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Featured researches published by Wojtek Auerbach.


Nature Genetics | 1997

Huntingtin is required for neurogenesis and is not impaired by the Huntington's disease CAG expansion

Jacqueline K. White; Wojtek Auerbach; Mabel P. Duyao; Jean Paul Vonsattel; James F. Gusella; Alexandra L. Joyner; Marcy E. MacDonald

Huntingtons disease (HD) is an autosomal-dominant neurodegenerative disorder caused by a CAG repeat expansion that lengthens a glutamine segment in the novel huntingtin protein. To elucidate the molecular basis of HD, we extended the polyglutamine tract of the mouse homologue, Hdh, by targetted introduction of an expanded human HD CAG repeat, creating mutant HdhneoQ50 and HdhQ50 alleles that express reduced and wild-type levels of altered huntingtin, respectively. Mice homozygous for reduced levels displayed characteristic aberrant brain development and perinatal lethality, indicating a critical function for Hdh in neurogenesis. However, mice with normal levels of mutant huntingtin did not display these abnormalities, indicating that the expanded CAG repeat does not eliminate or detectably impair huntingtins neurogenic function. Thus, the HD defect in man does not mimic complete or partial Hdh inactivation and appears to cause neurodegenerative disease by a gain-of-function mechanism.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2004

Deletion of Mouse Rad9 Causes Abnormal Cellular Responses to DNA Damage, Genomic Instability, and Embryonic Lethality

Kevin M. Hopkins; Wojtek Auerbach; Xiang Yuan Wang; M. Prakash Hande; Haiying Hang; Debra J. Wolgemuth; Alexandra L. Joyner; Howard B. Lieberman

ABSTRACT The fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe rad9 gene promotes cell survival through activation of cell cycle checkpoints induced by DNA damage. Mouse embryonic stem cells with a targeted deletion of Mrad9, the mouse ortholog of this gene, were created to evaluate its function in mammals. Mrad9−/− cells demonstrated a marked increase in spontaneous chromosome aberrations and HPRT mutations, indicating a role in the maintenance of genomic integrity. These cells were also extremely sensitive to UV light, gamma rays, and hydroxyurea, and heterozygotes were somewhat sensitive to the last two agents relative to Mrad9 +/+ controls. Mrad9 −/− cells could initiate but not maintain gamma-ray-induced G2 delay and retained the ability to delay DNA synthesis rapidly after UV irradiation, suggesting that checkpoint abnormalities contribute little to the radiosensitivity observed. Ectopic expression of Mrad9 or human HRAD9 complemented Mrad9 −/− cell defects, indicating that the gene has radioresponse and genomic maintenance functions that are evolutionarily conserved. Mrad9 +/− mice were generated, but heterozygous intercrosses failed to yield Mrad9 −/− pups, since embryos died at midgestation. Furthermore, Mrad9 −/− mouse embryo fibroblasts were not viable. These investigations establish Mrad9 as a key mammalian genetic element of pathways that regulate the cellular response to DNA damage, maintenance of genomic integrity, and proper embryonic development.


Traffic | 2006

Recycling to the Plasma Membrane is Delayed in EHD1 Knockout Mice

Debora Rapaport; Wojtek Auerbach; Naava Naslavsky; Metsada Pasmanik-Chor; Emilia Galperin; Amos Fein; Steve Caplan; Alexandra L. Joyner; Mia Horowitz

EHD1 is a member of the EHD family that contains four mammalian homologs. Among the invertebrate orthologs are a single Drosophila and Caenorhabditis elegans proteins and two plant members. They all contain three modules, a N‐terminal domain that contains nucleotide‐binding motifs, a central coiled–coil domain involved in oligomerization and a C‐terminal region that harbors the EH domain. Studies in C. elegans and EHD1 depletion by RNA interference in human cells have demonstrated that it regulates recycling of membrane proteins. We addressed the physiological role of EHD1 through its inactivation in the mouse. Ehd1 knockout mice were indistinguishable from normal mice, had a normal life span and showed no histological abnormalities. Analysis of transferrin uptake in Ehd1–/– embryonic fibroblasts demonstrated delayed recycling to the plasma membrane with accumulation of transferrin in the endocytic recycling compartment. Our results corroborate the established role of EHD1 in the exit of membrane proteins from recycling endosomes in vivo in a mouse model.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2005

The exon 8-containing prosaposin gene splice variant is dispensable for mouse development, lysosomal function, and secretion.

Tsadok Cohen; Wojtek Auerbach; Liat Ravid; Jacques Bodennec; Amos Fein; Anthony H. Futerman; Alexandra L. Joyner; Mia Horowitz

ABSTRACT Prosaposin is a multifunctional protein with diverse functions. Intracellularly, prosaposin is a precursor of four sphingolipid activator proteins, saposins A to D, which are required for hydrolysis of sphingolipids by several lysosomal exohydrolases. Secreted prosaposin has been implicated as a neurotrophic, myelinotrophic, and myotrophic factor as well as a spermatogenic factor. It has also been implicated in fertilization. The human and the mouse prosaposin gene has a 9-bp exon (exon 8) that is alternatively spliced, resulting in an isoform with three extra amino acids, Gln-Asp-Gln, within the saposin B domain. Alternative splicing in the prosaposin gene is conserved from fish to humans, tissue specific, and regulated in the brain during development and nerve regeneration-degeneration processes. To elucidate the physiological role of alternative splicing, we have generated a mouse lacking exon 8 by homologous recombination. The exon 8 prosaposin mutant mice are healthy and fertile with no obvious phenotype. No changes were detected in prosaposin secretion or in accumulation and metabolism of gangliosides, sulfatides, neutral glycosphingolipids, neutral phospholipids, other neutral lipids, and ceramide. These data strongly indicate that the prosaposin variant containing the exon 8-encoded three amino acids is dispensable for normal mouse development and fertility as well as for prosaposin secretion and its lysosomal function, at least in the presence of the prosaposin variant missing the exon 8-encoded three amino acids.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2000

Long glutamine tracts cause nuclear localization of a novel form of huntingtin in medium spiny striatal neurons in HdhQ92 and HdhQ111 knock-in mice

Vanessa C. Wheeler; Jacqueline K. White; Claire-Anne Gutekunst; Vladimir Vrbanac; Meredith Weaver; Xiao-Jiang Li; Shi-Hua Li; Hong Yi; Jean-Paul Vonsattel; James F. Gusella; Steven M. Hersch; Wojtek Auerbach; Alexandra L. Joyner; Marcy E. MacDonald


Human Molecular Genetics | 1999

Length-Dependent Gametic CAG Repeat Instability in the Huntington's Disease Knock-in Mouse

Vanessa C. Wheeler; Wojtek Auerbach; Jacqueline K. White; Jayalakshmi Srinidhi; Anna Auerbach; Angela Ryan; Mabel P. Duyao; Vladimir Vrbanac; Meredith Weaver; James F. Gusella; Alexandra L. Joyner; Marcy E. MacDonald


Nature Genetics | 1996

Inactivation of Fac in mice produces inducible chromosomal instability and reduced fertility reminiscent of Fanconi anaemia

Ming Chen; Darrell J. Tomkins; Wojtek Auerbach; Colin McKerlie; Hagop Youssoufian; Lili Liu; Olga I. Gan; Madeleine Carreau; Anna Auerbach; Tim Groves; Cynthia J. Guidos; Melvin H. Freedman; Jay Cross; Dean H. Percy; John E. Dick; Alexandra L. Joyner; Manuel Buchwald


Human Molecular Genetics | 2001

The HD mutation causes progressive lethal neurological disease in mice expressing reduced levels of huntingtin

Wojtek Auerbach; M Hurlbert; Paige Hilditch-Maguire; Youssef Zaim Wadghiri; Vanessa C. Wheeler; Sara I. Cohen; Alexandra L. Joyner; Marcy E. MacDonald; Daniel H. Turnbull


Cold Spring Harbor Symposia on Quantitative Biology | 1996

Targeted inactivation of the mouse Huntington's disease gene homolog Hdh.

Marcy E. MacDonald; Mabel P. Duyao; Teresa Calzonetti; Anna Auerbach; Angela Ryan; Glenn Barnes; Jacqueline K. White; Wojtek Auerbach; Jean-Paul Vonsattel; James F. Gusella; Alexandra L. Joyner


Biochemistry and Cell Biology | 1992

Expression of a mutant regulatory subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase in the Caco-2 human colonic carcinoma cell line

Vera Mihajlovic; Arkadius J. Krolczyk; Wojtek Auerbach; Manuel Buchwald; Bernard P. Schimmer

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Jacqueline K. White

Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute

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Angela Ryan

Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital

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Jean-Paul Vonsattel

Columbia University Medical Center

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