Bio

Honors & Awards


  • American Heart Association Postdoctoral Fellowship Award, American Heart Association (January 2017-December 2018)
  • NHLBI Training Grant on Integrative Bioengineering of Heart, Vessels and Blood, NIH (April 2011-April 2012)
  • HHMI Med-into-Grad Training Grant, HHMI (January 2011-April 2011)

Professional Education


  • Doctor of Philosophy, University of California San Diego, Bioengineering (2012)
  • Bachelor of Science, National Technical University of Athens, Electrical and Computer Engineering (2006)

Stanford Advisors


Publications

All Publications


  • Rickettsia Sca4 Reduces Vinculin-Mediated Intercellular Tension to Promote Spread. Cell Lamason, R. L., Bastounis, E., Kafai, N. M., Serrano, R., Del Álamo, J. C., Theriot, J. A., Welch, M. D. 2016; 167 (3): 670-683 e10

    Abstract

    Spotted fever group (SFG) rickettsiae are human pathogens that infect cells in the vasculature. They disseminate through host tissues by a process of cell-to-cell spread that involves protrusion formation, engulfment, and vacuolar escape. Other bacterial pathogens rely on actin-based motility to provide a physical force for spread. Here, we show that SFG species Rickettsia parkeri typically lack actin tails during spread and instead manipulate host intercellular tension and mechanotransduction to promote spread. Using transposon mutagenesis, we identified surface cell antigen 4 (Sca4) as a secreted effector of spread that specifically promotes protrusion engulfment. Sca4 interacts with the cell-adhesion protein vinculin and blocks association with vinculin's binding partner, α-catenin. Using traction and monolayer stress microscopy, we show that Sca4 reduces vinculin-dependent mechanotransduction at cell-cell junctions. Our results suggest that Sca4 relieves intercellular tension to promote protrusion engulfment, which represents a distinctive strategy for manipulating cytoskeletal force generation to enable spread.

    View details for DOI 10.1016/j.cell.2016.09.023

    View details for PubMedID 27768890

    View details for PubMedCentralID PMC5097866