نتایج جستجو برای: ift

تعداد نتایج: 953  

Journal: :The Journal of Cell Biology 2008
Jonathan M. Scholey

Intraflagellar transport (IFT), the motor-dependent movement of IFT particles along the axoneme, is critical for the assembly, maintenance, and function of motile and sensory cilia, and, consequently, this process underlies ciliary motility, cilium-based signaling, and ciliopathies. Here, I present my perspective on IFT as a model system for studying motor-driven cargo transport. I review evide...

Journal: :American journal of human genetics 2013
Jan Halbritter Albane A Bizet Miriam Schmidts Jonathan D Porath Daniela A Braun Heon Yung Gee Aideen M McInerney-Leo Pauline Krug Emilie Filhol Erica E Davis Rannar Airik Peter G Czarnecki Anna M Lehman Peter Trnka Patrick Nitschké Christine Bole-Feysot Markus Schueler Bertrand Knebelmann Stéphane Burtey Attila J Szabó Kálmán Tory Paul J Leo Brooke Gardiner Fiona A McKenzie Andreas Zankl Matthew A Brown Jane L Hartley Eamonn R Maher Chunmei Li Michel R Leroux Peter J Scambler Shing H Zhan Steven J Jones Hülya Kayserili Beyhan Tuysuz Khemchand N Moorani Alexandru Constantinescu Ian D Krantz Bernard S Kaplan Jagesh V Shah Toby W Hurd Dan Doherty Nicholas Katsanis Emma L Duncan Edgar A Otto Philip L Beales Hannah M Mitchison Sophie Saunier Friedhelm Hildebrandt

Intraflagellar transport (IFT) depends on two evolutionarily conserved modules, subcomplexes A (IFT-A) and B (IFT-B), to drive ciliary assembly and maintenance. All six IFT-A components and their motor protein, DYNC2H1, have been linked to human skeletal ciliopathies, including asphyxiating thoracic dystrophy (ATD; also known as Jeune syndrome), Sensenbrenner syndrome, and Mainzer-Saldino syndr...

Journal: :Annual review of cell and developmental biology 2003
Jonathan M Scholey

It has been a decade since a novel form of microtubule (MT)-based motility, i.e., intraflagellar transport (IFT), was discovered in Chlamydomonas flagella. Subsequent research has supported the hypothesis that IFT is required for the assembly and maintenance of all cilia and flagella and that its underlying mechanism involves the transport of nonmembrane-bound macromolecular protein complexes (...

Journal: :Cell 2006
Qian Wang Junmin Pan William J. Snell

Primary cilia are widely used for signal transduction during development and in homeostasis and are assembled and maintained by intraflagellar transport (IFT). Here, we have dissected the role of IFT in signaling within the flagella (structural and functional counterparts of cilia) of the biflagellated green alga Chlamydomonas. Using a conditional IFT mutant enables us to deplete the IFT machin...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2013
William B Ludington Kimberly A Wemmer Karl F Lechtreck George B Witman Wallace F Marshall

Cilia and flagella are microtubule-based organelles that protrude from the cell body. Ciliary assembly requires intraflagellar transport (IFT), a motile system that delivers cargo from the cell body to the flagellar tip for assembly. The process controlling injections of IFT proteins into the flagellar compartment is, therefore, crucial to ciliogenesis. Extensive biochemical and genetic analyse...

2009
Gaia Pigino Stefan Geimer Salvatore Lanzavecchia Eugenio Paccagnini Francesca Cantele Dennis R. Diener Joel L. Rosenbaum Pietro Lupetti

Intraflagellar transport (IFT) is the bidirectional movement of multipolypeptide particles between the ciliary membrane and the axonemal microtubules, and is required for the assembly, maintenance, and sensory function of cilia and flagella. In this paper, we present the first high-resolution ultrastructural analysis of trains of flagellar IFT particles, using transmission electron microscopy a...

Journal: :Biochemical Society transactions 2004
J M Scholey G Ou J Snow A Gunnarson

IFT (intraflagellar transport) assembles and maintains sensory cilia on the dendritic endings of chemosensory neurons within the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans. During IFT, macromolecular protein complexes called IFT particles (which carry ciliary precursors) are moved from the base of the sensory cilium to its distal tip by anterograde IFT motors (kinesin-II and Osm-3 kinesin) and back to the...

2009
Karl-Ferdinand Lechtreck Eric C. Johnson Tsuyoshi Sakai Deborah Cochran Bryan A. Ballif John Rush Gregory J. Pazour Mitsuo Ikebe George B. Witman

In humans, seven evolutionarily conserved genes that cause the cilia-related disorder Bardet-Biedl syndrome (BBS) encode proteins that form a complex termed the BBSome. The function of the BBSome in the cilium is not well understood. We purified a BBSome-like complex from Chlamydomonas reinhardtii flagella and found that it contains at least BBS1, -4, -5, -7, and -8 and undergoes intraflagellar...

Journal: :British journal of anaesthesia 2015
J J Pandit I F Russell M Wang

The isolated forearm technique (IFT) enables an otherwise paralysed patient to communicate awareness to the anaesthetist. We present a debate that focuses on how best to interpret IFT responses. On one side, Pandit argues that there is a range of response types from none through to movement initiated by the patient to alert the researcher. He also presents a de novo numerical scale by which IFT...

Journal: :The Journal of Cell Biology 1998
Gregory J. Pazour Curtis G. Wilkerson George B. Witman

Several enzymes, including cytoplasmic and flagellar outer arm dynein, share an Mr 8,000 light chain termed LC8. The function of this chain is unknown, but it is highly conserved between a wide variety of organisms. We have identified deletion alleles of the gene (fla14) encoding this protein in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. These mutants have short, immotile flagella with deficiencies in radial s...

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