Peter Calvert profile picture
315 464-7753

彼得·卡尔弗特博士

3610 Institute For Human Performance (IHP)
欧文大道505号
锡拉丘兹,纽约州13210
Peter Calvert's email address generated as an image

当前预约

教授 神经科学 Graduate Program
约翰一. Hoepner, MD, Endowed Professorship of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences

语言

英语

RESEARCH PROGRAMS AND AFFILIATIONS

Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
Biomedical Sciences Program
神经科学项目
Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences

研究兴趣

Molecular mechanisms of protein transport and localization in retinal neurons; mechanisms of retinal degenerative diseases

教育

博士后: University of Pennsylvania, 2006
博士后: Harvard Medical School, 2003
博士: University of Wisconsin at Madison, 1996

研究抽象

研究 in my laboratory is aimed at understanding the mechanisms of signal dependent protein localization and transport in neurons. Dynamic protein localization within cells is often determined by environmental stimuli. In rod photoreceptors of the retina transitions between darkness and light result in the massive translocation of several key signal transduction proteins between two major compartments. The second and third most abundant proteins in rods, 阻滞素和转导素, 分别, move in opposite directions. Arrestin, a protein that has been identified to be important for regulation of heterotrimeric G protein coupled receptors, is found primarily in the inner segment compartment of dark adapted rods, but essentially its entire compliment is transported to the outer segment compartment upon exposure to light. Transducin, the G protein in rod visual transduction, is found in the rod outer segment in dark-adapted rods and moves to the inner segment with the onset of light. A third phototransduction protein - the calcium binding protein, recoverin - also shifts its position toward the synaptic end of rods when they are exposed to steady light. To further complicate the story, all of these proteins are transported through a thin connecting cilium, within tens of minutes of light onset.

的功能, and mechanisms underlying these massive protein redistributions that occur day in and day out are not known despite decades of study. A major handicap to investigation has been the use of static, histological methods to examine dynamic processes. In living cells proteins are ever moving, faster or slower, in one direction or randomly. It is the net movement of populations of individual molecules that determines their average distributions within cells. 因此, it stands to reason that the only way to determine the mechanism of cellular localization and transport of proteins is to observe their dynamic behavior in the living, functioning cells they normally inhabit.

我们使用多光子 & confocal microscopy and the expression of fluorescently labeled proteins in transgenic animals to monitor protein dynamics in living cells in real time, particularly after changes in the cell's signaling state. 此外, we monitor intracellular signaling using fluorescent indicators such that the changes in protein dynamics may be correlated with the signaling state of the cell. Many disease causing genetic mutations result in the improper localization of proteins in cells. Studying the mechanisms by which proteins are localized and transported in living cells may lead to strategies for therapeutic interventions that will correct or alleviate disorders caused by such mutations.

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出版物

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