978 resultados para Zebrafish model
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Tenofovir (TFV) is one of the most used antiretroviral drugs. However, it is associated with tubular damage with mitochondria as a possible target. Tubulopathy precedes glomerular dysfunction, thus classic markers of renal function like the glomerular filtration rate (GFR) do not detect early TFV damage. Prediction and management of drug induced renal injury (DIRI) rely on the mechanisms of the drug insult and in optimal animal models to explore it. Zebrafish (Danio rerio) offers unique advantages for assessing DIRI, since the pronephros is structurally very similar to its human counterpart and is fully developed at 3.5 days postfertilization. The main aim of the present work was to evaluate the effects of TFV, as well as its pro-drug, tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (TDF), on the GFR and in mitochondria morphology in tubular cells of zebrafish larvae. Lethality curves were performed to understand the relationship between drug concentration and lethality. LC10 was selected to explore the renal function using the FITC-inulin assay and to analyze the mitochondrial toxicity by electron microscopy on larvae exposed to TDF, TFV, paracetamol and gentamicin (positive controls) or water (negative control). Lethality curves showed that gentamicin was the most lethal drug, followed by TDF, TFV and paracetamol. Gentamicin and paracetamol decreased the GFR, but no differences were found for either TDF or TFV, when compared to controls (%FITC Control = 33±8; %FITC TDF = 35±10; %FITC TFV = 30±10; %FITC Gentamicin = 46±17; %FITC Paracetamol = 83±14). Tubular mitochondria from treated larvae were notably different from non-treated larvae, showing swelling, irregular shapes, decreased mitochondria network, cristae disruption and loss of matrix granules. These results are in agreement with the effects of these drugs in humans and thus, demonstrate that zebrafish larvae can be a good model to assess the functional and structural damage associated with DIRI.
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Endocrine-disrupting compounds (EDCs) are widespread in the aquatic environment and can cause alterations in development, physiological homeostasis and health of vertebrates. Zebrafish, Danio rerio, has been suggested as a model species to identify targets as well as modes of EDC action. In fact, zebrafish has been found useful in EDC screening, in EDC effects assessment and in studying targets and mechanisms of EDC action. Since many of the environmental EDCs interfere with the sex steroid system of vertebrates, most EDC studies with zebrafish addressed disruption of sexual differentiation and reproduction. However, other targets of EDCs action must not be overlooked. For using a species as a toxicological model, a good knowledge of the biological traits of this species is a pre-requisite for the rational design of test protocols and endpoints as well as for the interpretation and extrapolation of the toxicological findings. Due to the genomic resources available for zebrafish and the long experience with zebrafish in toxicity testing, it is easily possible to establish molecular endpoints for EDC effects assessment. Additionally, the zebrafish model offers a number of technical advantages including ease and cost of maintenance, rapid development, high fecundity, optical transparency of embryos supporting phenotypic screening, existence of many mutant strains, or amenability for both forward and reverse genetics. To date, the zebrafish has been mainly used to identify molecular targets of EDC action and to determine effect thresholds, while the potential of this model species to study immediate and delayed physiological consequences of molecular interactions has been instrumentalized only partly. One factor that may limit the exploitation of this potential is the still rather fragmentary knowledge of basic biological and endocrine traits of zebrafish. Information on species-specific features in endocrine processes and biological properties, however, need to be considered in establishing EDC test protocols using zebrafish, in extrapolating findings from zebrafish to other vertebrate species, and in understanding how EDC-induced gene expression changes translate into disease.
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The human CERKL gene is responsible for common and severe forms of retinal dystrophies. Despite intense in vitro studies at the molecular and cellular level and in vivo analyses of the retina of murine knockout models, CERKL function remains unknown. In this study, we aimed to approach the developmental and functional features of cerkl in Danio rerio within an Evo-Devo framework. We show that gene expression increases from early developmental stages until the formation of the retina in the optic cup. Unlike the high mRNA-CERKL isoform multiplicity shown in mammals, the moderate transcriptional complexity in fish facilitates phenotypic studies derived from gene silencing. Moreover, of relevance to pathogenicity, teleost CERKL shares the two main human protein isoforms. Morpholino injection has been used to generate a cerkl knockdown zebrafish model. The morphant phenotype results in abnormal eye development with lamination defects, failure to develop photoreceptor outer segments, increased apoptosis of retinal cells and small eyes. Our data support that zebrafish Cerkl does not interfere with proliferation and neural differentiation during early developmental stages but is relevant for survival and protection of the retinal tissue. Overall, we propose that this zebrafish model is a powerful tool to unveil CERKL contribution to human retinal degeneration
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After myocardial infarction in humans, lost cardiomyocytes are replaced by an irreversible fibrotic scar. In contrast, zebrafish hearts efficiently regenerate after injury. Complete regeneration of the zebrafish heart is driven by the strong proliferation response of its cardiomyocytes to injury. Here we show that, after cardiac injury in zebrafish, telomerase becomes hyperactivated, and telomeres elongate transiently, preceding a peak of cardiomyocyte proliferation and full organ recovery. Using a telomerase-mutant zebrafish model, we found that telomerase loss drastically decreases cardiomyocyte proliferation and fibrotic tissue regression after cryoinjury and that cardiac function does not recover. The impaired cardiomyocyte proliferation response is accompanied by the absence of cardiomyocytes with long telomeres and an increased proportion of cardiomyocytes showing DNA damage and senescence characteristics. These findings demonstrate the importance of telomerase function in heart regeneration and highlight the potential of telomerase therapy as a means of stimulating cell proliferation upon myocardial infarction.
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Tese de Doutoramento, Ciências Biomédicas, Departamento de Ciências Biomédicas e Medicina, Universidade do Algarve, 2016
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Tese de Doutoramento em Biologia de Plantas
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The 16p11.2 600 kb copy-number variants (CNVs) are associated with mirror phenotypes on BMI, head circumference, and brain volume and represent frequent genetic lesions in autism spectrum disorders (ASDs) and schizophrenia. Here we interrogated the transcriptome of individuals carrying reciprocal 16p11.2 CNVs. Transcript perturbations correlated with clinical endophenotypes and were enriched for genes associated with ASDs, abnormalities of head size, and ciliopathies. Ciliary gene expression was also perturbed in orthologous mouse models, raising the possibility that ciliary dysfunction contributes to 16p11.2 pathologies. In support of this hypothesis, we found structural ciliary defects in the CA1 hippocampal region of 16p11.2 duplication mice. Moreover, by using an established zebrafish model, we show genetic interaction between KCTD13, a key driver of the mirrored neuroanatomical phenotypes of the 16p11.2 CNV, and ciliopathy-associated genes. Overexpression of BBS7 rescues head size and neuroanatomical defects of kctd13 morphants, whereas suppression or overexpression of CEP290 rescues phenotypes induced by KCTD13 under- or overexpression, respectively. Our data suggest that dysregulation of ciliopathy genes contributes to the clinical phenotypes of these CNVs.
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Adenylate kinases (AKs) are phosphotransferases that regulate the cellular adenine nucleotide composition and play a critical role in the energy homeostasis of all tissues. The AK2 isoenzyme is expressed in the mitochondrial intermembrane space and is mutated in reticular dysgenesis (RD), a rare form of severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID) in humans. RD is characterized by a maturation arrest in the myeloid and lymphoid lineages, leading to early onset, recurrent, and overwhelming infections. To gain insight into the pathophysiology of RD, we studied the effects of AK2 deficiency using the zebrafish model and induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) derived from fibroblasts of an RD patient. In zebrafish, Ak2 deficiency affected hematopoietic stem and progenitor cell (HSPC) development with increased oxidative stress and apoptosis. AK2-deficient iPSCs recapitulated the characteristic myeloid maturation arrest at the promyelocyte stage and demonstrated an increased AMP/ADP ratio, indicative of an energy-depleted adenine nucleotide profile. Antioxidant treatment rescued the hematopoietic phenotypes in vivo in ak2 mutant zebrafish and restored differentiation of AK2-deficient iPSCs into mature granulocytes. Our results link hematopoietic cell fate in AK2 deficiency to cellular energy depletion and increased oxidative stress. This points to the potential use of antioxidants as a supportive therapeutic modality for patients with RD.
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La neuropathie humaine sensitive et autonome de type 2 (NHSA 2) est une pathologie héréditaire rare caractérisée par une apparition précoce des symptômes et une absence d’affectation motrice. Cette pathologie entraîne la perte de perception de la douleur, de la chaleur et du froid ainsi que de la pression (toucher) dans les membres supérieurs et inférieurs et est due à des mutations autosomales récessives confinées à l’exon HSN2 de la protéine kinase à sérine/thréonine WNK1 (with-no-lysine protein kinase 1). Cet exon spécifique permettrait de conférer une spécificité au système nerveux à l’isoforme protéique WNK1/HSN2. La kinase WNK1 est étudiée en détails, en particulier au niveau du rein, mais son rôle au sein du système nerveux demeure inconnu. Considérant le début précoce de la neuropathie et le manque d’innervation sensorielle révélé par des biopsies chez les patients NHSA2, notre hypothèse de recherche est que les mutations tronquantes menant à la NHSA de type 2 causent une perte de fonction de l’isoforme WNK1/HSN2 spécifique au système nerveux entraînant un défaut dans le développement du système nerveux sensoriel périphérique. Chez l’embryon du poisson zèbre, WNK1/HSN2 est exprimé au niveau des neuromastes de la ligne latérale postérieure, un système mécanosensoriel périphérique. Nous avons obtenu des embryons knockdown pour WNK1/HSN2 par usage d’oligonucléotides morpholino antisens (AMO). Nos trois approches AMO ont révélé des embryons présentant des défauts d’établissement au niveau de la ligne latérale postérieure. Afin de déterminer la voie pathogène impliquant l’isoforme WNK1/HSN2, nous nous sommes intéressés à l’interaction rapportée entre la kinase WNK1 et le co-transporteur neuronal KCC2. Ce dernier est une cible de phosphorylation de WNK1 et son rôle dans la promotion de la neurogenèse est bien connu. Nous avons détecté l’expression de KCC2 au niveau de neuromastes de la ligne latérale postérieure et observé une expression accrue de KCC2 chez les embryons knockdown pour WNK1/HSN2 à l’aide de RT-PCR semi-quantitative. De plus, une sur-expression d’ARN humain de KCC2 chez des embryons a produit des défauts dans la ligne latérale postérieure, phénocopiant le knockdown de WNK1/HSN2. Ces résultats furent validés par un double knockdown, produisant des embryons n’exprimant ni KCC2, ni WNK1/HSN2, dont le phénotype fut atténué. Ces résultats nous mènent à suggérer une voie de signalisation où WNK1/HSN2 est en amont de KCC2, régulant son activation, et possiblement son expression. Nous proposons donc que la perte de fonction de l’isoforme spécifique cause un débalancement dans les niveaux de KCC2 activée, menant à une prolifération et une différenciation réduites des progéniteurs neuronaux du système nerveux périphérique. Les défauts associés à la NHSA de type 2 seraient donc de nature développementale et non neurodégénérative.
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Les anomalies du tube neural (ATN) sont des anomalies développementales où le tube neural reste ouvert (1-2/1000 naissances). Afin de prévenir cette maladie, une connaissance accrue des processus moléculaires est nécessaire. L’étiologie des ATN est complexe et implique des facteurs génétiques et environnementaux. La supplémentation en acide folique est reconnue pour diminuer les risques de développer une ATN de 50-70% et cette diminution varie en fonction du début de la supplémentation et de l’origine démographique. Les gènes impliqués dans les ATN sont largement inconnus. Les études génétiques sur les ATN chez l’humain se sont concentrées sur les gènes de la voie métabolique des folates du à leur rôle protecteur dans les ATN et les gènes candidats inférés des souris modèles. Ces derniers ont montré une forte association entre la voie non-canonique Wnt/polarité cellulaire planaire (PCP) et les ATN. Le gène Protein Tyrosine Kinase 7 est un membre de cette voie qui cause l’ATN sévère de la craniorachischisis chez les souris mutantes. Ptk7 interagit génétiquement avec Vangl2 (un autre gène de la voie PCP), où les doubles hétérozygotes montrent une spina bifida. Ces données font de PTK7 comme un excellent candidat pour les ATN chez l’humain. Nous avons re-séquencé la région codante et les jonctions intron-exon de ce gène dans une cohorte de 473 patients atteints de plusieurs types d’ATN. Nous avons identifié 6 mutations rares (fréquence allélique <1%) faux-sens présentes chez 1.1% de notre cohorte, dont 3 sont absentes dans les bases de données publiques. Une variante, p.Gly348Ser, a agi comme un allèle hypermorphique lorsqu'elle est surexprimée dans le modèle de poisson zèbre. Nos résultats impliquent la mutation de PTK7 comme un facteur de risque pour les ATN et supporte l'idée d'un rôle pathogène de la signalisation PCP dans ces malformations.
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Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2016-04
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Improvements in genomic technology, both in the increased speed and reduced cost of sequencing, have expanded the appreciation of the abundance of human genetic variation. However the sheer amount of variation, as well as the varying type and genomic content of variation, poses a challenge in understanding the clinical consequence of a single mutation. This work uses several methodologies to interpret the observed variation in the human genome, and presents novel strategies for the prediction of allele pathogenicity.
Using the zebrafish model system as an in vivo assay of allele function, we identified a novel driver of Bardet-Biedl Syndrome (BBS) in CEP76. A combination of targeted sequencing of 785 cilia-associated genes in a cohort of BBS patients and subsequent in vivo functional assays recapitulating the human phenotype gave strong evidence for the role of CEP76 mutations in the pathology of an affected family. This portion of the work demonstrated the necessity of functional testing in validating disease-associated mutations, and added to the catalogue of known BBS disease genes.
Further study into the role of copy-number variations (CNVs) in a cohort of BBS patients showed the significant contribution of CNVs to disease pathology. Using high-density array comparative genomic hybridization (aCGH) we were able to identify pathogenic CNVs as small as several hundred bp. Dissection of constituent gene and in vivo experiments investigating epistatic interactions between affected genes allowed for an appreciation of several paradigms by which CNVs can contribute to disease. This study revealed that the contribution of CNVs to disease in BBS patients is much higher than previously expected, and demonstrated the necessity of consideration of CNV contribution in future (and retrospective) investigations of human genetic disease.
Finally, we used a combination of comparative genomics and in vivo complementation assays to identify second-site compensatory modification of pathogenic alleles. These pathogenic alleles, which are found compensated in other species (termed compensated pathogenic deviations [CPDs]), represent a significant fraction (from 3 – 10%) of human disease-associated alleles. In silico pathogenicity prediction algorithms, a valuable method of allele prioritization, often misrepresent these alleles as benign, leading to omission of possibly informative variants in studies of human genetic disease. We created a mathematical model that was able to predict CPDs and putative compensatory sites, and functionally showed in vivo that second-site mutation can mitigate the pathogenicity of disease alleles. Additionally, we made publically available an in silico module for the prediction of CPDs and modifier sites.
These studies have advanced the ability to interpret the pathogenicity of multiple types of human variation, as well as made available tools for others to do so as well.
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Los peces cebra son utilizados como modelo biológico para screening primario de extractos de plantas con potencial bioactividad, aprovechando sus similitudes: genética, fisiológica y respuesta farmacológica con los mamíferos. En el estudio se empleó este modelo para valorar la actividad antiinflamatoria de 36 extractos metanólicos de plantas medicinales utilizadas en las provincias de Azuay y Loja (Ecuador). Parte del material vegetal fue recolectado con el aporte de una hierbatera de etnia Saraguro. Los extractos fueron preparados por percolación y su toxicidad fue evaluada en peces cebra en concentraciones variables de 400 a 3,125 μg/ml, determinándose la máxima concentración tolerada para cada uno de ´estos. La actividad antiinflamatoria se evaluó a través del ensayo de migración leucocitaria inducida por lipopolisacárido de Sallmonella typhi. Los extractos de: Cestrum aff. peruvianum, Galinsoga parviflora, Galium sp., Oenothera tetraptera, Peperomia aff. galioides , Passiflora ampullaceae y Ambrosia arborescens, correspondientes al 18,92% de los analizados, mostraron un potencial antiinflamatorio comparable con indometacina y dexametasona; siendo el extracto metanólico de Cestrum aff. peruvianum el más relevante a 50 g/ml. El análisis fitoquímico básico de los extractos se realizó por cromatografía de capa fina, evidenciándose la presencia de saponinas y terpenoidoes como compuestos principales en la mayoría de los extractos.
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Il locus CYYR1 identificato e clonato sul cromosoma 21 umano è stato caratterizzato dal punto di vista molecolare come un sistema multitrascritto, esclusivo dei vertebrati che ad oggi è orfano di una funzione specifica. Dati presenti in lettura e rintracciati mostrano una possibile relazione tra il gene CYYR1 e il pathway di Sonic Hedgehog (SHH). In questo progetto di tesi è stato utilizzato il modello animale Danio rerio per indagare il ruolo funzionale dell’ortologo (cyyr1), attraverso esperimenti di gain e loss of function che hanno permesso di dimostrare un suo coinvolgimento nello sviluppo del sistema nervoso centrale, del cuore e del tessuto muscolare. Lo studio dell’ortologo in zebrafish è stato associato all’utilizzo di linee cellulari di rabdomiosarcoma umano. I risultati ottenuti dall’induzione al differenziamento miogenico di queste linee, insieme ai dati ottenuti in Danio rerio, confermano il possibile coinvolgimento del gene CYYR1 nella miogenesi. Lo studio delle relazione tra il pathway di SHH e l’espressione del gene CYYR1 è stato condotto in entrambi i modelli con l’utilizzo di differenti inibitori della via di segnalazione. I risultati ottenuti mostrano che sistemi inibitori agenti direttamente sul recettore SMO riducono l’espressione del gene. Un dato inaspettato in Danio rerio ottenuto durante questi esperimenti di inibizione, ha aperto una nuova linea di ricerca in collaborazione con l’Università di Warwick tesa a verificare la relazione tra il gene cyyr1 e il gene lefty1. Gli esperimenti condotti presso il laboratorio della Prof.ssa Sampath hanno dimostrato la localizzazione del prodotto proteico cyyr1 in Danio rerio e indagato co-localizzazioni con la proteina lefty1. Infine, in collaborazione con Dr. Deflorian e della Prof.ssa Pistocchi, è stato generato un mutante di Danio rerio deleto per il gene cyyr1 con la tecnica CRISPR/Cas9. La caratterizzazione del mutante cyyr1 -/- ha confermato alcuni dei dati ottenuti attraverso esperimenti di loss of function.