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result(s) for
"Baralle, Francisco E."
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Alternative splicing as a regulator of development and tissue identity
2017
Key Points
Alternative splicing explains how a single gene can generate more than one mRNA transcript, thus expanding the complexity of the proteome.
During normal development, a large number of alternative splicing changes occur, and it is now apparent that these transitions between alternatively spliced isoforms contribute to the acquisition of adult tissue functions and identity.
Individual splicing changes are coordinated during development, establishing splicing networks.
As a result of recent progress, we now better understand the mechanisms that coordinate alternative splicing networks and the roles of these networks in cell differentiation, organ development and tissue homeostasis.
Alternative splicing expands the complexity of the proteome by generating multiple transcript isoforms from a single gene. Numerous alternative splicing events occur during cell differentiation and tissue maturation, suggesting that alternative splicing supports proper development. Recent studies shed light on how alternative splicing and its coordination contribute to organ development and tissue homeostasis.
Alternative splicing of eukaryotic transcripts is a mechanism that enables cells to generate vast protein diversity from a limited number of genes. The mechanisms and outcomes of alternative splicing of individual transcripts are relatively well understood, and recent efforts have been directed towards studying splicing networks. It has become apparent that coordinated splicing networks regulate tissue and organ development, and that alternative splicing has important physiological functions in different developmental processes in humans.
Journal Article
Tailored antisense oligonucleotides designed to correct aberrant splicing reveal actionable groups of mutations for rare genetic disorders
2024
Effective translation of rare disease diagnosis knowledge into therapeutic applications is achievable within a reasonable timeframe; where mutations are amenable to current antisense oligonucleotide technology. In our study, we identified five distinct types of abnormal splice-causing mutations in patients with rare genetic disorders and developed a tailored antisense oligonucleotide for each mutation type using phosphorodiamidate morpholino oligomers with or without octa-guanidine dendrimers and 2′-O-methoxyethyl phosphorothioate. We observed variations in treatment effects and efficiencies, influenced by both the chosen chemistry and the specific nature of the aberrant splicing patterns targeted for correction. Our study demonstrated the successful correction of all five different types of aberrant splicing. Our findings reveal that effective correction of aberrant splicing can depend on altering the chemical composition of oligonucleotides and suggest a fast, efficient, and feasible approach for developing personalized therapeutic interventions for genetic disorders within short time frames.
Personalized medicine: targeted oligonucleotides for rare genetic disorders
Millions globally suffer from rare diseases, often genetic and affecting children. This study explores using antisense oligonucleotides to fix incorrect RNA splicing, a common result of disease-causing genetic mutations. The results showed that tailored ASOs could correct incorrect splicing for various mutation types, showing this technology′s potential in treating rare genetic diseases. The team chose five mutation types disrupting normal splicing and created specific ASOs to correct these errors in cell models. They created minigenes to simulate the mutations and tested different ASOs′ effectiveness. This method was key to understanding ASOs′ ability to restore normal gene function, crucial for developing targeted treatments for rare genetic disorders. This research could lead to new, targeted treatments for rare genetic disorders, offering hope to millions of patients and their families facing limited treatment options. This summary was initially drafted using artificial intelligence, then revised and fact-checked by the author.
Journal Article
Molecular basis of UG-rich RNA recognition by the human splicing factor TDP-43
by
Daujotyte, Dalia
,
Allain, Frédéric H-T
,
Lukavsky, Peter J
in
631/337/1645/1792
,
631/45/500
,
631/535/878/1263
2013
TDP-43 regulates alternative splicing of the cystic fibrosis transmembrane regulator (CFTR) and is found in cytosolic granules associated with several neurodegenerative disorders. A new solution structure of the tandem RNA-recognition motifs (RRMs) that mediate interactions with its UG-rich RNA targets reveals a new RRM arrangement critical for TDP-43 function.
TDP-43 encodes an alternative-splicing regulator with tandem RNA-recognition motifs (RRMs). The protein regulates cystic fibrosis transmembrane regulator (
CFTR
) exon 9 splicing through binding to long UG-rich RNA sequences and is found in cytoplasmic inclusions of several neurodegenerative diseases. We solved the solution structure of the TDP-43 RRMs in complex with UG-rich RNA. Ten nucleotides are bound by both RRMs, and six are recognized sequence specifically. Among these, a central G interacts with both RRMs and stabilizes a new tandem RRM arrangement. Mutations that eliminate recognition of this key nucleotide or crucial inter-RRM interactions disrupt RNA binding and TDP-43–dependent splicing regulation. In contrast, point mutations that affect base-specific recognition in either RRM have weaker effects. Our findings reveal not only how TDP-43 recognizes UG repeats but also how RNA binding–dependent inter-RRM interactions are crucial for TDP-43 function.
Journal Article
Genomic variants in exons and introns: identifying the splicing spoilers
by
Baralle, Francisco E.
,
Pagani, Franco
in
Agriculture
,
Alternative Splicing - genetics
,
Animal Genetics and Genomics
2004
When genome variants are identified in genomic DNA, especially during routine analysis of disease-associated genes, their functional implications might not be immediately evident. Distinguishing between a genomic variant that changes the phenotype and one that does not is a difficult task. An increasing amount of evidence indicates that genomic variants in both coding and non-coding sequences can have unexpected deleterious effects on the splicing of the gene transcript. So how can benign polymorphisms be distinguished from disease-associated splicing mutations?
Journal Article
TDP-43 regulates retinoblastoma protein phosphorylation through the repression of cyclin-dependent kinase 6 expression
by
Baralle, Francisco E
,
Misteli, Tom
,
Ayala, Youhna M
in
amyotrophic lateral sclerosis
,
Animals
,
Apoptosis
2008
TDP-43 (for TAR DNA binding protein) is a highly conserved heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein (hnRNP) involved in specific pre-mRNA splicing and transcription events. TDP-43 recently has been identified as the main component of cytoplasmic inclusions in frontotemporal lobar degeneration (FTLD) and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), two neurodegenerative disorders. The cellular role of this protein remains to be identified. Here, we show that loss of TDP-43 results in dysmorphic nuclear shape, misregulation of the cell cycle, and apoptosis. Removal of TDP-43 in human cells significantly increases cyclin-dependent kinase 6 (Cdk6) protein and transcript levels. The control of Cdk6 expression mediated by TDP-43 involves GT repeats in the target gene sequence. Cdk6 up-regulation in TDP-43-depleted cells is accompanied by an increase in phosphorylation of two of its major targets, the retinoblastoma protein pRb and pRb-related protein pRb2/p130. TDP-43 silencing also is followed by changes in the expression levels of several factors that control cell proliferation. Morphological nuclear defects and increased apoptosis upon TDP-43 loss are mediated via the pRb pathway because pRb-negative cells (Saos-2) do not undergo programmed cell death or nuclear shape deformation upon TDP-43 removal. Our results identify a regulatory target of TDP-43 and show that TDP-43 depletion has important consequences in essential metabolic processes in human cells.
Journal Article
Physiological tissue-specific and age-related reduction of mouse TDP-43 levels is regulated by epigenetic modifications
by
Rashid, Mohammad M.
,
Baralle, Francisco E.
,
De Conti, Laura
in
aggregation
,
Aging - genetics
,
Aging - metabolism
2022
The cellular level of TDP-43 (also known as TARDBP) is tightly regulated; increases or decreases in TDP-43 have deleterious effects in cells. The predominant mechanism responsible for the regulation of the level of TDP-43 is an autoregulatory negative feedback loop. In this study, we identified an in vivo cause-effect relationship between Tardbp gene promoter methylation and specific histone modification and the TDP-43 level in tissues of mice at two different ages. Furthermore, epigenetic control was observed in mouse and human cultured cell lines. In amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, the formation of TDP-43-containing brain inclusions removes functional protein from the system. This phenomenon is continuous but compensated by newly synthesized protein. The balance between sequestration and new synthesis might become critical with ageing, if accompanied by an epigenetic modification-regulated decrease in newly synthesized TDP-43. Sequestration by aggregates would then decrease the amount of functional TDP-43 to a level lower than those needed by the cell and thereby trigger the onset of symptoms.
Journal Article
TDP-43 Regulates Drosophila Neuromuscular Junctions Growth by Modulating Futsch/MAP1B Levels and Synaptic Microtubules Organization
by
Baralle, Francisco E.
,
Romano, Giulia
,
Klima, Raffaella
in
Acetylation
,
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis
,
Animals
2011
TDP-43 is an evolutionarily conserved RNA binding protein recently associated with the pathogenesis of different neurological diseases. At the moment, neither its physiological role in vivo nor the mechanisms that may lead to neurodegeneration are well known. Previously, we have shown that TDP-43 mutant flies presented locomotive alterations and structural defects at the neuromuscular junctions. We have now investigated the functional mechanism leading to these phenotypes by screening several factors known to be important for synaptic growth or bouton formation. As a result we found that alterations in the organization of synaptic microtubules correlate with reduced protein levels in the microtubule associated protein futsch/MAP1B. Moreover, we observed that TDP-43 physically interacts with futsch mRNA and that its RNA binding capacity is required to prevent futsch down regulation and synaptic defects.
Journal Article
Synonymous Mutations in CFTR Exon 12 Affect Splicing and Are Not Neutral in Evolution
by
Baralle, Francisco E.
,
Raponi, Michela
,
Pagani, Franco
in
Amino Acid Sequence
,
Amino acids
,
Animals
2005
It is well established that exonic sequences contain regulatory elements of splicing that overlap with coding capacity. However, the conflict between ensuring splicing efficiency and preserving the coding capacity for an optimal protein during evolution has not been specifically analyzed. In fact, studies on genomic variability in fields as diverse as clinical genetics and molecular evolution mainly focus on the effect of mutations on protein function. Synonymous variations, in particular, are assumed to be functionally neutral both in clinical diagnosis and when measuring evolutionary distances between species. Using the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) exon 12 splicing as a model, we have established that about one quarter of synonymous variations result in exon skipping and, hence, in an inactive CFTR protein. Furthermore, comparative splicing evaluation of mammalian sequence divergences showed that artificial combinations of CFTR exon 12 synonymous and nonsynonymous substitutions are incompatible with normal RNA processing. In particular, the combination of the mouse synonymous with the human missense variations causes exon skipping. It follows that there are two sequential levels at which evolutionary selection of genomic variants take place: splicing control and protein function optimization.
Journal Article
An Essential Role for Fibronectin Extra Type III Domain A in Pulmonary Fibrosis
by
Wilke, Carol A
,
Toews, Galen B
,
White, Eric S
in
Actins - metabolism
,
Anesthesia. Intensive care medicine. Transfusions. Cell therapy and gene therapy
,
Animals
2008
Tissue fibrosis is considered a dysregulated wound-healing response. Fibronectin containing extra type III domain A (EDA) is implicated in the regulation of wound healing. EDA-containing fibronectin is deposited during wound repair, and its presence precedes that of collagen.
To investigate the role of EDA-containing fibronectin in lung fibrogenesis.
Primary lung fibroblasts from patients with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis or from patients undergoing resection for lung cancer were assessed for EDA-containing fibronectin and alpha-smooth muscle actin (alpha-SMA) expression. Mice lacking the EDA domain of fibronectin and their wild-type littermates were challenged with the bleomycin model of lung fibrosis. Primary lung fibroblasts from these mice were assayed in vitro to determine the contribution of EDA-containing fibronectin to fibroblast phenotypes.
Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis lung fibroblasts produced markedly more EDA-containing fibronectin and alpha-SMA than control fibroblasts. EDA-null mice failed to develop significant fibrosis 21 days after bleomycin challenge, whereas wild-type controls developed the expected increase in total lung collagen. Histologic analysis of EDA-null lungs after bleomycin showed less collagen and fewer alpha-SMA-expressing myofibroblasts compared with that observed in wild-type mice. Failure to develop lung fibrosis in EDA-null mice correlated with diminished activation of latent transforming growth factor (TGF)-beta and decreased lung fibroblast responsiveness to active TGF-beta in vitro.
The data show that EDA-containing fibronectin is essential for the fibrotic resolution of lung injury through TGF-beta activation and responsiveness, and suggest that EDA-containing fibronectin plays a critical role in tissue fibrogenesis.
Journal Article