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Dive into the research topics where Ian Smyth is active.

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Featured researches published by Ian Smyth.


Cell | 1996

Mutations of the Human Homolog of Drosophila patched in the Nevoid Basal Cell Carcinoma Syndrome

Heidi Hahn; Carol Wicking; Peter G. Zaphiropoulos; Mae R. Gailani; Susan Shanley; Abirami Chidambaram; Igor Vorechovsky; Erika Holmberg; Anne Birgitte Undén; Susan Gillies; Kylie Negus; Ian Smyth; Carolyn Pressman; David J. Leffell; Bernard Gerrard; Alisa M. Goldstein; Michael Dean; Rune Toftgård; Georgia Chenevix-Trench; Brandon J. Wainwright; Allen E. Bale

The nevoid basal cell carcinoma syndrome (NBCCS) is an autosomal dominant disorder characterized by multiple basal cell carcinomas (BCCs), pits of the palms and soles, jaw keratocysts, a variety of other tumors, and developmental abnormalities. NBCCS maps to chromosome 9q22.3. Familial and sporadic BCCs display loss of heterozygosity in this region, consistent with the gene being a tumor suppressor. A human sequence (PTC) with strong homology to the Drosophila segment polarity gene, patched, was isolated from a YAC and cosmid contig of the NBCCS region. Mutation analysis revealed alterations of PTC in NBCCS patients and in related tumors. We propose that a reduction in expression of the patched gene can lead to the developmental abnormalities observed in the syndrome and that complete loss of patched function contributes to transformation of certain cell types.


Cell | 2013

Genome-wide Generation and Systematic Phenotyping of Knockout Mice Reveals New Roles for Many Genes

Jacqueline K. White; Anna-Karin Gerdin; Natasha A. Karp; Edward Ryder; Marija Buljan; James Bussell; Jennifer Salisbury; Simon Clare; Neil J. Ingham; Christine Podrini; Richard Houghton; Jeanne Estabel; Joanna Bottomley; David Melvin; David Sunter; Niels C. Adams; David Tannahill; Darren W. Logan; Daniel G. MacArthur; Jonathan Flint; Vinit B. Mahajan; Stephen H. Tsang; Ian Smyth; Fiona M. Watt; William C. Skarnes; Gordon Dougan; David J. Adams; Ramiro Ramirez-Solis; Allan Bradley; Karen P. Steel

Summary Mutations in whole organisms are powerful ways of interrogating gene function in a realistic context. We describe a program, the Sanger Institute Mouse Genetics Project, that provides a step toward the aim of knocking out all genes and screening each line for a broad range of traits. We found that hitherto unpublished genes were as likely to reveal phenotypes as known genes, suggesting that novel genes represent a rich resource for investigating the molecular basis of disease. We found many unexpected phenotypes detected only because we screened for them, emphasizing the value of screening all mutants for a wide range of traits. Haploinsufficiency and pleiotropy were both surprisingly common. Forty-two percent of genes were essential for viability, and these were less likely to have a paralog and more likely to contribute to a protein complex than other genes. Phenotypic data and more than 900 mutants are openly available for further analysis. PaperClip


Oncogene | 1999

The hedgehog signalling pathway in tumorigenesis and development.

Carol Wicking; Ian Smyth; Allen E. Bale

The hedgehog signalling pathway is responsible for the embryonic patterning of a range of tissues, and it is now known that dysregulation of this pathway can result in the formation of several tumour types. This cascade is regulated at the cell surface by the opposing actions of the patched and smoothened molecules which together form a receptor complex for hedgehog. The discovery that inactivation of the human patched gene is responsible for familial and sporadic forms of basal cell carcinoma firmly established a role for dysregulation of hedgehog signalling in tumorigenesis. Other key members of this pathway have also been shown to be involved in tumour formation, as have more distal downstream targets of hedgehog signalling. Since it appears that tumorigenesis results from constitutive activation of hedgehog responsive genes, the identification of novel downstream targets of hedgehog signalling in given cell types is likely to increase our understanding of the molecular processes underlying tumour formation.


Nature Medicine | 2006

Human sebaceous tumors harbor inactivating mutations in LEF1

Hikaru Takeda; Stephen Lyle; Alexander J. Lazar; Christos C. Zouboulis; Ian Smyth; Fiona M. Watt

We found that one-third of human sebaceous tumors examined had double-nucleotide substitutions in the same LEF1 allele, irrespective of DNA mismatch repair status. The mutations impaired both LEF1 binding to β-catenin and transcriptional activation, and are the first tumor-associated mutations that inactivate Wnt signaling. Mutant LEF1 not only inhibited expression of β-catenin target genes but also stimulated expression of sebocyte markers, suggesting that it may determine the differentiated characteristics of sebaceous tumors.


Nature Genetics | 2005

Identification of a new gene mutated in Fraser syndrome and mouse myelencephalic blebs

Shalini Jadeja; Ian Smyth; Jolanta E. Pitera; Martin S. Taylor; Mieke M. van Haelst; Elizabeth Bentley; Lm McGregor; Jason Hopkins; Georges Chalepakis; Nicole Philip; Antonio Perez Aytes; Fiona M. Watt; S Darling; Ian J. Jackson; Adrian S. Woolf; Peter J. Scambler

Fraser syndrome is a recessive, multisystem disorder presenting with cryptophthalmos, syndactyly and renal defects and associated with loss-of-function mutations of the extracellular matrix protein FRAS1. Fras1 mutant mice have a blebbed phenotype characterized by intrauterine epithelial fragility generating serous and, later, hemorrhagic blisters. The myelencephalic blebs (my) strain has a similar phenotype. We mapped my to Frem2, a gene related to Fras1 and Frem1, and showed that a Frem2 gene-trap mutation was allelic to my. Expression of Frem2 in adult kidneys correlated with cyst formation in my homozygotes, indicating that the gene is required for maintaining the differentiated state of renal epithelia. Two individuals with Fraser syndrome were homozygous with respect to the same missense mutation of FREM2, confirming genetic heterogeneity. This is the only missense mutation reported in any blebbing mutant or individual with Fraser syndrome, suggesting that calcium binding in the CALXβ-cadherin motif is important for normal functioning of FREM2.


Developmental Cell | 2014

Global quantification of tissue dynamics in the developing mouse kidney.

Kieran M. Short; Alexander N. Combes; James G. Lefevre; Adler Ju; Kylie Georgas; Timothy O. Lamberton; Oliver Cairncross; Bree Rumballe; Andrew P. McMahon; Nicholas A. Hamilton; Ian Smyth; Melissa H. Little

Although kidneys of equal size can vary 10-fold in nephron number at birth, discovering what regulates such variation has been hampered by a lack of quantitative parameters defining kidney development. Here we report a comprehensive, quantitative, multiscale analysis of mammalian kidney development in which we measure changes in cell number, compartment volumes, and cellular dynamics across the entirety of organogenesis, focusing on two key nephrogenic progenitor populations: the ureteric epithelium and the cap mesenchyme. In doing so, we describe a discontinuous developmental program governed by dynamic changes in interactions between these key cellular populations occurring within a previously unappreciated structurally stereotypic organ architecture. We also illustrate the application of this approach to the detection of a subtle mutant phenotype. This baseline program of kidney morphogenesis provides a framework for assessing genetic and environmental developmental perturbation and will serve as a gold standard for the analysis of other organs.


PLOS Genetics | 2009

Palmitoylation Regulates Epidermal Homeostasis and Hair Follicle Differentiation

Pleasantine Mill; Angela Weishan Lee; Yuko Fukata; Ryouhei Tsutsumi; Masaki Fukata; Margaret Keighren; Rebecca M. Porter; Lisa McKie; Ian Smyth; Ian J. Jackson

Palmitoylation is a key post-translational modification mediated by a family of DHHC-containing palmitoyl acyl-transferases (PATs). Unlike other lipid modifications, palmitoylation is reversible and thus often regulates dynamic protein interactions. We find that the mouse hair loss mutant, depilated, (dep) is due to a single amino acid deletion in the PAT, Zdhhc21, resulting in protein mislocalization and loss of palmitoylation activity. We examined expression of Zdhhc21 protein in skin and find it restricted to specific hair lineages. Loss of Zdhhc21 function results in delayed hair shaft differentiation, at the site of expression of the gene, but also leads to hyperplasia of the interfollicular epidermis (IFE) and sebaceous glands, distant from the expression site. The specific delay in follicle differentiation is associated with attenuated anagen propagation and is reflected by decreased levels of Lef1, nuclear β-catenin, and Foxn1 in hair shaft progenitors. In the thickened basal compartment of mutant IFE, phospho-ERK and cell proliferation are increased, suggesting increased signaling through EGFR or integrin-related receptors, with a parallel reduction in expression of the key differentiation factor Gata3. We show that the Src-family kinase, Fyn, involved in keratinocyte differentiation, is a direct palmitoylation target of Zdhhc21 and is mislocalized in mutant follicles. This study is the first to demonstrate a key role for palmitoylation in regulating developmental signals in mammalian tissue homeostasis.


PLOS Genetics | 2011

Heterozygous mutations of FREM1 are associated with an increased risk of isolated metopic craniosynostosis in humans and mice

Lisenka E.L.M. Vissers; Timothy C. Cox; A. Murat Maga; Kieran M. Short; Fenny Wiradjaja; Irene M. Janssen; Fernanda Sarquis Jehee; Débora Romeo Bertola; Jia Liu; Garima Yagnik; Kiyotoshi Sekiguchi; Daiji Kiyozumi; Hans van Bokhoven; Carlo Marcelis; Michael L. Cunningham; Peter Anderson; Simeon A. Boyadjiev; Maria Rita Passos-Bueno; Joris A. Veltman; Ian Smyth; Michael F. Buckley; Tony Roscioli

The premature fusion of the paired frontal bones results in metopic craniosynostosis (MC) and gives rise to the clinical phenotype of trigonocephaly. Deletions of chromosome 9p22.3 are well described as a cause of MC with variably penetrant midface hypoplasia. In order to identify the gene responsible for the trigonocephaly component of the 9p22.3 syndrome, a cohort of 109 patients were assessed by high-resolution arrays and MLPA for copy number variations (CNVs) involving 9p22. Five CNVs involving FREM1, all of which were de novo variants, were identified by array-based analyses. The remaining 104 patients with MC were then subjected to targeted FREM1 gene re-sequencing, which identified 3 further mutant alleles, one of which was de novo. Consistent with a pathogenic role, mouse Frem1 mRNA and protein expression was demonstrated in the metopic suture as well as in the pericranium and dura mater. Micro-computed tomography based analyses of the mouse posterior frontal (PF) suture, the human metopic suture equivalent, revealed advanced fusion in all mice homozygous for either of two different Frem1 mutant alleles, while heterozygotes exhibited variably penetrant PF suture anomalies. Gene dosage-related penetrance of midfacial hypoplasia was also evident in the Frem1 mutants. These data suggest that CNVs and mutations involving FREM1 can be identified in a significant percentage of people with MC with or without midface hypoplasia. Furthermore, we present Frem1 mutant mice as the first bona fide mouse model of human metopic craniosynostosis and a new model for midfacial hypoplasia.


Development | 2013

Spatial mapping and quantification of developmental branching morphogenesis

Kieran M. Short; Mark Hodson; Ian Smyth

Branching morphogenesis is a fundamental developmental mechanism that shapes the formation of many organs. The complex three-dimensional shapes derived by this process reflect equally complex genetic interactions between branching epithelia and their surrounding mesenchyme. Despite the importance of this process to normal adult organ function, analysis of branching has been stymied by the absence of a bespoke method to quantify accurately the complex spatial datasets that describe it. As a consequence, although many developmentally important genes are proposed to influence branching morphogenesis, we have no way of objectively assessing their individual contributions to this process. We report the development of a method for accurately quantifying many aspects of branching morphogenesis and we demonstrate its application to the study of organ development. As proof of principle we have employed this approach to analyse the developing mouse lung and kidney, describing the spatial characteristics of the branching ureteric bud and pulmonary epithelia. To demonstrate further its capacity to profile unrecognised genetic contributions to organ development, we examine Tgfb2 mutant kidneys, identifying elements of both developmental delay and specific spatial dysmorphology caused by haplo-insufficiency for this gene. This technical advance provides a crucial resource that will enable rigorous characterisation of the genetic and environmental factors that regulate this essential and evolutionarily conserved developmental mechanism.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Hox10 genes function in kidney development in the differentiation and integration of the cortical stroma

Alisha R. Yallowitz; Steven M. Hrycaj; Kieran M. Short; Ian Smyth; Deneen M. Wellik

Organogenesis requires the differentiation and integration of distinct populations of cells to form a functional organ. In the kidney, reciprocal interactions between the ureter and the nephrogenic mesenchyme are required for organ formation. Additionally, the differentiation and integration of stromal cells are also necessary for the proper development of this organ. Much remains to be understood regarding the origin of cortical stromal cells and the pathways involved in their formation and function. By generating triple mutants in the Hox10 paralogous group genes, we demonstrate that Hox10 genes play a critical role in the developing kidney. Careful examination of control kidneys show that Foxd1-expressing stromal precursor cells are first observed in a cap-like pattern anterior to the metanephric mesenchyme and these cells subsequently integrate posteriorly into the kidney periphery as development proceeds. While the initial cap-like pattern of Foxd1-expressing cortical stromal cells is unaffected in Hox10 mutants, these cells fail to become properly integrated into the kidney, and do not differentiate to form the kidney capsule. Consistent with loss of cortical stromal cell function, Hox10 mutant kidneys display reduced and aberrant ureter branching, decreased nephrogenesis. These data therefore provide critical novel insights into the cellular and genetic mechanisms governing cortical cell development during kidney organogenesis. These results, combined with previous evidence demonstrating that Hox11 genes are necessary for patterning the metanephric mesenchyme, support a model whereby distinct populations in the nephrogenic cord are regulated by unique Hox codes, and that differential Hox function along the AP axis of the nephrogenic cord is critical for the differentiation and integration of these cell types during kidney organogenesis.

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Carol Wicking

University of Queensland

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Tia DiTommaso

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Benjamin T. Kile

Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research

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