Janine D. Liburd, PhD CAPM

Research and Commercialization Manager Vielight

  • Toronto ON

Dr. Liburd supports clinical and preclinical studies with proven success leading projects and establishing key collaborations.

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Biography

PhD trained scientist with research experience in diverse areas of Medical Device and Diagnostics, and Global Health. Experience supporting clinical and preclinical studies with proven success leading projects and establishing key collaborations. Revered for attention to detail, proactive approach and passionate drive to make a difference.

Areas of Expertise

Alzheimer's Disease
Global Health
Medical Devices
Diagnostics
Commercialization

Accomplishments

NSERC Postgraduate Doctoral Scholarship

Queen's University
2010 - 2012

Dr. Robert John Wilson Fellowship

Queen's University
2008 - 2010

Huntly MacDonald Sinclair Tuition Fellowship

Queen’s University
2008-2009

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Education

IMARC University

Foundation Package

2015

Trained in Clinical Research specifically US FDA regulations, GCP and Human subjects protection

Harvard Catalyst Course

Medical Device Development

2014

Intro to medical device &diagnostic innovation including technology transfer, regulatory and commercialization

Queen's University

PhD

Biochemistry

2013

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Affiliations

  • Certified Associate Project Manager (CAPM)

Event Appearances

Exhibitor

Brain Futures  Washington DC., Sept 6-7 2017

Exhibitor

Alzheimer’s Association International Conference  Toronto, Canada Jul 22-28 2016

Towards understanding myosin regulation by light chains: The case of Dictyostelium Myo1B and MlcB

MlcB. MOOT XXII NMR Symposium  Ottawa, Ontario, 2009

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Articles

Structure of the Single-lobe Myosin Light Chain C in Complex with the Light Chain-binding Domains of Myosin-1C Provides Insight into Divergent IQ motif Recognition

Journal of Biological Chemistry

Langelaan DN, Liburd J, Yang Y, Miller E, Chitayat S, Crawley SW, Côté GP and Smith SP.\

2016

Myosin light chains are key regulators of class 1 myosins and typically comprise two domains, with calmodulin being the archetypal example. They bind IQ motifs within the myosin neck region and amplify conformational changes in the motor domain. A single lobe light chain, myosin light chain C (MlcC), was recently identified and shown to specifically bind to two sequentially divergent IQ motifs of the Dictyostelium myosin-1C. To provide a molecular basis of this interaction, the structures of apo-MlcC and a 2:1 MlcC·myosin-1C neck complex were determined. The two non-functional EF-hand motifs of MlcC pack together to form a globular four-helix bundle that opens up to expose a central hydrophobic groove, which interacts with the N-terminal portion of the divergent IQ1 and IQ2 motifs. The N- and C-terminal regions of MlcC make critical contacts that contribute to its specific interactions with the myosin-1C divergent IQ motifs, which are contacts that deviate from the traditional mode of calmodulin-IQ recognition.

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Structure of the small Dictyostelium discoideum Myosin Light Chain MlcB provides Insights into MyoB IQ-motif recognition

Journal of Biological Chemistry

Liburd J, Chitayat S, Crawley SW, Munro K, Miller E, Denis CM, Spencer HL, Côté GP and Smith SP

2014

Dictyostelium discoideum MyoB is a class I myosin involved in the formation and retraction of membrane projections, cortical tension generation, membrane recycling, and phagosome maturation. The MyoB-specific, single-lobe EF-hand light chain MlcB binds the sole IQ motif of MyoB with submicromolar affinity in the absence and presence of Ca2+. However, the structural features of this novel myosin light chain and its interaction with its cognate IQ motif remain uncharacterized. Here, we describe the NMR-derived solution structure of apoMlcB, which displays a globular four-helix bundle. Helix 1 adopts a unique orientation when compared with the apo states of the EF-hand calcium-binding proteins calmodulin, S100B, and calbindin D9k. NMR-based chemical shift perturbation mapping identified a hydrophobic MyoB IQ binding surface that involves amino acid residues in helices I and IV and the functional N-terminal Ca2+ binding loop, a site that appears to be maintained when MlcB adopts the holo state. Complementary mutagenesis and binding studies indicated that residues Ile-701, Phe-705, and Trp-708 of the MyoB IQ motif are critical for recognition of MlcB, which together allowed the generation of a structural model of the apoMlcB-MyoB IQ complex. We conclude that the mode of IQ motif recognition by the novel single-lobe MlcB differs considerably from that of stereotypical bilobal light chains such as calmodulin.

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Identification of calmodulin and MlcC as light chains for Dictyostelium myosin-I isozymes

Biochemistry

Identification of calmodulin and MlcC as light chains for Dictyostelium myosin-I isozymes

2011

Dictyostelium discoideum express seven single-headed myosin-I isozymes (MyoA-MyoE and MyoK) that drive motile processes at the cell membrane. The light chains for MyoA and MyoE were identified by expressing Flag-tagged constructs consisting of the motor domain and the two IQ motifs in the neck region in Dictyostelium. The MyoA and MyoE constructs both copurified with calmodulin. Isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) showed that apo-calmodulin bound to peptides corresponding to the MyoA and MyoE IQ motifs with micromolar affinity. In the presence of calcium, calmodulin cross-linked two IQ motif peptides, with one domain binding with nanomolar affinity and the other with micromolar affinity. The IQ motifs were required for the actin-activated MgATPase activity of MyoA but not MyoE; however, neither myosin exhibited calcium-dependent activity. A Flag-tagged construct consisting of the MyoC motor domain and the three IQ motifs in the adjacent neck region bound a novel 8.6 kDa two EF-hand protein named MlcC, for myosin light chain for MyoC. MlcC is most similar to the C-terminal domain of calmodulin but does not bind calcium. ITC studies showed that MlcC binds IQ1 and IQ2 but not IQ3 of MyoC. IQ3 contains a proline residue that may render it nonfunctional. Each long-tailed Dictyostelium myosin-I has now been shown to have a unique light chain (MyoB-MlcB, MyoC-MlcC, and MyoD-MlcD), whereas the short-tailed myosins-I, MyoA and MyoE, have the multifunctional calmodulin as a light chain. The diversity in light chain composition is likely to contribute to the distinct cellular functions of each myosin-I isozyme.

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