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Dive into the research topics where Jacinta Caddy is active.

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Featured researches published by Jacinta Caddy.


Blood | 2009

Novel roles for erythroid Ankyrin-1 revealed through an ENU-induced null mouse mutant

Gerhard Rank; Rosemary Sutton; Vikki M. Marshall; Rachel J. Lundie; Jacinta Caddy; Tony Romeo; Kate M. Fernandez; Matthew P. McCormack; Brian M. Cooke; Simon J. Foote; Brendan S. Crabb; David J. Curtis; Douglas J. Hilton; Benjamin T. Kile; Stephen M. Jane

Insights into the role of ankyrin-1 (ANK-1) in the formation and stabilization of the red cell cytoskeleton have come from studies on the nb/nb mice, which carry hypomorphic alleles of Ank-1. Here, we revise several paradigms established in the nb/nb mice through analysis of an N-ethyl-N-nitrosourea (ENU)-induced Ank-1-null mouse. Mice homozygous for the Ank-1 mutation are profoundly anemic in utero and most die perinatally, indicating that Ank-1 plays a nonredundant role in erythroid development. The surviving pups exhibit features of severe hereditary spherocytosis (HS), with marked hemolysis, jaundice, compensatory extramedullary erythropoiesis, and tissue iron overload. Red cell membrane analysis reveals a complete loss of ANK-1 protein and a marked reduction in beta-spectrin. As a consequence, the red cells exhibit total disruption of cytoskeletal architecture and severely altered hemorheologic properties. Heterozygous mutant mice, which have wild-type levels of ANK-1 and spectrin in their RBC membranes and normal red cell survival and ultrastructure, exhibit profound resistance to malaria, which is not due to impaired parasite entry into RBC. These findings provide novel insights into the role of Ank-1, and define an ideal model for the study of HS and malarial resistance.


Oncogene | 2007

The tumour-suppressor Scribble dictates cell polarity during directed epithelial migration: regulation of Rho GTPase recruitment to the leading edge

Lukas E. Dow; Jeff S. Kauffman; Jacinta Caddy; A. S. Peterson; Stephen M. Jane; Sarah M. Russell; Patrick O. Humbert

Altered expression of human Scribble is associated with invasive epithelial cancers, however, its role in tumour development remains unclear. Mutations in Drosophila Scribble result in loss of polarity, overproliferation and 3D-tumourous overgrowth of epithelial cells. Using complementation studies in Drosophila we recently demonstrated that expression of human Scribble can also regulate polarity and restrict tissue overgrowth. Here, we have undertaken a detailed study of human Scribble function in the polarized mammary cell line, MCF10A. We show that although Scribble does not seem to be required for apical-basal polarity or proliferation control in MCF10A cells, Scribble is essential for the control of polarity associated with directed epithelial cell migration. Scribble-depleted MCF10A cells show defective in vitro wound closure and chemotactic movement. The cells at the wound edge fail to polarize, show reduced lamellipodia formation and impaired recruitment of Cdc42 and Rac1 to the leading edge. Furthermore, we show that this function is relevant in vivo as Scribble mutant mice show defective epidermal wound healing. This data identifies an essential role for mammalian Scribble in the regulation of the polarity specifically involved in directed epithelial migration.


Developmental Cell | 2010

Epidermal Wound Repair Is Regulated by the Planar Cell Polarity Signaling Pathway

Jacinta Caddy; Tomasz Wilanowski; Charbel Darido; Sebastian Dworkin; Stephen B. Ting; Quan Zhao; Gerhard Rank; Alana Auden; Seema Srivastava; Tony Papenfuss; Jennifer N. Murdoch; Patrick O. Humbert; Nidal Boulos; Thomas Weber; Jian Zuo; John M. Cunningham; Stephen M. Jane

The mammalian PCP pathway regulates diverse developmental processes requiring coordinated cellular movement, including neural tube closure and cochlear stereociliary orientation. Here, we show that epidermal wound repair is regulated by PCP signaling. Mice carrying mutant alleles of PCP genes Vangl2, Celsr1, PTK7, and Scrb1, and the transcription factor Grhl3, interact genetically, exhibiting failed wound healing, neural tube defects, and disordered cochlear polarity. Using phylogenetic analysis, ChIP, and gene expression in Grhl3(-)(/-) mice, we identified RhoGEF19, a homolog of a RhoA activator involved in PCP signaling in Xenopus, as a direct target of GRHL3. Knockdown of Grhl3 or RhoGEF19 in keratinocytes induced defects in actin polymerization, cellular polarity, and wound healing, and re-expression of RhoGEF19 rescued these defects in Grhl3-kd cells. These results define a role for Grhl3 in PCP signaling and broadly implicate this pathway in epidermal repair.


The EMBO Journal | 2008

Perturbed desmosomal cadherin expression in grainy head-like 1-null mice.

Tomasz Wilanowski; Jacinta Caddy; Stephen B. Ting; Nikki R. Hislop; Loretta Cerruti; Alana Auden; Lin-Lin Zhao; S Asquith; Sarah Ellis; Rodney Sinclair; John M. Cunningham; Stephen M. Jane

In Drosophila, the grainy head (grh) gene plays a range of key developmental roles through the regulation of members of the cadherin gene family. We now report that mice lacking the grh homologue grainy head‐like 1 (Grhl1) exhibit hair and skin phenotypes consistent with a reduction in expression of the genes encoding the desmosomal cadherin, desmoglein 1 (Dsg1). Grhl1‐null mice show an initial delay in coat growth, and older mice exhibit hair loss as a result of poor anchoring of the hair shaft in the follicle. The mice also develop palmoplantar keratoderma, analogous to humans with DSG1 mutations. Sequence analysis, DNA binding, and chromatin immunoprecipitation experiments demonstrate that the human and mouse Dsg1 promoters are direct targets of GRHL1. Ultrastructural analysis reveals reduced numbers of abnormal desmosomes in the interfollicular epidermis. These findings establish GRHL1 as an important regulator of the Dsg1 genes in the context of hair anchorage and epidermal differentiation, and suggest that cadherin family genes are key targets of the grainy head‐like genes across 700 million years of evolution.


Developmental Biology | 2011

The unique and cooperative roles of the Grainy head-like transcription factors in epidermal development reflect unexpected target gene specificity

Yeliz Boglev; Tomasz Wilanowski; Jacinta Caddy; Vishwas Parekh; Alana Auden; Charbel Darido; Nikki R. Hislop; Michael Cangkrama; Stephen B. Ting; Stephen M. Jane

The Grainy head-like 3 (Grhl3) gene encodes a transcription factor that plays essential roles in epidermal morphogenesis during embryonic development, with deficient mice exhibiting failed skin barrier formation, defective wound repair, and loss of eyelid fusion. Despite sharing significant sequence homology, overlapping expression patterns, and an identical core consensus DNA binding site, the other members of the Grhl family (Grhl1 and -2) fail to compensate for the loss of Grhl3 in these processes. Here, we have employed diverse genetic models, coupled with biochemical studies, to define the inter-relationships of the Grhl factors in epidermal development. We show that Grhl1 and Grhl3 have evolved complete functional independence, as evidenced by a lack of genetic interactions in embryos carrying combinations of targeted alleles of these genes. In contrast, compound heterozygous Grhl2/Grhl3 embryos displayed failed wound repair, and loss of a single Grhl2 allele in Grhl3-null embryos results in fully penetrant eyes open at birth. Expression of Grhl2 from the Grhl3 locus in homozygous knock-in mice corrects the wound repair defect, but these embryos still display a complete failure of skin barrier formation. This functional dissociation is due to unexpected differences in target gene specificity, as both GRHL2 and GRHL3 bind to and regulate expression of the wound repair gene Rho GEF 19, but regulation of the barrier forming gene, Transglutaminase 1 (TGase1), is unique to GRHL3. Our findings define the mechanisms underpinning the unique and cooperative roles of the Grhl genes in epidermal development.


Organogenesis | 2005

The epidermis of grhl3-null mice displays altered lipid processing and cellular hyperproliferation.

Stephen B. Ting; Jacinta Caddy; Tomasz Wilanowski; Alana Auden; John M. Cunningham; Peter M. Elias; Walter M. Holleran; Stephen M. Jane

The presence of an impermeable surface barrier is an essential homeostatic mechanism in almost all living organisms. We have recently described a novel gene that is critical for the developmental instruction and repair of the integument in mammals. This gene, Grainy head-like 3 (Grhl3) is a member of a large family of transcription factors that are homologs of the Drosophila developmental gene grainy head (grh). Mice lacking Grhl3 fail to form an adequate skin barrier, and die at birth due to dehydration. These animals are also unable to repair the epidermis, exhibiting failed wound healing in both fetal and adult stages of development. These defects are due, in part, to diminished expression of a Grhl3 target gene, Transglutaminase 1 (TGase 1), which encodes a key enzyme involved in cross-linking of epidermal structural proteins and lipids into the cornified envelope (CE). Remarkably, the Drosophila grh gene plays an analogous role, regulating enzymes involved in the generation of quinones, which are essential for cross-linking structural components of the fly epidermis. In an extension of our initial analyses, we focus this report on additional defects observed in the Grhl3-null epidermis, namely defective extracellular lipid processing, altered lamellar lipid architecture and cellular hyperproliferation. These abnormalities suggest that Grhl3 plays diverse mechanistic roles in maintaining homeostasis in the skin.


Mechanisms of Development | 2014

Grainyhead-like 3 regulation of endothelin-1 in the pharyngeal endoderm is critical for growth and development of the craniofacial skeleton

Sebastian Dworkin; Johanna E Simkin; Charbel Darido; Darren D. Partridge; Smitha R. Georgy; Jacinta Caddy; Tomasz Wilanowski; Graham J. Lieschke; Karen Doggett; Joan K. Heath; Stephen M. Jane

Craniofacial development is a highly conserved process that requires complex interactions between neural crest cells (NCCs) and pharyngeal tissues derived from all three germ layers. Signals emanating from the pharyngeal endoderm drive differentiation of NCCs into craniofacial cartilage, and disruption of this process underpins several human craniofacial defects (CFD). Here, we demonstrate that morpholino (MO)-mediated knockdown in zebrafish of the highly conserved transcription factor grainyhead-like 3 (grhl3), which is selectively expressed in the pharyngeal endoderm, leads to severe hypoplasia of the lower jaw cartilages. Phylogenetic analysis of conserved grhl-binding sites in gene regulatory regions identified endothelin-1 (edn1) as a putative direct grhl3 target gene, and this was confirmed by chromatin precipitation (ChIP) assays in zebrafish embryos. Injection of sub-phenotypic concentrations of MOs targeting both grhl3 and edn1 induced jaw abnormalities, and injection of edn1 mRNA into grhl3-morphants rescued both pharyngeal expression of the downstream effectors of edn1, and jaw cartilage formation. This study sheds new light on the role of endodermal endothelin-1 in vertebrate jaw development, and highlights potential new genetic defects that could underpin human CFD.


International Journal of Developmental Neuroscience | 2012

Regional neural tube closure defined by the Grainy head-like transcription factors

Yeliz Boglev; Sebastian Dworkin; Tomasz Wilanowski; Jacinta Caddy; Michael Cangkrama; Alana Auden; Stephen B. Ting; Stephen M. Jane

neuron. Specifically, I will show that the plane of cell division is non-random in GCPs, that asymmetric segregation of -catenin and N-cadherin is correlated with increased progenitor cell differentiation with increasing age and finally that the instance of asymmetric segregation of proteins can be changed by manipulating the level of Sonic hedgehog signaling, a major mitogen for GCP proliferation.


Science | 2005

A Homolog of Drosophila grainy head Is Essential for Epidermal Integrity in Mice

Stephen B. Ting; Jacinta Caddy; Nikki R. Hislop; Tomasz Wilanowski; Alana Auden; Lin-Lin Zhao; Sarah Ellis; Pritinder Kaur; Yoshikazu Uchida; Walter M. Holleran; Peter M. Elias; John M. Cunningham; Stephen M. Jane


Gene Expression Patterns | 2006

Spatial and temporal expression of the Grainyhead-like transcription factor family during murine development.

Alana Auden; Jacinta Caddy; Tomasz Wilanowski; Stephen B. Ting; John M. Cunningham; Stephen M. Jane

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Alana Auden

Royal Melbourne Hospital

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Tomasz Wilanowski

Nencki Institute of Experimental Biology

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John M. Cunningham

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

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Patrick O. Humbert

Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre

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Gerhard Rank

Royal Melbourne Hospital

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Sarah M. Russell

Swinburne University of Technology

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