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Richard Anderson

 
 
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Richard Anderson, Ph.D.

 Details of Research

Biographical Sketch Details of Research Personal Overview How to Contact
Richard Anderson
Name:
  Richard Gilpin Wood Anderson, Ph.D.
Endowed Title:
  Cecil H. Green Distinguished Chair in Cellular and Molecular Biology
Academic Title:
  Professor
Primary Appointment:
  Cell Biology
School:
  Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences
Southwestern Medical School
Degree Program:
  Cell Regulation
Non-degree Program:
  SURF
Department Website:
  Cell Biology
Lab Website:
  Anderson Lab
Email:
  Richard Anderson, Ph.D.

 RESEARCH OVERVIEW
 
All cells rely on special membrane domains to take up nutrients from their environment. Sometimes these domains are commandeered by viral pathogens or malfunction in certain disease states. One of these domains is the clathrin coated pit, which is specialized to carry macromolecules like LDL into cells. Another is the caveola, which is specialized for delivering small molecules like folate. The Anderson laboratory has made essential contributions to our understanding of how both domains function. The co-discovery of receptor-mediated endocytosis by coated pits, the discovery of an essential role for cholesterol in caveolae structure and function, the identification of the first caveolae maker protein caveolin-1, and the demonstration that caveolae are containers that compartmentalize multiple signaling modules and carry them to different cellular locations, are among the laboratory?s many accomplishments. Today the laboratory is concentrating on four fundamental questions in endocytosis biology. One has to do with the mechanism of caveolae internalization. Three different modes of internalization have been identified, but the structural and regulatory machinery involved in each pathway is not known. We also do not know how receptors cluster in membrane domains, so several projects are aimed towards understanding receptor clustering in caveolae and coated pits. Many small molecules and ions are internalized by caveolae, but we are interested in lipids like cholesterol and oleate. We would like to know how lipids are taken up and delivered to adiposomes, the cellular organelle specialized for lipid storage and turnover. Finally, we recently observed that cholesterol has a function outside of membranes in regulating cell signaling. We are working hard to understand the molecular mechanism of cholesterol-regulated signal transduction.
 
 RESEARCH INTERESTS
 
Cholesterol regulated signal transduction
Mechanism of caveolae internalization and traffic
Function of adiposomes in the metabolism and traffic of lipids
Mechanics of receptor targeting to membrane domains
Caveolae
 
 RECENT PUBLICATIONS
 
R. G. W. Anderson and K. Jacobson, "A role for lipid shells in targeting proteins to caveolae, rafts, and other lipid domains" Science, 296:1821-5., June 2002  Download File
Wang PY, Weng J, Anderson RG, "OSBP is a cholesterol-regulated scaffolding protein in control of ERK1/2 activation" Science, 307:1472-6, 2005  Download File
Isshiki M, Anderson RG, "Function of caveolae in Ca2+ entry and Ca2+- dependent signal transduction" Traffic, 4:717-23, 2003  Download File
Wang PY, Liu P, Weng J, Sontag E, Anderson RG, "A cholesterol-regulated PP2A/HePTP complex with dual specificity ERK1/2 phosphatase activity" EMBO J., 22 (11):2658-67, 2003  Download File
 
 
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