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Dive into the research topics where Emma A. Hall is active.

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Featured researches published by Emma A. Hall.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2011

Human and Mouse Mutations in WDR35 Cause Short-Rib Polydactyly Syndromes Due to Abnormal Ciliogenesis

Pleasantine Mill; Paul J. Lockhart; Elizabeth Fitzpatrick; Hayley Mountford; Emma A. Hall; Martin A. M. Reijns; Margaret Keighren; Melanie Bahlo; Catherine J. Bromhead; Peter S. Budd; Salim Aftimos; Martin B. Delatycki; Ravi Savarirayan; Ian J. Jackson; David J. Amor

Defects in cilia formation and function result in a range of human skeletal and visceral abnormalities. Mutations in several genes have been identified to cause a proportion of these disorders, some of which display genetic (locus) heterogeneity. Mouse models are valuable for dissecting the function of these genes, as well as for more detailed analysis of the underlying developmental defects. The short-rib polydactyly (SRP) group of disorders are among the most severe human phenotypes caused by cilia dysfunction. We mapped the disease locus from two siblings affected by a severe form of SRP to 2p24, where we identified an in-frame homozygous deletion of exon 5 in WDR35. We subsequently found compound heterozygous missense and nonsense mutations in WDR35 in an independent second case with a similar, severe SRP phenotype. In a mouse mutation screen for developmental phenotypes, we identified a mutation in Wdr35 as the cause of midgestation lethality, with abnormalities characteristic of defects in the Hedgehog signaling pathway. We show that endogenous WDR35 localizes to cilia and centrosomes throughout the developing embryo and that human and mouse fibroblasts lacking the protein fail to produce cilia. Through structural modeling, we show that WDR35 has strong homology to the COPI coatamers involved in vesicular trafficking and that human SRP mutations affect key structural elements in WDR35. Our report expands, and sheds new light on, the pathogenesis of the SRP spectrum of ciliopathies.


Development | 2015

A conserved role for Notch signaling in priming the cellular response to Shh through ciliary localisation of the key Shh transducer Smo

Magdalena Stasiulewicz; Shona D. Gray; Ioanna Mastromina; Joana Clara Silva; Mia Björklund; Philip A. Seymour; David Booth; Calum Thompson; Richard J. Green; Emma A. Hall; Palle Serup; J. Kim Dale

Notochord-derived Sonic Hedgehog (Shh) is essential for dorsoventral patterning of the overlying neural tube. Increasing concentration and duration of Shh signal induces progenitors to acquire progressively more ventral fates. We show that Notch signalling augments the response of neuroepithelial cells to Shh, leading to the induction of higher expression levels of the Shh target gene Ptch1 and subsequently induction of more ventral cell fates. Furthermore, we demonstrate that activated Notch1 leads to pronounced accumulation of Smoothened (Smo) within primary cilia and elevated levels of full-length Gli3. Finally, we show that Notch activity promotes longer primary cilia both in vitro and in vivo. Strikingly, these Notch-regulated effects are Shh independent. These data identify Notch signalling as a novel modulator of Shh signalling that acts mechanistically via regulation of ciliary localisation of key components of its transduction machinery. Highlighted article: Shh signalling controls dorso-ventral cell fate in the neural tube. Notch regulates ciliary architecture and localisation of key Shh pathway components, thus sensitising cells to Shh.


PLOS Genetics | 2013

Acute Versus Chronic Loss of Mammalian Azi1/Cep131 Results in Distinct Ciliary Phenotypes

Emma A. Hall; Margaret Keighren; Matthew J. Ford; Tracey Davey; Andrew P. Jarman; Lee B. Smith; Ian J. Jackson; Pleasantine Mill

Defects in cilium and centrosome function result in a spectrum of clinically-related disorders, known as ciliopathies. However, the complex molecular composition of these structures confounds functional dissection of what any individual gene product is doing under normal and disease conditions. As part of an siRNA screen for genes involved in mammalian ciliogenesis, we and others have identified the conserved centrosomal protein Azi1/Cep131 as required for cilia formation, supporting previous Danio rerio and Drosophila melanogaster mutant studies. Acute loss of Azi1 by knock-down in mouse fibroblasts leads to a robust reduction in ciliogenesis, which we rescue by expressing siRNA-resistant Azi1-GFP. Localisation studies show Azi1 localises to centriolar satellites, and traffics along microtubules becoming enriched around the basal body. Azi1 also localises to the transition zone, a structure important for regulating traffic into the ciliary compartment. To study the requirement of Azi1 during development and tissue homeostasis, Azi1 null mice were generated (Azi1Gt/Gt). Surprisingly, Azi1Gt/Gt MEFs have no discernible ciliary phenotype and moreover are resistant to Azi1 siRNA knock-down, demonstrating that a compensation mechanism exists to allow ciliogenesis to proceed despite the lack of Azi1. Cilia throughout Azi1 null mice are functionally normal, as embryonic patterning and adult homeostasis are grossly unaffected. However, in the highly specialised sperm flagella, the loss of Azi1 is not compensated, leading to striking microtubule-based trafficking defects in both the manchette and the flagella, resulting in male infertility. Our analysis of Azi1 knock-down (acute loss) versus gene deletion (chronic loss) suggests that Azi1 plays a conserved, but non-essential trafficking role in ciliogenesis. Importantly, our in vivo analysis reveals Azi1 mediates novel trafficking functions necessary for flagellogenesis. Our study highlights the importance of both acute removal of a protein, in addition to mouse knock-out studies, when functionally characterising candidates for human disease.


eLife | 2015

TALPID3 controls centrosome and cell polarity and the human ortholog KIAA0586 is mutated in Joubert syndrome (JBTS23)

Louise Stephen; Hasan Tawamie; Gemma M. Davis; Lars Tebbe; Peter Nürnberg; Gudrun Nürnberg; Holger Thiele; Michaela Thoenes; Eugen Boltshauser; Steffen Uebe; Oliver Rompel; André Reis; Arif B. Ekici; Lynn McTeir; Amy M Fraser; Emma A. Hall; Pleasantine Mill; Nicolas Daudet; Courtney E. Cross; Uwe Wolfrum; Rami Abou Jamra; Megan Davey; Hanno J. Bolz

Joubert syndrome (JBTS) is a severe recessive neurodevelopmental ciliopathy which can affect several organ systems. Mutations in known JBTS genes account for approximately half of the cases. By homozygosity mapping and whole-exome sequencing, we identified a novel locus, JBTS23, with a homozygous splice site mutation in KIAA0586 (alias TALPID3), a known lethal ciliopathy locus in model organisms. Truncating KIAA0586 mutations were identified in two additional patients with JBTS. One mutation, c.428delG (p.Arg143Lysfs*4), is unexpectedly common in the general population and may be a major contributor to JBTS. We demonstrate KIAA0586 protein localization at the basal body in human and mouse photoreceptors, as is common for JBTS proteins, and also in pericentriolar locations. We show that loss of TALPID3 (KIAA0586) function in animal models causes abnormal tissue polarity, centrosome length and orientation, and centriolar satellites. We propose that JBTS and other ciliopathies may in part result from cell polarity defects. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.08077.001


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2017

PLAA Mutations Cause a Lethal Infantile Epileptic Encephalopathy by Disrupting Ubiquitin-Mediated Endolysosomal Degradation of Synaptic Proteins

Emma A. Hall; Michael S. Nahorski; Lyndsay M. Murray; Ranad Shaheen; Emma M. Perkins; Kosala Dissanayake; Yosua Kristaryanto; Ross A. Jones; Julie Vogt; Manon Rivagorda; Mark T. Handley; Girish Mali; Tooba Quidwai; Dinesh C. Soares; Margaret Keighren; Lisa McKie; Richard L. Mort; Noor Gammoh; Amaya Garcia-Munoz; Tracey Davey; Matthieu Vermeren; D. Walsh; Peter S. Budd; Irene A. Aligianis; Eissa Faqeih; Alan J. Quigley; Ian J. Jackson; Yogesh Kulathu; Mandy Jackson; Richard R. Ribchester

During neurotransmission, synaptic vesicles undergo multiple rounds of exo-endocytosis, involving recycling and/or degradation of synaptic proteins. While ubiquitin signaling at synapses is essential for neural function, it has been assumed that synaptic proteostasis requires the ubiquitin-proteasome system (UPS). We demonstrate here that turnover of synaptic membrane proteins via the endolysosomal pathway is essential for synaptic function. In both human and mouse, hypomorphic mutations in the ubiquitin adaptor protein PLAA cause an infantile-lethal neurodysfunction syndrome with seizures. Resulting from perturbed endolysosomal degradation, Plaa mutant neurons accumulate K63-polyubiquitylated proteins and synaptic membrane proteins, disrupting synaptic vesicle recycling and neurotransmission. Through characterization of this neurological intracellular trafficking disorder, we establish the importance of ubiquitin-mediated endolysosomal trafficking at the synapse.


Mechanisms of Development | 2009

16-P011 Wdr35 is required for mammalian ciliogenesis and Hh responsiveness

Pleasantine Mill; Emma A. Hall; Margaret Keigren; Kirstie Lawson; Ian J. Jackson

A novel role for notch signalling in left–right determination through ciliary length control Susana Lopes, Raquel Lourenc o, Luis Pacheco, Nuno Moreno, Jill Kreiling, Leonor Saúde 1 Instituto de Medicina Molecular, Lisbon, Portugal 2 Instituto de Histologia e Biologia do Desenvolviment da Faculdade de Medicina de Lisboa, Lisbon, Portugal 3 Instituto Gulbenkian de Ciência, Oeiras, Portugal 4 Department of Molecular Biology, Cell Biology and Biochemistry, Brown University, Providence, United States


Mechanisms of Development | 2009

17-P041 Transcriptome analysis of FGF signalling in embryonic stem cells

Theodora Tzanavari; Alexei A. Sharov; Emma A. Hall; Yulan Piao; Nicola Drummond; Austin Smith; Minoru S.H. Ko; Tilo Kunath

also able to show that Sox3 could interact with Groucho directly. Using cell fractionation, the interacting factors could again be seen to affect each others subcellular distribution. Sox3 and Groucho both appear in the chromatin fraction when co-expressed. The transcriptional activation activity of Sox3 was repressed after coexpressing with Groucho. Using deletions of sox3 we have mapped the groucho interaction domain in the c-terminus. Together, these data suggest that Sox3 could function not only as a transcriptional activator but also as a repressor through interacting with the corepressor Groucho.


Mechanisms of Development | 2009

16-P019 A cell-based screen for genes involved in mammalian cilia formation and function

Emma A. Hall; Pleasantine Mill; Ian J. Jackson

Then they differentiate into ciliated cells by intercalating radially into the outer layer during mid neurulae stages. We show that dystroglycan (DG), a transmembrane receptor linking the extracellular matrix to the cytoskeleton, is expressed in cells of the inner layer. The mRNA and proteins are expressed when skin epithelialisation begins and disappeared at tail bud stage when the larval skin is fully differentiated suggesting DG unexplored roles in the specification and/or formation of this tissue. In order to study the functions of DG during skin formation, lossof-function experiments were performed using DG antisense morpholinos. Depletion of DG gives rise to a skin surface depleted in ciliated cells. In vitro and in vivo analyses of this phenotype show that ciliated cells precursors differentiate since they expressed alpha-tubulin. But they do not intercalate in the outer layer and do not undergo ciliogenesis. We propose that DG is required for ciliated cell intercalation during skin formation. The mechanisms implicated in this process are still under study.


Nature Genetics | 2010

Wt1 is required for cardiovascular progenitor cell formation through transcriptional control of Snail and E-cadherin

Ofelia M. Martínez-Estrada; Laura A. Lettice; Abdelkader Essafi; Juan Antonio Guadix; Joan Slight; Victor Velecela; Emma A. Hall; Judith Reichmann; Paul S. Devenney; Peter Hohenstein; Naoki Hosen; Robert E. Hill; Ramón Muñoz-Chápuli; Nicholas D. Hastie


Genes & Development | 2016

Mutations in genes encoding condensin complex proteins cause microcephaly through decatenation failure at mitosis

Carol-Anne Martin; Jennie E. Murray; Paula Carroll; Andrea Leitch; Karen J. Mackenzie; Mihail Halachev; Ahmed E. Fetit; Charlotte Keith; Louise S. Bicknell; Adeline Fluteau; Philippe Gautier; Emma A. Hall; Shelagh Joss; Gabriela Soares; João Silva; Michael B. Bober; Angela L. Duker; Carol A. Wise; Alan J. Quigley; Shubha R. Phadke; Andrew J. Wood; Paola Vagnarelli; Andrew P. Jackson

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Alan J. Quigley

Royal Hospital for Sick Children

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