Don't miss our weekly PhD newsletter | Sign up now Don't miss our weekly PhD newsletter | Sign up now

  Rhomboid-like proteins: from molecular principles to their role in human disease


   Sir William Dunn School of Pathology

This project is no longer listed on FindAPhD.com and may not be available.

Click here to search FindAPhD.com for PhD studentship opportunities
  Prof M Freeman  No more applications being accepted  Competition Funded PhD Project (Students Worldwide)

About the Project

The questions we address deal with the molecular mechanisms that underlie signalling between cells, and cellular responses to stress. These processes are implicated in multiple human diseases including cancer, neurodegeneration, inflammation and infection so, although we mostly do discovery science, our work has wide potential medical relevance.

Our particular focus is the rhomboid-like superfamily of membrane proteins. We were the first to discover rhomboids, and we proved that they were novel intramembrane proteases, conserved across evolution, and that they controlled growth factor signalling. Since then, the rhomboids have been implicated in many biological processes including, for example, growth factor activation, neurodegeneration, mitochondrial function, host cell invasion by parasites and bacterial physiology.

More recently we have become interested in the much wider superfamily of rhomboid-like proteins, the majority of which are not proteases. We have studied a few examples and have uncovered roles in controlling the cellular fate of membrane proteins. 

Our experimental approaches include genetics, cell biology, biochemistry and structural biology, mainly in mammalian cells but also with a variety of model systems including mice, Drosophila and yeast. Although our main effort is aimed at understanding fundamental biology of the rhomboid-like superfamily, we are also actively pursuing the potential medical significance of our basic discoveries.

Biological Sciences (4) Medicine (26)

Funding Notes

4 Year DPhil Prize Studentships cover full University fees, a tax free enhanced stipend of ~£21,122 pa, and up to £5,300 pa for research costs and travel. The competition is open to applicants from all countries. See https://www.path.ox.ac.uk for full details and to apply.

References

Tang, S., Beattie, A. T., Kafkova, L., Petris, G., Huguenin-Dezot, N., Fiedler, M., Freeman, M., and Chin, J. W. (2022). Mechanism-based traps enable protease and hydrolase substrate discovery. Nature 602, 701-707.
Sieber, B., Lu, F., Stribbling, S. M., Grieve, A. G., Ryan, A. J., and Freeman, M. (2022). iRhom2 regulates ERBB signalling to promote KRAS-driven tumour growth of lung cancer cells. J Cell Sci 135, jcs259949.
Dulloo, I., Atakpa-Adaji, P., Yeh, Y. C., Levet, C., Muliyil, S., Lu, F., Taylor, C. W., and Freeman, M. (2022). iRhom pseudoproteases regulate ER stress-induced cell death through IP3 receptors and BCL-2. Nat Commun 13, 1257.
Grieve, A. G., Yeh, Y. C., Chang, Y. F., Huang, H. Y., Zarcone, L., Breuning, J., Johnson, N., Stříšovský, K., Brown, M. H., Parekh, A. B., and Freeman, M. (2021). Conformational surveillance of Orai1 by a rhomboid intramembrane protease prevents inappropriate CRAC channel activation. Mol Cell 81, 4784-4798.e7.
Liu, G., Beaton, S. E., Grieve, A. G., Evans, R., Rogers, M., Strisovsky, K., Armstrong, F. A., Freeman, M., Exley, R. M., and Tang, C. M. (2020). Bacterial rhomboid proteases mediate quality control of orphan membrane proteins. EMBO J 39, e102922.
Dulloo, I., Muliyil, S., and Freeman, M. (2019). The molecular, cellular and pathophysiological roles of iRhom pseudoproteases. Open Biol 9, 190003
Künzel, U., Grieve, A. G., Meng, Y., Sieber, B., Cowley, S. A., and Freeman, M. (2018). FRMD8 promotes inflammatory and growth factor signalling by stabilising the iRhom/ADAM17 sheddase complex. eLife 7, 35012.

How good is research at University of Oxford in Biological Sciences?


Research output data provided by the Research Excellence Framework (REF)

Click here to see the results for all UK universities
Search Suggestions
Search suggestions

Based on your current searches we recommend the following search filters.