
Kevin Czaplinski, PhD
Assistant Professor
PhD Institution: UMDNJ-RWJMS
Department of Biochemistry and Cell Biology
Life Science Building, CMM 542 Stony Brook University Stony Brook, NY 11794-5215
Office telephone: 631-632-8634
E-mail: Kevin.Czaplinski@stonybrook.edu
Research
Post-transcriptional control of gene expression in the nervous system
In many instances cells rely on post-transcriptional processes
to regulate gene expression very rapidly and locally within the
cytoplasm. Translation, localization and degradation of messenger RNA
(mRNA) within the cytoplasm are all processes that can coordinate to
achieve dynamic control of gene expression. Post-transcriptionally
induced changes in gene expression are thought to be mediated through
the large Ribonucleo-Protein Complexes (RNPs) that form uniquely for
each mRNA, called mRNPs, but our current understanding of these
regulatory units is poor.
My lab focuses on post-transcriptional control of gene expression,
particularly on localization of mRNA within the cytoplasm, one poorly
understood component of post-transcriptional regulation. Active
localization of mRNA is particularly important to the nervous system
where the cell cytoplasm can extend great distances away from the
nucleus. At these distances, diffusion of products produced within the
cell soma will not suffice to supply proteins to the neuronal cellular
periphery that are needed for cell maintenance and function,
synaptogenesis and synaptic plasticity. Cells must actively transport
these factors to remote locations, and transporting mRNA in neurons is
one means to achieve this. Because it is the template for translation,
mRNA localization directs protein synthesis to the distal regions of the
cytoplasm where the product will function.
Trafficking RNPs in Neurons
My studies take complementary approaches to understand
the formation and function of RNP complexes involved in trafficking mRNA
in neurons. To localize mRNA within the cytoplasm, specific cis-acting
sequences within an mRNA are recognized by RNA binding proteins to
coordinate formation of the RNP. This RNP interacts with the
cytoskeleton as well as with membrane associated signaling complexes to
achieve translation of the mRNA at the right time and place within the
cytoplasm. Many unanswered questions remain about the roles of most of
these RNP components. We are performing studies that will examine the
roles of the RNA binding proteins as well as the sequence elements
involved in localizing mRNA to the processes of neurons. Several
neurological diseases including mental retardation involve
mis-regulation of mRNA in the cytoplasm and we believe that
understanding these mechanisms will lead to novel therapeutic approaches
to treat these diseases.
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