Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Cristina Dallabona is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Cristina Dallabona.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2012

Mutations of the Mitochondrial-tRNA Modifier MTO1 Cause Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy and Lactic Acidosis

Daniele Ghezzi; Enrico Baruffini; Tobias B. Haack; Federica Invernizzi; Laura Melchionda; Cristina Dallabona; Tim M. Strom; Rossella Parini; Alberto Burlina; Thomas Meitinger; Holger Prokisch; Ileana Ferrero; Massimo Zeviani

Dysfunction of mitochondrial respiration is an increasingly recognized cause of isolated hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. To gain insight into the genetic origin of this condition, we used next-generation exome sequencing to identify mutations in MTO1, which encodes mitochondrial translation optimization 1. Two affected siblings carried a maternal c.1858dup (p.Arg620Lysfs(∗)8) frameshift and a paternal c.1282G>A (p.Ala428Thr) missense mutation. A third unrelated individual was homozygous for the latter change. In both humans and yeast, MTO1 increases the accuracy and efficiency of mtDNA translation by catalyzing the 5-carboxymethylaminomethylation of the wobble uridine base in three mitochondrial tRNAs (mt-tRNAs). Accordingly, mutant muscle and fibroblasts showed variably combined reduction in mtDNA-dependent respiratory chain activities. Reduced respiration in mutant cells was corrected by expressing a wild-type MTO1 cDNA. Conversely, defective respiration of a yeast mto1Δ strain failed to be corrected by an Mto1(Pro622∗) variant, equivalent to human MTO1(Arg620Lysfs∗8), whereas incomplete correction was achieved by an Mto1(Ala431Thr) variant, corresponding to human MTO1(Ala428Thr). The respiratory yeast phenotype was dramatically worsened in stress conditions and in the presence of a paromomycin-resistant (P(R)) mitochondrial rRNA mutation. Lastly, in vivo mtDNA translation was impaired in the mutant yeast strains.


Neurology | 2014

Novel (ovario) leukodystrophy related to AARS2 mutations

Cristina Dallabona; Daria Diodato; Sietske H. Kevelam; Tobias B. Haack; Lee-Jun C. Wong; Gajja S. Salomons; Enrico Baruffini; Laura Melchionda; Caterina Mariotti; Tim M. Strom; Thomas Meitinger; Holger Prokisch; Kim Chapman; Alison Colley; Helena Rocha; Katrin Őunap; Raphael Schiffmann; Ettore Salsano; Mario Savoiardo; Eline M. Hamilton; Truus E. M. Abbink; Nicole I. Wolf; Ileana Ferrero; Costanza Lamperti; Massimo Zeviani; Adeline Vanderver; Daniele Ghezzi; Marjo S. van der Knaap

Objectives: The study was focused on leukoencephalopathies of unknown cause in order to define a novel, homogeneous phenotype suggestive of a common genetic defect, based on clinical and MRI findings, and to identify the causal genetic defect shared by patients with this phenotype. Methods: Independent next-generation exome-sequencing studies were performed in 2 unrelated patients with a leukoencephalopathy. MRI findings in these patients were compared with available MRIs in a database of unclassified leukoencephalopathies; 11 patients with similar MRI abnormalities were selected. Clinical and MRI findings were investigated. Results: Next-generation sequencing revealed compound heterozygous mutations in AARS2 encoding mitochondrial alanyl-tRNA synthetase in both patients. Functional studies in yeast confirmed the pathogenicity of the mutations in one patient. Sanger sequencing revealed AARS2 mutations in 4 of the 11 selected patients. The 6 patients with AARS2 mutations had childhood- to adulthood-onset signs of neurologic deterioration consisting of ataxia, spasticity, and cognitive decline with features of frontal lobe dysfunction. MRIs showed a leukoencephalopathy with striking involvement of left-right connections, descending tracts, and cerebellar atrophy. All female patients had ovarian failure. None of the patients had signs of a cardiomyopathy. Conclusions: Mutations in AARS2 have been found in a severe form of infantile cardiomyopathy in 2 families. We present 6 patients with a new phenotype caused by AARS2 mutations, characterized by leukoencephalopathy and, in female patients, ovarian failure, indicating that the phenotypic spectrum associated with AARS2 variants is much wider than previously reported.


Human Mutation | 2013

MTO1 Mutations are Associated with Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy and Lactic Acidosis and Cause Respiratory Chain Deficiency in Humans and Yeast

Enrico Baruffini; Cristina Dallabona; Federica Invernizzi; John W. Yarham; Laura Melchionda; Emma L. Blakely; Eleonora Lamantea; Claudia Donnini; Saikat Santra; Suresh Vijayaraghavan; Helen Roper; Alberto Burlina; Robert Kopajtich; Anett Walther; Tim M. Strom; Tobias B. Haack; Holger Prokisch; Robert W. Taylor; Ileana Ferrero; Massimo Zeviani; Daniele Ghezzi

We report three families presenting with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, lactic acidosis, and multiple defects of mitochondrial respiratory chain (MRC) activities. By direct sequencing of the candidate gene MTO1, encoding the mitochondrial‐tRNA modifier 1, or whole exome sequencing analysis, we identified novel missense mutations. All MTO1 mutations were predicted to be deleterious on MTO1 function. Their pathogenic role was experimentally validated in a recombinant yeast model, by assessing oxidative growth, respiratory activity, mitochondrial protein synthesis, and complex IV activity. In one case, we also demonstrated that expression of wt MTO1 could rescue the respiratory defect in mutant fibroblasts. The severity of the yeast respiratory phenotypes partly correlated with the different clinical presentations observed in MTO1 mutant patients, although the clinical outcome was highly variable in patients with the same mutation and seemed also to depend on timely start of pharmacological treatment, centered on the control of lactic acidosis by dichloroacetate. Our results indicate that MTO1 mutations are commonly associated with a presentation of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, lactic acidosis, and MRC deficiency, and that ad hoc recombinant yeast models represent a useful system to test the pathogenic potential of uncommon variants, and provide insight into their effects on the expression of a biochemical phenotype.


Human Mutation | 2014

VARS2 and TARS2 Mutations in Patients with Mitochondrial Encephalomyopathies

Daria Diodato; Laura Melchionda; Tobias B. Haack; Cristina Dallabona; Enrico Baruffini; Claudia Donnini; Tiziana Granata; Francesca Ragona; Paolo Balestri; Maria Margollicci; Eleonora Lamantea; Alessia Nasca; Christopher A. Powell; Michal Minczuk; Tim M. Strom; Thomas Meitinger; Holger Prokisch; Costanza Lamperti; Massimo Zeviani; Daniele Ghezzi

By way of whole‐exome sequencing, we identified a homozygous missense mutation in VARS2 in one subject with microcephaly and epilepsy associated with isolated deficiency of the mitochondrial respiratory chain (MRC) complex I and compound heterozygous mutations in TARS2 in two siblings presenting with axial hypotonia and severe psychomotor delay associated with multiple MRC defects. The nucleotide variants segregated within the families, were absent in Single Nucleotide Polymorphism (SNP) databases and are predicted to be deleterious. The amount of VARS2 and TARS2 proteins and valyl‐tRNA and threonyl‐tRNA levels were decreased in samples of afflicted patients according to the genetic defect. Expression of the corresponding wild‐type transcripts in immortalized mutant fibroblasts rescued the biochemical impairment of mitochondrial respiration and yeast modeling of the VARS2 mutation confirmed its pathogenic role. Taken together, these data demonstrate the role of the identified mutations for these mitochondriopathies. Our study reports the first mutations in the VARS2 and TARS2 genes, which encode two mitochondrial aminoacyl‐tRNA synthetases, as causes of clinically distinct, early‐onset mitochondrial encephalopathies.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2010

Sym1, the yeast ortholog of the MPV17 human disease protein, is a stress-induced bioenergetic and morphogenetic mitochondrial modulator

Cristina Dallabona; Renè Massimiliano Marsano; Paola Arzuffi; Daniele Ghezzi; Patrizia Mancini; Massimo Zeviani; Iliana Ferrero; Claudia Donnini

A peculiar form of hepatocerebral mtDNA depletion syndrome is caused by mutations in the MPV17 gene, which encodes a small hydrophobic protein of unknown function located in the mitochondrial inner membrane. In order to define the molecular basis of MPV17 variants associated with the human disorder, we have previously taken advantage of S. cerevisiae as a model system thanks to the presence of an MPV17 ortholog gene, SYM1. We demonstrate here that the SYM1 gene product is essential to maintain OXPHOS, glycogen storage, mitochondrial morphology and mtDNA stability in stressing conditions such as high temperature and ethanol-dependent growth. To gain insight into the molecular basis of the Sym1-less phenotype, we identified and characterized multicopy suppressor genes and metabolic suppressor compounds. Our results suggest that (i) metabolic impairment and mtDNA instability occur independently from each other as a consequence of SYM1 ablation; (ii) ablation of Sym1 causes depletion of glycogen storage, possibly due to defective anaplerotic flux of tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle intermediates to the cytosol; (iii) flattening of mitochondrial cristae in Sym1-defective organelles suggests a role for Sym1 in the structural preservation of the inner mitochondrial membrane, which could in turn control mtDNA maintenance and stability.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2015

TRMT5 Mutations Cause a Defect in Post-transcriptional Modification of Mitochondrial tRNA Associated with Multiple Respiratory-Chain Deficiencies

Christopher A. Powell; Robert Kopajtich; Aaron R. D'Souza; Joanna Rorbach; Laura S. Kremer; Ralf A. Husain; Cristina Dallabona; Claudia Donnini; Charlotte L. Alston; Helen Griffin; Angela Pyle; Patrick F. Chinnery; Tim M. Strom; Thomas Meitinger; Richard J. Rodenburg; Gudrun Schottmann; Markus Schuelke; Nadine Romain; Ronald G. Haller; Ileana Ferrero; Tobias B. Haack; Robert W. Taylor; Holger Prokisch; Michal Minczuk

Deficiencies in respiratory-chain complexes lead to a variety of clinical phenotypes resulting from inadequate energy production by the mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation system. Defective expression of mtDNA-encoded genes, caused by mutations in either the mitochondrial or nuclear genome, represents a rapidly growing group of human disorders. By whole-exome sequencing, we identified two unrelated individuals carrying compound heterozygous variants in TRMT5 (tRNA methyltransferase 5). TRMT5 encodes a mitochondrial protein with strong homology to members of the class I-like methyltransferase superfamily. Both affected individuals presented with lactic acidosis and evidence of multiple mitochondrial respiratory-chain-complex deficiencies in skeletal muscle, although the clinical presentation of the two affected subjects was remarkably different; one presented in childhood with failure to thrive and hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, and the other was an adult with a life-long history of exercise intolerance. Mutations in TRMT5 were associated with the hypomodification of a guanosine residue at position 37 (G37) of mitochondrial tRNA; this hypomodification was particularly prominent in skeletal muscle. Deficiency of the G37 modification was also detected in human cells subjected to TRMT5 RNAi. The pathogenicity of the detected variants was further confirmed in a heterologous yeast model and by the rescue of the molecular phenotype after re-expression of wild-type TRMT5 cDNA in cells derived from the affected individuals. Our study highlights the importance of post-transcriptional modification of mitochondrial tRNAs for faithful mitochondrial function.


Human Mutation | 2013

A Homozygous Mutation in LYRM7/MZM1L Associated with Early Onset Encephalopathy, Lactic Acidosis, and Severe Reduction of Mitochondrial Complex III Activity

Federica Invernizzi; Marco Tigano; Cristina Dallabona; Claudia Donnini; Ileana Ferrero; Maurizio Cremonte; Daniele Ghezzi; Costanza Lamperti; Massimo Zeviani

Mutations in nuclear genes associated with defective complex III (cIII) of the mitochondrial respiratory chain are rare, having been found in only two cIII assembly factors and, as private changes in single families, three cIII structural subunits. Recently, human LYRM7/MZM1L, the ortholog of yeast MZM1, has been identified as a new assembly factor for cIII. In a baby patient with early onset, severe encephalopathy, lactic acidosis and profound, isolated cIII deficiency in skeletal muscle, we identified a disease‐segregating homozygous mutation (c.73G>A) in LYRM7/MZM1L, predicting a drastic change in a highly conserved amino‐acid residue (p.Asp25Asn). In a mzm1Δ yeast strain, the expression of a mzm1D25N mutant allele caused temperature‐sensitive respiratory growth defect, decreased oxygen consumption, impaired maturation/stabilization of the Rieske Fe–S protein, and reduced complex III activity and amount. LYRM7/MZM1L is a novel disease gene, causing cIII‐defective, early onset, severe mitochondrial encephalopathy.


Mitochondrion | 2011

Predicting the contribution of novel POLG mutations to human disease through analysis in yeast model

Enrico Baruffini; Rita Horvath; Cristina Dallabona; Birgit Czermin; Eleonora Lamantea; Laurence A. Bindoff; Federica Invernizzi; Iliana Ferrero; Massimo Zeviani; Tiziana Lodi

The yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae was used to validate the pathogenic significance of eight human mutations in the gene encoding for the mitochondrial DNA polymerase gamma, namely G303R, S305R, R386H, R574W, P625R, D930N, K947R and P1073L, among which three are novel and four are of unclear pathological significance. Mitochondrial DNA extended and point mutability as well as dominance/recessivity of each mutation has been evaluated. The analysis in yeast revealed that two mutations, S305R and R386H, cannot be the sole cause of pathology observed in patients. These data led us to search for a second mutation in compound with S305R and we found a mutation, P1073L, missed in the first genetic analysis. Finally, a significant rescue of extended mutability has been observed for several dominant mutations by treatment with mitochondrial antioxidants.


Genetics | 2007

A Single Nucleotide Polymorphism in the DNA Polymerase Gamma Gene of Saccharomyces cerevisiae Laboratory Strains Is Responsible for Increased Mitochondrial DNA Mutability

Enrico Baruffini; Tiziana Lodi; Cristina Dallabona; Françoise Foury

In the Saccharomyces cerevisiae strains used for genome sequencing and functional analysis, the mitochondrial DNA replicase Mip1p contains a single nucleotide polymorphism changing the strictly conserved threonine 661 to alanine. This substitution is responsible for the increased rate of mitochondrial DNA point mutations and deletions in these strains.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2015

Elongator-dependent modification of cytoplasmic tRNALysUUU is required for mitochondrial function under stress conditions

Marco Tigano; Roberta Ruotolo; Cristina Dallabona; Flavia Fontanesi; Antoni Barrientos; Claudia Donnini; Simone Ottonello

To gain a wider view of the pathways that regulate mitochondrial function, we combined the effect of heat stress on respiratory capacity with the discovery potential of a genome-wide screen in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. We identified 105 new genes whose deletion impairs respiratory growth at 37°C by interfering with processes such as transcriptional regulation, ubiquitination and cytosolic tRNA wobble uridine modification via 5-methoxycarbonylmethyl-2-thiouridine formation. The latter process, specifically required for efficient decoding of AA-ending codons under stress conditions, was covered by multiple genes belonging to the Elongator (e.g. ELP3) and urmylation (e.g., NCS6) pathways. ELP3 or NCS6 deletants had impaired mitochondrial protein synthesis. Their respiratory deficiency was selectively rescued by overexpression of tRNALysUUU as well by overexpression of genes (BCK1 and HFM1) with a strong bias for the AAA codon read by this tRNA. These data extend the mitochondrial regulome, demonstrate that heat stress can impair respiration by disturbing cytoplasmic translation of proteins critically involved in mitochondrial function and document, for the first time, the involvement in such process of the Elongator and urmylation pathways. Given the conservation of these pathways, the present findings may pave the way to a better understanding of the human mitochondrial regulome in health and disease.

Collaboration


Dive into the Cristina Dallabona's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Massimo Zeviani

MRC Mitochondrial Biology Unit

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Daniele Ghezzi

Carlo Besta Neurological Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Eleonora Lamantea

Carlo Besta Neurological Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Federica Invernizzi

Fondazione IRCCS Ca' Granda Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge