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Dive into the research topics where Joel L. Rosenbaum is active.

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Featured researches published by Joel L. Rosenbaum.


Current Biology | 2002

Polycystin-2 localizes to kidney cilia and the ciliary level is elevated in orpk mice with polycystic kidney disease

Gregory J. Pazour; Jovenal T. San Agustin; John A. Follit; Joel L. Rosenbaum; George B. Witman

We thank Dr J. Lawrence and members of her laboratory for microscope time and assistance, Dr P. Furcinitti for assistance, and Drs Y. Cai and S. Somlo for the YCC2 antibody and for critically reading this manuscript. This work was supported by NIH GM60992 (GJP), GM30626 (GBW), GM14642 (JLR), and by the Robert W. Booth Fund at the Greater Worcester Community Foundation (GBW).


Journal of Cell Biology | 2002

The intraflagellar transport protein, IFT88, is essential for vertebrate photoreceptor assembly and maintenance

Gregory J. Pazour; Sheila A. Baker; James A. Deane; Douglas G. Cole; Bethany L. Dickert; Joel L. Rosenbaum; George B. Witman; Joseph C. Besharse

Approximately 10% of the photoreceptor outer segment (OS) is turned over each day, requiring large amounts of lipid and protein to be moved from the inner segment to the OS. Defects in intraphotoreceptor transport can lead to retinal degeneration and blindness. The transport mechanisms are unknown, but because the OS is a modified cilium, intraflagellar transport (IFT) is a candidate mechanism. IFT involves movement of large protein complexes along ciliary microtubules and is required for assembly and maintenance of cilia. We show that IFT particle proteins are localized to photoreceptor connecting cilia. We further find that mice with a mutation in the IFT particle protein gene, Tg737/IFT88, have abnormal OS development and retinal degeneration. Thus, IFT is important for assembly and maintenance of the vertebrate OS.


Current Biology | 2001

Localization of intraflagellar transport protein IFT52 identifies basal body transitional fibers as the docking site for IFT particles

James A. Deane; Douglas G. Cole; E. Scott Seeley; Dennis R. Diener; Joel L. Rosenbaum

Intraflagellar transport (IFT) is a motility in which particles composed of at least 17 polypeptides move underneath the flagellar membrane. Anterograde (outward) and retrograde (inward) movements of these IFT particles are mediated by FLA10 kinesin-II and cytoplasmic dynein DHC1b, respectively. Mutations affecting IFT particle polypeptides or motors result in the inability to assemble flagella. IFT particles and the motors moving them are located principally around the basal bodies as well as in the flagella. Here, we clone the cDNA encoding one of the IFT particle proteins, IFT52, and show by immunofluorescence that while some IFT52 is in the flagella, the majority is found in two horseshoe-shaped rings around the basal bodies. Immunoelectron microscopy indicates that IFT52 is associated with the periphery of the transitional fibers, which extend from the distal portion of the basal body to the cell membrane and demarcate the entrance to the flagellar compartment. This localization suggests that the transitional fibers form a docking complex for the IFT particles destined for the flagellum. Finally, the flagellaless mutant bld1 completely lacks IFT52 due to a deletion in the gene encoding IFT52.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2001

Intraflagellar transport balances continuous turnover of outer doublet microtubules: implications for flagellar length control

Wallace F. Marshall; Joel L. Rosenbaum

A central question in cell biology is how cells determine the size of their organelles. Flagellar length control is a convenient system for studying organelle size regulation. Mechanistic models proposed for flagellar length regulation have been constrained by the assumption that flagella are static structures once they are assembled. However, recent work has shown that flagella are dynamic and are constantly turning over. We have determined that this turnover occurs at the flagellar tips, and that the assembly portion of the turnover is mediated by intraflagellar transport (IFT). Blocking IFT inhibits the incorporation of tubulin at the flagellar tips and causes the flagella to resorb. These results lead to a simple steady-state model for flagellar length regulation by which a balance of assembly and disassembly can effectively regulate flagellar length.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2004

Intraflagellar transport (IFT) cargo IFT transports flagellar precursors to the tip and turnover products to the cell body

Hongmin Qin; Dennis R. Diener; Stefan Geimer; Douglas G. Cole; Joel L. Rosenbaum

Intraflagellar transport (IFT) is the bidirectional movement of multisubunit protein particles along axonemal microtubules and is required for assembly and maintenance of eukaryotic flagella and cilia. One posited role of IFT is to transport flagellar precursors to the flagellar tip for assembly. Here, we examine radial spokes, axonemal subunits consisting of 22 polypeptides, as potential cargo for IFT. Radial spokes were found to be partially assembled in the cell body, before being transported to the flagellar tip by anterograde IFT. Fully assembled radial spokes, detached from axonemal microtubules during flagellar breakdown or turnover, are removed from flagella by retrograde IFT. Interactions between IFT particles, motors, radial spokes, and other axonemal proteins were verified by coimmunoprecipitation of these proteins from the soluble fraction of Chlamydomonas flagella. These studies indicate that one of the main roles of IFT in flagellar assembly and maintenance is to transport axonemal proteins in and out of the flagellum.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2010

CEP290 tethers flagellar transition zone microtubules to the membrane and regulates flagellar protein content

Branch Craige; Che-Chia Tsao; Dennis R. Diener; Yuqing Hou; Karl-Ferdinand Lechtreck; Joel L. Rosenbaum; George B. Witman

Entry and exit of proteins into flagella is gauged by CEP290 in the transition zone.


Trends in Cell Biology | 2002

Intraflagellar transport and cilia-dependent diseases

Gregory J. Pazour; Joel L. Rosenbaum

Intraflagellar transport involves the movement of large protein particles along ciliary microtubules and is required for the assembly and maintenance of eukaryotic cilia and flagella. Intraflagellar-transport defects in the mouse cause a range of diseases including polycystic kidney disease, retinal degeneration and the laterality abnormality situs inversus, highlighting the important role that motile, sensory and primary cilia play in vertebrates.


Current Biology | 2001

An autosomal recessive polycystic kidney disease gene homolog is involved in intraflagellar transport in C. elegans ciliated sensory neurons

Hongmin Qin; Joel L. Rosenbaum; Maureen M. Barr

In this report, we show that the Caenorhabditis elegans gene osm-5 is homologous to the Chlamydomonas gene IFT88 and the mouse autosomal recessive polycystic kidney disease (ARPKD) gene, Tg737. The function of this ARPKD gene may be evolutionarily conserved: mutations result in defective ciliogenesis in worms [1], algae [2], and mice [2, 3]. Intraflagellar transport (IFT) is essential for the development and maintenance of motile and sensory cilia [4]. The biochemically isolated IFT particle from Chlamydomonas flagella is composed of 16 polypeptides in one of two Complexes (A and B) [5, 6] whose movement is powered by kinesin II (anterograde) and cytoplasmic dynein (retrograde) [7-9]. We demonstrate that OSM-5 (a Complex B polypeptide), DAF-10 and CHE-11 (two Complex A polypeptides), and CHE-2 [10], a previously uncategorized IFT polypeptide, all move at the same rate in C. elegans sensory cilia. In the absence of osm-5, the C. elegans autosomal dominant PKD (ADPKD) gene products [11] accumulate in stunted cilia, suggesting that abnormal or lack of cilia or defects in IFT may result in diseases such as polycystic kidney disease (PKD).


Nature Cell Biology | 2009

Intraflagellar transport is required for polarized recycling of the TCR/CD3 complex to the immune synapse

Francesca Finetti; Silvia Rossi Paccani; Maria Giovanna Riparbelli; Emiliana Giacomello; Giuseppe Perinetti; Gregory J. Pazour; Joel L. Rosenbaum; Cosima T. Baldari

Most eukaryotic cells have a primary cilium which functions as a sensory organelle. Cilia are assembled by intraflagellar transport (IFT), a process mediated by multimeric IFT particles and molecular motors. Here we show that lymphoid and myeloid cells, which lack primary cilia, express IFT proteins. IFT20, an IFT component essential for ciliary assembly, was found to colocalize with both the microtubule organizing centre (MTOC) and Golgi and post-Golgi compartments in T-lymphocytes. In antigen-specific conjugates, IFT20 translocated to the immune synapse. IFT20 knockdown resulted in impaired T-cell receptor/CD3 (TCR/CD3) clustering and signalling at the immune synapse, due to defective polarized recycling. Moreover, IFT20 was required for the inducible assembly of a complex with other IFT components (IFT57 and IFT88) and the TCR. The results identify IFT20 as a new regulator of immune synapse assembly in T cells and provide the first evidence to implicate IFT in membrane trafficking in cells lacking primary cilia, thereby introducing a new perspective on IFT function beyond its role in ciliogenesis.


Current Biology | 2007

Intraflagellar Transport Protein 27 Is a Small G Protein Involved in Cell-Cycle Control

Hongmin Qin; Zhaohui Wang; Dennis R. Diener; Joel L. Rosenbaum

BACKGROUND Intraflagellar transport (IFT) is a motility process operating between the ciliary/flagellar (interchangeable terms) membrane and the microtubular axoneme of motile and sensory cilia. Multipolypeptide IFT particles, composed of complexes A and B, carry flagellar precursors to their assembly site at the flagellar tip (anterograde) powered by kinesin, and turnover products from the tip back to the cytoplasm (retrograde) driven by cytoplasmic dynein. IFT is essential for the assembly and maintenance of almost all eukaryotic cilia and flagella, and mutations affecting either the IFT motors or the IFT particle polypeptides result in the inability to assemble normal flagella or in defects in the sensory functions of cilia. RESULTS We found that the IFT complex B polypeptide, IFT27, is a Rab-like small G protein. Reduction of the level of IFT27 by RNA interference reduces the levels of other complex A and B proteins, suggesting that this protein is instrumental in maintaining the stability of both IFT complexes. Furthermore, in addition to its role in flagellar assembly, IFT27 is unique among IFT polypeptides in that its partial knockdown results in defects in cytokinesis and elongation of the cell cycle and a more complete knockdown is lethal. CONCLUSION IFT27, a small G protein, is one of a growing number of flagellar proteins that are now known to have a role in cell-cycle control.

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George B. Witman

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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Gregory J. Pazour

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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