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Dive into the research topics where Michel R. Leroux is active.

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Featured researches published by Michel R. Leroux.


Cell | 2004

Comparative genomics identifies a flagellar and basal body proteome that includes the BBS5 human disease gene.

Jin Billy Li; Jantje M. Gerdes; Courtney J. Haycraft; Yanli Fan; Tanya M. Teslovich; Helen May-Simera; Haitao Li; Oliver E. Blacque; Linya Li; Carmen C. Leitch; Ra Lewis; Jane Green; Patrick S. Parfrey; Michel R. Leroux; William S. Davidson; Philip L. Beales; Lisa M. Guay-Woodford; Bradley K. Yoder; Gary D. Stormo; Nicholas Katsanis; Susan K. Dutcher

Cilia and flagella are microtubule-based structures nucleated by modified centrioles termed basal bodies. These biochemically complex organelles have more than 250 and 150 polypeptides, respectively. To identify the proteins involved in ciliary and basal body biogenesis and function, we undertook a comparative genomics approach that subtracted the nonflagellated proteome of Arabidopsis from the shared proteome of the ciliated/flagellated organisms Chlamydomonas and human. We identified 688 genes that are present exclusively in organisms with flagella and basal bodies and validated these data through a series of in silico, in vitro, and in vivo studies. We then applied this resource to the study of human ciliation disorders and have identified BBS5, a novel gene for Bardet-Biedl syndrome. We show that this novel protein localizes to basal bodies in mouse and C. elegans, is under the regulatory control of daf-19, and is necessary for the generation of both cilia and flagella.


Nature | 2003

Basal body dysfunction is a likely cause of pleiotropic Bardet–Biedl syndrome

Stephen J. Ansley; Jose L. Badano; Oliver E. Blacque; Josephine Hill; Bethan E. Hoskins; Carmen C. Leitch; Jun Chul Kim; Alison Ross; Erica R. Eichers; Tanya M. Teslovich; Allan K. Mah; Robert C. Johnsen; John C. Cavender; Richard Alan Lewis; Michel R. Leroux; Philip L. Beales; Nicholas Katsanis

Bardet–Biedl syndrome (BBS) is a genetically heterogeneous disorder characterized primarily by retinal dystrophy, obesity, polydactyly, renal malformations and learning disabilities. Although five BBS genes have been cloned, the molecular basis of this syndrome remains elusive. Here we show that BBS is probably caused by a defect at the basal body of ciliated cells. We have cloned a new BBS gene, BBS8, which encodes a protein with a prokaryotic domain, pilF, involved in pilus formation and twitching mobility. In one family, a homozygous null BBS8 mutation leads to BBS with randomization of left–right body axis symmetry, a known defect of the nodal cilium. We have also found that BBS8 localizes specifically to ciliated structures, such as the connecting cilium of the retina and columnar epithelial cells in the lung. In cells, BBS8 localizes to centrosomes and basal bodies and interacts with PCM1, a protein probably involved in ciliogenesis. Finally, we demonstrate that all available Caenorhabditis elegans BBS homologues are expressed exclusively in ciliated neurons, and contain regulatory elements for RFX, a transcription factor that modulates the expression of genes associated with ciliogenesis and intraflagellar transport.


Nature Genetics | 2006

The centrosomal protein nephrocystin-6 is mutated in Joubert syndrome and activates transcription factor ATF4

John A. Sayer; Edgar A. Otto; John F. O'Toole; Gudrun Nürnberg; Michael A. Kennedy; Christian F. W. Becker; Hans Christian Hennies; Juliana Helou; Massimo Attanasio; Blake V. Fausett; Boris Utsch; Hemant Khanna; Yan Liu; Iain A. Drummond; Isao Kawakami; Takehiro Kusakabe; Motoyuki Tsuda; Li Ma; Hwankyu Lee; Ronald G. Larson; Susan J. Allen; Christopher J. Wilkinson; Erich A. Nigg; Chengchao Shou; Concepción Lillo; David S. Williams; Bernd Hoppe; Markus J. Kemper; Thomas J. Neuhaus; Melissa A. Parisi

The molecular basis of nephronophthisis, the most frequent genetic cause of renal failure in children and young adults, and its association with retinal degeneration and cerebellar vermis aplasia in Joubert syndrome are poorly understood. Using positional cloning, we here identify mutations in the gene CEP290 as causing nephronophthisis. It encodes a protein with several domains also present in CENPF, a protein involved in chromosome segregation. CEP290 (also known as NPHP6) interacts with and modulates the activity of ATF4, a transcription factor implicated in cAMP-dependent renal cyst formation. NPHP6 is found at centrosomes and in the nucleus of renal epithelial cells in a cell cycle–dependent manner and in connecting cilia of photoreceptors. Abrogation of its function in zebrafish recapitulates the renal, retinal and cerebellar phenotypes of Joubert syndrome. Our findings help establish the link between centrosome function, tissue architecture and transcriptional control in the pathogenesis of cystic kidney disease, retinal degeneration, and central nervous system development.


Nature Genetics | 2004

The Bardet-Biedl protein BBS4 targets cargo to the pericentriolar region and is required for microtubule anchoring and cell cycle progression

Jun Chul Kim; Jose L. Badano; Sonja Sibold; Muneer A. Esmail; Josephine Hill; Bethan E. Hoskins; Carmen C. Leitch; Kerrie Venner; Stephen J. Ansley; Alison Ross; Michel R. Leroux; Nicholas Katsanis; Philip L. Beales

BBS4 is one of several proteins that cause Bardet-Biedl syndrome (BBS), a multisystemic disorder of genetic and clinical complexity. Here we show that BBS4 localizes to the centriolar satellites of centrosomes and basal bodies of primary cilia, where it functions as an adaptor of the p150glued subunit of the dynein transport machinery to recruit PCM1 (pericentriolar material 1 protein) and its associated cargo to the satellites. Silencing of BBS4 induces PCM1 mislocalization and concomitant deanchoring of centrosomal microtubules, arrest in cell division and apoptotic cell death. Expression of two truncated forms of BBS4 that are similar to those found in some individuals with BBS had a similar effect on PCM1 and microtubules. Our findings indicate that defective targeting or anchoring of pericentriolar proteins and microtubule disorganization contribute to the BBS phenotype and provide new insights into possible causes of familial obesity, diabetes and retinal degeneration.


Nature | 2005

Functional coordination of intraflagellar transport motors

Guangshuo Ou; Oliver E. Blacque; Joshua J. Snow; Michel R. Leroux; Jonathan M. Scholey

Cilia have diverse roles in motility and sensory reception, and defects in cilia function contribute to ciliary diseases such as Bardet–Biedl syndrome (BBS). Intraflagellar transport (IFT) motors assemble and maintain cilia by transporting ciliary precursors, bound to protein complexes called IFT particles, from the base of the cilium to their site of incorporation at the distal tip. In Caenorhabditis elegans, this is accomplished by two IFT motors, kinesin-II and osmotic avoidance defective (OSM)-3 kinesin, which cooperate to form two sequential anterograde IFT pathways that build distinct parts of cilia. By observing the movement of fluorescent IFT motors and IFT particles along the cilia of numerous ciliary mutants, we identified three genes whose protein products mediate the functional coordination of these motors. The BBS proteins BBS-7 and BBS-8 are required to stabilize complexes of IFT particles containing both of the IFT motors, because IFT particles in bbs-7 and bbs-8 mutants break down into two subcomplexes, IFT-A and IFT-B, which are moved separately by kinesin-II and OSM-3 kinesin, respectively. A conserved ciliary protein, DYF-1, is specifically required for OSM-3 kinesin to dock onto and move IFT particles, because OSM-3 kinesin is inactive and intact IFT particles are moved by kinesin-II alone in dyf-1 mutants. These findings implicate BBS ciliary disease proteins and an OSM-3 kinesin activator in the formation of two IFT pathways that build functional cilia.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2011

MKS and NPHP modules cooperate to establish basal body/transition zone membrane associations and ciliary gate function during ciliogenesis

Corey L. Williams; Chunmei Li; Katarzyna Kida; Peter N. Inglis; Swetha Mohan; Lucie Semenec; Nathan J. Bialas; Rachel M. Stupay; Nansheng Chen; Oliver E. Blacque; Bradley K. Yoder; Michel R. Leroux

Eight proteins, defects in which are associated with Meckel-Gruber syndrome and nephronophthisis ciliopathies, work together as two functional modules at the transition zone to establish basal body/transition zone connections with the membrane and barricade entry of non-ciliary components into this organelle.


Nature Genetics | 2004

Mutations in a member of the Ras superfamily of small GTP-binding proteins causes Bardet-Biedl syndrome

Yanli Fan; Muneer A. Esmail; Stephen J. Ansley; Oliver E. Blacque; Keith A. Boroevich; Alison Ross; Susan J. Moore; Jose L. Badano; Helen May-Simera; Deanna S Compton; Jane Green; Richard Alan Lewis; Mieke M. van Haelst; Patrick S. Parfrey; David L. Baillie; Philip L. Beales; Nicholas Katsanis; William S. Davidson; Michel R. Leroux

RAB, ADP-ribosylation factors (ARFs) and ARF-like (ARL) proteins belong to the Ras superfamily of small GTP-binding proteins and are essential for various membrane-associated intracellular trafficking processes. None of the ∼50 known members of this family are linked to human disease. Using a bioinformatic screen for ciliary genes in combination with mutational analyses, we identified ARL6 as the gene underlying Bardet-Biedl syndrome type 3, a multisystemic disorder characterized by obesity, blindness, polydactyly, renal abnormalities and cognitive impairment. We uncovered four different homozygous substitutions in ARL6 in four unrelated families affected with Bardet-Biedl syndrome, two of which disrupt a threonine residue important for GTP binding and function of several related small GTP-binding proteins. Analysis of the Caenorhabditis elegans ARL6 homolog indicates that it is specifically expressed in ciliated cells, and that, in addition to the postulated cytoplasmic functions of ARL proteins, it undergoes intraflagellar transport. These findings implicate a small GTP-binding protein in ciliary transport and the pathogenesis of a pleiotropic disorder.


EMBO Reports | 2012

The base of the cilium: roles for transition fibres and the transition zone in ciliary formation, maintenance and compartmentalization

Jeremy F. Reiter; Oliver E. Blacque; Michel R. Leroux

Both the basal body and the microtubule‐based axoneme it nucleates have evolutionarily conserved subdomains crucial for cilium biogenesis, function and maintenance. Here, we focus on two conspicuous but underappreciated regions of these structures that make membrane connections. One is the basal body distal end, which includes transition fibres of largely undefined composition that link to the base of the ciliary membrane. Transition fibres seem to serve as docking sites for intraflagellar transport particles, which move proteins within the ciliary compartment and are required for cilium biogenesis and sustained function. The other is the proximal‐most region of the axoneme, termed the transition zone, which is characterized by Y‐shaped linkers that span from the axoneme to the ciliary necklace on the membrane surface. The transition zone comprises a growing number of ciliopathy proteins that function as modular components of a ciliary gate. This gate, which forms early during ciliogenesis, might function in part by regulating intraflagellar transport. Together with a recently described septin ring diffusion barrier at the ciliary base, the transition fibres and transition zone deserve attention for their varied roles in forming functional ciliary compartments.


Current Biology | 2005

Functional genomics of the cilium, a sensory organelle

Oliver E. Blacque; Elliot A. Perens; Keith A. Boroevich; Peter N. Inglis; Chunmei Li; Adam Warner; Jaswinder Khattra; Robert A. Holt; Guangshuo Ou; Allan K. Mah; Sheldon J. McKay; Peter Huang; Peter Swoboda; Steve Jones; Marco A. Marra; David L. Baillie; Donald G. Moerman; Shai Shaham; Michel R. Leroux

Cilia and flagella play important roles in many physiological processes, including cell and fluid movement, sensory perception, and development. The biogenesis and maintenance of cilia depend on intraflagellar transport (IFT), a motility process that operates bidirectionally along the ciliary axoneme. Disruption in IFT and cilia function causes several human disorders, including polycystic kidneys, retinal dystrophy, neurosensory impairment, and Bardet-Biedl syndrome (BBS). To uncover new ciliary components, including IFT proteins, we compared C. elegans ciliated neuronal and nonciliated cells through serial analysis of gene expression (SAGE) and screened for genes potentially regulated by the ciliogenic transcription factor, DAF-19. Using these complementary approaches, we identified numerous candidate ciliary genes and confirmed the ciliated-cell-specific expression of 14 novel genes. One of these, C27H5.7a, encodes a ciliary protein that undergoes IFT. As with other IFT proteins, its ciliary localization and transport is disrupted by mutations in IFT and bbs genes. Furthermore, we demonstrate that the ciliary structural defect of C. elegans dyf-13(mn396) mutants is caused by a mutation in C27H5.7a. Together, our findings help define a ciliary transcriptome and suggest that DYF-13, an evolutionarily conserved protein, is a novel core IFT component required for cilia function.


Cell | 2000

Structure of the molecular chaperone prefoldin: unique interaction of multiple coiled coil tentacles with unfolded proteins.

Ralf Siegert; Michel R. Leroux; Clemens Scheufler; F. Ulrich Hartl; Ismail Moarefi

Prefoldin (GimC) is a hexameric molecular chaperone complex built from two related classes of subunits and present in all eukaryotes and archaea. Prefoldin interacts with nascent polypeptide chains and, in vitro, can functionally substitute for the Hsp70 chaperone system in stabilizing non-native proteins for subsequent folding in the central cavity of a chaperonin. Here, we present the crystal structure and characterization of the prefoldin hexamer from the archaeum Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum. Prefoldin has the appearance of a jellyfish: its body consists of a double beta barrel assembly with six long tentacle-like coiled coils protruding from it. The distal regions of the coiled coils expose hydrophobic patches and are required for multivalent binding of nonnative proteins.

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Chunmei Li

Simon Fraser University

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Peter C. Stirling

University of British Columbia

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