Professor Jason King
School of Biosciences
Professor
- Profile
-
- 2015 - present Royal Society University Research Fellow
- 2013 - present Advanced Vice-Chancellors Fellow, University of ºù«Ӱҵ
- 2007 - 2013 Post-doctoral fellow. CR-UK Beatson Institute. Advisor: Prof. Robert Insall
- 2003 - 2007 PhD. Cardiff University. Advisor: Prof Adrian Harwood.
- 2000 - 2001 MPhil(res) University of Birmingham
- 1996 - 1999 BSc Medical Biochemistry, University of Birmingham
- Research interests
-
The main focus of the laboratory is to understand how cells perform – the bulk capture of extracellular fluid. This plays important and distinct roles in diverse cell types such as macrophages, dendritic cells and neurons, by allowing cells to sample their environment and regulating membrane turnover. However macropinocytosis also allows cancer cells to scavenge the extracellular nutrients required to support their growth, and provides a route for pathogens and prions to enter host cells.
The diverse importance of macropinocytosis has only recently become clear, and both the formation and maturation of macropinosomes is poorly understood. My laboratory is thus trying to answer two fundamental questions:
-
How do cells generate the cup-shaped protrusions required to entrap extracellular fluid?
-
How are macropinosomes and phagosomes processed after internalisation?
Autophagy and lysosomal degradation pathways
Macroautophagy is a critical process used by cells to recycle nutrients to survive starvation, but also for protein and organelle homeostasis, cellular remodelling, and protection from pathogens and mis-folded proteins. Our primary aim is to understand the underlying mechanisms of autophagic degradation, how specific targets are recruited to autophagosomes, and how this integrates into the larger cellular context.
Our primary experimental system is the soil amoeba Dictyostelium discoideum. This allows us to use powerful molecular techniques to dissect autophagy in a simple model system. In addition, as Dictyostelium exclusively use phagocytosis and macropinocytosis to take up nutrients, they are an excellent model for phagocytic immune cells and allow us to circumvent the experimental limitations of macrophages and neutrophils. We are therefore currently exploiting this system to understand immune cell interactions with a variety of bacterial and fungal pathogens.
Full publication details at:
-
- Publications
-
Show: Featured publications All publications
Featured publications
Journal articles
- . Science, 382(6667), 223-230.
- . Current Biology, 30.
- . PLoS Pathogens, 15(2).
- . PLoS Pathogens, 14(12).
- . PLoS Pathogens, 13(4).
- . Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 113(40), E5906-E5915.
- . Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 112(7), E687-E692.
- . Molecular Biology of the Cell, 24(17), 2714-2726.
- . AUTOPHAGY, 7(12), 1490-1499.
All publications
Journal articles
- . Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 121(36).
- . Science, 382(6667), 223-230.
- . Journal of Cell Biology, 222(9).
- . Current Biology.
- , 41-59.
- . Current Biology.
- . Cells, 10(11).
- . J Cell Biol, 220(9).
- . Autophagy.
- . Current Biology, 30.
- . Science, 367(6475), 246-247.
- . The International Journal of Developmental Biology, 63(8-9-10), 461-471.
- . Cellular Microbiology, 21(9).
- . Autophagy, 15(8), 1407-1418.
- . PLoS Pathogens, 15(2).
- . Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 374(1765), 20180146-20180146.
- . Philosophical Transactions B: Biological Sciences, 374(1765).
- . Cellular Microbiology.
- . PLoS Pathogens, 14(12).
- . Frontiers in Cellular and Infection Microbiology, 8.
- . Microorganisms, 5(4).
- . Cells, 6(3).
- . FEBS Journal.
- . Journal of Cell Science, 130(10), 1785-1795.
- . PLoS Pathogens, 13(4).
- . Autophagy, 13(1), 24-40.
- . Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 113(40), E5906-E5915.
- . Autophagy, 12(1), 1-222.
- . Autophagy, 12(2), 443-443.
- . Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 112(7), E687-E692.
- . BMC Genomics, 16.
- . Traffic, 15(11), 1235-1246.
- . Molecular Biology of the Cell, 24(17), 2714-2726.
- . BioTechniques, 55(1), 39-41.
- . Developmental Cell, 24(2), 169-181.
- . Trends in Molecular Medicine, 18(10), 583-588.
- . J Cell Biol, 198(4), 501-508.
- . AUTOPHAGY, 8(7), 1159-1162.
- . Autophagy, 8(4), 445-544.
- . AUTOPHAGY, 7(12), 1490-1499.
- . JOURNAL OF CELL SCIENCE, 123(13), 2246-2255.
- . PLOS ONE, 5(6).
- . TRENDS IN CELL BIOLOGY, 19(10), 523-530.
- . BIOCHEMICAL SOCIETY TRANSACTIONS, 37, 1110-1114.
- . DISEASE MODELS & MECHANISMS, 2(5-6), 306-312.
- . CURRENT BIOLOGY, 18(18), R864-R866.
- . PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 105(16), 5998-6003.
- . MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE CELL, 18(12), 4772-4779.
- . BMC GENETICS, 8.
- . BMC GENETICS, 4.
- . Colloid & Polymer Science, 271(5), 469-479.
- . Biochemical Society Transactions.
- . JMIR Research Protocols, 12, e48014-e48014.
- . Molecular Biology of the Cell.
- . Cellular Microbiology.
- .
Chapters
Preprints
- Grants
-
- BBSRC
- Royal Society
- Teaching activities
-
I give lectures at both Level 2 (BMS242) and 3 (BMS376) on autophagy in health and disease, as well as support level 3 and 4, practical and dissertation modules.
- Professional activities and memberships
-
- Vice-Chair Gordon Research Seminar on Autophagy in Stress, Development and Disease 2012
- Vice Chancellor’s Advanced Fellow
- Associate editor BMC Cell Biology
- Society for General Microbiology, Eukaryotic Division committee member
- Dictybase Scientific advisory board member
- Opportunities
We advertise PhD opportunities (Funded or Self-Funded) on FindAPhD.com
For further information and details of other projects on offer, please see the department PhD Opportunities page.
Links