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Dive into the research topics where Antonio J. Giraldez is active.

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Featured researches published by Antonio J. Giraldez.


Science | 2010

A Novel miRNA Processing Pathway Independent of Dicer Requires Argonaute2 Catalytic Activity

Daniel Cifuentes; Huiling Xue; David W. Taylor; Heather Patnode; Yuichiro Mishima; Sihem Cheloufi; Enbo Ma; Shrikant Mane; Gregory J. Hannon; Nathan D. Lawson; Scot A. Wolfe; Antonio J. Giraldez

No Dicer for Me MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are small noncoding RNAs found in most eukaryotes. Most are processed from primary transcripts in the nucleus by the microprocessor enzyme complex, which includes the nuclease Drosha, with a small number being generated by the messenger RNA splicing machinery. All pre-miRNAs are then exported into the cytoplasm where they are cleaved further by a second nuclease, Dicer, into the mature, functional miRNA. Cifuentes et al. (p. 1694, published online 6 May), now show that in a Dicer mutant fish at least one miRNA, miR-451, is still formed from pre-miR-451. The processing of pre-miR-451 requires the slicing activity of another protein in the miRNA pathway, Argonaute2. The unusual secondary structure of the pre-miR-451 determines its noncanonical processing pathway, which suggests that other miRNAs might also be processed in this way. The unusual secondary structure of a precursor microRNA determines its noncanonical processing. Dicer is a central enzyme in microRNA (miRNA) processing. We identified a Dicer-independent miRNA biogenesis pathway that uses Argonaute2 (Ago2) slicer catalytic activity. In contrast to other miRNAs, miR-451 levels were refractory to dicer loss of function but were reduced in MZago2 (maternal-zygotic) mutants. We found that pre-miR-451 processing requires Ago2 catalytic activity in vivo. MZago2 mutants showed delayed erythropoiesis that could be rescued by wild-type Ago2 or miR-451-duplex but not by catalytically dead Ago2. Changing the secondary structure of Dicer-dependent miRNAs to mimic that of pre-miR-451 restored miRNA function and rescued developmental defects in MZdicer mutants, indicating that the pre-miRNA secondary structure determines the processing pathway in vivo. We propose that Ago2-mediated cleavage of pre-miRNAs, followed by uridylation and trimming, generates functional miRNAs independently of Dicer.


Science | 2012

Ribosome Profiling Shows That miR-430 Reduces Translation Before Causing mRNA Decay in Zebrafish

Ariel A. Bazzini; Miler T. Lee; Antonio J. Giraldez

Translation Block MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are small, noncoding RNA genes that are found in the genomes of most eukaryotes, where they play an important role in the regulation of gene expression. Although whether gene activity is repressed by blocking translation of messenger RNA (mRNA) targets, or by promoting their deadenylation and then degradation, has been open to debate. Bazzini et al. (p. 233, published online 15 March) and Djuranovic et al. (p. 237) looked at early points in the repression reaction in the zebrafish embryo or in Drosophila tissue culture cells, respectively, and found that translation was blocked before target mRNAs were significantly deadenylated and degraded. Thus, miRNAs appear to interfere with the initiation step of translation. MicroRNAs act to repress their messenger RNA targets first by blocking translation initiation and then through degradation. MicroRNAs regulate gene expression through deadenylation, repression, and messenger RNA (mRNA) decay. However, the contribution of each mechanism in non-steady-state situations remains unclear. We monitored the impact of miR-430 on ribosome occupancy of endogenous mRNAs in wild-type and dicer mutant zebrafish embryos and found that miR-430 reduces the number of ribosomes on target mRNAs before causing mRNA decay. Translational repression occurs before complete deadenylation, and disrupting deadenylation with use of an internal polyadenylate tail did not block target repression. Lastly, we observed that ribosome density along the length of the message remains constant, suggesting that translational repression occurs by reducing the rate of initiation rather than affecting elongation or causing ribosomal drop-off. These results show that miR-430 regulates translation initiation before inducing mRNA decay during zebrafish development.


Nature Methods | 2011

Selection-free zinc-finger-nuclease engineering by context-dependent assembly (CoDA)

Jeffry D. Sander; Elizabeth J. Dahlborg; Mathew J. Goodwin; Lindsay Cade; Feng Zhang; Daniel Cifuentes; Shaun J. Curtin; Jessica S. Blackburn; Stacey Thibodeau-Beganny; Yiping Qi; Christopher J. Pierick; Ellen J. Hoffman; Morgan L. Maeder; Cyd Khayter; Deepak Reyon; Drena Dobbs; David M. Langenau; Robert M. Stupar; Antonio J. Giraldez; Daniel F. Voytas; Randall T. Peterson; Jing-Ruey J. Yeh; J. Keith Joung

Engineered zinc-finger nucleases (ZFNs) enable targeted genome modification. Here we describe context-dependent assembly (CoDA), a platform for engineering ZFNs using only standard cloning techniques or custom DNA synthesis. Using CoDA-generated ZFNs, we rapidly altered 20 genes in Danio rerio, Arabidopsis thaliana and Glycine max. The simplicity and efficacy of CoDA will enable broad adoption of ZFN technology and make possible large-scale projects focused on multigene pathways or genome-wide alterations.


The EMBO Journal | 2014

Identification of small ORFs in vertebrates using ribosome footprinting and evolutionary conservation

Ariel A. Bazzini; Timothy G Johnstone; Romain Christiano; Sebastian D. Mackowiak; Benedikt Obermayer; Elizabeth S. Fleming; Charles E. Vejnar; Miler T. Lee; Nikolaus Rajewsky; Tobias C. Walther; Antonio J. Giraldez

Identification of the coding elements in the genome is a fundamental step to understanding the building blocks of living systems. Short peptides (< 100 aa) have emerged as important regulators of development and physiology, but their identification has been limited by their size. We have leveraged the periodicity of ribosome movement on the mRNA to define actively translated ORFs by ribosome footprinting. This approach identifies several hundred translated small ORFs in zebrafish and human. Computational prediction of small ORFs from codon conservation patterns corroborates and extends these findings and identifies conserved sequences in zebrafish and human, suggesting functional peptide products (micropeptides). These results identify micropeptide‐encoding genes in vertebrates, providing an entry point to define their function in vivo.


Nature Methods | 2015

CRISPRscan: designing highly efficient sgRNAs for CRISPR-Cas9 targeting in vivo

Miguel A. Moreno-Mateos; Charles E. Vejnar; Jean-Denis Beaudoin; Juan P. Fernandez; Emily K. Mis; Mustafa K. Khokha; Antonio J. Giraldez

CRISPR-Cas9 technology provides a powerful system for genome engineering. However, variable activity across different single guide RNAs (sgRNAs) remains a significant limitation. We analyzed the molecular features that influence sgRNA stability, activity and loading into Cas9 in vivo. We observed that guanine enrichment and adenine depletion increased sgRNA stability and activity, whereas differential sgRNA loading, nucleosome positioning and Cas9 off-target binding were not major determinants. We also identified sgRNAs truncated by one or two nucleotides and containing 5′ mismatches as efficient alternatives to canonical sgRNAs. On the basis of these results, we created a predictive sgRNA-scoring algorithm, CRISPRscan, that effectively captures the sequence features affecting the activity of CRISPR-Cas9 in vivo. Finally, we show that targeting Cas9 to the germ line using a Cas9-nanos 3′ UTR led to the generation of maternal-zygotic mutants, as well as increased viability and decreased somatic mutations. These results identify determinants that influence Cas9 activity and provide a framework for the design of highly efficient sgRNAs for genome targeting in vivo.


Developmental Cell | 2002

HSPG Modification by the Secreted Enzyme Notum Shapes the Wingless Morphogen Gradient

Antonio J. Giraldez; Richard R. Copley; Stephen M. Cohen

The secreted signaling protein Wingless acts as a morphogen to pattern the imaginal discs of Drosophila. Here we report identification of a secreted repressor of Wingless activity, which we call Notum. Loss of Notum function leads to increased Wingless activity by altering the shape of the Wingless protein gradient. When overexpressed, Notum blocks Wingless activity. Notum encodes a member of the alpha/beta-hydrolase superfamily, with similarity to pectin acetylesterases. We present evidence that Notum influences Wingless protein distribution by modifying the heparan sulfate proteoglycans Dally-like and Dally. High levels of Wingless signaling induce Notum expression. Thus, Wingless contributes to shaping its own gradient by regulating expression of a protein that modifies its interaction with cell surface proteoglycans.


Nature | 2013

Nanog, Pou5f1 and SoxB1 activate zygotic gene expression during the maternal-to-zygotic transition

Miler T. Lee; Ashley R. Bonneau; Carter M. Takacs; Ariel A. Bazzini; Kate R. DiVito; Elizabeth S. Fleming; Antonio J. Giraldez

After fertilization, maternal factors direct development and trigger zygotic genome activation (ZGA) at the maternal-to-zygotic transition (MZT). In zebrafish, ZGA is required for gastrulation and clearance of maternal messenger RNAs, which is in part regulated by the conserved microRNA miR-430. However, the factors that activate the zygotic program in vertebrates are unknown. Here we show that Nanog, Pou5f1 (also called Oct4) and SoxB1 regulate zygotic gene activation in zebrafish. We identified several hundred genes directly activated by maternal factors, constituting the first wave of zygotic transcription. Ribosome profiling revealed that nanog, sox19b and pou5f1 are the most highly translated transcription factors pre-MZT. Combined loss of these factors resulted in developmental arrest before gastrulation and a failure to activate >75% of zygotic genes, including miR-430. Our results demonstrate that maternal Nanog, Pou5f1 and SoxB1 are required to initiate the zygotic developmental program and induce clearance of the maternal program by activating miR-430 expression.


Annual Review of Cell and Developmental Biology | 2014

Zygotic Genome Activation During the Maternal-to-Zygotic Transition

Miler T. Lee; Ashley R. Bonneau; Antonio J. Giraldez

Embryogenesis depends on a highly coordinated cascade of genetically encoded events. In animals, maternal factors contributed by the egg cytoplasm initially control development, whereas the zygotic nuclear genome is quiescent. Subsequently, the genome is activated, embryonic gene products are mobilized, and maternal factors are cleared. This transfer of developmental control is called the maternal-to-zygotic transition (MZT). In this review, we discuss recent advances toward understanding the scope, timing, and mechanisms that underlie zygotic genome activation at the MZT in animals. We describe high-throughput techniques to measure the embryonic transcriptome and explore how regulation of the cell cycle, chromatin, and transcription factors together elicits specific patterns of embryonic gene expression. Finally, we illustrate the interplay between zygotic transcription and maternal clearance and show how these two activities combine to reprogram two terminally differentiated gametes into a totipotent embryo.


Genes & Development | 2009

Zebrafish miR-1 and miR-133 shape muscle gene expression and regulate sarcomeric actin organization

Yuichiro Mishima; Cei Abreu-Goodger; Alison A Staton; Carlos Stahlhut; Chong Shou; Chao Cheng; Mark Gerstein; Anton J. Enright; Antonio J. Giraldez

microRNAs (miRNAs) represent approximately 4% of the genes in vertebrates, where they regulate deadenylation, translation, and decay of the target messenger RNAs (mRNAs). The integrated role of miRNAs to regulate gene expression and cell function remains largely unknown. Therefore, to identify the targets coordinately regulated by muscle miRNAs in vivo, we performed gene expression arrays on muscle cells sorted from wild type, dicer mutants, and single miRNA knockdown embryos. Our analysis reveals that two particular miRNAs, miR-1 and miR-133, influence gene expression patterns in the zebrafish embryo where they account for >54% of the miRNA-mediated regulation in the muscle. We also found that muscle miRNA targets (1) tend to be expressed at low levels in wild-type muscle but are more highly expressed in dicer mutant muscle, and (2) are enriched for actin-related and actin-binding proteins. Loss of dicer function or down-regulation of miR-1 and miR-133 alters muscle gene expression and disrupts actin organization during sarcomere assembly. These results suggest that miR-1 and miR-133 actively shape gene expression patterns in muscle tissue, where they regulate sarcomeric actin organization.


Development | 2003

Wingless and Notch signaling provide cell survival cues and control cell proliferation during wing development

Antonio J. Giraldez; Stephen M. Cohen

Tissue growth during animal development depends on the coordination of cell proliferation and cell death. The EGF-receptor/MAPK, Hedgehog, Dpp, Wingless (Wg) and Notch signaling pathways have been implicated in growth control in the developing Drosophila wing. In this report, we examine the effects of Notch and Wg on growth in terms of cell proliferation and cell survival. Reduction of Wg signaling impaired compartment and clonal growth, and increased cell death. Inhibition of apoptosis in cells deficient for Wg signaling only partially rescued the clone growth defect, suggesting that Wg is also required to promote cell proliferation. This is supported by the finding that ectopic expression of Wg caused over-proliferation of cells in the proximal wing. Localized activation of Notch had non-autonomous effects on cell proliferation. However, only part of this effect was attributable to Notch-dependent induction of Wg, suggesting that other Notch-inducible signaling molecules contribute to the control of cell proliferation in the wing.

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Miler T. Lee

University of Pennsylvania

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