Jonathan T. Eggenschwiler
Princeton University
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Featured researches published by Jonathan T. Eggenschwiler.
Nature | 2001
Jonathan T. Eggenschwiler; Edward Espinoza; Kathryn V. Anderson
The mouse open brain (opb) and Sonic hedgehog (Shh) genes have opposing roles in neural patterning: opb is required for dorsal cell types and Shh is required for ventral cell types in the spinal cord. Here we show that opb acts downstream of Shh. Ventral cell types that are absent in Shh mutants, including the floor plate, are present in Shh opb double mutants. The organization of ventral cell types in Shh opb double mutants reveals that Shh-independent mechanisms can pattern the neural tube along its dorsal–ventral axis. We cloned opb by a map-based approach and found that it encodes Rab23, a member of the Rab family of vesicle transport proteins. The data indicate that dorsalizing signals activate transcription of Rab23 in order to silence the Shh pathway in dorsal neural cells.
Current Biology | 2002
Tamara Caspary; María J. García-García; Danwei Huangfu; Jonathan T. Eggenschwiler; Michael R. Wyler; Andrew S. Rakeman; Heather L. Alcorn; Kathryn V. Anderson
Precise patterning of cell types along the dorsal-ventral axis of the spinal cord is essential to establish functional neural circuits. In order to prove the feasibility of studying a single biological process through random mutagenesis in the mouse, we have identified recessive ENU-induced mutations in six genes that prevent normal specification of ventral cell types in the spinal cord. We positionally cloned the genes responsible for two of the mutant phenotypes, smoothened and dispatched, which are homologs of Drosophila Hh pathway components. The Dispatched homolog1 (Disp1) mutation causes lethality at midgestation and prevents specification of ventral cell types in the neural tube, a phenotype identical to the Smoothened (Smo) null phenotype. As in Drosophila, mouse Disp1 is required to move Shh away from the site of synthesis. Despite the existence of a second mouse disp homolog, Disp1 is essential for long-range signaling by both Shh and Ihh ligands. Our data indicate that Shh signaling is required within the notochord to maintain Shh expression and to prevent notochord degeneration. Disp1, unlike Smo, is not required for this juxtacrine signaling by Shh.
American Journal of Human Genetics | 2010
Joanna Walczak-Sztulpa; Jonathan T. Eggenschwiler; Daniel P.S. Osborn; Desmond Brown; Francesco Emma; Claus Klingenberg; Raoul C. M. Hennekam; G. Torre; Masoud Garshasbi; Andreas Tzschach; Małgorzata Szczepańska; Marian Krawczyński; Jacek Zachwieja; Danuta Zwolińska; Philip L. Beales; Hans-Hilger Ropers; Anna Latos-Bielenska; Andreas W. Kuss
Cranioectodermal dysplasia (CED) is a disorder characterized by craniofacial, skeletal, and ectodermal abnormalities. Most cases reported to date are sporadic, but a few familial cases support an autosomal-recessive inheritance pattern. Aiming at the elucidation of the genetic basis of CED, we collected 13 patients with CED symptoms from 12 independent families. In one family with consanguineous parents two siblings were affected, permitting linkage analysis and homozygosity mapping. This revealed a single region of homozygosity with a significant LOD score (3.57) on chromosome 3q21-3q24. By sequencing candidate genes from this interval we found a homozygous missense mutation in the IFT122 (WDR10) gene that cosegregated with the disease. Examination of IFT122 in our patient cohort revealed one additional homozygous missense change in the patient from a second consanguineous family. In addition, we found compound heterozygosity for a donor splice-site change and a missense change in one sporadic patient. All mutations were absent in 340 control chromosomes. Because IFT122 plays an important role in the assembly and maintenance of eukaryotic cilia, we investigated patient fibroblasts and found significantly reduced frequency and length of primary cilia as compared to controls. Furthermore, we transiently knocked down ift122 in zebrafish embryos and observed the typical phenotype found in other models of ciliopathies. Because not all of our patients harbored mutations in IFT122, CED seems to be genetically heterogeneous. Still, by identifying CED as a ciliary disorder, our study suggests that the causative mutations in the unresolved cases most likely affect primary cilia function too.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011
Jian Qin; Yulian Lin; Ryan X. Norman; Hyuk Wan Ko; Jonathan T. Eggenschwiler
Primary cilia are required for proper Sonic Hedgehog (Shh) signaling in mammals. However, their role in the signal transduction process remains unclear. We have identified sister of open brain (sopb), a null allele of mouse Intraflagellar transport protein 122 (Ift122). IFT122 negatively regulates the Shh pathway in the cilium at a step downstream of the Shh ligand and the transmembrane protein Smoothened, but upstream of the Gli2 transcription factor. Ift122sopb mutants generate primary cilia, but they show features of defective retrograde intraflagellar transport. IFT122 controls the ciliary localization of Shh pathway regulators in different ways. Disruption of IFT122 leads to accumulation of Gli2 and Gli3 at cilia tips while blocking the ciliary localization of the antagonist TULP3. Suppressor of Fused and Smoothened localize to the cilium through an IFT122-independent mechanism. We propose that the balance between positive and negative regulators of the Shh pathway at the cilium tip controls the output of the pathway and that Shh signaling regulates this balance through intraflagellar transport.
Development | 2004
Oleg V. Bulgakov; Jonathan T. Eggenschwiler; Dong-Hyun Hong; Kathryn V. Anderson; Tiansen Li
Sonic hedgehog (SHH) is a secreted morphogen that regulates the patterning and growth of many tissues in the developing mouse embryo, including the central nervous system (CNS). We show that a member of the FK506-binding protein family, FKBP8, is an essential antagonist of SHH signaling in CNS development. Loss of FKBP8 causes ectopic and ligand-independent activation of the Shh pathway, leading to expansion of ventral cell fates in the posterior neural tube and suppression of eye development. Although it is expressed broadly, FKBP8 is required to antagonize SHH signaling primarily in neural tissues, suggesting that hedgehog signal transduction is subject to cell-type specific modulation during mammalian development.
Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2012
Miki Nishio; Koichi Hamada; Kohichi Kawahara; Masato Sasaki; Fumihito Noguchi; Shuhei Chiba; Kensaku Mizuno; Satoshi Suzuki; Youyi Dong; Masaaki Tokuda; Takumi Morikawa; Hiroki Hikasa; Jonathan T. Eggenschwiler; Norikazu Yabuta; Hiroshi Nojima; Kentaro Nakagawa; Yutaka Hata; Hiroshi Nishina; Koshi Mimori; Masaki Mori; Takehiko Sasaki; Tak W. Mak; Toru Nakano; Satoshi Itami; Akira Suzuki
Mps one binder 1a (MOB1A) and MOB1B are key components of the Hippo signaling pathway and are mutated or inactivated in many human cancers. Here we show that intact Mob1a or Mob1b is essential for murine embryogenesis and that loss of the remaining WT Mob1 allele in Mob1a(Δ/Δ)1b(tr/+) or Mob1a(Δ/+)1b(tr/tr) mice results in tumor development. Because most of these cancers resembled trichilemmal carcinomas, we generated double-mutant mice bearing tamoxifen-inducible, keratinocyte-specific homozygous-null mutations of Mob1a and Mob1b (kDKO mice). kDKO mice showed hyperplastic keratinocyte progenitors and defective keratinocyte terminal differentiation and soon died of malnutrition. kDKO keratinocytes exhibited hyperproliferation, apoptotic resistance, impaired contact inhibition, enhanced progenitor self renewal, and increased centrosomes. Examination of Hippo pathway signaling in kDKO keratinocytes revealed that loss of Mob1a/b altered the activities of the downstream Hippo mediators LATS and YAP1. Similarly, YAP1 was activated in some human trichilemmal carcinomas, and some of these also exhibited MOB1A/1B inactivation. Our results clearly demonstrate that MOB1A and MOB1B have overlapping functions in skin homeostasis, and exert their roles as tumor suppressors by regulating downstream elements of the Hippo pathway.
Developmental Cell | 2010
Hyuk Wan Ko; Ryan X. Norman; John Tran; Kimberly P. Fuller; Mitsunori Fukuda; Jonathan T. Eggenschwiler
Recent findings indicate that mammalian Sonic hedgehog (Shh) signal transduction occurs within primary cilia, although the cell biological mechanisms underlying both Shh signaling and ciliogenesis have not been fully elucidated. We show that an uncharacterized TBC domain-containing protein, Broad-minded (Bromi), is required for high-level Shh responses in the mouse neural tube. We find that Bromi controls ciliary morphology and proper Gli2 localization within the cilium. By use of a zebrafish model, we further show that Bromi is required for proper association between the ciliary membrane and axoneme. Bromi physically interacts with cell cycle-related kinase (CCRK), whose Chlamydomonas homolog regulates flagellar length. Biochemical and genetic interaction data indicate that Bromi promotes CCRK stability and function. We propose that Bromi and CCRK control the structure of the primary cilium by coordinating assembly of the axoneme and ciliary membrane, allowing Gli proteins to be properly activated in response to Shh signaling.
Human Molecular Genetics | 2009
Ryan X. Norman; Hyuk Wan Ko; Viola Huang; Christine M. Eun; Lisa L. Abler; Zhen Zhang; Xin Sun; Jonathan T. Eggenschwiler
Tubby-like protein 3 (TULP3) is required for proper embryonic development in mice. Disruption of mouse Tulp3 results in morphological defects in the embryonic craniofacial regions, the spinal neural tube and the limbs. Here, we show that TULP3 functions as a novel negative regulator of Sonic hedgehog (Shh) signaling in the mouse. In Tulp3 mutants, ventral cell types in the lumbar neural tube, which acquire their identities in response to Shh signaling, are ectopically specified at the expense of dorsal cell types. Genetic epistasis experiments show that this ventralized phenotype occurs independently of Shh and the transmembrane protein Smoothened, but it is dependent on the transcription factor Gli2. The ventralized phenotype is also dependent on the kinesin II subunit Kif3A, which is required for intraflagellar transport and ciliogenesis. In addition, TULP3 is required for proper Shh-dependent limb patterning and for maintaining the correct balance between differentiation and proliferation in the neural tube. Finally, the localization of TULP3 to the tips of primary cilia raises the possibility that it regulates the Hedgehog pathway within this structure.
Developmental Biology | 2008
Ahryon Cho; Hyuk Wan Ko; Jonathan T. Eggenschwiler
Signaling by Sonic hedgehog (Shh) represents an important process by which many types of neural progenitor cells become properly organized along the dorsal-ventral axis of the vertebrate neural tube in a concentration-dependent manner. However, the mechanism by which Shh signals are transduced with high fidelity and the relationship between the Shh signaling pathway and other patterning systems remain unclear. Here we focus on the role of FK506-binding protein 8 (FKBP8) in controlling neural cell identity through its antagonism of the Shh pathway. Our data indicate that disruption of FKBP8 function activates the Shh signaling pathway cell-autonomously at a step that is independent of the transmembrane protein Smoothened but dependent on the Gli2 transcription factor. This activation is also dependent on the kinesin-2 subunit Kif3a, a component of the intraflagellar transport (IFT) machinery used to generate cilia. Our data also indicate that non-cell-autonomous effects of the Fkbp8 mutation further contribute to the neural patterning phenotype and suggest that FKBP8 plays an indirect role in promoting Bone morphogenetic protein (BMP) signaling through antagonism of the Shh pathway.
Developmental Biology | 2014
Kimberly P. Fuller; Joyce T. O׳Connell; Julie Gordon; Olivier Mauti; Jonathan T. Eggenschwiler
Asymmetric fluid flow in the node and Nodal signaling in the left lateral plate mesoderm (LPM) drive left-right patterning of the mammalian body plan. However, the mechanisms linking fluid flow to asymmetric gene expression in the LPM remain unclear. Here we show that the small GTPase Rab23, known for its role in Hedgehog signaling, plays a separate role in Nodal signaling and left-right patterning in the mouse embryo. Rab23 is not required for initial symmetry breaking in the node, but it is required for expression of Nodal and Nodal target genes in the LPM. Microinjection of Nodal protein and transfection of Nodal cDNA in the embryo indicate that Rab23 is required for the production of functional Nodal signals, rather than the response to them. Using gain- and loss-of function approaches, we show that Rab23 plays a similar role in zebrafish, where it is required in the teleost equivalent of the mouse node, Kupffer׳s vesicle. Collectively, these data suggest that Rab23 is an essential component of the mechanism that transmits asymmetric patterning information from the node to the LPM.