Publications by authors named "G Boncompain"

Article Synopsis
  • Sjögren's disease is a chronic autoimmune condition primarily causing dry mouth and eyes, alongside other symptoms.
  • It involves reduced saliva production and changes in the quality of mucins, which are essential for mouth and eye hydration.
  • A protein called Giantin is mislocalized in the salivary glands of Sjögren’s patients, disrupting its interaction with enzymes that modify mucins, potentially explaining decreased mucin sulfation in these individuals.
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To reach the lysosome, lysosomal membrane proteins (LMPs) are translocated in the endoplasmic reticulum after synthesis and then transported to the Golgi apparatus. The existence of a direct transport from the Golgi apparatus to the endosomes but also of an indirect route through the plasma membrane has been described. Clathrin adaptor binding motifs contained in the cytosolic tail of LMPs have been described as key players in their intracellular trafficking.

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High content screening (HCS) is a technology that automates cell biology experiments at large scale. A High Content Screen produces a high amount of microscopy images of cells under many conditions and requires that a dedicated image and data analysis workflow be designed for each assay to select hits. This heavy data analytic step remains challenging and has been recognized as one of the burdens hindering the adoption of HCS.

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Molecular tools enabling the control and observation of the proximity of proteins are essential for studying the functional role of physical distance between two proteins. Here we present CATCHFIRE (chemically assisted tethering of chimera by fluorogenic-induced recognition), a chemically induced proximity technology with intrinsic fluorescence imaging and sensing capabilities. CATCHFIRE relies on genetic fusion to small dimerizing domains that interact upon addition of fluorogenic inducers of proximity that fluoresce upon formation of the ternary assembly, allowing real-time monitoring of the chemically induced proximity.

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Association genetic studies and genome-scale CRISPR screens have recently identified ARF3 and TMEM251/LYSET/GCAF as Golgi-resident factors essential to brain and skeletal development. Here we discuss how even though the consequences of mutations in these genes affect endosomal and lysosomal compartments, the problem originates in the Golgi complex and may involve either the identity of the carrier vesicles or that of cargo molecules.

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