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Dive into the research topics where Julie Moss is active.

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Featured researches published by Julie Moss.


Journal of Endocrinology | 2009

Genetic background influences embryonic lethality and the occurrence of neural tube defects in Men1 null mice: relevance to genetic modifiers

Manuel Lemos; Brian Harding; Anita Reed; Jeshmi Jeyabalan; Gerard Walls; Michael R. Bowl; James Sharpe; Sarah Wedden; Julie Moss; Allyson Ross; Duncan Davidson; Rajesh V. Thakker

Germline mutations of the multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1 (MEN1) gene cause parathyroid, pancreatic and pituitary tumours in man. MEN1 mutations also cause familial isolated primary hyperparathyroidism (FIHP) and the same MEN1 mutations, in different families, can cause either FIHP or MEN1. This suggests a role for genetic background and modifier genes in altering the expression of a mutation. We investigated the effects of genetic background on the phenotype of embryonic lethality that occurs in a mouse model for MEN1. Men1(+/-) mice were backcrossed to generate C57BL/6 and 129S6/SvEv incipient congenic strains, and used to obtain homozygous Men1(-/-) mice. No viable Men1(-/-) mice were obtained. The analysis of 411 live embryos obtained at 9.5-16.5 days post-coitum (dpc) revealed that significant deviations from the expected Mendelian 1:2:1 genotype ratio were first observed at 12.5 and 14.5 dpc in the 129S6/SvEv and C57BL/6 strains respectively (P<0.05). Moreover, live Men1(-/-) embryos were absent by 13.5 and 15.5 dpc in the 129S6/SvEv and C57BL/6 strains respectively thereby indicating an earlier lethality by 2 days in the 129S6/SvEv strain (P<0.01). Men1(-/-) embryos had macroscopic haemorrhages, and histology and optical projection tomography revealed them to have internal haemorrhages, myocardial hypotrophy, pericardial effusion, hepatic abnormalities and neural tube defects. The neural tube defects occurred exclusively in 129S6/SvEv embryos (21 vs 0%, P<0.01). Thus, our findings demonstrate the importance of genetic background in influencing the phenotypes of embryonic lethality and neural tube defects in Men1(-/-) mice, and implicate a role for genetic modifiers.


Mammalian Genome | 2012

eMouseAtlas, EMAGE, and the spatial dimension of the transcriptome

Chris Armit; Shanmugasundaram Venkataraman; Lorna Richardson; Peter Stevenson; Julie Moss; Liz Graham; Allyson Ross; Yiya Yang; Nicholas Burton; Jianguo Rao; Bill Hill; Dominic Rannie; Mike Wicks; Duncan Davidson; Richard Baldock

AbstracteMouseAtlas (www.emouseatlas.org) is a comprehensive online resource to visualise mouse development and investigate gene expression in the mouse embryo. We have recently deployed a completely redesigned Mouse Anatomy Atlas website (www.emouseatlas.org/emap/ema) that allows users to view 3D embryo reconstructions, delineated anatomy, and high-resolution histological sections. A new feature of the website is the IIP3D web tool that allows a user to view arbitrary sections of 3D embryo reconstructions using a web browser. This feature provides interactive access to very high-volume 3D images via a tiled pan-and-zoom style interface and circumvents the need to download large image files for visualisation. eMouseAtlas additionally includes EMAGE (Edinburgh Mouse Atlas of Gene Expression) (www.emouseatlas.org/emage), a freely available, curated online database of in situ gene expression patterns, where gene expression domains extracted from raw data images are spatially mapped into atlas embryo models. In this way, EMAGE introduces a spatial dimension to transcriptome data and allows exploration of the spatial similarity between gene expression patterns. New features of the EMAGE interface allow complex queries to be built, and users can view and compare multiple gene expression patterns. EMAGE now includes mapping of 3D gene expression domains captured using the imaging technique optical projection tomography. 3D mapping uses WlzWarp, an open-source software tool developed by eMouseAtlas.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2011

Esrrg functions in early branch generation of the ureteric bud and is essential for normal development of the renal papilla

Rachel L. Berry; Louise Harewood; Liming Pei; Malcolm Fisher; David Brownstein; Allyson Ross; William A. Alaynick; Julie Moss; Nicholas D. Hastie; Peter Hohenstein; Jamie A. Davies; Ronald M. Evans; David Fitzpatrick

Congenital anomalies of the kidney and urinary tract (CAKUTs) are common disorders of human development affecting the renal parechyma, renal pelvis, ureter, bladder and urethra; they show evidence of shared genetic aetiology, although the molecular basis of this remains unknown in the majority of cases. Breakpoint mapping of a de novo, apparently balanced, reciprocal translocation associated with bilateral renal agenesis has implicated the gene encoding the nuclear steroid hormone receptor ESRRG as a candidate gene for CAKUT. Here we show that the Esrrg protein is detected throughout early ureteric ducts as cytoplasmic/sub-membranous staining; with nuclear localization seen in developing nephrons. In 14.5–16.5 dpc (days post-conception) mouse embryos, Esrrg localizes to the subset of ductal tissue within the kidney, liver and lung. The renal ductal expression becomes localized to renal papilla by 18.5 dpc. Perturbation of function was performed in embryonic mouse kidney culture using pooled siRNA to induce knock-down and a specific small-molecule agonist to induce aberrant activation of Esrrg. Both resulted in severe abnormality of early branching events of the ureteric duct. Mouse embryos with a targeted inactivation of Esrrg on both alleles (Esrrg−/−) showed agenesis of the renal papilla but normal development of the cortex and remaining medulla. Taken together, these results suggest that Esrrg is required for early branching events of the ureteric duct that occur prior to the onset of nephrogenesis. These findings confirm ESRRG as a strong candidate gene for CAKUT.


Hippocampus | 1998

Gene-trapping to identify and analyze genes expressed in the mouse hippocampus

Muriel Steel; Julie Moss; Katherine A. Clark; Ian R. Kearns; Ceri H. Davies; Richard G. M. Morris; William C. Skarnes; Richard Lathe

Mice harboring random gene‐trap insertions of a lacZ (β‐galactosidase)‐neomycin resistance fusion cassette (β‐geo) were analyzed for expression in the hippocampus. In 4 of 15 lines reporter gene activity was observed in the hippocampal formation. In the obn line, enzyme activity was detected in the CA1–3 hippocampal subfields, in hpk expression was restricted to CA1, but in both lines reporter activity was also present in other brain regions. In the third line, kin, reporter activity was robustly expressed throughout the stratum pyrimidale of CA1–3, with only low‐level expression elsewhere. The final line (glnC) displayed ubiquitous expression of the reporter and was not analyzed further. Fusion transcripts for the first three lines were characterized; all encode polypeptides with features of membrane‐associated signalling proteins. The obn fusion identified a human cDNA (B2–1) encoding a pleckstrin homology (PH) domain, while hpk sequences matched the Epstein‐Barr Virus (EBV) inducible G‐protein coupled receptor, EBI‐1. kin identified an alternative form of the abl‐related nonreceptor tyrosine kinase c‐arg. Electrophysiological studies on mice homozygous for the insertions revealed normal synaptic transmission, paired pulse facilitation and paired‐pulse depression at Schaffer collateral‐commissural CA1 synapses, and normal long‐term potentiation (LTP) in obn and kin. hpk mice displayed an increase in hippocampal CA1 long‐term potentiation (LTP), suggesting a role for this receptor in synaptic plasticity. Hippocampus 1998;8:444–457.


Database | 2015

Developing the eHistology Atlas.

Lorna Richardson; Liz Graham; Julie Moss; Nick Burton; Yogmatee Roochun; Chris Armit; Richard Baldock

The eMouseAtlas project has undertaken to generate a new resource providing access to high-resolution colour images of the slides used in the renowned textbook ‘The Atlas of Mouse Development’ by Matthew H. Kaufman. The original histology slides were digitized, and the associated anatomy annotations captured for display in the new resource. These annotations were assigned to objects in the standard reference anatomy ontology, allowing the eHistology resource to be linked to other data resources including the Edinburgh Mouse Atlas Gene-Expression database (EMAGE) an the Mouse Genome Informatics (MGI) gene-expression database (GXD). The provision of the eHistology Atlas resource was assisted greatly by the expertise of the eMouseAtlas project in delivering large image datasets within a web environment, using IIP3D technology. This technology also permits future extensions to the resource through the addition of further layers of data and annotations to the resource. Database URL: www.emouseatlas.org/emap/eHistology/index.php


Hypertension | 2017

Complement Factor B Is a Determinant of Both Metabolic and Cardiovascular Features of Metabolic Syndrome

Philip M. Coan; Marjorie Barrier; Neza Alfazema; Roderick N. Carter; Sophie Marion de Procé; Xaquin C. Dopico; Ana Garcia Diaz; Adrian Thomson; Lucy H. Jackson-Jones; Ben Moyon; Zoe Webster; David Ross; Julie Moss; Mark J. Arends; Nicholas M. Morton; Timothy J. Aitman

CFB (complement factor B) is elevated in adipose tissue and serum from patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus and cardiovascular disease, but the causal relationship to disease pathogenesis is unclear. Cfb is also elevated in adipose tissue and serum of the spontaneously hypertensive rat, a well-characterized model of metabolic syndrome. To establish the role of CFB in metabolic syndrome, we knocked out the Cfb gene in the spontaneously hypertensive rat. Cfb−/− rats showed improved glucose tolerance and insulin sensitivity, redistribution of visceral to subcutaneous fat, increased adipocyte mitochondrial respiration, and marked changes in gene expression. Cfb−/− rats also had lower blood pressure, increased ejection fraction and fractional shortening, and reduced left ventricular mass. These changes in metabolism and gene expression, in adipose tissue and left ventricle, suggest new adipose tissue-intrinsic and blood pressure-independent mechanisms for insulin resistance and cardiac hypertrophy in the spontaneously hypertensive rat. In silico analysis of the human CFB locus revealed 2 cis-regulated expression quantitative trait loci for CFB expression significantly associated with visceral fat, circulating triglycerides and hypertension in genome-wide association studies. Together, these data demonstrate a key role for CFB in the development of spontaneously hypertensive rat metabolic syndrome phenotypes and of related traits in humans and indicate the potential for CFB as a novel target for treatment of cardiometabolic disease.


Archive | 2017

3D mouse embryo model: EMA38, Stage TS16, Age E10.0 (est)

Bill Hill; Richard Baldock; Lorna Richardson; Nick Burton; Elizabeth Graham; Renske Brune; Julie Moss; Duncan Davidson; Chris Armit

The eMouseAtlas team have generated a series of 3D images to capture mouse embryo development and to use as a spatial framework for gene-expression and other spatially organised data. The resource is published and available on the Web at http://www.emouseatlas.org/emap/ema/.


Archive | 2017

3D mouse embryo model: EMA80, Stage TS23, Age E15.0 (est)

Bill Hill; Richard Baldock; Lorna Richardson; Nick Burton; Elizabeth Graham; Renske Brune; Julie Moss; Duncan Davidson; Chris Armit

The eMouseAtlas team have generated a series of 3D images to capture mouse embryo development and to use as a spatial framework for gene-expression and other spatially organised data. The resource is published and available on the Web at http://www.emouseatlas.org/emap/ema/.


Kaufman's Atlas of Mouse Development Supplement#R##N#Coronal Images | 2016

2 – Coronal Sections

David J. Price; Elizabeth Graham; Julie Moss; Chris Armit; Richard Baldock

The original The Atlas of Mouse Development by Matt Kaufman (MK) included transverse and sagittal sections at multiple stages of development, but only two plates of coronal sections (stages E14.5 (plate 34) and E16.5 (plate 39)). When a revised version of the Atlas was suggested, a survey of users recommended that the series of coronal sections should be extended to include additional stages of development, particularly the brain at E11, E11.5, E12.5, E13.5, and E15.5. This chapter presents these new coronal sections, together with some new sections to extend the E14.5 images provided in the original Atlas. These sections include some original annotations from MK that are supplemented by more detailed brain annotations.


Development | 2015

The atlas of mouse development eHistology resource

Elizabeth Graham; Julie Moss; Nick Burton; Chris Armit; Lorna Richardson; Richard Baldock

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Chris Armit

University of Edinburgh

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Nick Burton

University of Edinburgh

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Bill Hill

Western General Hospital

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Renske Brune

University of Edinburgh

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Allyson Ross

Western General Hospital

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