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Dive into the research topics where Rachel Allison is active.

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Featured researches published by Rachel Allison.


Nature Neuroscience | 2006

Asymmetrical β-actin mRNA translation in growth cones mediates attractive turning to netrin-1

Kin-Mei Leung; Francisca P. G. Van Horck; Andrew C. Lin; Rachel Allison; Nancy Standart; Christine E. Holt

Local protein synthesis regulates the turning of growth cones to guidance cues, yet little is known about which proteins are synthesized or how they contribute to directional steering. Here we show that β-actin mRNA resides in Xenopus laevis retinal growth cones where it binds to the RNA-binding protein Vg1RBP. Netrin-1 induces the movement of Vg1RBP granules into filopodia, suggesting that it may direct the localization and translation of mRNAs in growth cones. Indeed, a gradient of netrin-1 activates a translation initiation regulator, eIF-4E-binding protein 1 (4EBP), asymmetrically and triggers a polarized increase in β-actin translation on the near side of the growth cone before growth cone turning. Inhibition of β-actin translation abolishes both the asymmetric rise in β-actin and attractive, but not repulsive, turning. Our data suggest that newly synthesized β-actin, concentrated near sites of signal reception, provides the directional bias for polymerizing actin in the direction of an attractive stimulus.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2012

Mutations in the ER-shaping protein reticulon 2 cause the axon-degenerative disorder hereditary spastic paraplegia type 12

Gladys Montenegro; Adriana P. Rebelo; James W. Connell; Rachel Allison; Carla Babalini; Michela D’Aloia; Pasqua Montieri; Rebecca Schüle; Hiroyuki Ishiura; Justin Price; Alleene V. Strickland; Michael Gonzalez; Lisa Baumbach-Reardon; Tine Deconinck; Jia Huang; Giorgio Bernardi; Jeffery M. Vance; Mark T. Rogers; Shoji Tsuji; Margaret A. Pericak-Vance; Ludger Schöls; Antonio Orlacchio; Evan Reid; Stephan Züchner

Hereditary spastic paraplegias (HSPs) are a group of genetically heterogeneous neurodegenerative conditions. They are characterized by progressive spastic paralysis of the legs as a result of selective, length-dependent degeneration of the axons of the corticospinal tract. Mutations in 3 genes encoding proteins that work together to shape the ER into sheets and tubules - receptor accessory protein 1 (REEP1), atlastin-1 (ATL1), and spastin (SPAST) - have been found to underlie many cases of HSP in Northern Europe and North America. Applying Sanger and exome sequencing, we have now identified 3 mutations in reticulon 2 (RTN2), which encodes a member of the reticulon family of prototypic ER-shaping proteins, in families with spastic paraplegia 12 (SPG12). These autosomal dominant mutations included a complete deletion of RTN2 and a frameshift mutation predicted to produce a highly truncated protein. Wild-type reticulon 2, but not the truncated protein potentially encoded by the frameshift allele, localized to the ER. RTN2 interacted with spastin, and this interaction required a hydrophobic region in spastin that is involved in ER localization and that is predicted to form a curvature-inducing/sensing hairpin loop domain. Our results directly implicate a reticulon protein in axonopathy, show that this protein participates in a network of interactions among HSP proteins involved in ER shaping, and further support the hypothesis that abnormal ER morphogenesis is a pathogenic mechanism in HSP.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2013

An ESCRT–spastin interaction promotes fission of recycling tubules from the endosome

Rachel Allison; Jennifer H. Lumb; Coralie Fassier; James W. Connell; Daniel Martin; Matthew N.J. Seaman; Jamilé Hazan; Evan Reid

Inclusion of IST1 into the ESCRT complex allows recruitment of the microtubule-severing protein spastin to promote fission of recycling tubules from the endosome.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2012

The AAA ATPase spastin links microtubule severing to membrane modelling.

Jennifer H. Lumb; James W. Connell; Rachel Allison; Evan Reid

In 1999, mutations in the gene encoding the microtubule severing AAA ATPase spastin were identified as a major cause of a genetic neurodegenerative condition termed hereditary spastic paraplegia (HSP). This finding stimulated intense study of the spastin protein and over the last decade, a combination of cell biological, in vivo, in vitro and structural studies have provided important mechanistic insights into the cellular functions of the protein, as well as elucidating cell biological pathways that might be involved in axonal maintenance and degeneration. Roles for spastin have emerged in shaping the endoplasmic reticulum and the abscission stage of cytokinesis, in which spastin appears to couple membrane modelling to microtubule regulation by severing.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2017

Defects in ER–endosome contacts impact lysosome function in hereditary spastic paraplegia

Rachel Allison; James R. Edgar; Guy Pearson; Tania Rizo; Timothy Newton; Sven Günther; Fiamma Berner; Jennifer Hague; James W. Connell; Jürgen Winkler; Jennifer Lippincott-Schwartz; Christian Beetz; Beate Winner; Evan Reid

Contacts between endosomes and the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) promote endosomal tubule fission, but the mechanisms involved and consequences of tubule fission failure are incompletely understood. We found that interaction between the microtubule-severing enzyme spastin and the ESCRT protein IST1 at ER–endosome contacts drives endosomal tubule fission. Failure of fission caused defective sorting of mannose 6-phosphate receptor, with consequently disrupted lysosomal enzyme trafficking and abnormal lysosomal morphology, including in mouse primary neurons and human stem cell–derived neurons. Consistent with a role for ER-mediated endosomal tubule fission in lysosome function, similar lysosomal abnormalities were seen in cellular models lacking the WASH complex component strumpellin or the ER morphogen REEP1. Mutations in spastin, strumpellin, or REEP1 cause hereditary spastic paraplegia (HSP), a disease characterized by axonal degeneration. Our results implicate failure of the ER–endosome contact process in axonopathy and suggest that coupling of ER-mediated endosomal tubule fission to lysosome function links different classes of HSP proteins, previously considered functionally distinct, into a unifying pathway for axonal degeneration.


RNA | 2009

Vg1RBP phosphorylation by Erk2 MAP kinase correlates with the cortical release of Vg1 mRNA during meiotic maturation of Xenopus oocytes.

Anna Git; Rachel Allison; Eusebio Perdiguero; Angel R. Nebreda; Evelyn Houliston; Nancy Standart

Xenopus Vg1RBP is a member of the highly conserved IMP family of four KH-domain RNA binding proteins, with roles in RNA localization, translational control, RNA stability, and cell motility. Vg1RBP has been implicated in localizing Vg1 mRNAs to the vegetal cortex during oogenesis, in a process mediated by microtubules and microfilaments, and in migration of neural crest cells in embryos. Using c-mos morpholino, kinase inhibitors, and constitutely active recombinant kinases we show that Vg1RBP undergoes regulated phosphorylation by Erk2 MAPK during meiotic maturation, on a single residue, S402, located between the KH2 and KH3 domains. Phosphorylation temporally correlates with the release of Vg1 mRNA from its tight cortical association, assayed in lysates in physiological salt buffers, but does not affect RNA binding, nor self-association of Vg1RBP. U0126, a MAP kinase inhibitor, prevents Vg1RBP cortical release and Vg1 mRNA solubilization in meiotically maturing eggs, while injection of MKK6-DD, a constitutively activated MAP kinase kinase, promotes the release of both Vg1RBP and Vg1 mRNA from insoluble cortical structures. We propose that Erk2 MAP kinase phosphorylation of Vg1RBP regulates the protein:protein-mediated association of Vg1 mRNP with the cytoskeleton and/or ER. Since the MAP kinase site in Vg1RBP is conserved in several IMP homologs, this modification also has important implications for the regulation of IMP proteins in somatic cells.


Methods | 2010

Translational control assessed using the tethered function assay in Xenopus oocytes

Nicola Minshall; Rachel Allison; Aline Marnef; Anna Wilczynska; Nancy Standart

The tethered function assay is a method designed to address the role of an RNA-binding protein upon the metabolism of a reporter RNA. The basis of this assay is to artificially tether a test protein to a reporter mRNA by employing an unrelated bacteriophage MS2 or lambda N RNA-protein interaction, and to assess the effects of the test protein on the reporter RNA. In this chapter, we first discuss the principles and validity of the tethered function approach, drawing on appropriate examples from several cell types and of many proteins that regulate RNA in a variety of processes, including RNA processing (splicing, polyadenylation/deadenylation, decay), localisation and protein synthesis. Secondly, we will focus on the use of this approach to monitor translational activation and repression in Xenopus oocytes, giving a detailed protocol, and discussing possible optimizations we have explored.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Quantitative Gait Analysis Using a Motorized Treadmill System Sensitively Detects Motor Abnormalities in Mice Expressing ATPase Defective Spastin

James W. Connell; Rachel Allison; Evan Arthur Reid

The hereditary spastic paraplegias (HSPs) are genetic conditions in which there is progressive axonal degeneration in the corticospinal tract. Autosomal dominant mutations, including nonsense, frameshift and missense changes, in the gene encoding the microtubule severing ATPase spastin are the most common cause of HSP in North America and northern Europe. In this study we report quantitative gait analysis using a motorized treadmill system, carried out on mice knocked-in for a disease-associated mutation affecting a critical residue in the Walker A motif of the spastin ATPase domain. At 4 months and at one year of age homozygous mutant mice had a number of abnormal gait parameters, including in stride length and stride duration, compared to heterozygous and wild-type littermates. Gait parameters in heterozygous animals did not differ from wild-type littermates. We conclude that quantitative gait analysis using the DigiGait system sensitively detects motor abnormalities in a hereditary spastic paraplegia model, and would be a useful method for analyzing the effects of pharmacological treatments for HSP.


Brain | 2018

Mechanistic basis of an epistatic interaction reducing age at onset in hereditary spastic paraplegia

Timothy Newton; Rachel Allison; James R. Edgar; Jennifer H. Lumb; Catherine E Rodger; Paul T. Manna; Tania Rizo; Zacharias Kohl; Anders O H Nygren; Larissa Arning; Rebecca Schüle; Christel Depienne; Lisa V. Goldberg; Christiane Frahm; Giovanni Stevanin; Alexandra Durr; Ludger Schöls; Beate Winner; Christian Beetz; Evan Reid

The mechanisms underlying disease modifier gene effects are rarely understood. Newton et al. report that deletion of DPY30 reduces age at onset in hereditary spastic paraplegia caused by SPAST mutations. They demonstrate that both genes regulate cellular pathways that pathologically impact lysosome function, providing a mechanistic explanation for this interaction.


Development | 2018

BMP- and Neuropilin-1-mediated motor axon navigation relies on spastin alternative translation

Nicolas Jardin; François Giudicelli; Daniel Martin; Anaïs Vitrac; Stéphanie De Gois; Rachel Allison; Corinne Houart; Evan Reid; Jamilé Hazan; Coralie Fassier

ABSTRACT Functional analyses of genes responsible for neurodegenerative disorders have unveiled crucial links between neurodegenerative processes and key developmental signalling pathways. Mutations in SPG4-encoding spastin cause hereditary spastic paraplegia (HSP). Spastin is involved in diverse cellular processes that couple microtubule severing to membrane remodelling. Two main spastin isoforms are synthesised from alternative translational start sites (M1 and M87). However, their specific roles in neuronal development and homeostasis remain largely unknown. To selectively unravel their neuronal function, we blocked spastin synthesis from each initiation codon during zebrafish development and performed rescue analyses. The knockdown of each isoform led to different motor neuron and locomotion defects, which were not rescued by the selective expression of the other isoform. Notably, both morphant neuronal phenotypes were observed in a CRISPR/Cas9 spastin mutant. We next showed that M1 spastin, together with HSP proteins atlastin 1 and NIPA1, drives motor axon targeting by repressing BMP signalling, whereas M87 spastin acts downstream of neuropilin 1 to control motor neuron migration. Our data therefore suggest that defective BMP and neuropilin 1 signalling may contribute to the motor phenotype in a vertebrate model of spastin depletion. Summary: Spastin main isoforms play crucial and specific roles in zebrafish motor circuit wiring and larval locomotion through their distinct regulation of the BMP and neuropilin 1 axon guidance pathways.

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Evan Reid

University of Cambridge

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Anna Git

University of Cambridge

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Guy Pearson

University of Cambridge

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Beate Winner

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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