Susan Lowey, Ph.D.

Professor Emeritus  

Lowey.Susan

Background


Dr. Lowey received her Ph.D. in Physical Chemistry at Yale University. Her characterization of the myosin molecule continued as a postdoctoral fellow at Harvard University, and forms the basis of a long career on the structure and function of contractile proteins. Following a decade at the Childrens Cancer Research Foundation, Harvard Medical School, she brought her biochemical expertise to a team of biophysicists at the newly founded Rosenstiel Basic Medical Sciences Research Center, Brandeis University. Since 1998 she has been Professor in the Department of Molecular Physiology & Biophysics at the University of Vermont.

Contact


Office:
HSRF 128
802-656-8091

Lab:
HSRF 133
802-656-4433

 

Research Description


Dr. Lowey's laboratory studies the role of myosin in muscle contraction. Many aspects of the interaction between myosin and actin have been elaborated since the sliding filament theory of contraction was originally proposed in the 1950's, but a detailed mechanism of how ATP hydrolysis is coupled to force generation is still not available. Current structural models have focused on conformational changes occurring at the interface between the globular catalytic domain of myosin and the actin filament. Many of the point mutations implicated in inherited hypertrophic cardiomyopathy are found in the actin-binding regions of the myosin molecule. One experimental approach has been to engineer point mutations in the gene for cardiac myosin heavy chain and express the mutant myosin in mice or more recently in rabbits. The isolated and purified myosin can be analyzed by transient kinetics to understand the effect of the mutation on the basic actomyosin contractile cycle. To probe the structural consequences of a mutation, actin filaments can be decorated with mutant myosin, and the complex characterized by electron cryomicroscopy and image analysis (Volkmann et al., 2007, PLoS ONE 2(11):e1123. This biochemical/biophysical research will provide students with a basic understanding of biological motors and the contractile process in healthy and diseased states of heart muscle.

Faculty Highlighted Publications


Volkmann N, Liu H, Hazelwood L, Krementsova EB, Lowey S, Trybus KM, Hanein D. The structural basis of myosin V processive movement as revealed by electron cryomicroscopy. Mol Cell. 2005. 19(5): 595-605.

Lowey S, Saraswat LD, Liu H, Volkmann N, Hanein D. Evidence for an interaction between the SH3 domain and the N-terminal extension of the essential light chain in class II myosins. J Mol Biol. 2007. 371(4):902-13.

Volkmann N, Lui H, Hazelwood L, Trybus KM, Lowey S, Hanein D. The R403Q myosin mutation implicated in familial hypertrophic cardiomyopathy causes disorder at the actomyosin interface PLoS ONE. 2007. Nov 7;2(11):e1123.

Lowey S, Lesko LM, Rovner AS, Hodges AR, White SL, Low RB, Rincon M, Gulick J, Robbins J. Functional Effects of the Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy R403Q Mutation Are Different in an {alpha}- or {beta}-Myosin Heavy Chain Backbone. J Biol Chem. 2008. Jul 18;283(29):20579-89.

Lowey S, and Trybus KM. Common structural motifs for the regulation of divergent class II myosins. J. Biol. Chem. 2010. 285(22):16403-16407.

Lowey S, Bretton V, Gulick J, Robbins J, Trybus KM. Transgenic mouse alpha- and beta-cardiac myosins containing the R403Q mutation show isoform-dependent transient kinetic differences. J Biol Chem. 2013 May 24;288(21):14780-7.

Taylor KA, Feig M, Brooks CL 3rd, Fagnant PM, Lowey S, Trybus KM. Role of the essential light chain in the activation of smooth muscle myosin by regulatory light chain phosphorylation. J Struct Biol. 2014 Mar;185(3):375-82.

All publications >> 

Selected Awards


Guggenheim Fellowship 1974-75

Fogarty International Scholar 1980-83

MERIT, National Institutes of Health 1986-96

Fellow, American Academy of Arts and Sciences 1990 - present

Fellow, Biophysical Society 1999 - present