Juan Pedro Martinez-Barbera
University College London
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Juan Pedro Martinez-Barbera.
Nature Genetics | 2012
Yu Sun; Beata Bak; Nadia Schoenmakers; A. S. Paul van Trotsenburg; W. Oostdijk; Peter J. Voshol; Emma L. Cambridge; Jacqueline K. White; Paul Le Tissier; S. Neda Mousavy Gharavy; Juan Pedro Martinez-Barbera; Wilhelmina H. Stokvis-Brantsma; Thomas Vulsma; Marlies Kempers; Luca Persani; Irene Campi; Marco Bonomi; Paolo Beck-Peccoz; Hongdong Zhu; Timothy M. E. Davis; Anita Hokken-Koelega; Daria Gorbenko Del Blanco; Jayanti Rangasami; Claudia Ruivenkamp; Jeroen F. J. Laros; Marjolein Kriek; Sarina G. Kant; Cathy A J Bosch; Nienke R. Biermasz; Natasha M. Appelman-Dijkstra
Congenital central hypothyroidism occurs either in isolation or in conjunction with other pituitary hormone deficits. Using exome and candidate gene sequencing, we identified 8 distinct mutations and 2 deletions in IGSF1 in males from 11 unrelated families with central hypothyroidism, testicular enlargement and variably low prolactin concentrations. IGSF1 is a membrane glycoprotein that is highly expressed in the anterior pituitary gland, and the identified mutations impair its trafficking to the cell surface in heterologous cells. Igsf1-deficient male mice show diminished pituitary and serum thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) concentrations, reduced pituitary thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) receptor expression, decreased triiodothyronine concentrations and increased body mass. Collectively, our observations delineate a new X-linked disorder in which loss-of-function mutations in IGSF1 cause central hypothyroidism, likely secondary to an associated impairment in pituitary TRH signaling.
Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2012
Sujatha A. Jayakody; Cynthia L. Andoniadou; Carles Gaston-Massuet; Massimo Signore; Anna Cariboni; Pierre Bouloux; Paul Le Tissier; Larysa Pevny; Mehul T. Dattani; Juan Pedro Martinez-Barbera
Sex-determining region Y (SRY) box 2 (SOX2) haploinsufficiency causes a form of hypopituitarism in humans that is characterized by gonadotrophin deficiency known as hypogonadotrophic hypogonadism. Here, we conditionally deleted Sox2 in mice to investigate the pathogenesis of hypogonadotrophic hypogonadism. First, we found that absence of SOX2 in the developing Rathke pouch of conditional embryos led to severe anterior lobe hypoplasia with drastically reduced expression of the pituitary-specific transcription factor POU class 1 homeobox 1 (POU1F1) as well as severe disruption of somatotroph and thyrotroph differentiation. In contrast, corticotrophs, rostral-tip POU1F1-independent thyrotrophs, and, interestingly, lactotrophs and gonadotrophs were less affected. Second, we identified a requirement for SOX2 in normal proliferation of periluminal progenitors; in its absence, insufficient precursors were available to produce all cell lineages of the anterior pituitary. Differentiated cells derived from precursors exiting cell cycle at early stages, including corticotrophs, rostral-tip thyrotrophs, and gonadotrophs, were generated, while hormone-producing cells originating from late-born precursors, such as somatotrophs and POU1F1-dependent thyrotrophs, were severely reduced. Finally, we found that 2 previously characterized patients with SOX2 haploinsufficiency and associated hypogonadotrophic hypogonadism had a measurable response to gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) stimulation, suggesting that it is not the absence of gonadotroph differentiation, but rather the deficient hypothalamic stimulation of gonadotrophs, that underlies typical hypogonadotrophic hypogonadism.
Human Mutation | 2011
Kyriaki S. Alatzoglou; Cynthia L. Andoniadou; Daniel Kelberman; Charles Buchanan; John A. Crolla; Maria Cristina Arriazu; Martin Roubicek; Daniel Moncet; Juan Pedro Martinez-Barbera; Mehul T. Dattani
SOX2 is an early developmental transcription factor and marker of stem cells that has recently been implicated in the development of the pituitary gland. Heterozygous SOX2 mutations have been described in patients with hypopituitarism and severe ocular abnormalities. In the majority of published cases, the pituitary gland is either small or normal in size. Here, we report two unrelated patients with SOX2 haploinsufficiency (a heterozygous gene deletion and a novel c.143TC>AA/p.F48X mutation) who developed nonprogressive pituitary tumors of early onset, suggesting a congenital etiology. The truncating mutation resulted in significant loss of function and impaired nuclear localization of the mutant protein, in addition to a failure to repress β‐catenin transcriptional activity in vitro. This is the first indication that SOX2 haploinsufficiency is implicated in the generation of pituitary tumors with distinct clinical characteristics, possibly mediated via its effects on the Wnt signaling pathway. 32:1376–1380, 2011. ©2011 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
45th Meeting of the British Society for Paediatric Endocrinology and Diabetes | 2017
Hoong-Wei Gan; Clare Leeson; Helen Aitkenhead; Sadaf Farooqi; Helen Spoudeas; Juan Pedro Martinez-Barbera; Mehul Dattani
55th Annual ESPE | 2016
Hoong-Wei Gan; Clare Leeson; Helen Aitkenhead; Helen Spoudeas; Juan Pedro Martinez-Barbera; Mehul Dattani
Society for Endocrinology BES 2014 | 2014
Carles Gaston-Massuet; Mark J. McCabe; Mehul T. Dattani; Juan Pedro Martinez-Barbera
Society for Endocrinology BES 2014 | 2014
Cynthia L. Andoniadou; Juan Pedro Martinez-Barbera
Archive | 2014
Juan Pedro Martinez-Barbera; Cynthia L. Andoniadou
Archive | 2014
Gabriela Carreno; Cynthia L. Andoniadou; Wendy E. Heywood; Kevin Mills; Mehul T. Dattani; Juan Pedro Martinez-Barbera
ESPE 2014 | 2014
Kyriaki S. Alatzoglou; Cynthia L. Andoniadou; Daniel Kelberman; Hyoong-Goo Kim; Edward Botse-Baidoo; Jennifer Pedersen-White; Lawrence C. Layman; Juan Pedro Martinez-Barbera; Mehul T. Dattani