Benutzer: Gast  Login
Titel:

IFT74 variants cause skeletal ciliopathy and motile cilia defects in mice and humans.

Dokumenttyp:
Article; Journal Article; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't; Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural
Autor(en):
Bakey, Zeineb; Cabrera, Oscar A; Hoefele, Julia; Antony, Dinu; Wu, Kaman; Stuck, Michael W; Micha, Dimitra; Eguether, Thibaut; Smith, Abigail O; van der Wel, Nicole N; Wagner, Matias; Strittmatter, Lara; Beales, Philip L; Jonassen, Julie A; Thiffault, Isabelle; Cadieux-Dion, Maxime; Boyes, Laura; Sharif, Saba; Tüysüz, Beyhan; Dunstheimer, Desiree; Niessen, Hans W M; Devine, William; Lo, Cecilia W; Mitchison, Hannah M; Schmidts, Miriam; Pazour, Gregory J
Abstract:
Motile and non-motile cilia play critical roles in mammalian development and health. These organelles are composed of a 1000 or more unique proteins, but their assembly depends entirely on proteins synthesized in the cell body and transported into the cilium by intraflagellar transport (IFT). In mammals, malfunction of non-motile cilia due to IFT dysfunction results in complex developmental phenotypes that affect most organs. In contrast, disruption of motile cilia function causes subfertility,...     »
Zeitschriftentitel:
PLoS Genet
Jahr:
2023
Band / Volume:
19
Heft / Issue:
6
Volltext / DOI:
doi:10.1371/journal.pgen.1010796
PubMed:
http://view.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37315079
Print-ISSN:
1553-7390
TUM Einrichtung:
Institut für Humangenetik (Prof. Winkelmann)
 BibTeX