Helen F. Sutherland
University of London
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Featured researches published by Helen F. Sutherland.
Nature | 2001
Elizabeth A. Lindsay; Francesca Vitelli; Hong Su; Masae Morishima; Tuong Huynh; Tiziano Pramparo; Vesna Jurecic; George Ogunrinu; Helen F. Sutherland; Peter J. Scambler; Allan Bradley; Antonio Baldini
DiGeorge syndrome is characterized by cardiovascular, thymus and parathyroid defects and craniofacial anomalies, and is usually caused by a heterozygous deletion of chromosomal region 22q11.2 (del22q11) (ref. 1). A targeted, heterozygous deletion, named Df(16)1, encompassing around 1 megabase of the homologous region in mouse causes cardiovascular abnormalities characteristic of the human disease. Here we have used a combination of chromosome engineering and P1 artificial chromosome transgenesis to localize the haploinsufficient gene in the region, Tbx1. We show that Tbx1, a member of the T-box transcription factor family, is required for normal development of the pharyngeal arch arteries in a gene dosage-dependent manner. Deletion of one copy of Tbx1 affects the development of the fourth pharyngeal arch arteries, whereas homozygous mutation severely disrupts the pharyngeal arch artery system. Our data show that haploinsufficiency of Tbx1 is sufficient to generate at least one important component of the DiGeorge syndrome phenotype in mice, and demonstrate the suitability of the mouse for the genetic dissection of microdeletion syndromes.
Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2002
Catherine Roberts; Helen F. Sutherland; Hannah Farmer; Wendy L. Kimber; Stephanie Halford; Alisoun H. Carey; Joshua M. Brickman; Anthony Wynshaw-Boris; Peter J. Scambler
ABSTRACT The Hira gene encodes a nuclear WD40 domain protein homologous to the yeast transcriptional corepressors Hir1p and Hir2p. Using targeted mutagenesis we demonstrate that Hira is essential for murine embryogenesis. Analysis of inbred 129Sv embryos carrying the null mutation revealed an initial requirement during gastrulation, with many mutant embryos having a distorted primitive streak. Mutant embryos recovered at later stages have a range of malformations with axial and paraxial mesendoderm being particularly affected, a finding consistent with the disruption of gastrulation seen earlier in development. This phenotype could be partially rescued by a CD1 genetic background, although the homozygous mutation was always lethal by embryonic day 11, with death probably resulting from abnormal placentation and failure of cardiac morphogenesis.
American Journal of Human Genetics | 1999
R Wadey; J McKie; Charalambos Papapetrou; Helen F. Sutherland; Frans Lohman; Jan Osinga; Ingrid Frohn; Robert M. W. Hofstra; Carel Meijers; Francesca Amati; Emanuela Conti; Antonio Pizzuti; Bruno Dallapiccola; Giuseppe Novelli; Peter J. Scambler
We would like to thank the families and clinicians who made the study possible. Support was from the Birth Defects Foundation and the British Heart Foundation (to P.J.S.), Telethon Foundation grant E. 723 (to B.D. and G.N.), and the Dutch Heart Foundation and the Sophia Foundation for Medical Research (to C.M.). We would like to thank Drs. Antonio Baldini and Elizabeth Lindsay for patient referrals, helpful discussion, and providing critical data prior to publication. Access to PCR conditions can be obtained at the e-mail addresses that follow: [email protected] (for C.M.), [email protected] (for R.W.), and [email protected] (for G.N.).
Human Genetics | 1997
J McKie; Helen F. Sutherland; Emma L. Harvey; Ung-Jin Kim; Peter J. Scambler
Abstract A Drosophila-related expressed sequence tag (DRES) with sequence similarity to the peanut gene has previously been localized to human chromosome 22q11. We have isolated the cDNA corresponding to this DRES and show that it is a novel member of the family of septin genes, which encode proteins with GTPase activity thought to interact during cytokinesis. The predicted protein has P-loop nucleotide binding and GTPase motifs. The gene, which we call PNUTL1, maps to the region of 22q11.2 frequently deleted in DiGeorge and velo-cardio-facial syndromes and is particularly highly expressed in the brain. The mouse homologue, Pnutl1, maps to MMU16 adding to the growing number of genes from the DiGeorge syndrome region that map to this chromosome.
Human Molecular Genetics | 1999
Wendy L. Kimber; Patrick Hsieh; Shinji Hirotsune; Lisa A. Yuva-Paylor; Helen F. Sutherland; Amy Chen; Pilar Ruiz-Lozano; Shelley Hoogstraten-Miller; Kenneth R. Chien; Richard Paylor; Peter J. Scambler; Anthony Wynshaw-Boris
American Journal of Human Genetics | 1996
Helen F. Sutherland; R Wadey; J McKie; Catherine Taylor; U Atif; Karen A. Johnstone; S Halford; Ung-Jin Kim; J Goodship; Antonio Baldini; Peter J. Scambler
Genomics | 1998
Helen F. Sutherland; Ung-Jin Kim; Peter J. Scambler
Genome Research | 1998
J McKie; R Wadey; Helen F. Sutherland; Catherine Taylor; Peter J. Scambler
Nature , 401 pp. 97-101. (2001) | 2001
E Lindsay; Francesca Vitelli; Hong Su; Masae Morishima; Tuong Huynh; Tiziano Pramparo; Jurecic; George Ogunrinu; Helen F. Sutherland; Peter J. Scambler; Allan Bradley; Antonio Baldini
Am.J.Hum.Genet. , 63 A7-. (1998) | 1998
Peter J. Scambler; Catherine Roberts; Helen F. Sutherland; Wendy L. Kimber; Lui; S Halford; J McKie; Cas Snoeren; Frans Lohman; Carel Meijers; Anthony Wynshaw-Boris