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Mohan Gupta

Assistant Professor, Cell & Molecular Biology, Committee on Genetics, Genomics & Systems Biology

Education:

B.S., Biochemistry, University of Kansas, 1992

Ph.D., Biochemistry (Honors), University of Kansas, 2001

Contact Information:

Email:

Office:
920 E. 58th St.
Chicago, IL 60637
CLSC - 218B
Phone: (773) 834-1376
Fax: (773) 702-3172

Lab:
920 E. 58th St.
Chicago, IL 60637
CLSC - 201
Phone: (773) 834-1376

Mohan L Gupta

Research Summary / Selected Publications

Interaction between microtubules and target sites (e.g. kinetochores) is critical for cellular processes such as mitosis, development, and stem cell maintenance. To function in these diverse roles, the dynamic behavior of microtubules must be properly regulated. For example, disruption of microtubule function/organization has been linked to neurodegenerative disease. Alternately, inhibiting microtubule dynamics is among the most effective strategies for cancer therapeutics. Thus, understanding these processes represents a major challenge for cell biology with potential to have significant impact on issues of human health.

Microtubules are regulated by a large and diverse group of proteins. However, due to the transient and dynamic nature of the interactions, the mechanisms involved have been elusive. My lab uses the model organism S. cerevisiae to address fundamental questions about the mechanisms that regulate microtubule function and microtubule interactions within the cell. We utilize various approaches; high-resolution and quantitative microscopy, cell biological approaches in living cells, molecular biology, protein biochemistry, and in-vitro reconstitution assays.

Kinesin motor proteins generally power movement along microtubules. We recently discovered that the important, but poorly understood Kinesin-8 family represents...

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Gupta, M. L., Jr., Carvalho, P., Roof. D. M., and Pellman, D. (2006). “Plus end-specific depolymerase activity of Kip3, a kinesin-8 protein, explains its role in positioning the yeast mitotic spindle.” Nat Cell Biol 8:913-23.  PubMed Citation

Carvalho, P., Gupta, M. L., Jr., Hoyt, M. A., and Pellman, D. (2004). “Cell cycle control of kinesin-mediated transport of Bik1 (CLIP-170) regulates microtubule stability and dynein activation.” Dev Cell 6:815-29.  PubMed Citation

Gupta, M. L., Jr., Bode, C. J., Georg, G. I., and Himes, R. H. (2003). “Understanding tubulin-Taxol interactions: mutations that impart Taxol binding to yeast tubulin.” Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 100:6394-7.  Full Text

Gupta, M. L., Jr., Bode, C. J., Thrower, D. A., Pearson, C. G., Suprenant, K. A., Bloom, K. S., and Himes, R. H. (2002). “β-Tubulin C354 mutations that severely decrease microtubule dynamics do not prevent nuclear migration in yeast.” Mol Biol Cell 13:2919-32.  Full Text

Austin, K. M., Gupta, M. L., Jr., Coats, S., Tulpule, A., Mostoslavsky, G., Balazs, A. B., Mulligan, R. C., Daley, G., Pellman, D., and Shimamura, A. (2008). “Mitotic Aberrations in Shwachman-Diamond Syndrome.” J Clin Invest 118:1511-8.  Full Text

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