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William Nelson

Professor
Molecular & Cellular Physiology
Stanford University
United States of America

Biography

William Nelson is working as Professor, Biology and Molecular & Cellular Physiology Member of Bio-X, Stanford Cancer Institute. Faculty Fellow of Stanford ChEM-H.

Research Interest

Our research objectives are to understand the cellular mechanisms involved in the development and maintenance of epithelial cell polarity. Polarized epithelial cells play fundamental roles in the ontogeny and function of a variety of tissues and organs. Recent studies indicate that the development of epithelial cell polarity is a multistage process requiring instructive extracellular cues (eg. cell-cell and cell-substratum contact) and the reorganization of proteins in the cytoplasm and on the plasma membrane. Once established, polarity is maintained by targeting and retention of proteins to functionally distinct apical and basal-lateral plasma membrane domains. We have developed three strategies to address molecular and biochemical aspects of the mechanisms involved in these processes: (i). Analysis of membrane and cytoplasmic protein sorting, targeting and distribution in established cell lines of polarized renal epithelia in tissue culture (eg. MDCK cells). Biochemical and molecular analysis of protein sorting into vesicles, transport and docking of vesicles with specialized membrane domains. (ii). Structural and functional analysis of cell adhesion in epithelial cells. Molecular genetic approaches to disrupt cadherin and associated protein (catenins) functions. Role of cell adhesion in establishing docking machinery for transport vesicles. (iii). In vitro studies of protein organization and interactions in purified and reconstituted cell systems. (iv). In vivo studies of embryonic development of polarized renal epithelia in the normal mouse and the cpk mouse mutant, a murine strain with autosomal recessive polycystic kidney disease in which cell polarity is partially reversed.

Publications

  • Dickinson DJ, Nelson WJ, Weis WI (2012) An epithelial tissue in Dictyostelium challenges the traditional origin of metazoan multicellularity. BIOESSAYS 34: 833-840.

  • Mukundan V, Nelson WJ, Pruitt BL (2013) Microactuator device for integrated measurement of epithelium mechanics. BIOMEDICAL MICRODEVICES 15: 117-123.

  • Mbom BC, Nelson WJ, Barth A (2013) ß-catenin at the centrosome: Discrete pools of ß-catenin communicate during mitosis and may co-ordinate centrosome functions and cell cycle progression. BioEssays 35: 804-809.

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