17 results on '"Kelvin See"'
Search Results
2. Genome-wide linkage, exome sequencing and functional analyses identify ABCB6 as the pathogenic gene of dyschromatosis universalis hereditaria.
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Hong Liu, Yi Li, Ken Kwok Hon Hung, Na Wang, Chuan Wang, Xuechao Chen, Donglai Sheng, Xi'an Fu, Kelvin See, Jia Nee Foo, Huiqi Low, Herty Liany, Ishak Darryl Irwan, Jian Liu, Baoqi Yang, Mingfei Chen, Yongxiang Yu, Gongqi Yu, Guiye Niu, Jiabao You, Yan Zhou, Shanshan Ma, Ting Wang, Xiaoxiao Yan, Boon Kee Goh, John E A Common, Birgitte E Lane, Yonghu Sun, Guizhi Zhou, Xianmei Lu, Zhenhua Wang, Hongqing Tian, Yuanhua Cao, Shumin Chen, Qiji Liu, Jianjun Liu, and Furen Zhang
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
As a genetic disorder of abnormal pigmentation, the molecular basis of dyschromatosis universalis hereditaria (DUH) had remained unclear until recently when ABCB6 was reported as a causative gene of DUH.We performed genome-wide linkage scan using Illumina Human 660W-Quad BeadChip and exome sequencing analyses using Agilent SureSelect Human All Exon Kits in a multiplex Chinese DUH family to identify the pathogenic mutations and verified the candidate mutations using Sanger sequencing. Quantitative RT-PCR and Immunohistochemistry was performed to verify the expression of the pathogenic gene, Zebrafish was also used to confirm the functional role of ABCB6 in melanocytes and pigmentation.Genome-wide linkage (assuming autosomal dominant inheritance mode) and exome sequencing analyses identified ABCB6 as the disease candidate gene by discovering a coding mutation (c.1358C>T; p.Ala453Val) that co-segregates with the disease phenotype. Further mutation analysis of ABCB6 in four other DUH families and two sporadic cases by Sanger sequencing confirmed the mutation (c.1358C>T; p.Ala453Val) and discovered a second, co-segregating coding mutation (c.964A>C; p.Ser322Lys) in one of the four families. Both mutations were heterozygous in DUH patients and not present in the 1000 Genome Project and dbSNP database as well as 1,516 unrelated Chinese healthy controls. Expression analysis in human skin and mutagenesis interrogation in zebrafish confirmed the functional role of ABCB6 in melanocytes and pigmentation. Given the involvement of ABCB6 mutations in coloboma, we performed ophthalmological examination of the DUH carriers of ABCB6 mutations and found ocular abnormalities in them.Our study has advanced our understanding of DUH pathogenesis and revealed the shared pathological mechanism between pigmentary DUH and ocular coloboma.
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- 2014
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3. Histone methyltransferase activity programs nuclear peripheral genome positioning
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Jonathan A. Epstein, Kelvin See, Jun Li, Andrey Poleshko, Anna A. Kiseleva, Cheryl L. Smith, and Feiyan Liu
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Histone-modifying enzymes ,Histone methyltransferase activity ,Cellular differentiation ,Biology ,Article ,Epigenesis, Genetic ,Histones ,03 medical and health sciences ,Histone H3 ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Epigenetics ,Nuclear membrane ,Molecular Biology ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,Cell Differentiation ,Cell Biology ,Chromatin ,Cell biology ,HEK293 Cells ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Histone methyltransferase ,Histone Methyltransferases ,Protein Processing, Post-Translational ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
Spatial organization of the genome in the nucleus plays a critical role in development and regulation of transcription. A genomic region that resides at the nuclear periphery is part of the chromatin layer marked with histone H3 lysine 9 dimethyl (H3K9me2), but chromatin reorganization during cell differentiation can cause movement in and out of this nuclear compartment with patterns specific for individual cell fates. Here we describe a CRISPR-based system that allows visualization coupled with forced spatial relocalization of a target genomic locus in live cells. We demonstrate that a specified locus can be tethered to the nuclear periphery through direct binding to a dCas9-Lap2β fusion protein at the nuclear membrane, or via targeting of a histone methyltransferase (HMT), G9a fused to dCas9, that promotes H3K9me2 labeling and localization to the nuclear periphery. The enzymatic activity of the HMT is sufficient to promote this repositioning, while disruption of the catalytic activity abolishes the localization effect. We further demonstrate that dCas9-G9a-mediated localization to the nuclear periphery is independent of nuclear actin polymerization. Our data suggest a function for epigenetic histone modifying enzymes in spatial chromatin organization and provide a system for tracking and labeling targeted genomic regions in live cells.
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- 2020
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4. A Neurexin2aa deficiency results in axon pathfinding defects and increased anxiety in zebrafish
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Angela Koh, Yun Jing Goh, Thorsten Wohland, Vindhya Chaganty, Kathiresan Purushothaman, Shijie Tao, Kelvin See, László Orbán, Christoph Winkler, and Ajay S. Mathuru
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Neurogenesis ,Neurexin ,Synaptogenesis ,Nerve Tissue Proteins ,Biology ,Anxiety ,Neuromuscular junction ,Synapse ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Genetics ,medicine ,Animals ,Axon ,Molecular Biology ,Zebrafish ,Genetics (clinical) ,030304 developmental biology ,Motor Neurons ,0303 health sciences ,Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental ,General Medicine ,Spinal muscular atrophy ,Zebrafish Proteins ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Cell biology ,Axon Guidance ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Axon guidance ,CRISPR-Cas Systems ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Neurexins are presynaptic transmembrane proteins that control synapse activity and are risk factors for autism spectrum disorder. Zebrafish, a popular model for behavioral studies, has six neurexin genes, but their functions in embryogenesis and behavior remain largely unknown. We have previously reported that nrxn2a is aberrantly spliced and specifically dysregulated in motor neurons (MNs) in models of spinal muscular atrophy. In this study, we generated nrxn2aa−/− mutants by CRISPR/Cas9 to understand nrxn2aa function at the zebrafish neuromuscular junction (NMJ) and to determine the effects of its deficiency on adult behavior. Homozygous mutant embryos derived from heterozygous parents did not show obvious defects in axon outgrowth or synaptogenesis of MNs. In contrast, maternal-zygotic (MZ) nrxn2aa−/− mutants displayed extensively branched axons and defective MNs, suggesting a cell-autonomous role for maternally provided nrxn2aa in MN development. Analysis of the NMJs revealed enlarged choice points in MNs of mutant larvae and reduced co-localization of pre- and post-synaptic terminals, indicating impaired synapse formation. Severe early NMJ defects partially recovered in late embryos when mutant transcripts became strongly upregulated. Ultimately, however, the induced defects resulted in muscular atrophy symptoms in adult MZ mutants. Zygotic homozygous mutants developed normally but displayed increased anxiety at adult stages. Together, our data demonstrate an essential role for maternal nrxn2aa in NMJ synapse establishment, while zygotic nrxn2aa expression appears dispensable for synapse maintenance. The viable nrxn2aa−/− mutant furthermore serves as a novel model to study how an increase in anxiety-like behaviors impacts other deficits.
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- 2020
5. Endocardial Hippo signaling regulates myocardial growth and cardiogenesis
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Stanley Artap, Jonathan A. Epstein, Rajan Jain, Li Li, Kelvin See, Cheryl L. Smith, Andrey Poleshko, Haig Aghajanian, and Lauren J. Manderfield
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0301 basic medicine ,Neuregulin-1 ,Organogenesis ,Cell ,Cell Cycle Proteins ,Protein Serine-Threonine Kinases ,Biology ,Article ,Cell size ,Mice ,03 medical and health sciences ,Paracrine signalling ,Transcription (biology) ,Human Umbilical Vein Endothelial Cells ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Hippo Signaling Pathway ,Molecular Biology ,Endocardium ,Adaptor Proteins, Signal Transducing ,Hippo signaling pathway ,Myocardium ,Heart ,YAP-Signaling Proteins ,Cell Biology ,Fibroblasts ,Phosphoproteins ,Cell biology ,DNA-Binding Proteins ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Hippo signaling ,Neuregulin ,Acyltransferases ,Signal Transduction ,Transcription Factors ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
The Hippo signaling pathway has been implicated in control of cell and organ size, proliferation, and endothelial-mesenchymal transformation. This pathway impacts upon two partially redundant transcription cofactors, Yap and Taz, that interact with other factors, including members of the Tead family, to affect expression of downstream genes. Yap and Taz have been shown to regulate, in a cell-autonomous manner, myocardial proliferation, myocardial hypertrophy, regenerative potential, and overall size of the heart. Here, we show that Yap and Taz also play an instructive, non-cell-autonomous role in the endocardium of the developing heart to regulate myocardial growth through release of the paracrine factor, neuregulin. Without endocardial Yap and Taz, myocardial growth is impaired causing early post-natal lethality. Thus, the Hippo signaling pathway regulates cell size via both cell-autonomous and non-cell-autonomous mechanisms. Furthermore, these data suggest that Hippo may regulate organ size via a sensing and paracrine function in endothelial cells.
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- 2018
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6. Disruption of LRRK2 in Zebrafish leads to hyperactivity and weakened antibacterial response
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Jianjun Liu, Jing Zhao, Kelvin See, Dongliang Yu, Yuying Wang, Minxia Lu, Fei Li, Donglai Sheng, Qinliu Liu, and Xu Hu
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0301 basic medicine ,Mutant ,Biophysics ,GTPase ,Hyperkinesis ,Motor Activity ,Leucine-Rich Repeat Serine-Threonine Protein Kinase-2 ,Biochemistry ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Animals ,Molecular Biology ,Zebrafish ,Behavior, Animal ,biology ,Sequence Analysis, RNA ,Kinase ,Immunity ,Antibacterial Response ,Bacterial Infections ,Cell Biology ,Zebrafish Proteins ,biology.organism_classification ,LRRK2 ,nervous system diseases ,Cell biology ,030104 developmental biology ,Infectious disease (medical specialty) ,Mutagenesis, Site-Directed ,Signal transduction ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
As a protein with complex domain structure and roles in kinase, GTPase and scaffolding, LRRK2 is believed to be an important orchestration node leading to several cascades of signal transduction rather than one specific pathway. LRRK2 variants were found to be associated with Parkinson's disease, Crohn's disease and leprosy. Here we disrupt LRRK2 in zebrafish and found hyperactivity rather than hypoactivity in adult zebrafish mutants. By RNA-seq we found genes involved in infectious disease and immunological disease were notably affected. Functional studies also revealed a weakened antibacterial response in LRRK2 mutant. This mutant can be further explored for revealing molecular mechanisms and modeling of LRRK2 related diseases.
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- 2018
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7. Lineage-specific reorganization of nuclear peripheral heterochromatin and H3K9me2 domains
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Rajan Jain, Joshua H. Rhoades, Yemin Lan, Kelvin See, Cheryl L. Smith, and Jonathan A. Epstein
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Heterochromatin ,Biology ,Cell fate determination ,Cell Line ,Histones ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Downregulation and upregulation ,Gene expression ,Humans ,MEF2C ,Myocytes, Cardiac ,Molecular Biology ,Gene ,030304 developmental biology ,Neurons ,0303 health sciences ,MEF2 Transcription Factors ,Multipotent Stem Cells ,Nuclear Proteins ,Cell Differentiation ,Chromatin Assembly and Disassembly ,Stem Cells and Regeneration ,Chromatin ,Cell biology ,Up-Regulation ,P19 cell ,Trans-Activators ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
Dynamic organization of chromatin within the three-dimensional nuclear space has been postulated to regulate gene expression and cell fate. Here, we define the genome-wide distribution of nuclear peripheral heterochromatin as a multipotent P19 cell adopts either a neural or a cardiac fate. We demonstrate that H3K9me2-marked nuclear peripheral heterochromatin undergoes lineage-specific reorganization during cell-fate determination. This is associated with spatial repositioning of genomic loci away from the nuclear periphery as shown by 3D immuno-FISH. Locus repositioning is not always associated with transcriptional changes, but a subset of genes is upregulated. Mef2c is specifically repositioned away from the nuclear periphery during early neurogenic differentiation, but not during early cardiogenic differentiation, with associated transcript upregulation. Myocd is specifically repositioned during early cardiogenic differentiation, but not during early neurogenic differentiation, and is transcriptionally upregulated at later stages of cardiac differentiation. We provide experimental evidence for lineage-specific regulation of nuclear architecture during cell-fate determination in a mouse cell line.
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- 2018
8. Experimental heart failure modelled by the cardiomyocyte-specific loss of an epigenome modifier, DNMT3B
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Mitsutero Ito, Jeremy N. Skepper, Syed Haider, Roger Foo, Kelvin See, M. Ackers-Johnson, Emma L. Robinson, H.L. Roderick, Nichola Figg, Anne C. Ferguson-Smith, Carmen Methner, Patrick Brien, and Ana Vujic
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Candidate gene ,Myocardium/metabolism ,Epigenesis, Genetic ,Organ Specificity/genetics ,Exon ,Mice ,Conditional gene knockout ,DNA (Cytosine-5-)-Methyltransferases/genetics ,Myocytes, Cardiac ,DNA (Cytosine-5-)-Methyltransferases ,Regulation of gene expression ,Mice, Knockout ,Myocytes, Cardiac/metabolism ,Sarcomeres/genetics ,Organ Specificity ,DNA methylation ,Cardiac/metabolism ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Sarcomeres ,Knockout ,Biology ,Heart Failure/genetics ,Systolic/genetics ,Myosin Heavy Chains/genetics ,Protein Aggregates ,Genetic ,Heart Failure, Systolic/genetics ,Animals ,Humans ,Molecular Biology ,Heart Failure ,Myocytes ,Myosin Heavy Chains ,Ubiquitin ,Animal ,Myocardium ,Alternative splicing ,Epigenome ,DNA Methylation ,Fibrosis ,Disease Models, Animal ,Alternative Splicing ,Gene Expression Regulation ,Disease Models ,Proteolysis ,Cancer research ,MYH7 ,Ubiquitin/metabolism ,Gene Deletion ,Heart Failure, Systolic ,Epigenesis - Abstract
Differential DNA methylation exists in the epigenome of end-stage failing human hearts but whether it contributes to disease progression is presently unknown. Here, we report that cardiac specific deletion of Dnmt3b, the predominant DNA methyltransferase in adult mouse hearts, leads to an accelerated progression to severe systolic insufficiency and myocardial thinning without a preceding hypertrophic response. This was accompanied by widespread myocardial interstitial fibrosis and myo-sarcomeric disarray. By targeted candidate gene quantitative RT-PCR, we discovered an over-activity of cryptic splice sites in the sarcomeric gene Myh7, resulting in a transcript with 8 exons missing. Moreover, a region of differential methylation overlies the splice site locus in the hearts of the cardiac-specific conditional knockout (CKO) mice. Although abundant and complex forms of alternative splice variants have been reported in diseased hearts and the contribution of each remains to be understood in further detail, our results demonstrate for the first time that a link may exist between alternative splicing and the cardiac epigenome. In particular, this gives the novel evidence whereby the loss of an epigenome modifier promotes the development and progression of heart disease.
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- 2015
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9. Single cardiomyocyte nuclear transcriptomes reveal a lincRNA-regulated de-differentiation and cell cycle stress-response in vivo
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Peter Yiqing Li, Zenia Tiang, Matthew Ackers-Johnson, Eng How Lim, Wilson Lek Wen Tan, Li Ting Lee, Tuan D. A. Luu, Roger Foo, and Kelvin See
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Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Nodal Protein ,Science ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Endogeny ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Biology ,Bioinformatics ,Article ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Transcriptome ,Mice ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Downregulation and upregulation ,Stress, Physiological ,Gene expression ,Animals ,Humans ,Myocyte ,Gene Regulatory Networks ,Myocytes, Cardiac ,Heart Failure ,Regulation of gene expression ,Multidisciplinary ,Cell Cycle ,General Chemistry ,Cell Dedifferentiation ,Cell cycle ,Cell biology ,Mice, Inbred C57BL ,030104 developmental biology ,Gene Expression Regulation ,RNA, Long Noncoding ,NODAL - Abstract
Cardiac regeneration may revolutionize treatment for heart failure but endogenous progenitor-derived cardiomyocytes in the adult mammalian heart are few and pre-existing adult cardiomyocytes divide only at very low rates. Although candidate genes that control cardiomyocyte cell cycle re-entry have been implicated, expression heterogeneity in the cardiomyocyte stress-response has never been explored. Here, we show by single nuclear RNA-sequencing of cardiomyocytes from both mouse and human failing, and non-failing adult hearts that sub-populations of cardiomyocytes upregulate cell cycle activators and inhibitors consequent to the stress-response in vivo. We characterize these subgroups by weighted gene co-expression network analysis and discover long intergenic non-coding RNAs (lincRNA) as key nodal regulators. KD of nodal lincRNAs affects expression levels of genes related to dedifferentiation and cell cycle, within the same gene regulatory network. Our study reveals that sub-populations of adult cardiomyocytes may have a unique endogenous potential for cardiac regeneration in vivo., Adult mammalian cardiomyocytes are predominantly binucleated and unable to divide. Using single nuclear RNA-sequencing of cardiomyocytes from mouse and human failing and non-failing adult hearts, See et al. show that some cardiomyocytes respond to stress by dedifferentiation and cell cycle re-entry regulated by lncRNAs.
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- 2017
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10. Exclusion of alternative exon 33 of Ca
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Guang, Li, Juejin, Wang, Ping, Liao, Peter, Bartels, Hengyu, Zhang, Dejie, Yu, Mui Cheng, Liang, Kian Keong, Poh, Chye Yun, Yu, Fengli, Jiang, Tan Fong, Yong, Yuk Peng, Wong, Zhenyu, Hu, Hua, Huang, Guangqin, Zhang, Mary Joyce, Galupo, Jin-Song, Bian, Sathivel, Ponniah, Scott Lee, Trasti, Kelvin, See, Roger, Foo, Uta C, Hoppe, Stefan, Herzig, and Tuck Wah, Soong
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Heart Failure ,Mice, Knockout ,Calcium Channels, L-Type ,Nifedipine ,Myocardium ,Colforsin ,Isoproterenol ,Action Potentials ,Calcium Channel Blockers ,Ventricular Premature Complexes ,Electrophysiological Phenomena ,Rats ,Mice, Inbred C57BL ,Alternative Splicing ,Long QT Syndrome ,Mice ,PNAS Plus ,Tachycardia ,Animals ,Myocytes, Cardiac ,Cells, Cultured ,Sequence Deletion - Abstract
To directly address in vivo significance of the altered CaV1.2 channel property arising from alternative splicing, we generated CaV1.2 exon 33-specific knockout (exon 33−/−) mice. Here, we showed that the exclusion of alternative exon 33 altered CaV1.2 biophysical property, leading to greater ICa density. This increase in current density induced prolongation of ventricular cardiomyocyte action potential duration, and the cardiomyocytes exhibited increased early afterdepolarizations and autonomous action potentials—hallmarks of arrhythmias. In vivo, exon 33−/− mice had increased occurrences of premature ventricular contractions, tachycardia, and lengthened QT interval. As such, exclusion of exon 33 of the CaV1.2 channel is proarrhythmogenic. Although failing human hearts had greater inclusion of exon 33, it is unclear whether the inclusion is compensatory, neutral, or damaging.
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- 2017
11. Exclusion of alternative exon 33 of Ca V 1.2 calcium channels in heart is proarrhythmogenic
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Yuk Peng Wong, Jin-Song Bian, Mary Joyce Galupo, Sathivel Ponniah, Juejin Wang, Chye Yun Yu, Peter Bartels, Uta C. Hoppe, Guang Li, Dejie Yu, Stefan Herzig, Fengli Jiang, Mui Cheng Liang, Ping Liao, Hua Huang, Guangqin Zhang, Kelvin See, Kian Keong Poh, Hengyu Zhang, Scott L. Trasti, Roger Foo, Tuck Wah Soong, Zhenyu Hu, and Tan Fong Yong
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0301 basic medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Multidisciplinary ,biology ,Voltage-dependent calcium channel ,Calcium channel ,Alternative splicing ,T-type calcium channel ,Dilated cardiomyopathy ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,medicine.disease ,Cav1.2 ,03 medical and health sciences ,Electrophysiology ,Exon ,030104 developmental biology ,0302 clinical medicine ,Endocrinology ,Internal medicine ,biology.protein ,medicine - Abstract
Alternative splicing changes the CaV1.2 calcium channel electrophysiological property, but the in vivo significance of such altered channel function is lacking. Structure-function studies of heterologously expressed CaV1.2 channels could not recapitulate channel function in the native milieu of the cardiomyocyte. To address this gap in knowledge, we investigated the role of alternative exon 33 of the CaV1.2 calcium channel in heart function. Exclusion of exon 33 in CaV1.2 channels has been reported to shift the activation potential -10.4 mV to the hyperpolarized direction, and increased expression of CaV1.2Δ33 channels was observed in rat myocardial infarcted hearts. However, how a change in CaV1.2 channel electrophysiological property, due to alternative splicing, might affect cardiac function in vivo is unknown. To address these questions, we generated mCacna1c exon 33-/--null mice. These mice contained CaV1.2Δ33 channels with a gain-of-function that included conduction of larger currents that reflects a shift in voltage dependence and a modest increase in single-channel open probability. This altered channel property underscored the development of ventricular arrhythmia, which is reflected in significantly more deaths of exon 33-/- mice from β-adrenergic stimulation. In vivo telemetric recordings also confirmed increased frequencies in premature ventricular contractions, tachycardia, and lengthened QT interval. Taken together, the significant decrease or absence of exon 33-containing CaV1.2 channels is potentially proarrhythmic in the heart. Of clinical relevance, human ischemic and dilated cardiomyopathy hearts showed increased inclusion of exon 33. However, the possible role that inclusion of exon 33 in CaV1.2 channels may play in the pathogenesis of human heart failure remains unclear.
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- 2017
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12. SMN deficiency alters Nrxn2 expression and splicing in zebrafish and mouse models of spinal muscular atrophy
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Michael Sendtner, Sinnakaruppan Mathavan, Utz Fischer, Christoph Winkler, Himanshu Vyas, Preeti Yadav, Pearl S. Cheong, Serene G. P. Lee, Kelvin See, Martin Graf, and Marieke Giegerich
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animal diseases ,Mice, Transgenic ,Nerve Tissue Proteins ,Laser Capture Microdissection ,SMN1 ,Biology ,Morpholinos ,Muscular Atrophy, Spinal ,Mice ,Genetics ,medicine ,Animals ,Protein Isoforms ,MRNA transport ,Calcium Signaling ,RNA, Messenger ,Molecular Biology ,Zebrafish ,Cells, Cultured ,In Situ Hybridization ,Genetics (clinical) ,Motor Neurons ,Alternative splicing ,General Medicine ,Spinal muscular atrophy ,Motor neuron ,SMA ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Survival of Motor Neuron 1 Protein ,nervous system diseases ,Cell biology ,Survival of Motor Neuron 2 Protein ,Alternative Splicing ,Disease Models, Animal ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Spinal Cord ,nervous system ,Gene Knockdown Techniques ,RNA splicing ,Calcium - Abstract
Spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is a progressive neurodegenerative disease affecting lower motor neurons. SMA is caused by mutations in the Survival Motor Neuron 1 (SMN1) gene, which result in reduced levels of functional SMN protein. Biochemical studies have linked the ubiquitously expressed SMN protein to the assembly of pre-mRNA processing U snRNPs, raising the possibility that aberrant splicing is a major defect in SMA. Accordingly, several transcripts affected upon SMN deficiency have been reported. A second function for SMN in axonal mRNA transport has also been proposed that may likewise contribute to the SMA phenotype. The underlying etiology of SMA, however, is still not fully understood. Here, we have used a combination of genomics and live Ca2+ imaging to investigate the consequences of SMN deficiency in a zebrafish model of SMA. In a transcriptome analyses of SMN-deficient zebrafish, we identified neurexin2a (nrxn2a) as strongly down-regulated and displaying changes in alternative splicing patterns. Importantly, the knock-down of two distinct nrxn2a isoforms phenocopies SMN-deficient fish and results in a significant reduction of motor axon excitability. Interestingly, we observed altered expression and splicing of Nrxn2 also in motor neurons from the Smn−/−;SMN2+/+ mouse model of SMA, suggesting conservation of nrxn2 regulation by SMN in mammals. We propose that SMN deficiency affects splicing and abundance of nrxn2a. This may explain the pre-synaptic defects at neuromuscular endplates in SMA pathophysiology.
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- 2013
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13. A landscape of circular RNA expression in the human heart
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Benson T.S. Lim, Matthew Ackers-Johnson, Albert Dashi, Peter Yiqing Li, Wilson Lek Wen Tan, Zenia Tiang, Chukwuemeka George Anene-Nzelu, Kelvin See, Wee Woon Chua, Roger Foo, Tuan D. A. Luu, Dominic Paul Lee, and Arthur Mark Richards
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0301 basic medicine ,Genetic Markers ,Time Factors ,Heart Diseases ,Physiology ,Sequence analysis ,In situ hybridization ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Biology ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Cell Line ,03 medical and health sciences ,symbols.namesake ,Mice ,0302 clinical medicine ,Circular RNA ,Physiology (medical) ,microRNA ,Databases, Genetic ,Animals ,Humans ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Myocytes, Cardiac ,RNA, Messenger ,Gene ,Embryonic Stem Cells ,Genetic Association Studies ,In Situ Hybridization, Fluorescence ,Sanger sequencing ,Genetics ,Regulation of gene expression ,Sequence Analysis, RNA ,RNA ,Computational Biology ,Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental ,High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing ,Cell Differentiation ,RNA, Circular ,Single Molecule Imaging ,Cell biology ,030104 developmental biology ,Phenotype ,Case-Control Studies ,symbols ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine - Abstract
Aims Circular RNA (circRNA) is a newly validated class of single-stranded RNA, ubiquitously expressed in mammalian tissues and possessing key functions including acting as microRNA sponges and as transcriptional regulators by binding to RNA-binding proteins. While independent studies confirm the expression of circRNA in various tissue types, genome-wide circRNA expression in the heart has yet to be described in detail. Methods and results We performed deep RNA-sequencing on ribosomal-depleted RNA isolated from 12 human hearts, 25 mouse hearts and across a 28-day differentiation time-course of human embryonic stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes. Using purpose-designed bioinformatics tools, we uncovered a total of 15 318 and 3017 cardiac circRNA within human and mouse, respectively. Their abundance generally correlates with the abundance of their cognate linear RNA, but selected circRNAs exist at disproportionately higher abundance. Top highly expressed circRNA corresponded to key cardiac genes including Titin ( TTN ), RYR2 , and DMD . The most abundant cardiac-expressed circRNA is a cytoplasmic localized single-exon circSLC8A1-1 . The longest human transcript TTN alone generates up to 415 different exonic circRNA isoforms, the majority (83%) of which originates from the I-band domain. Finally, we confirmed the expression of selected cardiac circRNA by RT-PCR, Sanger sequencing and single molecule RNA-fluorescence in situ hybridization. Conclusions Our data provide a detailed circRNA expression landscape in hearts. There is a high-abundance of specific cardiac-expressed circRNA. These findings open up a new avenue for future investigation into this emerging class of RNA.
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- 2016
14. Transcriptional enhancement of Smn levels in motoneurons is crucial for proper axon morphology in zebrafish
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Zoltán Spiró, Shermaine Tay, Angela Koh, Christoph Winkler, and Kelvin See
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0301 basic medicine ,Cell type ,Transcription, Genetic ,animal diseases ,In situ hybridization ,030105 genetics & heredity ,Biology ,Axonogenesis ,Article ,Animals, Genetically Modified ,03 medical and health sciences ,medicine ,Animals ,Axon ,Zebrafish ,Transcription factor ,In Situ Hybridization ,Motor Neurons ,Multidisciplinary ,fungi ,Spinal muscular atrophy ,Anatomy ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,SMA ,Survival of Motor Neuron 1 Protein ,Axons ,nervous system diseases ,Cell biology ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,nervous system ,embryonic structures - Abstract
An unresolved mystery in the field of spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is why a reduction of the ubiquitously expressed Smn protein causes defects mostly in motoneurons. We addressed the possibility that this restricted vulnerability stems from elevated Smn expression in motoneurons. To explore this, we established an ex vivo zebrafish culture system of GFP-marked motoneurons to quantitatively measure Smn protein and smn mRNA levels as well as promoter activity in motoneurons versus other cell types. Importantly, we uncovered that Smn levels are elevated in motoneurons by means of transcriptional activation. In addition, we identified the ETS family transcription factor Etv5b to be responsible for increased smn transcription in motoneurons. Moreover, we established that the additional supply of Smn protein in motoneurons is necessary for proper axonogenesis in a cell-autonomous manner. These findings demonstrate the reliance of motoneurons on more Smn, thereby adding a novel piece of evidence for their increased vulnerability under SMA conditions.
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- 2016
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15. Image stitching of dissimilar images
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Mark Kelvin See, Gil Rupert Licu, Carlo Noel Ochotorena, Sonam, Nelvyn John Mendoza, Edwin Sybingco, and Maria Antonette C. Roque
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business.industry ,Computer science ,Distortion (optics) ,Perspective (graphical) ,Feature extraction ,ComputingMethodologies_IMAGEPROCESSINGANDCOMPUTERVISION ,Image processing ,GeneralLiterature_MISCELLANEOUS ,Image stitching ,Histogram ,Computer vision ,Artificial intelligence ,Ghosting ,business ,Panoramic photography ,ComputingMethodologies_COMPUTERGRAPHICS - Abstract
Image stitching is done by combining multiple input images such that the ideal result is a single image that contains contexts from all the inputs as well as seamless transitions between contexts. It is most commonly used in the field of panoramic photography. Large dissimilarities in the input image set are very problematic in image stitching applications. These cause several objections in the resulting output, such as ghosting and distortion. This paper presents a fully automated image stitching process that is aimed at reducing objections and increasing stitching quality. The proposed implementation adapted existing methods with an objective of having am implementation that is more robust against the dissimilarities caused by perspective, illumination, and occlusion.
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- 2015
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16. Schwann cell defects contribute to motor neuron degeneration in a zebrafish model for Spinal Muscular Atrophy
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Shermaine Tay, Kelvin See, Christoph Winkler, and Himanshu Vyas
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Embryology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,biology ,medicine ,Motor neuron degeneration ,Schwann cell ,Spinal muscular atrophy ,Anatomy ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Zebrafish ,Neuroscience ,Developmental Biology - Published
- 2017
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17. Genome-wide linkage, exome sequencing and functional analyses identify ABCB6 as the pathogenic gene of dyschromatosis universalis hereditaria
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C. Wang, Furen Zhang, Gongqi Yu, Hongqing Tian, Xuechao Chen, Donglai Sheng, Ting Wang, Shumin Chen, Jianjun Liu, Birgitte E. Lane, Jian Liu, Guizhi Zhou, Mingfei Chen, Yonghu Sun, Shanshan Ma, H. Liu, Baoqi Yang, Xiaoxiao Yan, Kelvin See, Boon Kee Goh, Yongxiang Yu, Qiji Liu, Zhenhua Wang, Jia Nee Foo, Yan Zhou, Hui Qi Low, Yuanhua Cao, Guiye Niu, Ken Kwok Hon Hung, Xianmei Lu, Na Wang, John E.A. Common, Jiabao You, Ishak D. Irwan, Yi Li, Herty Liany, and Xi'an Fu
- Subjects
Male ,Candidate gene ,Heredity ,DNA Mutational Analysis ,lcsh:Medicine ,Genome-wide association study ,Exome ,Genome Sequencing ,lcsh:Science ,Exome sequencing ,Zebrafish ,Pigmentary Disorders ,Skin ,Genetics ,Sanger sequencing ,Multidisciplinary ,Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Linkage (Genetics) ,Chromosome Mapping ,Skin Diseases, Genetic ,Genomics ,Animal Models ,Immunohistochemistry ,Pedigree ,Autosomal Dominant ,symbols ,Melanocytes ,Medicine ,Female ,Research Article ,dbSNP ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Mutation, Missense ,Dermatology ,Biology ,Dyschromatosis universalis hereditaria ,symbols.namesake ,Model Organisms ,Sequence Homology, Nucleic Acid ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Genetic Testing ,Pigmentation disorder ,Genetic Association Studies ,Family Health ,Clinical Genetics ,Base Sequence ,Sequence Homology, Amino Acid ,lcsh:R ,Computational Biology ,Human Genetics ,medicine.disease ,ATP-Binding Cassette Transporters ,lcsh:Q ,Lod Score ,Pigmentation Disorders ,Genome-Wide Association Study - Abstract
Background As a genetic disorder of abnormal pigmentation, the molecular basis of dyschromatosis universalis hereditaria (DUH) had remained unclear until recently when ABCB6 was reported as a causative gene of DUH. Methodology We performed genome-wide linkage scan using Illumina Human 660W-Quad BeadChip and exome sequencing analyses using Agilent SureSelect Human All Exon Kits in a multiplex Chinese DUH family to identify the pathogenic mutations and verified the candidate mutations using Sanger sequencing. Quantitative RT-PCR and Immunohistochemistry was performed to verify the expression of the pathogenic gene, Zebrafish was also used to confirm the functional role of ABCB6 in melanocytes and pigmentation. Results Genome-wide linkage (assuming autosomal dominant inheritance mode) and exome sequencing analyses identified ABCB6 as the disease candidate gene by discovering a coding mutation (c.1358C>T; p.Ala453Val) that co-segregates with the disease phenotype. Further mutation analysis of ABCB6 in four other DUH families and two sporadic cases by Sanger sequencing confirmed the mutation (c.1358C>T; p.Ala453Val) and discovered a second, co-segregating coding mutation (c.964A>C; p.Ser322Lys) in one of the four families. Both mutations were heterozygous in DUH patients and not present in the 1000 Genome Project and dbSNP database as well as 1,516 unrelated Chinese healthy controls. Expression analysis in human skin and mutagenesis interrogation in zebrafish confirmed the functional role of ABCB6 in melanocytes and pigmentation. Given the involvement of ABCB6 mutations in coloboma, we performed ophthalmological examination of the DUH carriers of ABCB6 mutations and found ocular abnormalities in them. Conclusion Our study has advanced our understanding of DUH pathogenesis and revealed the shared pathological mechanism between pigmentary DUH and ocular coloboma.
- Published
- 2014
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