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Dive into the research topics where Balázs Bálint is active.

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Featured researches published by Balázs Bálint.


Genome Research | 2012

A DNA methylation fingerprint of 1628 human samples

Augustin F. Fernandez; Yassen Assenov; José I. Martín-Subero; Balázs Bálint; Reiner Siebert; Hiroaki Taniguchi; Hiroyuki Yamamoto; Manuel Hidalgo; Aik Choon Tan; Oliver Galm; Isidre Ferrer; Montse Sanchez-Cespedes; Alberto Villanueva; Javier Carmona; Jose V. Sanchez-Mut; María Berdasco; Victor Moreno; Gabriel Capellá; David Monk; Esteban Ballestar; Santiago Ropero; Ramon Martinez; Marta Sanchez-Carbayo; Felipe Prosper; Xabier Agirre; Mario F. Fraga; Osvaldo Graña; Luis A. Pérez-Jurado; Jaume Mora; Susana Puig

Most of the studies characterizing DNA methylation patterns have been restricted to particular genomic loci in a limited number of human samples and pathological conditions. Herein, we present a compromise between an extremely comprehensive study of a human sample population with an intermediate level of resolution of CpGs at the genomic level. We obtained a DNA methylation fingerprint of 1628 human samples in which we interrogated 1505 CpG sites. The DNA methylation patterns revealed show this epigenetic mark to be critical in tissue-type definition and stemness, particularly around transcription start sites that are not within a CpG island. For disease, the generated DNA methylation fingerprints show that, during tumorigenesis, human cancer cells underwent a progressive gain of promoter CpG-island hypermethylation and a loss of CpG methylation in non-CpG-island promoters. Although transformed cells are those in which DNA methylation disruption is more obvious, we observed that other common human diseases, such as neurological and autoimmune disorders, had their own distinct DNA methylation profiles. Most importantly, we provide proof of principle that the DNA methylation fingerprints obtained might be useful for translational purposes by showing that we are able to identify the tumor type origin of cancers of unknown primary origin (CUPs). Thus, the DNA methylation patterns identified across the largest spectrum of samples, tissues, and diseases reported to date constitute a baseline for developing higher-resolution DNA methylation maps and provide important clues concerning the contribution of CpG methylation to tissue identity and its changes in the most prevalent human diseases.


Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2007

Biotechnological intensification of biogas production.

Zoltán Bagi; Norbert Ács; Balázs Bálint; Lenke Horváth; Krisztina Dobó; Katalin Perei; Gábor Rákhely; Kornél L. Kovács

The importance of syntrophic relationships among microorganisms participating in biogas formation has been emphasized, and the regulatory role of in situ hydrogen production has been recognized. It was assumed that the availability of hydrogen may be a limiting factor for hydrogenotrophic methanogens. This hypothesis was tested under laboratory and field conditions by adding a mesophilic (Enterobacter cloacae) or thermophilic hydrogen-producing (Caldicellulosyruptor saccharolyticus) strain to natural biogas-producing consortia. The substrates were waste water sludge, dried plant biomass from Jerusalem artichoke, and pig manure. In all cases, a significant intensification of biogas production was observed. The composition of the generated biogas did not noticeably change. In addition to being a good hydrogen producer, C. saccharolyticus has cellulolytic activity; hence, it is particularly suitable when cellulose-containing biomass is fermented. The process was tested in a 5-m3 thermophilic biogas digester using pig manure slurry as a substrate. Biogas formation increased at least 160–170% upon addition of the hydrogen-producing bacteria as compared to the biogas production of the spontaneously formed microbial consortium. Using the hydrogenase-minus control strain provided evidence that the observed enhancement was due to interspecies hydrogen transfer. The on-going presence of C. saccharolyticus was demonstrated after several months of semicontinuous operation.


Brain | 2013

DNA methylation map of mouse and human brain identifies target genes in Alzheimer’s disease

Jose V. Sanchez-Mut; Esther Aso; Nicolas Panayotis; Ira T. Lott; Mara Dierssen; Alberto Rábano; Rocío G. Urdinguio; Agustín F. Fernández; Aurora Astudillo; José I. Martín-Subero; Balázs Bálint; Mario F. Fraga; Antonio Gomez; Cecile Gurnot; Jean-Christophe Roux; Jesús Avila; Takao K. Hensch; Isidro Ferrer; Manel Esteller

The central nervous system has a pattern of gene expression that is closely regulated with respect to functional and anatomical regions. DNA methylation is a major regulator of transcriptional activity, and aberrations in the distribution of this epigenetic mark may be involved in many neurological disorders, such as Alzheimer’s disease. Herein, we have analysed 12 distinct mouse brain regions according to their CpG 5’-end gene methylation patterns and observed their unique epigenetic landscapes. The DNA methylomes obtained from the cerebral cortex were used to identify aberrant DNA methylation changes that occurred in two mouse models of Alzheimer’s disease. We were able to translate these findings to patients with Alzheimer’s disease, identifying DNA methylation-associated silencing of three targets genes: thromboxane A2 receptor (TBXA2R), sorbin and SH3 domain containing 3 (SORBS3) and spectrin beta 4 (SPTBN4). These hypermethylation targets indicate that the cyclic AMP response element-binding protein (CREB) activation pathway and the axon initial segment could contribute to the disease.


Cell Death & Differentiation | 2014

Identification of a ZEB2-MITF-ZEB1 transcriptional network that controls melanogenesis and melanoma progression

Geertrui Denecker; Niels Vandamme; Ö Akay; D Koludrovic; Joachim Taminau; Kelly Lemeire; Alexander Gheldof; B De Craene; M. Van Gele; Lieve Brochez; Girish Mallya Udupi; Mairin Rafferty; Balázs Bálint; William M. Gallagher; Ghanem Elias Ghanem; Danny Huylebroeck; Jody J. Haigh; J. J. van den Oord; Lionel Larue; I Davidson; J-C Marine; Geert Berx

Deregulation of signaling pathways that control differentiation, expansion and migration of neural crest-derived melanoblasts during normal development contributes also to melanoma progression and metastasis. Although several epithelial-to-mesenchymal (EMT) transcription factors, such as zinc finger E-box binding protein 1 (ZEB1) and ZEB2, have been implicated in neural crest cell biology, little is known about their role in melanocyte homeostasis and melanoma. Here we show that mice lacking Zeb2 in the melanocyte lineage exhibit a melanoblast migration defect and, unexpectedly, a severe melanocyte differentiation defect. Loss of Zeb2 in the melanocyte lineage results in a downregulation of the Microphthalmia-associated transcription factor (Mitf) and melanocyte differentiation markers concomitant with an upregulation of Zeb1. We identify a transcriptional signaling network in which the EMT transcription factor ZEB2 regulates MITF levels to control melanocyte differentiation. Moreover, our data are also relevant for human melanomagenesis as loss of ZEB2 expression is associated with reduced patient survival.


Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2005

Utilization of keratin-containing biowaste to produce biohydrogen

Balázs Bálint; Zoltán Bagi; András Tóth; Gábor Rákhely; Katalin Perei; Kornél L. Kovács

A two-stage fermentation system was constructed to test and demonstrate the feasibility of biohydrogen generation from keratin-rich biowaste. We isolated a novel aerobic Bacillus strain (Bacillus licheniformis KK1) that displays outstanding keratinolytic activity. The isolated strain was employed to convert keratin-containing biowaste into a fermentation product that is rich in amino acids and peptides. The process was optimized for the second fermentation step, in which the product of keratin fermentation—supplemented with essential minerals—was metabolized by Thermococcus litoralis, an anaerobic hyperthermophilic archaeon. T. litoralis grew on the keratin hydrolysate and produced hydrogen gas as a physiological fermentation byproduct. Hyperthermophilic cells utilized the keratin hydrolysate in a similar way as their standard nutrient, i.e., bacto-peptone. The generalization of the findings to protein-rich waste treatment and production of biohydrogen is discussed and possible means of further improvements are listed.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016

A highly precise and portable genome engineering method allows comparison of mutational effects across bacterial species

Ákos Nyerges; Bálint Csörgő; Istvan Nagy; Balázs Bálint; Péter Bihari; Viktória Lázár; Gábor Apjok; Kinga Umenhoffer; Balázs Bogos; György Pósfai; Csaba Pál

Significance Current tools for bacterial genome engineering suffer from major limitations. They have been optimized for a few laboratory model strains, lead to the accumulation of numerous undesired, off-target modifications, and demand extensive modification of the host genome prior to large-scale editing. Herein, we address these problems and present a simple, all-in-one solution. By utilizing a highly conserved mutant allele of the bacterial mismatch-repair system, we were able to gain unprecedented precision in the control over the generation of desired modifications in multiple bacterial species. These results have broad implications with regards to both biotechnological and clinical applications. Currently available tools for multiplex bacterial genome engineering are optimized for a few laboratory model strains, demand extensive prior modification of the host strain, and lead to the accumulation of numerous off-target modifications. Building on prior development of multiplex automated genome engineering (MAGE), our work addresses these problems in a single framework. Using a dominant-negative mutant protein of the methyl-directed mismatch repair (MMR) system, we achieved a transient suppression of DNA repair in Escherichia coli, which is necessary for efficient oligonucleotide integration. By integrating all necessary components into a broad-host vector, we developed a new workflow we term pORTMAGE. It allows efficient modification of multiple loci, without any observable off-target mutagenesis and prior modification of the host genome. Because of the conserved nature of the bacterial MMR system, pORTMAGE simultaneously allows genome editing and mutant library generation in other biotechnologically and clinically relevant bacterial species. Finally, we applied pORTMAGE to study a set of antibiotic resistance-conferring mutations in Salmonella enterica and E. coli. Despite over 100 million y of divergence between the two species, mutational effects remained generally conserved. In sum, a single transformation of a pORTMAGE plasmid allows bacterial species of interest to become an efficient host for genome engineering. These advances pave the way toward biotechnological and therapeutic applications. Finally, pORTMAGE allows systematic comparison of mutational effects and epistasis across a wide range of bacterial species.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Epigenetic Activation of SOX11 in Lymphoid Neoplasms by Histone Modifications

Maria Carmela Vegliante; Cristina Royo; Jara Palomero; Itziar Salaverria; Balázs Bálint; Idoia Martin-Guerrero; Xabier Agirre; Amaia Lujambio; Julia Richter; Sílvia Xargay-Torrent; Sílvia Beà; Luis Hernández; Anna Enjuanes; María José Calasanz; Andreas Rosenwald; German Ott; Jose Roman-Gomez; Felipe Prosper; Manel Esteller; Pedro Jares; Reiner Siebert; Elias Campo; José I. Martín-Subero; Virginia Amador

Recent studies have shown aberrant expression of SOX11 in various types of aggressive B-cell neoplasms. To elucidate the molecular mechanisms leading to such deregulation, we performed a comprehensive SOX11 gene expression and epigenetic study in stem cells, normal hematopoietic cells and different lymphoid neoplasms. We observed that SOX11 expression is associated with unmethylated DNA and presence of activating histone marks (H3K9/14Ac and H3K4me3) in embryonic stem cells and some aggressive B-cell neoplasms. In contrast, adult stem cells, normal hematopoietic cells and other lymphoid neoplasms do not express SOX11. Such repression was associated with silencing histone marks H3K9me2 and H3K27me3. The SOX11 promoter of non-malignant cells was consistently unmethylated whereas lymphoid neoplasms with silenced SOX11 tended to acquire DNA hypermethylation. SOX11 silencing in cell lines was reversed by the histone deacetylase inhibitor SAHA but not by the DNA methyltransferase inhibitor AZA. These data indicate that, although DNA hypermethylation of SOX11 is frequent in lymphoid neoplasms, it seems to be functionally inert, as SOX11 is already silenced in the hematopoietic system. In contrast, the pathogenic role of SOX11 is associated with its de novo expression in some aggressive lymphoid malignancies, which is mediated by a shift from inactivating to activating histone modifications.


Leukemia | 2012

Array-based DNA methylation analysis in classical Hodgkin lymphoma reveals new insights into the mechanisms underlying silencing of B cell-specific genes

Ole Ammerpohl; A Haake; S Pellissery; M Giefing; Julia Richter; Balázs Bálint; M Kulis; J Le; Marina Bibikova; Hans G. Drexler; Marc Seifert; R Shaknovic; Bernhard Korn; Ralf Küppers; José I. Martín-Subero; Reiner Siebert

Array-based DNA methylation analysis in classical Hodgkin lymphoma reveals new insights into the mechanisms underlying silencing of B cell-specific genes


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2017

Morphotype of bacteroids in different legumes correlates with the number and type of symbiotic NCR peptides

Jesús Montiel; J. Allan Downie; Attila Farkas; Péter Bihari; Róbert Herczeg; Balázs Bálint; Peter Mergaert; Attila Kereszt; Eva Kondorosi

Significance The mutualistic association between legumes and rhizobia has ecological and agronomical relevance because of its contribution to the global nitrogen cycle by biological nitrogen fixation. Legumes from the Inverted Repeat Lacking Clade (IRLC) impose irreversible differentiation to their endosymbionts through nodule-specific cysteine-rich (NCR) peptides. This study indicates that NCR gene families evolved via different pathways in IRLC species, in which their size and composition directly impacted the morphotype of their bacterial partners. The positive correlation between the diversity of NCRs with their physiological effects on bacteria provides a better understanding of the multiple roles played by this large family in nodule functioning. In legume nodules, rhizobia differentiate into nitrogen-fixing forms called bacteroids, which are enclosed by a plant membrane in an organelle-like structure called the symbiosome. In the Inverted Repeat-Lacking Clade (IRLC) of legumes, this differentiation is terminal due to irreversible loss of cell division ability and is associated with genome amplification and different morphologies of the bacteroids that can be swollen, elongated, spherical, and elongated–branched, depending on the host plant. In Medicago truncatula, this process is orchestrated by nodule-specific cysteine-rich peptides (NCRs) delivered into developing bacteroids. Here, we identified the predicted NCR proteins in 10 legumes representing different subclades of the IRLC with distinct bacteroid morphotypes. Analysis of their expression and predicted sequences establishes correlations between the composition of the NCR family and the morphotypes of bacteroids. Although NCRs have a single origin, their evolution has followed different routes in individual lineages, and enrichment and diversification of cationic peptides has resulted in the ability to impose major morphological changes on the endosymbionts. The wide range of effects provoked by NCRs such as cell enlargement, membrane alterations and permeabilization, and biofilm and vesicle formation is dependent on the amino acid composition and charge of the peptides. These effects are strongly influenced by the rhizobial surface polysaccharides that affect NCR-induced differentiation and survival of rhizobia in nodule cells.


Systematic Biology | 2012

The evolution of defense mechanisms correlate with the explosive diversification of autodigesting Coprinellus mushrooms (Agaricales, Fungi).

László G. Nagy; Judit Házi; Balázs Szappanos; Sándor Kocsubé; Balázs Bálint; Gábor Rákhely; Csaba Vágvölgyi; Tamás Papp

Bursts of diversification are known to have contributed significantly to the extant morphological and species diversity, but evidence for many of the theoretical predictions about adaptive radiations have remained contentious. Despite their tremendous diversity, patterns of evolutionary diversification and the contribution of explosive episodes in fungi are largely unknown. Here, using the genus Coprinellus (Psathyrellaceae, Agaricales) as a model, we report the first explosive fungal radiation and infer that the onset of the radiation correlates with a change from a multilayered to a much simpler defense structure on the fruiting bodies. We hypothesize that this change constitutes a key innovation, probably relaxing constraints on diversification imposed by nutritional investment into the development of protective tissues of fruiting bodies. Fossil calibration suggests that Coprinellus mushrooms radiated during the Miocene coinciding with global radiation of large grazing mammals following expansion of dry open grasslands. In addition to diversification rate-based methods, we test the hard polytomy hypothesis, by analyzing the resolvability of internal nodes of the backbone of the putative radiation using Reversible-Jump MCMC. We discuss potential applications and pitfalls of this approach as well as how biologically meaningful polytomies can be distinguished from alignment shortcomings. Our data provide insights into the nature of adaptive radiations in general by revealing a deceleration of morphological diversification through time. The dynamics of morphological diversification was approximated by obtaining the temporal distribution of state changes in discrete traits along the trees and comparing it with the tempo of lineage accumulation. We found that the number of state changes correlate with the number of lineages, even in parts of the tree with short internal branches, and peaks around the onset of the explosive radiation followed by a slowdown, most likely because of the decrease in available niches.

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Istvan Nagy

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Gergely Maróti

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Csaba Pál

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Ákos Nyerges

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Attila Kereszt

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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