Anton Sanderfoot
Assistant Professor, Dept of Plant Biology Ph.D. Department of Microbiology University of Illinois at Urbana/Champaign 1996
Cell biological and genetic analysis of vesicle trafficking in Arabidopsis
Contact Information
Mailing Address:
Dr. Anton Sanderfoot
Department of Plant Biology
University of Minnesota
250 Biological Science Center
1445 Gortner Ave.
St. Paul, MN 55108
Office: 610 Biological Sciences Center
Phone: (612) 624-1747
Fax: (612) 625-1738
E-mail: sande099@umn.edu
Useful Links
Lab Home Page
Arabidopsis SNAREs
Research Interests
Functional analysis of SNAREs in the Golgi/endosomal system of Arabidopsis
The secretory system is essential to the proper function of all eukaryotic
cells. The majority of the cargo (i.e.: proteins, lipids, carbohydrates,
etc.) that is exchanged between the different compartments of the secretory
system occurs using transport vesicles that bud from a donor organelle,
traverse the cytoplasm and then fuse with a target membrane. As with all
eukaryotes, plants face the difficult task of directing cargo to many
different destinations while using a common set of endomembrane
compartments. Clearly, a complex and specific vesicle trafficking machinery
is required, and one aspect of this machinery is a class of integral
membrane proteins called SNAREs. My lab uses the model plant Arabidopsis, a
system with well established cell biological, biochemical and genetic tools
that we use to study the functions of SNAREs in the secretory/endocytic
pathways. We also use the unicellular plant Chlamydomonas to investigate the
evolutionary conservation of the green plant secretory mechanisms.
Using cell biological approaches, we examine the intracellular localization
of various SNARE proteins. Using biochemical fractionations and
immunoprecipitations, we examine the composition of the SNARE complexes.
Using both forward and reverse genetics, we also examine the cytological and
developmental consequences of losing individual SNAREs. Our work has
recently focused on particular SNARE complexes involved in cell plate
formation, as well as a role for these complexes in polarized secretion in
non-dividing cells. Each of which is an essential activity for the growth
and development of plants.

Selected Publications
Anton A. Sanderfoot and Natasha V. Raikhel (2002).The secretory system of Arabidopsis. The Arabidopsis Book, eds. C.R. Somerville and E.M. Meyerowitz, American Society of Plant Biologists, Rockville, MD, DOI 10.1199/tab.0098
Haiyan Zheng,
Sebastian Y. Bednarek, Anton
A. Sanderfoot, Jose
Alonso, Joseph
R. Ecker, and Natasha V. Raikhel (2002). NPSN11 is a cell plate associated SNARE protein that interacts with the syntaxin KNOLLE. Plant Physiol. First published on May 2, 2002; DOI 10.1104/pp.003970
Anton A. Sanderfoot, Valentina Kovaleva, Diane C. Bassham, and Natasha V. Raikhel
(2001). Interactions between syntaxins identify at least five SNARE complexes
within the Golgi/prevacuolar system of the Arabidopsis cell. Mol. Biol. Cell. 12:3733-3743.
Anton A. Sanderfoot, Marsha Pilgrim, Luc Adam, and Natasha V. Raikhel (2001).
Disruption of individual members of Arabidopsis syntaxin gene families indicates
each have essential functions. Plant Cell. 13:659-666.
Anton A. Sanderfoot, Farhah F. Assaad, and Natasha V. Raikhel (2000). The Arabidopsis
Genome: An abundance of SNAREs. Plant Physiol. 124:1558-1569.
Diane C. Bassham, Anton A. Sanderfoot, Valentina Kovaleva, Haiyan Zheng, and
Natasha V. Raikhel (2000). AtVPS45 Complex Formation at the TGN. Mol Biol Cell. 11:2251-2265
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