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Dive into the research topics where Jesús Machado-Salas is active.

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Featured researches published by Jesús Machado-Salas.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2008

Hyperglycosylation and Reduced GABA Currents of Mutated GABRB3 Polypeptide in Remitting Childhood Absence Epilepsy

Miyabi Tanaka; Richard W. Olsen; Marco T. Medina; Emily Schwartz; María Elisa Alonso; Reyna M. Durón; Ramon Castro-Ortega; Iris E. Martínez-Juárez; Ignacio Pascual-Castroviejo; Jesús Machado-Salas; Rene Silva; Julia N. Bailey; Dongsheng Bai; Adriana Ochoa; Aurelio Jara-Prado; Gregorio Pineda; Robert L. Macdonald; Antonio V. Delgado-Escueta

Childhood absence epilepsy (CAE) accounts for 10% to 12% of epilepsy in children under 16 years of age. We screened for mutations in the GABA(A) receptor (GABAR) beta 3 subunit gene (GABRB3) in 48 probands and families with remitting CAE. We found that four out of 48 families (8%) had mutations in GABRB3. One heterozygous missense mutation (P11S) in exon 1a segregated with four CAE-affected persons in one multiplex, two-generation Mexican family. P11S was also found in a singleton from Mexico. Another heterozygous missense mutation (S15F) was present in a singleton from Honduras. An exon 2 heterozygous missense mutation (G32R) was present in two CAE-affected persons and two persons affected with EEG-recorded spike and/or sharp wave in a two-generation Honduran family. All mutations were absent in 630 controls. We studied functions and possible pathogenicity by expressing mutations in HeLa cells with the use of Western blots and an in vitro translation and translocation system. Expression levels did not differ from those of controls, but all mutations showed hyperglycosylation in the in vitro translation and translocation system with canine microsomes. Functional analysis of human GABA(A) receptors (alpha 1 beta 3-v2 gamma 2S, alpha 1 beta 3-v2[P11S]gamma 2S, alpha 1 beta 3-v2[S15F]gamma 2S, and alpha 1 beta 3-v2[G32R]gamma 2S) transiently expressed in HEK293T cells with the use of rapid agonist application showed that each amino acid transversion in the beta 3-v2 subunit (P11S, S15F, and G32R) reduced GABA-evoked current density from whole cells. Mutated beta 3 subunit protein could thus cause absence seizures through a gain in glycosylation of mutated exon 1a and exon 2, affecting maturation and trafficking of GABAR from endoplasmic reticulum to cell surface and resulting in reduced GABA-evoked currents.


Experimental Neurology | 1977

Neuronal changes in the aging mouse. Spinal cord and lower brain stem.

Jesús Machado-Salas; Madge E. Scheibel; Arnold B. Scheibel

Abstract In view of the marked changes which we have recently described in the Golgi-stained nerve cell bodies and dendrites of cerebral neocortex in senescent human subjects, we have attempted a similar study of the very old (26 to 30 months) mouse for comparative purposes. Although neocortical changes in this species seemed unimpressive, marked and apparently progressive agerelated changes were found in most neurons of spinal cord and lower brain stem. Early changes included irregular swelling and “lumpiness” of cell bodies and initial portions of the dendrites, followed by increasing nodularization of the dendrite tree and loss of whatever spines or postsynaptic specializations may have been present in the young adult. Zones of constriction along dendrite shafts seemed to result in complete breaks with loss of the distal segment and shrivelling of the proximal segment. Irregularly swollen neurons with “amputation stumps” replacing principle dendrites appeared the penultimate phase before eventual cell loss. The remarkably widespread occurrence of such changes throughout sensory and motor systems is considered in relation to the consequent loss of functional neuropil and the possible embarrassment of coping behavior in the senile mouse.


Neurology | 2008

Novel mutations in Myoclonin1/EFHC1 in sporadic and familial juvenile myoclonic epilepsy

Mayerlim Medina; Toshimitsu Suzuki; María Elisa Alonso; Reyna M. Durón; Iris E. Martínez-Juárez; Julia N. Bailey; Dongsheng Bai; Yushi Inoue; I. Yoshimura; Sunao Kaneko; M. C. Montoya; Adriana Ochoa; A. Jara Prado; Miyabi Tanaka; Jesús Machado-Salas; S. Fujimoto; M. Ito; S. Hamano; K. Sugita; Y. Ueda; Makiko Osawa; Hirokazu Oguni; Francisco Rubio-Donnadieu; Kazuhiro Yamakawa; Antonio V. Delgado-Escueta

Background: Juvenile myoclonic epilepsy (JME) accounts for 3 to 12% of all epilepsies. In 2004, the GENESS Consortium demonstrated four missense mutations in Myoclonin1/EFHC1 of chromosome 6p12.1 segregating in 20% of Hispanic families with JME. Objective: To examine what percentage of consecutive JME clinic cases have mutations in Myoclonin1/EFHC1. Methods: We screened 44 consecutive patients from Mexico and Honduras and 67 patients from Japan using heteroduplex analysis and direct sequencing. Results: We found five novel mutations in transcripts A and B of Myoclonin1/EFHC1. Two novel heterozygous missense mutations (c.755C>A and c.1523C>G) in transcript A occurred in both a singleton from Mexico and another singleton from Japan. A deletion/frameshift (C.789del.AV264fsx280) in transcript B was present in a mother and daughter from Mexico. A nonsense mutation (c.829C>T) in transcript B segregated in four clinically and seven epileptiform-EEG affected members of a large Honduran family. The same nonsense mutation (c.829C>T) occurred as a de novo mutation in a sporadic case. Finally, we found a three-base deletion (−364○%–362del.GAT) in the promoter region in a family from Japan. Conclusion: Nine percent of consecutive juvenile myoclonic epilepsy cases from Mexico and Honduras clinics and 3% of clinic patients from Japan carry mutations in Myoclonin1/EFCH1. These results represent the highest number and percentage of mutations found for a juvenile myoclonic epilepsy causing gene of any population group. GLOSSARY: CAE = childhood absence epilepsy; FS = febrile seizures in infancy/childhood; GM = grand mal tonic clonic seizure; JME = Juvenile myoclonic epilepsy; PSW = 3–6 Hz polyspike and slow wave complexes; SW = single spike and slow wave complex.


Experimental Neurology | 1977

Morphologic changes in the hypothalamus of the old mouse.

Jesús Machado-Salas; Madge E. Scheibel; Arnold B. Scheibel

Abstract The hypothalami of old mice were studied with Golgi methods. Our observations showed progressive disruption of hypothalamic architecture, paralleled by deterioration and loss of dendritic surface. Even though these changes were found in all hypothalamic regions studied, they were not evenly distributed. These patterns of distribution plus their possible functional importance are significant in relationship to neuroendocrinological changes in the aged. Emphasis is placed on the aging hypothalamus as an integrator of information originating in similarly aging limbic structures.


Epilepsia | 2005

Seizures of Idiopathic Generalized Epilepsies

Reyna M. Durón; Marco T. Medina; Iris E. Martínez-Juárez; Julia N. Bailey; Perez-Gosiengfiao Kt; Ricardo Ramos-Ramírez; Minerva López-Ruiz; María Elisa Alonso; Ramón H. Castro Ortega; Ignacio Pascual‐Castroviejo; Jesús Machado-Salas; Lizardo Mija; Antonio V. Delgado-Escueta

Summary:  Idiopathic generalized epilepsies (IGEs) comprise at least 40% of epilepsies in the United States, 20% in Mexico, and 8% in Central America. Here, we review seizure phenotypes across IGE syndromes, their response to treatment and advances in molecular genetics that influence nosology. Our review included the Medline database from 1945 to 2005 and our prospectively collected Genetic Epilepsy Studies (GENESS) Consortium database. Generalized seizures occur with different and similar semiologies, frequencies, and patterns, ages at onset, and outcomes in different IGEs, suggesting common neuroanatomical pathways for seizure phenotypes. However, the same seizure phenotypes respond differently to the same treatments in different IGEs, suggesting different molecular defects across syndromes. De novo mutations in SCN1A in sporadic Dravet syndrome and germline mutations in SCN1A, SCN1B, and SCN2A in generalized epilepsies with febrile seizures plus have unraveled the heterogenous myoclonic epilepsies of infancy and early childhood. Mutations in GABRA1, GABRG2, and GABRB3 are associated with absence seizures, while mutations in CLCN2 and myoclonin/EFHC1 substantiate juvenile myoclonic epilepsy as a clinical entity. Refined understanding of seizure phenotypes, their semiology, frequencies, and patterns together with the identification of molecular lesions in IGEs continue to accelerate the development of molecular epileptology.


International Journal of Neuroscience | 2001

Motor impairments in an oxidative stress model and its correlation with cytological changes on rat striatum and prefrontal cortex.

Maria Rosa Avila-Costa; Laura Colín-Barenque; Teresa I. Fortoul; Jesús Machado-Salas; Jesús Espinosa-Villanueva; Concepción Rugerio-Vargas; Gabino Borgonio; Claudia Dorado; Selva Rivas-Arancibia

Exposure to ozone results in an increased production of free radicals which causes oxidative stress. The purpose of this study was to determine the effects of ozone exposure on motor behavior and its correlation with the cytology of the striatum and prefrontal cortex. ‘Twenty-four male Wistar rats were exposed to 1 p.p.m. (parts per million) ozone for 4 hrs in a closed chamber. Control group was exposed to flowing air. Twenty-four hours after ozone exposure, the motor behavior was measured. After that, the animals were perfused and the brains were placed in Golgi stain. The analysis consisted in counting the dendrities spines in 5 secondary and 5 tertiary dendrites of each of the 20 medium size spiny neurons of striatum and 20 pyramidal neurons of prefrontal cortex analyzed. Our results showed alterations in motor behavior and a significant reduction of dendritie spines. and provided evidence that the deterioration in motor behavior is probably due to the reduction in spine density in the neurons of striatum and prefrontal cortex.


Epilepsia | 2009

DNA variants in coding region of EFHC1: SNPs do not associate with juvenile myoclonic epilepsy

Dongsheng Bai; Julia N. Bailey; Reyna M. Durón; María Elisa Alonso; Marco T. Medina; Iris E. Martínez-Juárez; Toshimitsu Suzuki; Jesús Machado-Salas; Ricardo Ramos-Ramírez; Miyabi Tanaka; Ramón H. Castro Ortega; Minerva López-Ruiz; Astrid Rasmussen; Adriana Ochoa; Aurelio Jara-Prado; Kazuhiro Yamakawa; Antonio V. Delgado-Escueta

Purpose:  Juvenile myoclonic epilepsy (JME) accounts for 3 to 12% of all epilepsies. In 2004, we identified a mutation‐harboring Mendelian gene that encodes a protein with one EF‐hand motif (EFHC1) in chromosome 6p12. We observed one doubly heterozygous and three heterozygous missense mutations in EFHC1 segregating as an autosomal dominant gene with 21 affected members of six Hispanic JME families from California and Mexico. In 2006, similar and three novel missense mutations were reported in sporadic and familial Caucasian JME from Italy and Austria. In this study, we asked if coding single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) of EFHC1 also contribute as susceptibility alleles to JME with complex genetics.


Genetics in Medicine | 2017

EFHC1 variants in juvenile myoclonic epilepsy: reanalysis according to NHGRI and ACMG guidelines for assigning disease causality

Julia N. Bailey; Christopher Patterson; Laurence de Nijs; Reyna M. Durón; Viet-Huong Nguyen; Miyabi Tanaka; Marco T. Medina; Aurelio Jara-Prado; Iris E. Martínez-Juárez; Adriana Ochoa; Yolli Molina; Toshimitsu Suzuki; María Elisa Alonso; Jenny E. Wight; Yu-Chen Lin; Laura Maria de Figueiredo Ferreira Guilhoto; Elza Márcia Targas Yacubian; Jesús Machado-Salas; Andrea Daga; Kazuhiro Yamakawa; Thierry Grisar; Bernard Lakaye; Antonio V. Delgado-Escueta

Purpose:EFHC1 variants are the most common mutations in inherited myoclonic and grand mal clonic-tonic-clonic (CTC) convulsions of juvenile myoclonic epilepsy (JME). We reanalyzed 54 EFHC1 variants associated with epilepsy from 17 cohorts based on National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI) and American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics (ACMG) guidelines for interpretation of sequence variants.Methods:We calculated Bayesian LOD scores for variants in coinheritance, unconditional exact tests and odds ratios (OR) in case–control associations, allele frequencies in genome databases, and predictions for conservation/pathogenicity. We reviewed whether variants damage EFHC1 functions, whether efhc1−/− KO mice recapitulate CTC convulsions and “microdysgenesis” neuropathology, and whether supernumerary synaptic and dendritic phenotypes can be rescued in the fly model when EFHC1 is overexpressed. We rated strengths of evidence and applied ACMG combinatorial criteria for classifying variants.Results:Nine variants were classified as “pathogenic,” 14 as “likely pathogenic,” 9 as “benign,” and 2 as “likely benign.” Twenty variants of unknown significance had an insufficient number of ancestry-matched controls, but ORs exceeded 5 when compared with racial/ethnic-matched Exome Aggregation Consortium (ExAC) controls.Conclusions:NHGRI gene-level evidence and variant-level evidence establish EFHC1 as the first non–ion channel microtubule–associated protein whose mutations disturb R-type VDCC and TRPM2 calcium currents in overgrown synapses and dendrites within abnormally migrated dislocated neurons, thus explaining CTC convulsions and “microdysgenesis” neuropathology of JME.Genet Med 19 2, 144–156.


Experimental Neurology | 2012

Ontogeny of Lafora bodies and neurocytoskeleton changes in Laforin-deficient mice.

Jesús Machado-Salas; Maria Rosa Avila-Costa; Patricia Guevara; Jorge Guevara; Reyna M. Durón; Dongsheng Bai; Miyabi Tanaka; Kazuhiro Yamakawa; Antonio V. Delgado-Escueta

Lafora disease (LD) is an autosomal recessive, always fatal progressive myoclonus epilepsy with rapid cognitive and neurologic deterioration. One of the pathological hallmarks of LD is the presence of cytoplasmic PAS+polyglucosan inclusions called Lafora bodies (LBs). Current clinical and neuropathological views consider LBs to be the cause of neurological derangement of patients. A systematic study of the ontogeny and structural features of the LBs has not been done in the past. Therefore, we undertook a detailed microscopic analysis of the neuropile of a Laforin-deficient (epm2a-/-) mouse model. Wild type and epm2a-/- mice were sacrificed at different ages and their encephalon processed for light microscopy. Luxol-fast-blue, PAS, Bielschowski techniques, as well as immunocytochemistry (TUNEL, Caspase-3, Apaf-1, Cytochrome-C and Neurofilament L antibodies) were used. Young null mice (11 days old) showed necrotic neuronal death in the absence of LBs. Both cell death and LBs showed a progressive increment in size and number with age. Type I LBs emerged at two weeks of age and were distributed in somata and neurites. Type II LBs appeared around the second month of age and always showed a complex architecture and restricted to neuronal somata. Their number was considerably less than type I LBs. Bielschowski method showed neurofibrillary degeneration and senile-like plaques. These changes were more prominent in the hippocampus and ventral pons. Neurofibrillary tangles were already present in 11 days-old experimental animals, whereas senile-like plaques appeared around the third to fourth month of life. The encephalon of null mice was not uniformly affected: Diencephalic structures were spared, whereas cerebral cortex, basal ganglia, pons, hippocampus and cerebellum were notoriously affected. This uneven distribution was present even within the same structure, i.e., hippocampal sectors. Of special relevance, was the observation of the presence of immunoreactivity to neurofilament L on the external rim of type II LBs. Perhaps, type II LB is not the end point of a metabolic abnormality. Instead, we suggest that type II LB is a highly specialized structural and functional entity that emerges as a neuronal response to major carbohydrate metabolism impairment. Early necrotic cell death, neurocytoskeleton derangement, different structural and probably functional profiles for both forms of LBs, a potential relationship between the external rim of the LB type II and the cytoskeleton and an uneven distribution of these abnormalities indicate that LD is both a complex neurodegenerative disease and a glycogen metabolism disorder. Our findings are critical for future studies on disease mechanisms and therapies for LD. Interestingly, the neurodegenerative changes observed in this LD model can also be useful for understanding the process of dementia.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2002

Targeted disruption of the Epm2a gene causes formation of Lafora inclusion bodies, neurodegeneration, ataxia, myoclonus epilepsy and impaired behavioral response in mice

Subramaniam Ganesh; Antonio V. Delgado-Escueta; Toshiro Sakamoto; Maria Rosa Avila; Jesús Machado-Salas; Yoshinobu Hoshii; Takumi Akagi; Hiroshi Gomi; Toshimitsu Suzuki; Kenji Amano; Kishan Lal Agarwala; Yuki Hasegawa; Dongsheng Bai; Tokuhiro Ishihara; Tsutomu Hashikawa; Shigeyoshi Itohara; Eain M. Cornford; Hiroaki Niki; Kazuhiro Yamakawa

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Marco T. Medina

Universidad Nacional Autónoma de Honduras

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Dongsheng Bai

University of California

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Miyabi Tanaka

University of California

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Kazuhiro Yamakawa

RIKEN Brain Science Institute

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