Zhu Xueliang
Professor
Biochemistry and Cell Biology
Shanghai Institutes for Biological Sciences
China
Biography
ZHU Xueliang is a Professor Institute of Biochemistry and Cell Biology, Shanghai Institutes for Biological Sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shanghai, China.
Research Interest
His group is mainly interested in regulation of cell motilities, including mitosis, migration, and intracellular transport. Such activities often exhibit transient, regional distributions of organelles and/or proteins, require accurate coordination among multiple participants, and involve MT and microfilament cytoskeletons. They have recently focused on a genetic pathway, the dynein pathway. It was originally identified in Aspergillus in screens for mutants critical for even nuclear distrubutions (Nud) along hyphae and subsequently found to be conserved and essential in mammals. Whereas the majority of Nud genes identified encode subunits of cytoplasmic dynein and dynactin, two genes termed NudE and NudF, corresponding to NudE/NudE-like (Nudel) and Lis1 in mammals, respectively, are of interest because they potentially code for dynein regulators. Moreover, halploinsufficiency of Lis1 is known to cause a severe congenital disease, type I lissencephaly, characterized by smooth brain surface, mental retardation, and short life span. Dynein and dynactin consist of a huge microtubule-dependent molecular motor important for many types of cell motilities. Malfunction of the dynein motor has been shown to cause Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), a progressive neurodegenerative disease that affects neurons in the brain and the spinal chord. Starting from mitosin/CENP-F, an Rb-associated kinetochore protein, we identified NudE and Nudel as its associated proteins. Since then, we have tried to answer how they function in cell motilities in respect to other related proteins.