Courtney J. Haycraft
Medical University of South Carolina
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Featured researches published by Courtney J. Haycraft.
PLOS Genetics | 2005
Courtney J. Haycraft; Boglarka Banizs; Yesim Aydin-Son; Qihong Zhang; Edward J. Michaud; Bradley K. Yoder
Intraflagellar transport (IFT) proteins are essential for cilia assembly and have recently been associated with a number of developmental processes, such as left–right axis specification and limb and neural tube patterning. Genetic studies indicate that IFT proteins are required for Sonic hedgehog (Shh) signaling downstream of the Smoothened and Patched membrane proteins but upstream of the Glioma (Gli) transcription factors. However, the role that IFT proteins play in transduction of Shh signaling and the importance of cilia in this process remain unknown. Here we provide insights into the mechanism by which defects in an IFT protein, Tg737/Polaris, affect Shh signaling in the murine limb bud. Our data show that loss of Tg737 results in altered Gli3 processing that abrogates Gli3-mediated repression of Gli1 transcriptional activity. In contrast to the conclusions drawn from genetic analysis, the activity of Gli1 and truncated forms of Gli3 (Gli3R) are unaffected in Tg737 mutants at the molecular level, indicating that Tg737/Polaris is differentially involved in specific activities of the Gli proteins. Most important, a negative regulator of Shh signaling, Suppressor of fused, and the three full-length Gli transcription factors localize to the distal tip of cilia in addition to the nucleus. Thus, our data support a model where cilia have a direct role in Gli processing and Shh signal transduction.
Cell | 2004
Jin Billy Li; Jantje M. Gerdes; Courtney J. Haycraft; Yanli Fan; Tanya M. Teslovich; Helen May-Simera; Haitao Li; Oliver E. Blacque; Linya Li; Carmen C. Leitch; Ra Lewis; Jane Green; Patrick S. Parfrey; Michel R. Leroux; William S. Davidson; Philip L. Beales; Lisa M. Guay-Woodford; Bradley K. Yoder; Gary D. Stormo; Nicholas Katsanis; Susan K. Dutcher
Cilia and flagella are microtubule-based structures nucleated by modified centrioles termed basal bodies. These biochemically complex organelles have more than 250 and 150 polypeptides, respectively. To identify the proteins involved in ciliary and basal body biogenesis and function, we undertook a comparative genomics approach that subtracted the nonflagellated proteome of Arabidopsis from the shared proteome of the ciliated/flagellated organisms Chlamydomonas and human. We identified 688 genes that are present exclusively in organisms with flagella and basal bodies and validated these data through a series of in silico, in vitro, and in vivo studies. We then applied this resource to the study of human ciliation disorders and have identified BBS5, a novel gene for Bardet-Biedl syndrome. We show that this novel protein localizes to basal bodies in mouse and C. elegans, is under the regulatory control of daf-19, and is necessary for the generation of both cilia and flagella.
Nature Genetics | 2008
Pamela V. Tran; Courtney J. Haycraft; Tatiana Y. Besschetnova; Annick Turbe-Doan; Rolf W. Stottmann; Bruce J. Herron; Allyson L. Chesebro; Haiyan Qiu; Paul Scherz; Jagesh V. Shah; Bradley K. Yoder; David R. Beier
Characterization of previously described intraflagellar transport (IFT) mouse mutants has led to the proposition that normal primary cilia are required for mammalian cells to respond to the sonic hedgehog (SHH) signal. Here we describe an N-ethyl-N-nitrosourea–induced mutant mouse, alien (aln), which has abnormal primary cilia and shows overactivation of the SHH pathway. The aln locus encodes a novel protein, THM1 (tetratricopeptide repeat–containing hedgehog modulator-1), which localizes to cilia. aln-mutant cilia have bulb-like structures at their tips in which IFT proteins (such as IFT88) are sequestered, characteristic of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii and Caenorhabditis elegans retrograde IFT mutants. RNA-interference knockdown of Ttc21b (which we call Thm1 and which encodes THM1) in mouse inner medullary collecting duct cells expressing an IFT88–enhanced yellow fluorescent protein fusion recapitulated the aln-mutant cilial phenotype, and live imaging of these cells revealed impaired retrograde IFT. In contrast to previously described IFT mutants, Smoothened and full-length glioblastoma (GLI) proteins localize to aln-mutant cilia. We hypothesize that the aln retrograde IFT defect causes sequestration of IFT proteins in aln-mutant cilia and leads to the overactivated SHH signaling phenotype. Specifically, the aln mutation uncouples the roles of anterograde and retrograde transport in SHH signaling, suggesting that anterograde IFT is required for GLI activation and that retrograde IFT modulates this event.
Development | 2007
Courtney J. Haycraft; Qihong Zhang; Buer Song; Walker S. Jackson; Peter J. Detloff; Rosa Serra; Bradley K. Yoder
While cilia are present on most cells in the mammalian body, their functional importance has only recently been discovered. Cilia formation requires intraflagellar transport (IFT), and mutations disrupting the IFT process result in loss of cilia and mid-gestation lethality with developmental defects that include polydactyly and abnormal neural tube patterning. The early lethality in IFT mutants has hindered research efforts to study the role of this organelle at later developmental stages. Thus, to investigate the role of cilia during limb development, we generated a conditional allele of the IFT protein Ift88 (polaris). Using the Cre-lox system, we disrupted cilia on different cell populations within the developing limb. While deleting cilia in regions of the limb ectoderm had no overt effect on patterning, disruption in the mesenchyme resulted in extensive polydactyly with loss of anteroposterior digit patterning and shortening of the proximodistal axis. The digit patterning abnormalities were associated with aberrant Shh pathway activity, whereas defects in limb outgrowth were due in part to disruption of Ihh signaling during endochondral bone formation. In addition, the limbs of mesenchymal cilia mutants have ectopic domains of cells that resemble chondrocytes derived from the perichondrium, which is not typical of Indian hedgehog mutants. Overall these data provide evidence that IFT is essential for normal formation of the appendicular skeleton through disruption of multiple signaling pathways.
The FASEB Journal | 2012
A. K. T. Wann; Ning Zuo; Courtney J. Haycraft; Cynthia G. Jensen; C. Anthony Poole; Susan R. McGlashan; Martin M. Knight
We investigated the role of the chondrocyte primary cilium in mechanotransduction events related to cartilage extracellular matrix synthesis. We generated conditionally immortalized wild‐type (WT) and IFT88orpk (ORPK) mutant chondrocytes that lack primary cilia and assessed intracellular Ca2+ signaling, extracellular matrix synthesis, and ATP release in response to physiologically relevant compressive strains in a 3‐dimensional chondrocyte culture system. All conditions were compared to unloaded controls. We found that cilia were required for compression‐induced Ca2+ signaling mediated by ATP release, and an associated up‐regulation of aggrecan mRNA and sulfated glycosaminosglycan secretion. However, chondrocyte cilia were not the initial mechanoreceptors, since both WT and ORPK cells showed mechanically induced ATP release. Rather, we found that primary cilia were required for downstream ATP reception, since ORPK cells did not elicit a Ca2+ response to exogenous ATP even though WT and ORPK cells express similar levels of purine receptors. We suggest that purinergic Ca2+ signaling may be regulated by polycystin‐1, since ORPK cells only expressed the C‐terminal tail. This is the first study to demonstrate that primary cilia are essential organelles for cartilage mechanotransduction, as well as identifying a novel role for primary cilia not previously reported in any other cell type, namely cilia‐mediated control of ATP reception.—Wann, A. K. T., Zuo, N., Haycraft, C. J., Jensen, C. G., Poole, C. A., McGlashan, S. R., Knight, M. M. Primary cilia mediate mechanotransduction through control of ATP‐induced Ca2+ signaling in compressed chondrocytes. FASEB J. 26, 1663‐1671 (2012). www.fasebj.org
Experimental Cell Research | 2003
Courtney J. Haycraft; Jenny C. Schafer; Qihong Zhang; Patrick D. Taulman; Bradley K. Yoder
Cilia are present on cells of many eukaryotic organisms and recent data in the mouse suggest that ciliary defects can cause severe developmental abnormalities and disease. Studies across eukaryotic systems indicate that cilia are constructed and maintained through a highly conserved process termed intraflagellar transport (IFT), for which many of the proteins involved have yet to be identified. IFT describes the movement of large protein particles consisting of an A and a B complex along the cilia axoneme in anterograde and retrograde directions. Herein we describe a novel C. elegans gene, F59C6.7/9, that is required for cilia assembly and whose function is disrupted in che-13 ciliogenic mutants. As previously shown for all IFT complex B genes identified to date, expression of che-13 (F59C6.7/9) is regulated by the RFX-type transcription factor DAF-19, suggesting a conserved transcriptional pathway in ciliogenesis. Fluorescent-tagged CHE-13 protein concentrates at the base of cilia and moves along the axoneme as expected for an IFT protein. Furthermore, loss of che-13 differentially affects the localization of two known IFT complex B proteins, OSM-5 and OSM-6, implying that CHE-13 functions as part of this complex. Overall, our data confirm that CHE-13 is an IFT protein and further that the IFT particle assembles in an ordered process through specific protein-protein interactions.
Journal of Cell Science | 2005
Marlene E. Winkelbauer; Jenny C. Schafer; Courtney J. Haycraft; Peter Swoboda; Bradley K. Yoder
Nephronophthisis (NPH) is a cystic kidney disorder that causes end-stage renal failure in children. Five nephrocystin (nephrocystin-1 to nephrocystin-5) genes, whose function is disrupted in NPH patients, have been identified and data indicate they form a complex at cell junctions and focal adhesions. More recently, the nephrocystin proteins have also been identified in cilia, as have multiple other cystic kidney disease related proteins. Significant insights into this cilia and cystic kidney disease connection have come from analyses in simpler eukaryotic organisms such as Caenorhabditis elegans. In this regard, we became interested in the C. elegans homologs of nephrocystin-1 (nph-1) and nephrocystin-4 (nph-4) from a database screen to identify genes coordinately regulated by the ciliogenic transcription factor DAF-19. Here we show that expression of nph-1 and nph-4 is DAF-19 dependent, that their expression is restricted to ciliated sensory neurons, and that both NPH-1 and NPH-4 concentrate at the transition zones at the base of the cilia, but are not found in the cilium axoneme. In addition, NPH-4 is required for the localization of NPH-1 to this domain. Interestingly, nph-1 or nph-4 mutants have no obvious cilia assembly defects; however, they do have abnormalities in cilia-mediated sensory functions as evidenced by abnormal chemotaxis and lifespan regulation. Our data suggest that rather than having a ciliogenic role, the NPH proteins play an important function as part of the sensory or signaling machinery of this organelle. These findings suggest that the defects in human NPH patients may not be the result of aberrant ciliogenesis but abnormal cilia-sensory functions.
Laboratory Investigation | 2005
Qihong Zhang; James R. Davenport; Mandy J. Croyle; Courtney J. Haycraft; Bradley K. Yoder
While relatively ignored for years as vestigial, cilia have recently become the focus of intense interest as organelles that result in severe pathologies when disrupted. Here, we further establish a connection between cilia dysfunction and disease by showing that loss of polaris (Tg737), an intraflagellar transport (IFT) protein required for ciliogenesis, causes abnormalities in the exocrine and endocrine pancreas of the Tg737orpk mouse. Pathology is evident late in gestation as dilatations of the pancreatic ducts that continue to expand postnatally. Shortly after birth, the acini become disorganized, undergo apoptosis, and are largely ablated in late stage pathology. In addition, serum amylase levels are elevated and carboxypeptidase is abnormally activated within the pancreas. Ultrastructural analysis reveals that the acini undergo extensive vacuolization and have numerous ‘halo-granules’ similar to that seen in induced models of pancreatitis resulting from duct obstruction. Intriguingly, although the acini are severely affected in Tg737orpk mutants, cilia and Tg737 expression are restricted to the ducts and islets and are not detected on acinar cells. Analysis of the endocrine pancreas in Tg737orpk mutants revealed normal differentiation and distribution of cell types in the islets. However, after fasting, mutant blood glucose levels are significantly lower than controls and when challenged in glucose tolerance tests, Tg737orpk mutants exhibited defects in glucose uptake. These findings are interesting in light of the recently proposed role for polaris, the protein encoded by the Tg737 gene, in the hedgehog pathway and hedgehog signaling in insulin production and glucose homeostasis.
Current Topics in Developmental Biology | 2008
Courtney J. Haycraft; Rosa Serra
Although the expression of cilia on chondrocytes was described over 40 years ago, the importance of this organelle in skeletal development and maintenance has only recently been recognized. Primary cilia are found on most mammalian cells and have been shown to play a role in chemosensation and mechanosensation. A growing number of human pleiotropic syndromes have been shown to be associated with ciliary or basal body dysfunction. Skeletal phenotypes, including alterations in limb patterning, endochondral bone formation, craniofacial development, and dentition, have been described in several of these syndromes. Additional insights into the potential roles and mechanisms of cilia action in the mammalian skeleton have been provided by research in model organisms including mouse and zebrafish. In this article we describe what is currently known about the localization of cilia in the skeleton as well as the roles and underlying molecular mechanisms of cilia in skeletal development.
Journal of Cell Science | 2006
Jenny C. Schafer; Marlene E. Winkelbauer; Corey L. Williams; Courtney J. Haycraft; Renee A. Desmond; Bradley K. Yoder
Defects in cilia are associated with diseases and developmental abnormalities. Proper cilia function is required for sonic hedgehog and PDGFRα signaling in mammals and for insulin-like growth factor (IGF) signaling in Caenorhabditis elegans. However, the role of cilia in these pathways remains unknown. To begin addressing this issue, we are characterizing putative cilia proteins in C. elegans that are predicted to have regulatory rather than structural functions. In this report, we characterized the novel cilia protein T28F3.6 (IFTA-2, intraflagellar transport associated protein 2), which is homologous to the mammalian Rab-like 5 protein. We found that, unlike the intraflagellar transport (IFT) genes, disruption of ifta-2 does not result in overt cilia assembly abnormalities, nor did it cause chemotaxis or osmotic avoidance defects typical of cilia mutants. Rather, ifta-2 null mutants have an extended lifespan phenotype and are defective in dauer formation. Our analysis indicates that these phenotypes result from defects in the DAF-2 (insulin-IGF-1-like) receptor signaling pathway in ciliated sensory neurons. We conclude that IFTA-2 is not a ciliogenic protein but rather is a regulator of specific cilia signaling activities. Interestingly, a mammalian IFTA-2 homolog is also found in cilia, raising the possibility that its function has been conserved during evolution.