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Barry  M.  Gumbiner
Degree(s): Ph.D.
Graduate School: University of CA,San Francisco
Primary Appointment: Professor and Chair of Cell Biology
Research Interests:
Cell Adhesion and Morphogenesis; Wnt Signaling; Cadherins and Catenins; Development and Cancer

Email Address: bmg4n@virginia.edu


Biomedical Sciences Graduate Program(s)
  • Molecular Cell and Developmental Biology
  • Biochemistry, Molecular Biology and Genetics
  • Neuroscience

  • Research Description

    Cadherin and beta-catenin signaling in development and cancer
    We are studying how beta-catenin functions in its two key roles; in cell adhesion as a binding protein for cadherin cell adhesion molecules, and in the Wnt signaling pathway as a binding partner for the TCF transcription factor. E-cadherin acts as a tumor suppressor protein by inhibiting the Wnt stimulated TCF-dependent signaling activity of beta-catenin. In this way E-cadherin slows the proliferation of colorectal tumor cells. In other types of tumors, such as breast and prostate, E-cadherin acts to suppress tumor cell invasion, but in these cases invasion suppression involves alternate beta-catenin-dependent signaling pathways distinct from the canonical Wnt/beta-catenin/TCF signaling pathway. Furthermore, E-cadherin and beta-catenin directly mediate the contact inhibition of growth in a number of cell types; again by an alternate beta-catenin-dependent pathway. Current efforts are directed at elucidating the alternate molecular pathways by which beta-catenin mediates these growth and tumor suppressor functions of E-cadherin. We have also discovered that beta-catenin occurs in several distinct molecular forms which regulate its targeting to either TCF transcriptional complexes in the nucleus or cadherin adhesive complexes at the plasma membrane; Wnt signaling generates a TCF-selective form. Beta-catenin targeting and degradation is regulated by a cytoplasmic protein complex that includes the APC tumor suppressor protein, axin, and GSK3b, and we are investigating the mechanisms by which these proteins function in beta-catenin targeting and Wnt signaling.


    Regulation of cadherin-mediated adhesion during tissue morphogenesis
    Cadherins play important roles in morphogenetic processes that shape tissues in embryos and in growing adult organs. Tissue morphogenesis involves cell movements and cell rearrangements, processes that require a continual controlled breaking and re-making of adhesive bonds. We are studying how the regulation of cadherin adhesive function drives tissue morphogenesis during gastrulation of the Xenopus embryo. Regulation of a Xenopus C-cadherin in response to TGFb type growth factors is required for the elongation of tissues that drives the formation of the body axis. C-cadherin is also regulated spatially by the expression of a protocadherin (a poorly understood subfamily of cadherin proteins) call PAPC (paraxial protocadherin). We are now investigating the molecular mechanisms underlying the regulation of C-cadherin adhesion by TGFb factors and PAPC. These studies deal with a range of interesting problems, including the analysis of the basic molecular mechanism of cadherin adhesive binding, the molecular basis of PAPC function, the functions of the catenins in controlling cadherins, and the mechanism by which signaling pathways regulate these functions dynamically in the cell. At the level of tissue development, we are trying to understand how the temporal and spatial regulation of cadherin-mediated cell adhesion controls the cell movements and cell rearrangements that drive morphogenesis.



    Selected Publications
  • Gumbiner, B.M. (2005) Regulation of cadherin-mediated adhesion in morphogenesis. Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology, 6:622-634.
  • Gottardi, C.J. and Gumbiner, B.M. (2004) Distinct molecular forms of beta-catenin are targeted to adhesive or transcriptional complexes. J. Cell Biol., 167:339-350.
  • Wong, A. S. T. and Gumbiner, B. M. (2003) Adhesion-Independent Mechanism for Suppression of Tumor Cell Invasion by E-cadherin, J. Cell Biol., 161:1191-1203.
  • Boggon, T. J. , Murray, J., Chappuis-Flament, S., Wong, E., Gumbiner, B.M., and Shapiro, L. (2002) C-Cadherin ectodomain structure and implications for cell adhesion mechanisms. Science, 296:1308-1313.
  • http://faculty.virginia.edu/gumbiner/Publications/

  • Intranet Profile
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    Contact Information
      Office Address: PO Box 800732, Jordan Hall, 3315, 
      Office Phone: +1 434-243-9290
      Fax Phone: +1 434-924-2794

    Other Websites for this mentor:
    http://faculty.virginia.edu/gumbiner/

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