through spatial-temporal control of gap gene expression. The prevailing model for establishment of the gradient has been localized anterior translation, subsequent diffusion, and spatially uniform degradation, consistent with the observed exponential anterior-posterior decay. However, a recent direct measurement of the Bicoid diffusion coefficient via fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (FRAP) resulted in a surprisingly low estimate, which challenged the prevailing model and led to more complicated active transport models. Here, we reassessed this conclusion using a detailed computational model of the FRAP experiment and analysis. In our model, we found disagreement between the input diffusion coefficient and the resulting estimated diffusion coefficient, as measured by previous methods. By using the model to reproduce the original data, we estimate that Bicoid's mitotic diffusion coefficient is 3-fold larger than the originally reported value. Thus, the long-standing diffusive transport model still holds.
Methods in Enzymology, 2014
Microtubules are dynamic polymers of the cytoskeleton, which play important roles in cell divisio... more Microtubules are dynamic polymers of the cytoskeleton, which play important roles in cell division, polarization, and intracellular transport. Self-assembly of microtubule polymer from αβ-tubulin heterodimers is highly variable, with stochastic switching between alternate states of net growth and net shortening, a phenomenon known as dynamic instability. Microtubule tip structures are also variable and directly influence the kinetics of assembly and vice versa. TipTracker, a semiautomated, image processing-based tool, permits high spatial and temporal resolution measurements from fluorescence microscopy images (~10-40 nm, or 1-5 dimer lengths, at 1-10 Hz) with simultaneous tip structure estimation. We provide a walkthrough of the TipTracker code to demonstrate methods used to (1) fit the coordinates of the microtubule backbone; (2) track microtubule tip position; and (3) estimate tip structure from the spatial decay of the tip fluorescence distribution, discuss possible sources of error, and include an example protocol for nanometer-scale tip tracking in living cells. Additionally, we evaluate TipTracker's accuracy on simulated digital images and fixed microtubules to estimate accuracy under realistic imaging conditions. In summary, this chapter demonstrates the use of TipTracker in making robust, high-resolution measurements of microtubule tip dynamics and structures, facilitating quantitative investigations into nanoscale/molecular control of microtubule assembly. Although our primary focus is on microtubules, these methods are, in principle, suitable for other polymer structures, such as F-actin.
Biophysical Journal, 2013
The structure and free energy of multistranded linear polymer ends evolves as individual subunits... more The structure and free energy of multistranded linear polymer ends evolves as individual subunits are added and lost. Thus, the energetic state of the polymer end is not constant, as assembly theory has assumed. Here we utilize a Brownian dynamics approach to simulate the addition and loss of individual subunits at the polymer tip. Using the microtubule as a primary example, we examined how the structure of the polymer tip dictates the rate at which units are added to and lost from individual protofilaments. We find that freely diffusing subunits arrive less frequently to lagging protofilaments but bind more efficiently, such that there is no kinetic difference between leading and lagging protofilaments within a tapered tip. However, local structure at the nanoscale has up to an order-of-magnitude effect on the rate of addition. Thus, the kinetic on-rate constant, integrated across the microtubule tip (kon,MT), is an ensemble average of the varying individual protofilament on-rate constants (kon,PF). Our findings have implications for both catastrophe and rescue of the dynamic microtubule end, and provide a subnanoscale framework for understanding the mechanism of action of microtubule-associated proteins and microtubule-directed drugs. Although we utilize the specific example of the microtubule here, the findings are applicable to multistranded polymers generally.