Kirk B. Jensen
University of Adelaide
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Publication
Featured researches published by Kirk B. Jensen.
Cell | 2001
Jennifer C. Darnell; Kirk B. Jensen; Peng Jin; Victoria Brown; Stephen T. Warren; Robert B. Darnell
Loss of fragile X mental retardation protein (FMRP) function causes the fragile X mental retardation syndrome. FMRP harbors three RNA binding domains, associates with polysomes, and is thought to regulate mRNA translation and/or localization, but the RNAs to which it binds are unknown. We have used RNA selection to demonstrate that the FMRP RGG box binds intramolecular G quartets. This data allowed us to identify mRNAs encoding proteins involved in synaptic or developmental neurobiology that harbor FMRP binding elements. The majority of these mRNAs have an altered polysome association in fragile X patient cells. These data demonstrate that G quartets serve as physiologically relevant targets for FMRP and identify mRNAs whose dysregulation may underlie human mental retardation.
Neuron | 2000
Kirk B. Jensen; B. Kate Dredge; Giovanni Stefani; Ru Zhong; Ronald J. Buckanovich; Hirotaka J. Okano; Yolanda Y. L. Yang; Robert B. Darnell
We have combined genetic and biochemical approaches to analyze the function of the RNA-binding protein Nova-1, the paraneoplastic opsoclonus-myoclonus ataxia (POMA) antigen. Nova-1 null mice die postnatally from a motor deficit associated with apoptotic death of spinal and brainstem neurons. Nova-1 null mice show specific splicing defects in two inhibitory receptor pre-mRNAs, glycine alpha2 exon 3A (GlyRalpha2 E3A) and GABA(A) exon gamma2L. Nova protein in brain extracts specifically bound to a previously identified GlyRalpha2 intronic (UCAUY)3 Nova target sequence, and Nova-1 acted directly on this element to increase E3A splicing in cotransfection assays. We conclude that Nova-1 binds RNA in a sequence-specific manner to regulate neuronal pre-mRNA alternative splicing; the defect in splicing in Nova-1 null mice provides a model for understanding the motor dysfunction in POMA.
The EMBO Journal | 2014
Cameron P. Bracken; Xiaochun Li; Josephine A. Wright; David Lawrence; Katherine A. Pillman; Marika Salmanidis; Matthew A Anderson; B. Kate Dredge; Philip A. Gregory; Anna Tsykin; Corine T. Neilsen; Daniel W. Thomson; Andrew G. Bert; Joanne M. Leerberg; Alpha S. Yap; Kirk B. Jensen; Yeesim Khew-Goodall; Gregory J. Goodall
The microRNAs of the miR‐200 family maintain the central characteristics of epithelia and inhibit tumor cell motility and invasiveness. Using the Ago‐HITS‐CLIP technology for transcriptome‐wide identification of direct microRNA targets in living cells, along with extensive validation to verify the reliability of the approach, we have identified hundreds of miR‐200a and miR‐200b targets, providing insights into general features of miRNA target site selection. Gene ontology analysis revealed a predominant effect of miR‐200 targets in widespread coordinate control of actin cytoskeleton dynamics. Functional characterization of the miR‐200 targets indicates that they constitute subnetworks that underlie the ability of cancer cells to migrate and invade, including coordinate effects on Rho‐ROCK signaling, invadopodia formation, MMP activity, and focal adhesions. Thus, the miR‐200 family maintains the central characteristics of the epithelial phenotype by acting on numerous targets at multiple levels, encompassing both cytoskeletal effectors that control actin filament organization and dynamics, and upstream signals that locally regulate the cytoskeleton to maintain cell morphology and prevent cell migration.
PLOS ONE | 2011
B. Kate Dredge; Kirk B. Jensen
Anti-NeuN (Neuronal Nuclei) is a monoclonal antibody used extensively to specifically detect post-mitotic neurons. Anti-NeuN reactivity is predominantly nuclear; by western it detects multiple bands ranging in molecular weight from 45 kDa to >75 kDa. Expression screening putatively identified R3hdm2 as NeuN; however immunoprecipitation and mass spectrometry of the two major NeuN species at 45–50 kDa identified both as the RNA binding protein Rbfox3 (a member of the Fox family of alternative splicing factors), confirming and extending the identification of the 45 kDa band as Rbfox3 by Kim et al. Mapping of the anti-NeuN reactive epitopes in both R3hdm2 and Rbfox3 reveals a common proline- and glutamine-rich domain that lies at the N-terminus of the Rbfox3 protein. Our data suggests that alternative splicing of the Rbfox3 pre-mRNA itself leads to the production of four protein isoforms that migrate in the 45–50 kDa range, and that one of these splicing choices regulates Rbfox3/NeuN sub-cellular steady-state distribution, through the addition or removal of a short C-terminal extension containing the second half of a bipartite hydrophobic proline-tyrosine nuclear localization signal. Rbfox3 regulates alternative splicing of the Rbfox2 pre-mRNA, producing a message encoding a dominant negative form of the Rbfox2 protein. We show here that nuclear Rbfox3 isoforms can also enhance the inclusion of cryptic exons in the Rbfox2 mRNA, resulting in nonsense-mediated decay of the message, thereby contributing to the negative regulation of Rbfox2 by Rbfox3 through a novel mechanism.
PLOS ONE | 2011
Sophie Wiszniak; B. Kate Dredge; Kirk B. Jensen
The ability of germ cells to carry out a gene regulatory program distinct from the surrounding somatic tissue, and their capacity to specify an entire new organism has made them a focus of many studies that seek to understand how specific regulatory mechanisms, particularly post-transcriptional mechanisms, contribute to cell fate. In zebrafish, germ cells are specified through the inheritance of cytoplasmic determinants, termed the germ plasm, which contains a number of maternal mRNAs and proteins. Investigation of several of these messages has revealed that the restricted localisation of these mRNAs to the germ plasm and subsequent germ cells is due to cis-acting sequence elements present in their 3′UTRs. Here we show that a member of the Hu family of RNA-binding proteins, HuB, is maternally provided in the zebrafish embryo and exhibits germ cell specific expression during embryogenesis. Restriction of HuB mRNA to the germ cells is dependent on a number of sequence elements in its 3′UTR, which act to degrade the mRNA in the soma and stabilise it in the germ cells. In addition, we show that the germ cell specific RNA-binding protein DAZL is able to promote HuB mRNA stability and translation in germ cells, and further demonstrate that these activities require a 30 nucleotide element in the 3′UTR. Our study suggests that DAZL specifically binds the HuB 3′UTR and protects the message from degradation and/or enhances HuB translation, leading to the germ cell specific expression of HuB protein.
Mechanisms of Development | 2009
Peter McCarthy; Kate Dredge; Kirk B. Jensen
are regulated by miRNAs, we analysed the miRNA expression profile of ES cells as they differentiate toward an extra-embryonic ectoderm fate (trophoblast) following acute downregulation of the stem cell master regulator Oct4. The expression levels of approximately 5% of the identified miRNAs changed markedly upon Oct4 downregulation. We are currently performing experiments designed to interfere with the function of these developmentally-regulated miRNAs, and investigating the roles that specific miRNAs play in proliferation and differentiation of ES cells.
Mechanisms of Development | 2009
Sophie Wiszniak; Kirk B. Jensen
MicroRNAs (miRNAs) constitute of a class small non-coding RNAs that are involved in post-transcriptional gene regulation and have important regulatory roles in many fundamental biological processes. A small number of miRNAs predominantly expressed in muscle tissue have been found to play critical role in myogenesis, muscle growth, cardiac function and muscle hypertrophy. In the present study, the invivo function of one of the miRNAs induced during myogenesis, miR-206, is addressed in zebrafish. We show that miR-206 is expressed during the early gastrulation stage prior to myogenesis. Expression of miR-206 results in an inhibition of myogenesis and abnormal slow muscle cells formation. We found that sonic hedgehog (shh), a signaling protein that mediates differentiation of slow muscle progenitor cells during myogenesis, is a target of miR-206. Our results demonstrate that miR-206 regulates sonic hedgehog signaling to control myogenesis.
Science | 2003
Jernej Ule; Kirk B. Jensen; Matteo Ruggiu; Aldo Mele; Aljaž Ule; Robert B. Darnell
Archive | 1995
Larry Gold; Bruce E. Eaton; Drew Smith; Matthew Wecker; Kirk B. Jensen
Methods | 2005
Jernej Ule; Kirk B. Jensen; Aldo Mele; Robert B. Darnell