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Dive into the research topics where Davide Seruggia is active.

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Featured researches published by Davide Seruggia.


European Biophysics Journal | 2011

Atomic force microscopy study of DNA conformation in the presence of drugs

Valeria Cassina; Davide Seruggia; Giovanni Luca Beretta; Domenico Salerno; Doriano Brogioli; Stefano Manzini; Franco Zunino; Francesco Mantegazza

Binding of ligands to DNA gives rise to several relevant biological and biomedical effects. Here, through the use of atomic force microscopy (AFM), we studied the consequences of drug binding on the morphology of single DNA molecules. In particular, we quantitatively analyzed the effects of three different DNA-binding molecules (doxorubicin, ethidium bromide, and netropsin) that exert various pharmacologic and therapeutic effects. The results of this study show the consequences of intercalation and groove molecular binding on DNA conformation. These single-molecule measurements demonstrate morphological features that reflect the specific modes of drug–DNA interaction. This experimental approach may have implications in the design of therapeutically effective agents.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2015

Functional validation of mouse tyrosinase non-coding regulatory DNA elements by CRISPR–Cas9-mediated mutagenesis

Davide Seruggia; A. Fernández; Marta Cantero; Pawel Pelczar; Lluís Montoliu

Newly developed genome-editing tools, such as the clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeat (CRISPR)–Cas9 system, allow simple and rapid genetic modification in most model organisms and human cell lines. Here, we report the production and analysis of mice carrying the inactivation via deletion of a genomic insulator, a key non-coding regulatory DNA element found 5′ upstream of the mouse tyrosinase (Tyr) gene. Targeting sequences flanking this boundary in mouse fertilized eggs resulted in the efficient deletion or inversion of large intervening DNA fragments delineated by the RNA guides. The resulting genome-edited mice showed a dramatic decrease in Tyr gene expression as inferred from the evident decrease of coat pigmentation, thus supporting the functionality of this boundary sequence in vivo, at the endogenous locus. Several potential off-targets bearing sequence similarity with each of the two RNA guides used were analyzed and found to be largely intact. This study reports how non-coding DNA elements, even if located in repeat-rich genomic sequences, can be efficiently and functionally evaluated in vivo and, furthermore, it illustrates how the regulatory elements described by the ENCODE and EPIGENOME projects, in the mouse and human genomes, can be systematically validated.


Current protocols in human genetics | 2014

Mouse Genome Editing Using the CRISPR/Cas System

Donald W. Harms; Rolen M. Quadros; Davide Seruggia; Masato Ohtsuka; Gou Takahashi; Lluís Montoliu; Channabasavaiah B. Gurumurthy

The availability of techniques to create desired genetic mutations has enabled the laboratory mouse as an extensively used model organism in biomedical research including human genetics. A new addition to this existing technical repertoire is the CRISPR/Cas system. Specifically, this system allows editing of the mouse genome much more quickly than the previously used techniques, and, more importantly, multiple mutations can be created in a single experiment. Here we provide protocols for preparation of CRISPR/Cas reagents and microinjection into one‐cell mouse embryos to create knockout or knock‐in mouse models. Curr. Protoc. Hum. Genet. 83:15.7.1‐15.7.27.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2010

Magnetic tweezers measurements of the nanomechanical properties of DNA in the presence of drugs

Domenico Salerno; Doriano Brogioli; Valeria Cassina; Diana Turchi; Giovanni Luca Beretta; Davide Seruggia; Roberto Ziano; Franco Zunino; Francesco Mantegazza

Herein, we study the nanomechanical characteristics of single DNA molecules in the presence of DNA binders, including intercalating agents (ethidium bromide and doxorubicin), a minor groove binder (netropsin) and a typical alkylating damaging agent (cisplatin). We have used magnetic tweezers manipulation techniques, which allow us to measure the contour and persistence lengths together with the bending and torsional properties of DNA. For each drug, the specific variations of the nanomechanical properties induced in the DNA have been compared. We observed that the presence of drugs causes a specific variation in the DNA extension, a shift in the natural twist and a modification of bending dependence on the imposed twist. By introducing a naive model, we have justified an anomalous correlation of torsion data observed in the presence of intercalators. Finally, a data analysis criterion for discriminating between different molecular interactions among DNA and drugs has been suggested.


Epigenetics & Chromatin | 2014

The PEG13 -DMR and brain-specific enhancers dictate imprinted expression within the 8q24 intellectual disability risk locus

Franck Court; Cristina Camprubí; Cristina García; Amy Guillaumet-Adkins; Angela Sparago; Davide Seruggia; Juan Sandoval; Manel Esteller; Alex Martin-Trujillo; Andrea Riccio; Lluís Montoliu; David Monk

BackgroundGenomic imprinting is the epigenetic marking of genes that results in parent-of-origin monoallelic expression. Most imprinted domains are associated with differentially DNA methylated regions (DMRs) that originate in the gametes, and are maintained in somatic tissues after fertilization. This allelic methylation profile is associated with a plethora of histone tail modifications that orchestrates higher order chromatin interactions. The mouse chromosome 15 imprinted cluster contains multiple brain-specific maternally expressed transcripts including Ago2, Chrac1, Trappc9 and Kcnk9 and a paternally expressed gene, Peg13. The promoter of Peg13 is methylated on the maternal allele and is the sole DMR within the locus. To determine the extent of imprinting within the human orthologous region on chromosome 8q24, a region associated with autosomal recessive intellectual disability, Birk-Barel mental retardation and dysmorphism syndrome, we have undertaken a systematic analysis of allelic expression and DNA methylation of genes mapping within an approximately 2 Mb region around TRAPPC9.ResultsUtilizing allele-specific RT-PCR, bisulphite sequencing, chromatin immunoprecipitation and chromosome conformation capture (3C) we show the reciprocal expression of the novel, paternally expressed, PEG13 non-coding RNA and maternally expressed KCNK9 genes in brain, and the biallelic expression of flanking transcripts in a range of tissues. We identify a tandem-repeat region overlapping the PEG13 transcript that is methylated on the maternal allele, which binds CTCF-cohesin in chromatin immunoprecipitation experiments and possesses enhancer-blocker activity. Using 3C, we identify mutually exclusive approximately 58 and 500 kb chromatin loops in adult frontal cortex between a novel brain-specific enhancer, marked by H3K4me1 and H3K27ac, with the KCNK9 and PEG13 promoters which we propose regulates brain-specific expression.ConclusionsWe have characterised the molecular mechanism responsible for reciprocal allelic expression of the PEG13 and KCNK9 transcripts. Therefore, our observations may have important implications for identifying the cause of intellectual disabilities associated with the 8q24 locus.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015

MIR retrotransposon sequences provide insulators to the human genome

Jianrong Wang; Cristina Vicente-García; Davide Seruggia; Eduardo Moltó; Ana Fernández-Miñán; Ana Neto; Elbert Lee; José Luis Gómez-Skarmeta; Lluís Montoliu; Victoria V. Lunyak; I. King Jordan

Significance Insulators are genome sequence elements that help to organize eukaryotic genomes into coherent regulatory domains. Insulators can encode both enhancer-blocking activity, which prevents the interaction between enhancers and promoters located in distinct regulatory domains, and/or chromatin barrier activity that helps to delineate active and repressive chromatin domains. The origins and functional characteristics of insulator sequence elements are important, open questions in molecular biology and genomics. This report provides insight into these questions by demonstrating the origins of a number of human insulator sequences from a family of transposable-element–derived repetitive sequence elements: mammalian-wide interspersed repeats (MIRs). Human MIR-derived insulators are characterized by distinct sequence, expression, and chromatin features that provide clues as to their potential mechanisms of action. Insulators are regulatory elements that help to organize eukaryotic chromatin via enhancer-blocking and chromatin barrier activity. Although there are several examples of transposable element (TE)-derived insulators, the contribution of TEs to human insulators has not been systematically explored. Mammalian-wide interspersed repeats (MIRs) are a conserved family of TEs that have substantial regulatory capacity and share sequence characteristics with tRNA-related insulators. We sought to evaluate whether MIRs can serve as insulators in the human genome. We applied a bioinformatic screen using genome sequence and functional genomic data from CD4+ T cells to identify a set of 1,178 predicted MIR insulators genome-wide. These predicted MIR insulators were computationally tested to serve as chromatin barriers and regulators of gene expression in CD4+ T cells. The activity of predicted MIR insulators was experimentally validated using in vitro and in vivo enhancer-blocking assays. MIR insulators are enriched around genes of the T-cell receptor pathway and reside at T-cell–specific boundaries of repressive and active chromatin. A total of 58% of the MIR insulators predicted here show evidence of T-cell–specific chromatin barrier and gene regulatory activity. MIR insulators appear to be CCCTC-binding factor (CTCF) independent and show a distinct local chromatin environment with marked peaks for RNA Pol III and a number of histone modifications, suggesting that MIR insulators recruit transcriptional complexes and chromatin modifying enzymes in situ to help establish chromatin and regulatory domains in the human genome. The provisioning of insulators by MIRs across the human genome suggests a specific mechanism by which TE sequences can be used to modulate gene regulatory networks.


Gene | 2010

Controlled removal of a nonviral episomal vector from transfected cells

Sina Rupprecht; Claudia Hagedorn; Davide Seruggia; Terese Magnusson; Ernst Wagner; Manfred Ogris; Hans J. Lipps

An ideal vector to be used in gene therapy should allow long-term and regulated expression of the therapeutic sequence, but in many cases, it would be most desirable to remove all ectopic vector sequences from the cell once expression is no longer required. The vector pEPI is the first nonviral autonomous replicon that was constructed for mammalian cells. It represents a minimal model system to study the epigenetic regulation of replication and transcription but is also regarded as a promising alternative to currently used viral vector systems in gene therapy. Its function relies on a transcription unit linked to an S/MAR sequence. We constructed an inducible pEPI vector system based on the Tet ON system in which transcription is switched on in the presence of doxycycline. We show that for vector replication and long-term maintenance an ongoing transcription running into the S/MAR element is required. Once established, the vector is lost from the cell upon switching off transcription from the gene linked to the S/MAR. This feature provides not only controlled transgene expression but also the possibility to remove all vector molecules from the cells upon demand. This inducible episomal nonviral vector system will find broad application in gene therapy but also in reprogramming of somatic cells or modification of stem cells.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2014

Binary recombinase systems for high-resolution conditional mutagenesis

Mario Hermann; Patrick Stillhard; Hendrik Wildner; Davide Seruggia; Viktor Kapp; Héctor Sánchez-Iranzo; Nadia Mercader; Lluís Montoliu; Hanns Ulrich Zeilhofer; Pawel Pelczar

Conditional mutagenesis using Cre recombinase expressed from tissue specific promoters facilitates analyses of gene function and cell lineage tracing. Here, we describe two novel dual-promoter-driven conditional mutagenesis systems designed for greater accuracy and optimal efficiency of recombination. Co-Driver employs a recombinase cascade of Dre and Dre-respondent Cre, which processes loxP-flanked alleles only when both recombinases are expressed in a predetermined temporal sequence. This unique property makes Co-Driver ideal for sequential lineage tracing studies aimed at unraveling the relationships between cellular precursors and mature cell types. Co-InCre was designed for highly efficient intersectional conditional transgenesis. It relies on highly active trans-splicing inteins and promoters with simultaneous transcriptional activity to reconstitute Cre recombinase from two inactive precursor fragments. By generating native Cre, Co-InCre attains recombination rates that exceed all other binary SSR systems evaluated in this study. Both Co-Driver and Co-InCre significantly extend the utility of existing Cre-responsive alleles.


Reproduction, Fertility and Development | 2017

Concepts and tools for gene editing.

Santiago Josa; Davide Seruggia; A. Fernández; Lluís Montoliu

Gene editing is a relatively recent concept in the molecular biology field. Traditional genetic modifications in animals relied on a classical toolbox that, aside from some technical improvements and additions, remained unchanged for many years. Classical methods involved direct delivery of DNA sequences into embryos or the use of embryonic stem cells for those few species (mice and rats) where it was possible to establish them. For livestock, the advent of somatic cell nuclear transfer platforms provided alternative, but technically challenging, approaches for the genetic alteration of loci at will. However, the entire landscape changed with the appearance of different classes of genome editors, from initial zinc finger nucleases, to transcription activator-like effector nucleases and, most recently, with the development of clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats (CRISPR) and CRISPR-associated proteins (Cas). Gene editing is currently achieved by CRISPR-Cas-mediated methods, and this technological advancement has boosted our capacity to generate almost any genetically altered animal that can be envisaged.


Transgenic Research | 2014

The new CRISPR-Cas system: RNA-guided genome engineering to efficiently produce any desired genetic alteration in animals

Davide Seruggia; Lluís Montoliu

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Lluís Montoliu

Spanish National Research Council

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A. Fernández

Spanish National Research Council

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