Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Despina Sanoudou is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Despina Sanoudou.


Annals of Neurology | 2005

Interferon-α/β–mediated innate immune mechanisms in dermatomyositis

Steven A. Greenberg; Jack L. Pinkus; Geraldine S. Pinkus; Travis Burleson; Despina Sanoudou; Rabi Tawil; Richard J. Barohn; David Saperstein; Hannah R. Briemberg; Maria Ericsson; Peter J. Park; Anthony A. Amato

Dermatomyositis has been modeled as an autoimmune disease largely mediated by the adaptive immune system, including a local humorally mediated response with B and T helper cell muscle infiltration, antibody and complement‐mediated injury of capillaries, and perifascicular atrophy of muscle fibers caused by ischemia. To further understand the pathophysiology of dermatomyositis, we used microarrays, computational methods, immunohistochemistry and electron microscopy to study muscle specimens from 67 patients, 54 with inflammatory myopathies, 14 with dermatomyositis. In dermatomyositis, genes induced by interferon‐α/β were highly overexpressed, and immunohistochemistry for the interferon‐α/β inducible protein MxA showed dense staining of perifascicular, and, sometimes all myofibers in 8/14 patients and on capillaries in 13/14 patients. Of 36 patients with other inflammatory myopathies, 1 patient had faint MxA staining of myofibers and 3 of capillaries. Plasmacytoid dendritic cells, potent CD4+ cellular sources of interferon‐α, are present in substantial numbers in dermatomyositis and may account for most of the cells previously identified as T helper cells. In addition to an adaptive immune response, an innate immune response characterized by plasmacytoid dendritic cell infiltration and interferon‐α/β inducible gene and protein expression may be an important part of the pathogenesis of dermatomyositis, as it appears to be in systemic lupus erythematosus. Ann Neurol 2005;57:664–678


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2002

Gene expression comparison of biopsies from Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) and normal skeletal muscle

Judith N. Haslett; Despina Sanoudou; Alvin T. Kho; Richard R. Bennett; Steven A. Greenberg; Isaac S. Kohane; Alan H. Beggs; Louis M. Kunkel

The primary cause of Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) is a mutation in the dystrophin gene leading to the absence of the corresponding RNA transcript and protein. Absence of dystrophin leads to disruption of the dystrophin-associated protein complex and substantial changes in skeletal muscle pathology. Although the histological pathology of dystrophic tissue has been well documented, the underlying molecular pathways remain poorly understood. To examine the pathogenic pathways and identify new or modifying factors involved in muscular dystrophy, expression microarrays were used to compare individual gene expression profiles of skeletal muscle biopsies from 12 DMD patients and 12 unaffected control patients. Two separate statistical analysis methods were used to interpret the resulting data: t test analysis to determine the statistical significance of differential expression and geometric fold change analysis to determine the extent of differential expression. These analyses identified 105 genes that differ significantly in expression level between unaffected and DMD muscle. Many of the differentially expressed genes reflect changes in histological pathology. For instance, immune response signals and extracellular matrix genes are overexpressed in DMD muscle, an indication of the infiltration of inflammatory cells and connective tissue. Significantly more genes are overexpressed than are underexpressed in dystrophic muscle, with dystrophin underexpressed, whereas other genes encoding muscle structure and regeneration processes are overexpressed, reflecting the regenerative nature of the disease.


The FASEB Journal | 2003

Expression profiling and identification of novel genes involved in myogenic differentiation

Kinga K. Tomczak; Voichita D. Marinescu; Marco F. Ramoni; Despina Sanoudou; Federica Montanaro; Mei Han; Louis M. Kunkel; Isaac S. Kohane; Alan H. Beggs

Skeletal muscle differentiation is a complex, highly coordinated process that relies on precise temporal gene expression patterns. To better understand this cascade of transcriptional events, we used expression profiling to analyze gene expression in a 12‐day time course of differentiating C2C12 myoblasts. Cluster analysis specific for time‐ordered microarray experiments classified 2895 genes and ESTs with variable expression levels between proliferating and differentiating cells into 22 clusters with distinct expression patterns during myogenesis. Expression patterns for several known and novel genes were independently confirmed by real‐time quantitative RT‐PCR and/or Western blotting and immunofluorescence. MyoD and MEF family members exhibited unique expression kinetics that were highly coordinated with cell‐cycle withdrawal regulators. Among genes with peak expression levels during cell cycle withdrawal were Vcam1, Itgb3, Itga5, Vc1, as well as Ptger4, a gene not previously associated with the process of myogenesis. One interesting uncharacterized transcript that is highly induced during myogenesis encodes several immunoglobulin repeats with sequence similarity to titin, a large sarcomeric protein. These data sets identify many additional uncharacterized transcripts that may play important functions in muscle cell proliferation and differentiation and provide a baseline for comparison with C2C12 cells expressing various mutant genes involved in myopathic disorders.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

T-tubule disorganization and defective excitation-contraction coupling in muscle fibers lacking myotubularin lipid phosphatase

Lama Al-Qusairi; Norbert Weiss; Anne Toussaint; Céline Berbey; Nadia Messaddeq; Christine Kretz; Despina Sanoudou; Alan H. Beggs; Bruno Allard; Jean-Louis Mandel; Jocelyn Laporte; Vincent Jacquemond; Anna Buj-Bello

Skeletal muscle contraction is triggered by the excitation-contraction (E-C) coupling machinery residing at the triad, a membrane structure formed by the juxtaposition of T-tubules and sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) cisternae. The formation and maintenance of this structure is key for muscle function but is not well characterized. We have investigated the mechanisms leading to X-linked myotubular myopathy (XLMTM), a severe congenital disorder due to loss of function mutations in the MTM1 gene, encoding myotubularin, a phosphoinositide phosphatase thought to have a role in plasma membrane homeostasis and endocytosis. Using a mouse model of the disease, we report that Mtm1-deficient muscle fibers have a decreased number of triads and abnormal longitudinally oriented T-tubules. In addition, SR Ca2+ release elicited by voltage-clamp depolarizations is strongly depressed in myotubularin-deficient muscle fibers, with myoplasmic Ca2+ removal and SR Ca2+ content essentially unaffected. At the molecular level, Mtm1-deficient myofibers exhibit a 3-fold reduction in type 1 ryanodine receptor (RyR1) protein level. These data reveal a critical role of myotubularin in the proper organization and function of the E-C coupling machinery and strongly suggest that defective RyR1-mediated SR Ca2+ release is responsible for the failure of muscle function in myotubular myopathy.


BMC Bioinformatics | 2003

Reproducibility of Gene Expression Across Generations of Affymetrix Microarrays

Ashish Nimgaonkar; Despina Sanoudou; Atul J. Butte; Judith N. Haslett; Louis M. Kunkel; Alan H. Beggs; Isaac S. Kohane

BackgroundThe development of large-scale gene expression profiling technologies is rapidly changing the norms of biological investigation. But the rapid pace of change itself presents challenges. Commercial microarrays are regularly modified to incorporate new genes and improved target sequences. Although the ability to compare datasets across generations is crucial for any long-term research project, to date no means to allow such comparisons have been developed. In this study the reproducibility of gene expression levels across two generations of Affymetrix GeneChips® (HuGeneFL and HG-U95A) was measured.ResultsCorrelation coefficients were computed for gene expression values across chip generations based on different measures of similarity. Comparing the absolute calls assigned to the individual probe sets across the generations found them to be largely unchanged.ConclusionWe show that experimental replicates are highly reproducible, but that reproducibility across generations depends on the degree of similarity of the probe sets and the expression level of the corresponding transcript.


Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2009

The Anti-apoptotic Protein HAX-1 Interacts with SERCA2 and Regulates Its Protein Levels to Promote Cell Survival

Elizabeth Vafiadaki; Demetrios A. Arvanitis; Stamatis Pagakis; Vasiliki Papalouka; Despina Sanoudou; Aikaterini Kontrogianni-Konstantopoulos; Evangelia G. Kranias

Cardiac contractility is regulated through the activity of various key Ca(2+)-handling proteins. The sarco(endo)plasmic reticulum (SR) Ca(2+) transport ATPase (SERCA2a) and its inhibitor phospholamban (PLN) control the uptake of Ca(2+) by SR membranes during relaxation. Recently, the antiapoptotic HS-1-associated protein X-1 (HAX-1) was identified as a binding partner of PLN, and this interaction was postulated to regulate cell apoptosis. In the current study, we determined that HAX-1 can also bind to SERCA2. Deletion mapping analysis demonstrated that amino acid residues 575-594 of SERCA2s nucleotide binding domain are required for its interaction with the C-terminal domain of HAX-1, containing amino acids 203-245. In transiently cotransfected human embryonic kidney 293 cells, recombinant SERCA2 was specifically targeted to the ER, whereas HAX-1 selectively concentrated at mitochondria. On triple transfections with PLN, however, HAX-1 massively translocated to the ER membranes, where it codistributed with PLN and SERCA2. Overexpression of SERCA2 abrogated the protective effects of HAX-1 on cell survival, after hypoxia/reoxygenation or thapsigargin treatment. Importantly, HAX-1 overexpression was associated with down-regulation of SERCA2 expression levels, resulting in significant reduction of apparent ER Ca(2+) levels. These findings suggest that HAX-1 may promote cell survival through modulation of SERCA2 protein levels and thus ER Ca(2+) stores.


Journal of Proteome Research | 2008

Search for potential markers for prostate cancer diagnosis, prognosis and treatment in clinical tissue specimens using amine-specific isobaric tagging (iTRAQ) with two-dimensional liquid chromatography and tandem mass spectrometry

Spiros D. Garbis; Stavros I. Tyritzis; Theodoros Roumeliotis; Panagiotis Zerefos; Eugenia G. Giannopoulou; Antonia Vlahou; Sophia Kossida; Jose I. Diaz; Stavros Vourekas; Constantin Tamvakopoulos; Kitty Pavlakis; Despina Sanoudou; Constantinos Constantinides

This study aimed to identify candidate new diagnosis and prognosis markers and medicinal targets of prostate cancer (PCa), using state of the art proteomics. A total of 20 prostate tissue specimens from 10 patients with benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) and 10 with PCa (Tumour Node Metastasis [TNM] stage T1-T3) were analyzed by isobaric stable isotope labeling (iTRAQ) and two-dimensional liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (2DLC-MS/MS) approaches using a hybrid quadrupole time-of-flight system (QqTOF). The study resulted in the reproducible identification of 825 nonredundant gene products (p < or = 0.05) of which 30 exhibited up-regulation (> or =2-fold) and another 35 exhibited down-regulation (< or =0.5-fold) between the BPH and PCa specimens constituting a major contribution toward their global proteomic assessment. Selected findings were confirmed by immunohistochemical analysis of prostate tissue specimens. The proteins determined support existing knowledge and uncover novel and promising PCa biomarkers. The PCa proteome found can serve as a useful aid for the identification of improved diagnostic and prognostic markers and ultimately novel chemopreventive and therapeutic targets.


Stem Cells | 2006

Defective Ribosomal Protein Gene Expression Alters Transcription, Translation, Apoptosis, and Oncogenic Pathways in Diamond‐Blackfan Anemia

Hanna T. Gazda; Alvin T. Kho; Despina Sanoudou; Jan Maciej Zaucha; Isaac S. Kohane; Colin A. Sieff; Alan H. Beggs

Diamond‐Blackfan anemia (DBA) is a broad developmental disease characterized by anemia, bone marrow (BM) erythroblastopenia, and an increased incidence of malignancy. Mutations in ribosomal protein gene S19 (RPS19) are found in ∼25% of DBA patients; however, the role of RPS19 in the pathogenesis of DBA remains unknown. Using global gene expression analysis, we compared highly purified multipotential, erythroid, and myeloid BM progenitors from RPS19 mutated and control individuals. We found several ribosomal protein genes downregulated in all DBA progenitors. Apoptosis genes, such as TNFRSF10B and FAS, transcriptional control genes, including the erythropoietic transcription factor MYB (encoding c‐myb), and translational genes were greatly dysregulated, mostly in diseased erythroid cells. Cancer‐related genes, including RAS family oncogenes and tumor suppressor genes, were significantly dysregulated in all diseased progenitors. In addition, our results provide evidence that RPS19 mutations lead to codownregulation of multiple ribosomal protein genes, as well as downregulation of genes involved in translation in DBA cells. In conclusion, the altered expression of cancer‐related genes suggests a molecular basis for malignancy in DBA. Downregulation of c‐myb expression, which causes complete failure of fetal liver erythropoiesis in knockout mice, suggests a link between RPS19 mutations and reduced erythropoiesis in DBA.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2003

Expression profiling reveals altered satellite cell numbers and glycolytic enzyme transcription in nemaline myopathy muscle.

Despina Sanoudou; Judith N. Haslett; Alvin T. Kho; Shaoqiang Guo; Hanna T. Gazda; Steven A. Greenberg; Hart G.W. Lidov; Isaac S. Kohane; Louis M. Kunkel; Alan H. Beggs

The nemaline myopathies (NMs) are a clinically and genetically heterogeneous group of disorders characterized by nemaline rods and skeletal muscle weakness. Mutations in five sarcomeric thin filament genes have been identified. However, the molecular consequences of these mutations are unknown. Using Affymetrix oligonucleotide microarrays, we have analyzed the expression patterns of >21,000 genes and expressed sequence tags in skeletal muscles of 12 NM patients and 21 controls. Multiple complementary approaches were used for data analysis, including geometric fold analysis, two-tailed unequal variance t test, hierarchical clustering, relevance network, and nearest-neighbor analysis. We report the identification of high satellite cell populations in NM and the significant down-regulation of transcripts for key enzymes of glucose and glycogen metabolism as well as a possible regulator of fatty acid metabolism, UCP3. Interestingly, transcript level changes of multiple genes suggest possible changes in Ca2+ homeostasis. The increased expression of multiple structural proteins was consistent with increased fibrosis. This comprehensive study of downstream molecular consequences of NM gene mutations provides insights in the cellular events leading to the NM phenotype.


Nature Communications | 2015

Correction of human phospholamban R14del mutation associated with cardiomyopathy using targeted nucleases and combination therapy

Ioannis Karakikes; Francesca Stillitano; Mathieu Nonnenmacher; Christos Tzimas; Despina Sanoudou; Vittavat Termglinchan; Chi Wing Kong; Stephanie N. Rushing; Jens Hansen; Delaine K. Ceholski; Fotis Kolokathis; Dimitrios Th. Kremastinos; Alexandros Katoulis; Lihuan Ren; Ninette Cohen; Johannes M.I.H. Gho; Dimitrios Tsiapras; Aryan Vink; Joseph C. Wu; Folkert W. Asselbergs; Ronald A. Li; Jean Sebastien Hulot; Evangelia G. Kranias; Roger J. Hajjar

A number of genetic mutations is associated with cardiomyopathies. A mutation in the coding region of the phospholamban (PLN) gene (R14del) is identified in families with hereditary heart failure. Heterozygous patients exhibit left ventricular dilation and ventricular arrhythmias. Here we generate induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) from a patient harbouring the PLN R14del mutation and differentiate them into cardiomyocytes (iPSC-CMs). We find that the PLN R14del mutation induces Ca2+ handling abnormalities, electrical instability, abnormal cytoplasmic distribution of PLN protein and increases expression of molecular markers of cardiac hypertrophy in iPSC-CMs. Gene correction using transcription activator-like effector nucleases (TALENs) ameliorates the R14del-associated disease phenotypes in iPSC-CMs. In addition, we show that knocking down the endogenous PLN and simultaneously expressing a codon-optimized PLN gene reverses the disease phenotype in vitro. Our findings offer novel strategies for targeting the pathogenic mutations associated with cardiomyopathies.

Collaboration


Dive into the Despina Sanoudou's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Evangelia G. Kranias

University of Cincinnati Academic Health Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Alan H. Beggs

Boston Children's Hospital

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Louis M. Kunkel

Boston Children's Hospital

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Alvin T. Kho

Boston Children's Hospital

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Kobra Haghighi

University of Cincinnati Academic Health Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Hermona Soreq

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge