M

Meghan A. Morrissey

University of California, Santa Barbara

ORCID: 0000-0002-0531-4864

Publishes on Phagocytosis and Immune Regulation, Immune Cell Function and Interaction, Immunotherapy and Immune Responses. 54 papers and 1.6k citations.

54Publications
1.6kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Chimeric antigen receptors that trigger phagocytosis
Cited by 408Open Access

Chimeric antigen receptors (CARs) are synthetic receptors that reprogram T cells to kill cancer. The success of CAR-T cell therapies highlights the promise of programmed immunity and suggests that applying CAR strategies to other immune cell lineages may be beneficial. Here, we engineered a family of Chimeric Antigen Receptors for Phagocytosis (CAR-Ps) that direct macrophages to engulf specific targets, including cancer cells. CAR-Ps consist of an extracellular antibody fragment, which can be modified to direct CAR-P activity towards specific antigens. By screening a panel of engulfment receptor intracellular domains, we found that the cytosolic domains from Megf10 and FcRɣ robustly triggered engulfment independently of their native extracellular domain. We show that CAR-Ps drive specific engulfment of antigen-coated synthetic particles and whole human cancer cells. Addition of a tandem PI3K recruitment domain increased cancer cell engulfment. Finally, we show that CAR-P expressing murine macrophages reduce cancer cell number in co-culture by over 40%.

An active role for basement membrane assembly and modification in tissue sculpting
Meghan A. Morrissey, David R. Sherwood|Journal of Cell Science|2015
Cited by 151Open Access

Basement membranes are a dense, sheet-like form of extracellular matrix (ECM) that underlie epithelia and endothelia, and surround muscle, fat and Schwann cells. Basement membranes separate tissues and protect them from mechanical stress. Although traditionally thought of as a static support structure, a growing body of evidence suggests that dynamic basement membrane deposition and modification instructs coordinated cellular behaviors and acts mechanically to sculpt tissues. In this Commentary, we highlight recent studies that support the idea that far from being a passive matrix, basement membranes play formative roles in shaping tissues.

The netrin receptor DCC focuses invadopodia-driven basement membrane transmigration in vivo
Elliott J. Hagedorn, Joshua W. Ziel, Meghan A. Morrissey et al.|The Journal of Cell Biology|2013
Cited by 128Open Access

Though critical to normal development and cancer metastasis, how cells traverse basement membranes is poorly understood. A central impediment has been the challenge of visualizing invasive cell interactions with basement membrane in vivo. By developing live-cell imaging methods to follow anchor cell (AC) invasion in Caenorhabditis elegans, we identify F-actin-based invadopodia that breach basement membrane. When an invadopodium penetrates basement membrane, it rapidly transitions into a stable invasive process that expands the breach and crosses into the vulval tissue. We find that the netrin receptor UNC-40 (DCC) specifically enriches at the site of basement membrane breach and that activation by UNC-6 (netrin) directs focused F-actin formation, generating the invasive protrusion and the cessation of invadopodia. Using optical highlighting of basement membrane components, we further demonstrate that rather than relying solely on proteolytic dissolution, the AC's protrusion physically displaces basement membrane. These studies reveal an UNC-40-mediated morphogenetic transition at the cell-basement membrane interface that directs invading cells across basement membrane barriers.