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Dive into the research topics where Erica R. Eichers is active.

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Featured researches published by Erica R. Eichers.


Nature | 2003

Basal body dysfunction is a likely cause of pleiotropic Bardet–Biedl syndrome

Stephen J. Ansley; Jose L. Badano; Oliver E. Blacque; Josephine Hill; Bethan E. Hoskins; Carmen C. Leitch; Jun Chul Kim; Alison Ross; Erica R. Eichers; Tanya M. Teslovich; Allan K. Mah; Robert C. Johnsen; John C. Cavender; Richard Alan Lewis; Michel R. Leroux; Philip L. Beales; Nicholas Katsanis

Bardet–Biedl syndrome (BBS) is a genetically heterogeneous disorder characterized primarily by retinal dystrophy, obesity, polydactyly, renal malformations and learning disabilities. Although five BBS genes have been cloned, the molecular basis of this syndrome remains elusive. Here we show that BBS is probably caused by a defect at the basal body of ciliated cells. We have cloned a new BBS gene, BBS8, which encodes a protein with a prokaryotic domain, pilF, involved in pilus formation and twitching mobility. In one family, a homozygous null BBS8 mutation leads to BBS with randomization of left–right body axis symmetry, a known defect of the nodal cilium. We have also found that BBS8 localizes specifically to ciliated structures, such as the connecting cilium of the retina and columnar epithelial cells in the lung. In cells, BBS8 localizes to centrosomes and basal bodies and interacts with PCM1, a protein probably involved in ciliogenesis. Finally, we demonstrate that all available Caenorhabditis elegans BBS homologues are expressed exclusively in ciliated neurons, and contain regulatory elements for RFX, a transcription factor that modulates the expression of genes associated with ciliogenesis and intraflagellar transport.


Nature Genetics | 2004

Loss of BBS proteins causes anosmia in humans and defects in olfactory cilia structure and function in the mouse

Heather M. Kulaga; Carmen C. Leitch; Erica R. Eichers; Jose L. Badano; Alysa Lesemann; Bethan E. Hoskins; James R. Lupski; Philip L. Beales; Randall R. Reed; Nicholas Katsanis

Defects in cilia are associated with several human disorders, including Kartagener syndrome, polycystic kidney disease, nephronophthisis and hydrocephalus. We proposed that the pleiotropic phenotype of Bardet-Biedl syndrome (BBS), which encompasses retinal degeneration, truncal obesity, renal and limb malformations and developmental delay, is due to dysfunction of basal bodies and cilia. Here we show that individuals with BBS have partial or complete anosmia. To test whether this phenotype is caused by ciliary defects of olfactory sensory neurons, we examined mice with deletions of Bbs1 or Bbs4. Loss of function of either BBS protein affected the olfactory, but not the respiratory, epithelium, causing severe reduction of the ciliated border, disorganization of the dendritic microtubule network and trapping of olfactory ciliary proteins in dendrites and cell bodies. Our data indicate that BBS proteins have a role in the microtubule organization of mammalian ciliated cells and that anosmia might be a useful determinant of other pleiotropic disorders with a suspected ciliary involvement.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

Inhibition of neural crest migration underlies craniofacial dysmorphology and Hirschsprung's disease in Bardet–Biedl syndrome

Jonathan L. Tobin; Matt Di Franco; Erica R. Eichers; Helen May-Simera; Monica Garcia; Jiong Yan; Robyn J. Quinlan; Monica J. Justice; Raoul C. M. Hennekam; James Briscoe; Masazumi Tada; Roberto Mayor; Alan J. Burns; James R. Lupski; Peter Hammond; Philip L. Beales

Facial recognition is central to the diagnosis of many syndromes, and craniofacial patterns may reflect common etiologies. In the pleiotropic Bardet–Biedl syndrome (BBS), a primary ciliopathy with intraflagellar transport dysfunction, patients have a characteristic facial “gestalt” that dysmorphologists have found difficult to characterize. Here, we use dense surface modeling (DSM) to reveal that BBS patients and mouse mutants have mid-facial defects involving homologous neural crest-derived structures shared by zebrafish morphants. These defects of the craniofacial (CF) skeleton arise from aberrant cranial neural crest cell (NCC) migration. These effects are not confined to the craniofacial region, but vagal-derived NCCs fail to populate the enteric nervous system, culminating in disordered gut motility. Furthermore, morphants display hallmarks of disrupted Sonic Hedgehog (Shh) signaling from which NCCs take positional cues. We propose a model whereby Bbs proteins modulate NCC migration, contributing to craniofacial morphogenesis and development of the enteric nervous system. These migration defects also explain the association of Hirschsprungs disease (HD) with BBS. Moreover, this is a previously undescribed method of using characterization of facial dysmorphology as a basis for investigating the pathomechanism of CF development in dysmorphic syndromes.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2002

BBS4 Is a Minor Contributor to Bardet-Biedl Syndrome and May Also Participate in Triallelic Inheritance

Nicholas Katsanis; Erica R. Eichers; Stephen J. Ansley; Richard Alan Lewis; Hülya Kayserili; Bethan E. Hoskins; Peter J. Scambler; Philip L. Beales; James R. Lupski

Bardet-Biedl syndrome (BBS) is an uncommon multisystemic disorder characterized primarily by retinal dystrophy, obesity, polydactyly, and renal dysfunction. BBS has been modeled historically as an autosomal recessive trait, under which premise six independent BBS loci (BBS1-BBS6) have been mapped in the human genome. However, extended mutational analyses of BBS2 and BBS6, the first two BBS genes cloned, suggest that BBS exhibits a more complex pattern of inheritance, in which three mutations at two loci simultaneously are necessary and sufficient in some families to manifest the phenotype. We evaluated the spectrum of mutations in the recently identified BBS4 gene with a combination of haplotype analysis and mutation screening on a multiethnic cohort of 177 families. Consistent with predictions from previous genetic analyses, our data suggest that mutations in BBS4 contribute to BBS in <3% of affected families. Furthermore, integrated mutational data from all three currently cloned BBS genes raise the possibility that BBS4 may participate in triallelic inheritance with BBS2 and BBS1, but not the other known loci. Establishment of the loci pairing in triallelism is likely to be important for the elucidation of the functional relationships among the different BBS proteins.


Human Genetics | 2006

Phenotypic characterization of Bbs4 null mice reveals age-dependent penetrance and variable expressivity.

Erica R. Eichers; Muhammad M. Abd-El-Barr; Richard Paylor; Richard Alan Lewis; Weimin Bi; Xiaodi Lin; Thomas P. Meehan; David W. Stockton; S. M. Wu; Elizabeth A. Lindsay; Monica J. Justice; Philip L. Beales; Nicholas Katsanis; James R. Lupski

Bardet-Biedl syndrome (BBS) is a rare oligogenic disorder exhibiting both clinical and genetic heterogeneity. Although the BBS phenotype is variable both between and within families, the syndrome is characterized by the hallmarks of developmental and learning difficulties, post-axial polydactylia, obesity, hypogenitalism, renal abnormalities, retinal dystrophy, and several less frequently observed features. Eleven genes mutated in BBS patients have been identified, and more are expected to exist, since about 20–30% of all families cannot be explained by the known loci. To investigate the etiopathogenesis of BBS, we created a mouse null for one of the murine homologues, Bbs4, to assess the contribution of one gene to the pleiotropic murine Bbs phenotype. Bbs4 null mice, although initially runted compared to their littermates, ultimately become obese in a gender-dependent manner, females earlier and with more severity than males. Blood chemistry tests indicated abnormal lipid profiles, signs of liver dysfunction, and elevated insulin and leptin levels reminiscent of metabolic syndrome. As in patients with BBS, we found age-dependent retinal dystrophy. Behavioral assessment revealed that mutant mice displayed more anxiety-related responses and reduced social dominance. We noted the rare occurrence of birth defects, including neural tube defects and hydrometrocolpos, in the null mice. Evaluations of these null mice have uncovered phenotypic features with age-dependent penetrance and variable expressivity, partially recapitulating the human BBS phenotype.


Vision Research | 2007

Impaired photoreceptor protein transport and synaptic transmission in a mouse model of Bardet-Biedl syndrome.

Muhammad M. Abd-El-Barr; Kristen Sykoudis; Sara Andrabi; Erica R. Eichers; Mark E. Pennesi; Perciliz L. Tan; John H. Wilson; Nicholas Katsanis; James R. Lupski; S. M. Wu

Bardet-Biedl syndrome (BBS) is an oligogenic syndrome whose manifestations include retinal degeneration, renal abnormalities, obesity and polydactylia. Evidence suggests that the main etiopathophysiology of this syndrome is impaired intraflagellar transport (IFT). In this study, we study the Bbs4-null mouse and investigate photoreceptor structure and function after loss of this gene. We find that Bbs4-null mice have defects in the transport of phototransduction proteins from the inner segments to the outer segments, before signs of cell death. Additionally, we show defects in synaptic transmission from the photoreceptors to secondary neurons of the visual system, demonstrating multiple functions for BBS4 in photoreceptors.


Annals of Medicine | 2004

Triallelic inheritance: a bridge between Mendelian and multifactorial traits

Erica R. Eichers; Richard Alan Lewis; Nicholas Katsanis; James R. Lupski

The increasing identification of disease genes is revealing a growing number of traits that fail to conform to traditional Mendelian paradigms, thereby creating new challenges to both genetic investigators and clinicians. Bardet‐Biedl syndrome (BBS) is one such disorder that has helped to define ‘oligogenic’ inheritance, a term that implies that some diseases are not inherited as simple single‐gene Mendelian disorders and yet are not classic complex traits, but rather fit a model in which mutations in a small number of genes may interact genetically to manifest the phenotype. BBS is a pleiotropic disorder characterized by post‐natal obesity, post‐axial polydactyly, and progressive retinal dystrophy. Eight BBS loci have been identified to date and six of these genes have been cloned. Mutation analysis of these BBS genes in a cohort of patients has led to the description of the novel phenomenon of ‘triallelic inheritance,’ wherein families were identified in which three mutations from genes at two different BBS loci segregate with expression of the disease. Modeling the cooperative ability of alleles of different genes at distinct loci to give rise to a particular phenotype will facilitate the understanding of complex multifactorial and polygenic traits.


Science | 2001

Triallelic inheritance in Bardet-Biedl syndrome, a Mendelian recessive disorder

Nicholas Katsanis; Stephen J. Ansley; Jose L. Badano; Erica R. Eichers; Richard Alan Lewis; Bethan E. Hoskins; Peter J. Scambler; William S. Davidson; Philip L. Beales; James R. Lupski


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2002

Newfoundland rod-cone dystrophy, an early-onset retinal dystrophy, is caused by splice-junction mutations in RLBP1.

Erica R. Eichers; Jane Green; David W. Stockton; Christopher S. Jackman; James Whelan; J. Arch McNamara; Gordon J. Johnson; James R. Lupski; Nicholas Katsanis


In: EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF HUMAN GENETICS. (pp. 67 - 67). NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP (2002) | 2002

Triallelic inheritance in Bardet-Biedl syndrome, a Mendelian recessive disorder.

Nicholas Katsanis; Stephen J. Ansley; Jose L. Badano; Erica R. Eichers; Ra Lewis; Bethan E. Hoskins; Peter J. Scambler; William S. Davidson; Philip L. Beales; Lupski

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James R. Lupski

Boston Children's Hospital

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Alison Ross

University College London

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