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Dive into the research topics where Anthony Q. Vu is active.

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Featured researches published by Anthony Q. Vu.


Nature Neuroscience | 2012

Divergent roles of ALS-linked proteins FUS/TLS and TDP-43 intersect in processing long pre-mRNAs

Clotilde Lagier-Tourenne; Magdalini Polymenidou; Kasey R. Hutt; Anthony Q. Vu; Michael Baughn; Stephanie C. Huelga; Kevin M. Clutario; Shuo-Chien Ling; Tiffany Y. Liang; Curt Mazur; Edward Wancewicz; Aneeza S. Kim; Andy Watt; Sue Freier; Geoffrey G. Hicks; John Paul Donohue; Lily Shiue; C. Frank Bennett; John Ravits; Don W. Cleveland; Gene W. Yeo

FUS/TLS (fused in sarcoma/translocated in liposarcoma) and TDP-43 are integrally involved in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and frontotemporal dementia. We found that FUS/TLS binds to RNAs from >5,500 genes in mouse and human brain, primarily through a GUGGU-binding motif. We identified a sawtooth-like binding pattern, consistent with co-transcriptional deposition of FUS/TLS. Depletion of FUS/TLS from the adult nervous system altered the levels or splicing of >950 mRNAs, most of which are distinct from RNAs dependent on TDP-43. Abundance of only 45 RNAs was reduced after depletion of either TDP-43 or FUS/TLS from mouse brain, but among these were mRNAs that were transcribed from genes with exceptionally long introns and that encode proteins that are essential for neuronal integrity. Expression levels of a subset of these were lowered after TDP-43 or FUS/TLS depletion in stem cell–derived human neurons and in TDP-43 aggregate–containing motor neurons in sporadic ALS, supporting a common loss-of-function pathway as one component underlying motor neuron death from misregulation of TDP-43 or FUS/TLS.


Molecular Cell | 2012

LIN28 Binds Messenger RNAs at GGAGA Motifs and Regulates Splicing Factor Abundance

Melissa L. Wilbert; Stephanie C. Huelga; Katannya Kapeli; Thomas J. Stark; Tiffany Y. Liang; Stella Chen; Bernice Y. Yan; Jason L. Nathanson; Kasey R. Hutt; Michael Lovci; Hilal Kazan; Anthony Q. Vu; Katlin B. Massirer; Quaid Morris; Shawn Hoon; Gene W. Yeo

LIN28 is a conserved RNA-binding protein implicated in pluripotency, reprogramming, and oncogenesis. It was previously shown to act primarily by blocking let-7 microRNA (miRNA) biogenesis, but here we elucidate distinct roles of LIN28 regulation via its direct messenger RNA (mRNA) targets. Through crosslinking and immunoprecipitation coupled with high-throughput sequencing (CLIP-seq) in human embryonic stem cells and somatic cells expressing exogenous LIN28, we have defined discrete LIN28-binding sites in a quarter of human transcripts. These sites revealed that LIN28 binds to GGAGA sequences enriched within loop structures in mRNAs, reminiscent of its interaction with let-7 miRNA precursors. Among LIN28 mRNA targets, we found evidence for LIN28 autoregulation and also direct but differing effects on the protein abundance of splicing regulators in somatic and pluripotent stem cells. Splicing-sensitive microarrays demonstrated that exogenous LIN28 expression causes widespread downstream alternative splicing changes. These findings identify important regulatory functions of LIN28 via direct mRNA interactions.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2010

Global regulation of alternative splicing during myogenic differentiation

Christopher S. Bland; Eric T. Wang; Anthony Q. Vu; Marjorie P. David; John Castle; Jason M. Johnson; Christopher B. Burge; Thomas A. Cooper

Recent genome-wide analyses have elucidated the extent of alternative splicing (AS) in mammals, often focusing on comparisons of splice isoforms between differentiated tissues. However, regulated splicing changes are likely to be important in biological transitions such as cellular differentiation, or response to environmental stimuli. To assess the extent and significance of AS in myogenesis, we used splicing-sensitive microarray analysis of differentiating C2C12 myoblasts. We identified 95 AS events that undergo robust splicing transitions during C2C12 differentiation. More than half of the splicing transitions are conserved during differentiation of avian myoblasts, suggesting the products and timing of transitions are functionally significant. The majority of splicing transitions during C2C12 differentiation fall into four temporal patterns and were dependent on the myogenic program, suggesting that they are integral components of myogenic differentiation. Computational analyses revealed enrichment of many sequence motifs within the upstream and downstream intronic regions near the alternatively spliced regions corresponding to binding sites of splicing regulators. Western analyses demonstrated that several splicing regulators undergo dynamic changes in nuclear abundance during differentiation. These findings show that within a developmental context, AS is a highly regulated and conserved process, suggesting a major role for AS regulation in myogenic differentiation.


bioRxiv | 2016

Gene Expression Signatures of Sporadic ALS Motor Neuron Populations

Ranjan Batra; Kasey R. Hutt; Anthony Q. Vu; Stuart J. Rabin; Michael Baughn; Ryan T. Libby; Shawn Hoon; John Ravits; Gene W. Yeo

Background Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a fatal neurodegenerative disease primarily affecting motor neurons (MNs) to cause progressive paralysis. Ninety percent of cases are sporadic (sALS) and ten percent are familial (fALS). The molecular mechanisms underlying neurodegeneration remain elusive and there is a lack of promising biomarkers that define ALS phenotypes and progression. To date, most expression studies have focused on either complex whole tissues that contain cells other than MNs or induced pluripotent derived MNs (iMNs). Furthermore, as human tissue samples have high variability, estimation of differential gene-expression is not a trivial task. Results Here, we report a battery of orthogonal computational analyses to discover geneexpression defects in laser capture microdissected and enriched MN RNA pools from sALS patient spinal cords in regions destined for but not yet advanced in neurodegenerative stage. We used total RNA-sequencing (RNA-seq), applied multiple percentile rank (MPR) analysis to analyze MN-specific gene-expression signatures, and used high-throughput qPCR to validate RNA-seq results. Furthermore, we used a systems-level approach that identified molecular networks perturbed in sALS MNs. Weighted gene co-expression correlation network (WGCNA) analysis revealed defects in neurotransmitter biosynthesis and RNA-processing pathways while gene-gene interaction analysis showed abnormalities in networks that pertained to cell-adhesion, immune response and wound healing. Conclusions We discover gene-expression signatures that distinguish sALS from control MNs and our findings illuminate possible mechanisms of cellular toxicity. Our systematic and comprehensive analysis serves as a framework to reveal expression signatures and disrupted pathways that will be useful for future mechanistic studies and biomarker based therapeutic research.


PLOS ONE | 2014

A Novel Splice-Site Mutation in ALS2 Establishes the Diagnosis of Juvenile Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis in a Family with Early Onset Anarthria and Generalized Dystonias

Saima Siddiqi; Jia Nee Foo; Anthony Q. Vu; Saad Azim; David L. Silver; Atika Mansoor; Stacey Kiat Hong Tay; Sumiya Abbasi; Asraf Hussain Hashmi; Jamal Janjua; Sumbal Khalid; E. Shyong Tai; Gene W. Yeo; Chiea Chuen Khor

The diagnosis of childhood neurological disorders remains challenging given the overlapping clinical presentation across subgroups and heterogeneous presentation within subgroups. To determine the underlying genetic cause of a severe neurological disorder in a large consanguineous Pakistani family presenting with severe scoliosis, anarthria and progressive neuromuscular degeneration, we performed genome-wide homozygosity mapping accompanied by whole-exome sequencing in two affected first cousins and their unaffected parents to find the causative mutation. We identified a novel homozygous splice-site mutation (c.3512+1G>A) in the ALS2 gene (NM_020919.3) encoding alsin that segregated with the disease in this family. Homozygous loss-of-function mutations in ALS2 are known to cause juvenile-onset amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), one of the many neurological conditions having overlapping symptoms with many neurological phenotypes. RT-PCR validation revealed that the mutation resulted in exon-skipping as well as the use of an alternative donor splice, both of which are predicted to cause loss-of-function of the resulting proteins. By examining 216 known neurological disease genes in our exome sequencing data, we also identified 9 other rare nonsynonymous mutations in these genes, some of which lie in highly conserved regions. Sequencing of a single proband might have led to mis-identification of some of these as the causative variant. Our findings established a firm diagnosis of juvenile ALS in this family, thus demonstrating the use of whole exome sequencing combined with linkage analysis in families as a powerful tool for establishing a quick and precise genetic diagnosis of complex neurological phenotypes.


bioRxiv | 2018

Untargeted Mass Spectrometry-Based Metabolomics Tracks Molecular Changes in Raw and Processed Foods and Beverages

Julia M. Gauglitz; Christine M. Aceves; Alexander A. Aksenov; Gajender Aleti; Jehad Almaliti; Amina Bouslimani; Elizabeth A. Brown; Anaamika Campeau; Andres Mauricio Caraballo-Rodriguez; Rama Chaar; Ricardo R. da Silva; Alyssa M. Demko; Francesca Di Ottavio; Emmanuel Elijah; Madeleine Ernst; L. Paige Ferguson; Xavier Holmes; Justin J.J. van der Hooft; Alan K. Jarmusch; Lingjing Jiang; Kyo Bin Kang; Irina Koester; Brian Kwan; Bohan Ni; Jie Li; Yueying Li; Alexey V. Melnik; Carlos Molina-Santiago; Aaron L. Oom; Morgan W. Panitchpakdi

A major aspect of our daily lives is the need to acquire, store and prepare our food. Storage and preparation can have drastic effects on the compositional chemistry of our foods, but we have a limited understanding of the temporal nature of processes such as storage, spoilage, fermentation and brewing on the chemistry of the foods we eat. Here, we performed a temporal analysis of the chemical changes in foods during common household preparations using untargeted mass spectrometry and novel data analysis approaches. Common treatments of foods such as home fermentation of yogurt, brewing of tea, spoilage of meats and ripening of tomatoes altered the chemical makeup through time, through both chemical and biological processes. For example, brewing tea altered its composition by increasing the diversity of molecules, but this change was halted after 4 min of brewing. The results indicate that this is largely due to differential extraction of the material from the tea and not modification of the molecules during the brewing process. This is in contrast to the preparation of yogurt from milk, spoilage of meat and the ripening of tomatoes where biological transformations directly altered the foods molecular composition. Comprehensive assessment of chemical changes using multivariate statistics showed the varied impacts of the different food treatments, while analysis of individual chemical changes show specific alterations of chemical families in the different food types. The methods developed here represent novel approaches to studying the changes in food chemistry that can reveal global alterations in chemical profiles and specific transformations at the chemical level. Highlights We created a reference data set for tomato, milk to yogurt, tea, coffee, turkey and beef. We show that normal preparation and handling affects the molecular make-up. Tea preparation is largely driven by differential extraction. Formation of yogurt involves chemical transformations. The majority of meat molecules are not altered in 5 days at room temperature.


Acta Neuropathologica | 2018

Transcriptome–pathology correlation identifies interplay between TDP-43 and the expression of its kinase CK1E in sporadic ALS

Florian Krach; Ranjan Batra; Emily C. Wheeler; Anthony Q. Vu; Ruth Wang; Kasey R. Hutt; Stuart J. Rabin; Michael Baughn; Ryan T. Libby; Sandra Diaz-Garcia; Jennifer E. Stauffer; Elaine Pirie; Shahram Saberi; Maria Rodriguez; Assael Madrigal; Zacharias Kohl; Beate Winner; Gene W. Yeo; John Ravits

Sporadic amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (sALS) is the most common form of ALS, however, the molecular mechanisms underlying cellular damage and motor neuron degeneration remain elusive. To identify molecular signatures of sALS we performed genome-wide expression profiling in laser capture microdissection-enriched surviving motor neurons (MNs) from lumbar spinal cords of sALS patients with rostral onset and caudal progression. After correcting for immunological background, we discover a highly specific gene expression signature for sALS that is associated with phosphorylated TDP-43 (pTDP-43) pathology. Transcriptome–pathology correlation identified casein kinase 1ε (CSNK1E) mRNA as tightly correlated to levels of pTDP-43 in sALS patients. Enhanced crosslinking and immunoprecipitation in human sALS patient- and healthy control-derived frontal cortex, revealed that TDP-43 binds directly to and regulates the expression of CSNK1E mRNA. Additionally, we were able to show that pTDP-43 itself binds RNA. CK1E, the protein product of CSNK1E, in turn interacts with TDP-43 and promotes cytoplasmic accumulation of pTDP-43 in human stem-cell-derived MNs. Pathological TDP-43 phosphorylation is therefore, reciprocally regulated by CK1E activity and TDP-43 RNA binding. Our framework of transcriptome–pathology correlations identifies candidate genes with relevance to novel mechanisms of neurodegeneration.


Cell Reports | 2012

Integrative Genome-wide Analysis Reveals Cooperative Regulation of Alternative Splicing by hnRNP Proteins

Stephanie C. Huelga; Anthony Q. Vu; Justin D. Arnold; Tiffany Y. Liang; Patrick P. Liu; Bernice Y. Yan; John Paul Donohue; Lily Shiue; Shawn Hoon; Sydney Brenner; Manuel Ares; Gene W. Yeo


Nature | 2016

Distinct and shared functions of ALS-associated proteins TDP-43, FUS and TAF15 revealed by multisystem analyses

Katannya Kapeli; Gabriel A. Pratt; Anthony Q. Vu; Kasey R. Hutt; Fernando Martinez; Balaji Sundararaman; Ranjan Batra; Stephanie C. Huelga; Seung Chun; Tiffany Y. Liang; Jeremy Chang; John Paul Donohue; Lily Shiue; Jiayu Zhang; Haining Zhu; Franca Cambi; Edward J. Kasarskis; Shawn Hoon; Manuel Ares; John Ravits; Frank Rigo; Gene W. Yeo; Peter Freese; Nicole J. Lambert; Christopher B. Burge


The FASEB Journal | 2012

Discrete LIN28 binding sites in mature messenger RNA sequences reveals regulation of a network of splicing factors and downstream alternative splicing patterns

Melissa L. Wilbert; Stephanie C. Huelga; Anthony Q. Vu; Thomas J. Stark; Katlin B. Massirer; Stella Chen; Tiffany Y. Liang; Gene W. Yeo

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Gene W. Yeo

University of California

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Kasey R. Hutt

University of California

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John Ravits

University of California

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Lily Shiue

University of California

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Michael Baughn

University of California

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Ranjan Batra

University of California

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