Publications by authors named "Lily Jan"

Calcium (Ca)-activated ion channels and lipid scramblases in the transmembrane protein 16 (TMEM16) family are structurally related to mechanosensitive ion channels in the TMEM63 and transmembrane channel-like (TMC) families. Members of this structurally related superfamily share similarities in gating transitions and serve a wide range of physiological functions, which is evident from their disease associations. The TMEM16, TMEM63 and TMC families include members with important functions in the cell membrane and/or intracellular organelles such as the endoplasmic reticulum, membrane contact sites, endosomes and lysosomes.

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To facilitate our understanding of proteome dynamics during signaling events, robust workflows affording fast time resolution without confounding factors are essential. We present Surface-exposed protein Labeling using PeroxidaSe, HO, and Tyramide-derivative (SLAPSHOT) to label extracellularly exposed proteins in a rapid, specific, and sensitive manner. Simple and flexible SLAPSHOT utilizes recombinant soluble APEX2 protein applied to cells, thus circumventing the engineering of tools and cells, biological perturbations, and labeling biases.

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Article Synopsis
  • Scientists studied special proteins that help our bodies feel touch and sound. They focused on how these proteins stretch and bend when pushed.
  • They found that these proteins are soft and start to change shape when enough force is applied.
  • This soft and stretchy behavior helps our bodies detect different types of touch, making it easier to sense things around us.
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TMEM16F is a calcium-activated phospholipid scramblase and nonselective ion channel, which allows the movement of lipids bidirectionally across the plasma membrane. While the functions of TMEM16F have been extensively characterized in multiple cell types, the role of TMEM16F in the central nervous system remains largely unknown. Here, we sought to study how TMEM16F in the brain may be involved in neurodegeneration.

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Article Synopsis
  • Cells can detect physical forces and turn them into electrical or chemical signals, a process called mechanotransduction, but how intracellular organelles, like lysosomes, sense these forces is not well understood.
  • * Researchers have identified the Drosophila TMEM63 (DmTMEM63) ion channel as a mechanosensor within lysosomes, affecting their shape and function.
  • * Mutations in Tmem63 lead to issues like poor lysosomal degradation and motor deficits in fruit flies, and similar functions are noted in mammals, indicating that studying TMEM63 can help understand mechanotransduction in organelles.
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The dual functions of TMEM16F as Ca-activated ion channel and lipid scramblase raise intriguing questions regarding their molecular basis. Intrigued by the ability of the FDA-approved drug niclosamide to inhibit TMEM16F-dependent syncytia formation induced by SARS-CoV-2, we examined cryo-EM structures of TMEM16F with or without bound niclosamide or 1PBC, a known blocker of TMEM16A Ca-activated Cl channel. Here, we report evidence for a lipid scrambling pathway along a groove harboring a lipid trail outside the ion permeation pore.

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Moyamoya disease, a cerebrovascular disease leading to strokes in children and young adults, is characterized by progressive occlusion of the distal internal carotid arteries and the formation of collateral vessels. Altered genes play a prominent role in the aetiology of moyamoya disease, but a causative gene is not identified in the majority of cases. Exome sequencing data from 151 individuals from 84 unsolved families were analysed to identify further genes for moyamoya disease, then candidate genes assessed in additional cases (150 probands).

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To facilitate our understanding of the often rapid and nuanced dynamics of extracellularly exposed proteomes during signaling events, it is important to devise robust workflows affording fast time resolution without biases and confounding factors. Here, we present urface-exposed protein beling using eroxidae, , and yramide-derivative (SLAPSHOT), to label extracellularly exposed proteins in a rapid, sensitive, and specific manner, while preserving cellular integrity. This experimentally simple and flexible method utilizes recombinant soluble APEX2 peroxidase that is applied to cells, thus circumventing biological perturbations, tedious engineering of tools and cells, and labeling biases.

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Membrane trafficking is essential for sculpting neuronal morphology. The GARP and EARP complexes are conserved tethers that regulate vesicle trafficking in the secretory and endolysosomal pathways, respectively. Both complexes contain the Vps51, Vps52, and Vps53 proteins, and a complex-specific protein: Vps54 in GARP and Vps50 in EARP.

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Neurodegeneration arising from aging, injury, or diseases has devastating health consequences. Whereas neuronal survival and axon degeneration have been studied extensively, much less is known about how neurodegeneration affects dendrites, in part due to the limited assay systems available. To develop an assay for dendrite degeneration and repair, we used photo-switchable caspase-3 (caspase-Light-Oxygen-Voltage-sensing [caspase-LOV]) in peripheral class 4 dendrite arborization (c4da) neurons to induce graded neurodegeneration by adjusting illumination duration during development and adulthood in .

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Adult hippocampal neurogenesis is critical for learning and memory, and aberrant adult neurogenesis has been implicated in cognitive decline associated with aging and neurological diseases [J. T. Gonçalves, S.

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The voltage-gated ion channel activity depends on both activation (transition from the resting state to the open state) and inactivation. Inactivation is a self-restraint mechanism to limit ion conduction and is as crucial to membrane excitability as activation. Inactivation can occur when the channel is open or closed.

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Sensory neurons enable animals to detect environmental changes and avoid harm. An intriguing open question concerns how the various attributes of sensory neurons arise in development. larvae undergo a behavioral transition by robustly activating a thermal nociceptive escape behavior during the second half of larval development (third instar).

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Article Synopsis
  • The TMEM16 family consists of ten related proteins that play various roles in the body, some of which are linked to cancer and respiratory diseases.
  • Two important modulators with potential therapeutic applications are 1PBC, which inhibits tumor growth, and the FDA-approved drug niclosamide, which prevents a specific viral infection by targeting TMEM16F.
  • Researchers have mapped the structures of TMEM16F when bound to these drugs, revealing a common binding site and demonstrating that the drug's interaction can vary between TMEM16A and TMEM16F, paving the way for better-targeted treatments.
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The MRGPRX family of receptors (MRGPRX1-4) is a family of mas-related G-protein-coupled receptors that have evolved relatively recently. Of these, MRGPRX2 and MRGPRX4 are key physiological and pathological mediators of itch and related mast cell-mediated hypersensitivity reactions. MRGPRX2 couples to both G and G in mast cells.

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In the postnatal brain, neurogenesis occurs only within a few regions, such as the hippocampal sub-granular zone (SGZ). Postnatal neurogenesis is tightly regulated by factors that balance stem cell renewal with differentiation, and it gives rise to neurons that participate in learning and memory formation. The Kv1.

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Febrile seizures (FSs) are the most common convulsion in infancy and childhood. Considering the limitations of current treatments, it is important to examine the mechanistic cause of FSs. Prompted by a genome-wide association study identifying TMEM16C (also known as ANO3) as a risk factor of FSs, we showed previously that loss of TMEM16C function causes hippocampal neuronal hyperexcitability [Feenstra , Nat.

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Mucus clearance constitutes the primary defence of the respiratory system against viruses, bacteria and environmental insults [1]. This transport across the entire airway emerges from the integrated activity of thousands of multiciliated cells, each containing hundreds of cilia, which together must coordinate their spatial arrangement, alignment and motility [2, 3]. The mechanisms of fluid transport have been studied extensively at the level of an individual cilium [4, 5], collectively moving metachronal waves [6-10], and more generally the hydrodynamics of active matter [11, 12].

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Communication between organelles is essential for their cellular homeostasis. Neurodegeneration reflects the declining ability of neurons to maintain cellular homeostasis over a lifetime, where the endolysosomal pathway plays a prominent role by regulating protein and lipid sorting and degradation. Here we report that TMEM16K, an endoplasmic reticulum lipid scramblase causative for spinocerebellar ataxia (SCAR10), is an interorganelle regulator of the endolysosomal pathway.

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The conducting airway forms a protective mucosal barrier and is the primary target of airway disorders. The molecular events required for the formation and function of the airway mucosal barrier, as well as the mechanisms by which barrier dysfunction leads to early onset airway diseases, remain unclear. In this study, we systematically characterized the developmental landscape of the mouse airway using single-cell RNA sequencing and identified remarkably conserved cellular programs operating during human fetal development.

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Activation of mechanosensitive ion channels underlies a variety of fundamental physiological processes that require sensation of mechanical force. Different mechanosensitive channels adapt distinctive structures and mechanotransduction mechanisms to fit their biological roles. How mechanosensitive channels work, especially in animals, has been extensively studied in the past decade.

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Proliferating cells, typically considered "nonexcitable," nevertheless, exhibit regulation by bioelectric signals. Notably, voltage-gated sodium channels (VGSC) that are crucial for neuronal excitability are also found in progenitors and up-regulated in cancer. Here, we identify a role for VGSC in proliferation of neuroblast (NB) lineages within the central nervous system.

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TMEM16B (ANO2) is the Ca-activated chloride channel expressed in multiple brain regions, including the amygdala. Here we report that knockout mice exhibit impaired anxiety-related behaviors and context-independent fear memory, thus implicating TMEM16B in anxiety modulation. We found that TMEM16B is expressed in somatostatin-positive (SOM) GABAergic neurons of the central lateral amygdala (CeL), and its activity modulates action potential duration and inhibitory postsynaptic current (IPSC).

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