Publications by authors named "Svetlana Makova"

Nephronophthisis (NPHP) is a ciliopathy characterized by renal fibrosis and cyst formation, and accounts for a significant portion of end stage renal disease in children and young adults. Currently, no targeted therapy is available for this disease. is one of the over 25 NPHP genes identified to date.

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Article Synopsis
  • * Researchers found an enrichment of loss-of-function mutations affecting H2Bub1 in CHD patients, particularly those with ciliary dysfunction and abnormal heart laterality.
  • * Functional studies on Rnf20, Rnf40, and Ube2b demonstrated their synergistic roles in affecting heart asymmetry and cilia movement, suggesting that H2Bub1 is crucial for the expression of cilia genes and may serve as a transcriptional regulator linked to
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Heterotaxy is a disorder of left-right body patterning, or laterality, that is associated with major congenital heart disease. The aetiology and mechanisms underlying most cases of human heterotaxy are poorly understood. In vertebrates, laterality is initiated at the embryonic left-right organizer, where motile cilia generate leftward flow that is detected by immotile sensory cilia, which transduce flow into downstream asymmetric signals.

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Motile cilia create asymmetric fluid flow in the evolutionarily conserved ciliated organ of asymmetry (COA) and play a fundamental role in establishing the left-right (LR) axis in vertebrate embryos. The transcriptional control of the large group of genes that encode proteins that contribute to ciliary structure and function remains poorly understood. In this study we find that the winged helix transcription factor Rfx2 is expressed in motile cilia in mouse and zebrafish embryos.

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The vertebrate body plan has conserved handed left-right (LR) asymmetry that is manifested in the heart, lungs, and gut. Leftward flow of extracellular fluid at the node (nodal flow) is critical for normal LR axis determination in the mouse. Nodal flow is generated by motile node cell monocilia and requires the axonemal dynein, left-right dynein (lrd).

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