Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Ellen Flannery is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Ellen Flannery.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Comparative Genomic Analysis of Drosophila melanogaster and Vector Mosquito Developmental Genes

Susanta K. Behura; Morgan Haugen; Ellen Flannery; Joseph Sarro; Charles R. Tessier; David W. Severson; Molly Duman-Scheel

Genome sequencing projects have presented the opportunity for analysis of developmental genes in three vector mosquito species: Aedes aegypti, Culex quinquefasciatus, and Anopheles gambiae. A comparative genomic analysis of developmental genes in Drosophila melanogaster and these three important vectors of human disease was performed in this investigation. While the study was comprehensive, special emphasis centered on genes that 1) are components of developmental signaling pathways, 2) regulate fundamental developmental processes, 3) are critical for the development of tissues of vector importance, 4) function in developmental processes known to have diverged within insects, and 5) encode microRNAs (miRNAs) that regulate developmental transcripts in Drosophila. While most fruit fly developmental genes are conserved in the three vector mosquito species, several genes known to be critical for Drosophila development were not identified in one or more mosquito genomes. In other cases, mosquito lineage-specific gene gains with respect to D. melanogaster were noted. Sequence analyses also revealed that numerous repetitive sequences are a common structural feature of Drosophila and mosquito developmental genes. Finally, analysis of predicted miRNA binding sites in fruit fly and mosquito developmental genes suggests that the repertoire of developmental genes targeted by miRNAs is species-specific. The results of this study provide insight into the evolution of developmental genes and processes in dipterans and other arthropods, serve as a resource for those pursuing analysis of mosquito development, and will promote the design and refinement of functional analysis experiments.


CSH Protocols | 2010

Aedes aegypti: An Emerging Model for Vector Mosquito Development

Anthony Clemons; Morgan Haugen; Ellen Flannery; Michael Tomchaney; Kristopher Kast; Caitlin Jacowski; Christy Le; Akio Mori; Wendy Simanton Holland; Joseph Sarro; David W. Severson; Molly Duman-Scheel

Blood-feeding mosquitoes, including the dengue and yellow fever vector Aedes aegypti, transmit many of the worlds deadliest diseases. Such diseases have resurged in developing countries and pose clear threats for epidemic outbreaks in developed countries. Recent mosquito genome projects have stimulated interest in the potential for arthropod-borne disease control by genetic manipulation of vector insects. Targets of particular interest include genes that regulate development. However, although the Ae. aegypti genome project uncovered homologs of many known developmental regulatory genes, little is known of the genetic regulation of development in Ae. aegypti or other vector mosquitoes. This article provides an overview of the background, husbandry, and potential uses of Ae. aegypti as a model species. Methods for culturing, collecting and fixing developing tissues, analyzing gene and protein expression, and knocking down genes are permitting detailed analyses of the functions of developmental regulatory genes and the selective inhibition of such genes during Ae. aegypti development. This methodology, much of which is applicable to other mosquito species, is useful to both the comparative development and vector research communities.


Journal of Visualized Experiments | 2015

Chitosan/interfering RNA nanoparticle mediated gene silencing in disease vector mosquito larvae

Xin Zhang; Keshava Mysore; Ellen Flannery; Kristin Michel; David W. Severson; Kun Yan Zhu; Molly Duman-Scheel

Vector mosquitoes inflict more human suffering than any other organism-and kill more than one million people each year. The mosquito genome projects facilitated research in new facets of mosquito biology, including functional genetic studies in the primary African malaria vector Anopheles gambiae and the dengue and yellow fever vector Aedes aegypti. RNA interference- (RNAi-) mediated gene silencing has been used to target genes of interest in both of these disease vector mosquito species. Here, we describe a procedure for preparation of chitosan/interfering RNA nanoparticles that are combined with food and ingested by larvae. This technically straightforward, high-throughput, and relatively inexpensive methodology, which is compatible with long double stranded RNA (dsRNA) or small interfering RNA (siRNA) molecules, has been used for the successful knockdown of a number of different genes in A. gambiae and A. aegypti larvae. Following larval feedings, knockdown, which is verified through qRT-PCR or in situ hybridization, can persist at least through the late pupal stage. This methodology may be applicable to a wide variety of mosquito and other insect species, including agricultural pests, as well as other non-model organisms. In addition to its utility in the research laboratory, in the future, chitosan, an inexpensive, non-toxic and biodegradable polymer, could potentially be utilized in the field.


PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases | 2013

Disruption of Aedes aegypti olfactory system development through chitosan/siRNA nanoparticle targeting of semaphorin-1a.

Keshava Mysore; Ellen Flannery; Michael Tomchaney; David W. Severson; Molly Duman-Scheel

Despite the devastating impact of mosquito-borne illnesses on human health, surprisingly little is known about mosquito developmental biology, including development of the olfactory system, a tissue of vector importance. Analysis of mosquito olfactory developmental genetics has been hindered by a lack of means to target specific genes during the development of this sensory system. In this investigation, chitosan/siRNA nanoparticles were used to target semaphorin-1a (sema1a) during olfactory system development in the dengue and yellow fever vector mosquito Aedes aegypti. Immunohistochemical analyses and anterograde tracing of antennal sensory neurons, which were used to track the progression of olfactory development in this species, revealed antennal lobe defects in sema1a knockdown fourth instar larvae. These findings, which correlated with a larval odorant tracking behavioral phenotype, identified previously unreported roles for Sema1a in the developing insect larval olfactory system. Analysis of sema1a knockdown pupae also revealed a number of olfactory phenotypes, including olfactory receptor neuron targeting and projection neuron defects coincident with a collapse in the structure and shape of the antennal lobe and individual glomeruli. This study, which is to our knowledge the first functional genetic analysis of insect olfactory development outside of D. melanogaster, identified critical roles for Sema1a during Ae. aegypti larval and pupal olfactory development and advocates the use of chitosan/siRNA nanoparticles as an effective means of targeting genes during post-embryonic Ae. aegypti development. Use of siRNA nanoparticle methodology to understand sensory developmental genetics in mosquitoes will provide insight into the evolutionary conservation and divergence of key developmental genes which could be exploited in the development of both common and species-specific means for intervention.


BMC Developmental Biology | 2011

The Drosophila Netrin receptor frazzled/DCC functions as an invasive tumor suppressor

Adrienne VanZomeren-Dohm; Joseph Sarro; Ellen Flannery; Molly Duman-Scheel

BackgroundLoss of heterozygosity at 18q, which includes the Deleted in Colorectal Cancer (DCC) gene, has been linked to many human cancers. However, it is unclear if loss of DCC is the specific underlying cause of these cancers. The Drosophila imaginal discs are excellent systems in which to study DCC function, as it is possible to model human tumors through the generation of somatic clones of cells bearing multiple genetic lesions. Here, these attributes of the fly system were utilized to investigate the potential tumor suppressing functions of the Drosophila DCC homologue frazzled (fra) during eye-antennal disc development.ResultsMost fra loss of function clones are eliminated during development. However, when mutant clone cells generated in the developing eye were rescued from death, partially differentiated eye cells were found outside of the normal eye field, and in extreme cases distant sites of the body. Characterization of these cells during development indicates that fra mutant cells display characteristics of invasive tumor cells, including increased levels of phospho-ERK, phospho-JNK, and Mmp-1, changes in cadherin expression, remodeling of the actin cytoskeleton, and loss of polarity. Mutation of fra promotes basement membrane degradation and invasion which are repressed by inhibition of Rho1 signaling. Although inhibition of JNK signaling blocks invasive phenotypes in some metastatic cancer models in flies, blocking JNK signaling inhibits fra mutant cell death, thereby enhancing the fra mutant phenotype.ConclusionsThe results of this investigation provide the first direct link between point mutations in fra/DCC and metastatic phenotypes in an animal model and suggest that Fra functions as an invasive tumor suppressor during Drosophila development.


CSH Protocols | 2010

Whole-mount in situ hybridization for analysis of gene expression during Aedes aegypti development

Morgan Haugen; Michael Tomchaney; Kristopher Kast; Ellen Flannery; Anthony Clemons; Caitlin Jacowski; Wendy Simanton Holland; Christy Le; David W. Severson; Molly Duman-Scheel

Blood-feeding mosquitoes, including the dengue and yellow fever vector Aedes aegypti, transmit many of the worlds deadliest diseases. Such diseases have resurged in developing countries and pose clear threats for epidemic outbreaks in developed countries. Recent mosquito genome projects have stimulated interest in the potential for arthropod-borne disease control by genetic manipulation of vector insects, and genes that regulate development are of particular interest. This protocol for whole-mount in situ hybridization can be used to analyze gene expression in Ae. aegypti embryos and larvae, a critical aspect of understanding developmental gene function in this vector mosquito.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Semaphorin-1a Is Required for Aedes aegypti Embryonic Nerve Cord Development

Morgan Haugen; Ellen Flannery; Michael Tomchaney; Akio Mori; Susanta K. Behura; David W. Severson; Molly Duman-Scheel

Although mosquito genome projects have uncovered orthologues of many known developmental regulatory genes, extremely little is known about mosquito development. In this study, the role of semaphorin-1a (sema1a) was investigated during vector mosquito embryonic ventral nerve cord development. Expression of sema1a and the plexin A (plexA) receptor are detected in the embryonic ventral nerve cords of Aedes aegypti (dengue vector) and Anopheles gambiae (malaria vector), suggesting that Sema1a signaling may regulate mosquito nervous system development. Analysis of sema1a function was investigated through siRNA-mediated knockdown in A. aegypti embryos. Knockdown of sema1a during A. aegypti development results in a number of nerve cord phenotypes, including thinning, breakage, and occasional fusion of the longitudinal connectives, thin or absent commissures, and general distortion of the nerve cord. Although analysis of Drosophila melanogaster sema1a loss-of-function mutants uncovered many similar phenotypes, aspects of the longitudinal phenotypes differed between D. melanogaster and A. aegypti. The results of this investigation suggest that Sema1a is required for development of the insect ventral nerve cord, but that the developmental roles of this guidance molecule have diverged in dipteran insects.


CSH Protocols | 2010

Immunohistochemical analysis of protein expression during Aedes aegypti development.

Anthony Clemons; Ellen Flannery; Kristopher Kast; David W. Severson; Molly Duman-Scheel

Blood-feeding mosquitoes, including the dengue and yellow fever vector Aedes aegypti, transmit many of the worlds deadliest diseases. Such diseases have resurged in developing countries and pose clear threats for epidemic outbreaks in developed countries. Recent mosquito genome projects have stimulated interest in the potential for arthropod-borne disease control by genetic manipulation of vector insects, and gene products that regulate development are of particular interest. This protocol for immunohistochemical analysis of protein expression can be used to analyze expression of developmental proteins of interest in Ae. aegypti embryos, larvae, and pupae, which will be critical for the development of markers for particular developing tissues.


CSH Protocols | 2010

Fixation and Preparation of Developing Tissues from Aedes aegypti

Anthony Clemons; Morgan Haugen; Ellen Flannery; Kristopher Kast; Caitlin Jacowski; David W. Severson; Molly Duman-Scheel

Blood-feeding mosquitoes, including the dengue and yellow fever vector Aedes aegypti, transmit many of the worlds deadliest diseases. Such diseases have resurged in developing countries and pose clear threats for epidemic outbreaks in developed countries. Recent mosquito genome projects have stimulated interest in the potential for arthropod-borne disease control by genetic manipulation of vector insects, and genes that regulate development are of particular interest. This protocol describes a method for fixation and dissection of Ae. aegypti embryos, larvae, and pupae. Tissue processed in this manner can be used subsequently for in situ hybridization detection of mRNA or immunohistochemical analysis of protein expression.


Developmental Dynamics | 2014

Role of semaphorin-1a in the developing visual system of the disease vector mosquito Aedes aegypti

Keshava Mysore; Ellen Flannery; Matthew T. Leming; Michael Tomchaney; Lucy Shi; Longhua Sun; Joseph E. O'Tousa; David W. Severson; Molly Duman-Scheel

Background: Despite the devastating impact of mosquito‐borne illnesses on human health, very little is known about mosquito developmental biology, including development of the mosquito visual system. Mosquitoes possess functional adult compound eyes as larvae, a trait that makes them an interesting model in which to study comparative developmental genetics. Here, we functionally characterize visual system development in the dengue and yellow fever vector mosquito Aedes aegypti, in which we use chitosan/siRNA nanoparticles to target the axon guidance gene semaphorin‐1a (sema1a). Results: Immunohistochemical analyses revealed the progression of visual sensory neuron targeting that results in generation of the retinotopic map in the mosquito optic lobe. Loss of sema1a function led to optic lobe phenotypes, including defective targeting of visual sensory neurons and failed formation of the retinotopic map. These sema1a knockdown phenotypes correlated with behavioral defects in larval photoavoidance. Conclusions: The results of this investigation indicate that Sema1a is required for optic lobe development in A. aegypti and highlight the behavioral importance of a functioning visual system in preadult mosquitoes. Developmental Dynamics 243:1457–1469, 2014.

Collaboration


Dive into the Ellen Flannery's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Joseph Sarro

University of Notre Dame

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Keshava Mysore

University of Notre Dame

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge