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Characterizing the Roles of C1ORF198 in Centriole and Primary Cilium Formation and Function

Date
August 23, 2023
Time
1:00 PM EDT - 4:00 PM EDT
Location
KHE225
Open To
Event open to Students, Faculty, Staff, Post-Doctoral Fellows, Public
Contact
Sarah Kovacs skovacs@torontomu.ca

Candidate: Karl Cruz
Supervisor: Dr. Gagan Gupta

ABSTRACT

Centrioles are microtubule-based structures of the cell that are important in forming the centrosomes and primary cilium, which play a critical role in cell division, signaling, and development. Through a large-scale proteomics study of centriolar proteins, we found that an uncharacterized protein, Chromosome 1 Open Reading Frame 198 (C1ORF198), is a candidate interactor of known centriolar and ciliary proteins. Our findings indicate that C1ORF198 localizes to the centriole throughout the cell cycle, primarily during interphase, and at the base of the primary cilium. Depletion or knockout of C1ORF198 resulted in an
amplification of the centriole number, thus, suggesting that it regulates the fidelity of centriole duplication through an unknown mechanism. Moreover, C1ORF198 is overexpressed in certain cancer lines, and may play a role in primary cilium formation. Using a combination of functional, localization and proteomic assays, we seek to delineate C1ORF198 function in human cells.