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Dive into the research topics where Mari Eyestone is active.

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Featured researches published by Mari Eyestone.


eLife | 2013

Patient-specific iPSC-derived photoreceptor precursor cells as a means to investigate retinitis pigmentosa

Budd A. Tucker; Robert F. Mullins; Luan M. Streb; Kristin R. Anfinson; Mari Eyestone; Emily E. Kaalberg; Megan Riker; Arlene V. Drack; Terry A. Braun; Edwin M. Stone

Next-generation and Sanger sequencing were combined to identify disease-causing USH2A mutations in an adult patient with autosomal recessive RP. Induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs), generated from the patient’s keratinocytes, were differentiated into multi-layer eyecup-like structures with features of human retinal precursor cells. The inner layer of the eyecups contained photoreceptor precursor cells that expressed photoreceptor markers and exhibited axonemes and basal bodies characteristic of outer segments. Analysis of the USH2A transcripts of these cells revealed that one of the patient’s mutations causes exonification of intron 40, a translation frameshift and a premature stop codon. Western blotting revealed upregulation of GRP78 and GRP94, suggesting that the patient’s other USH2A variant (Arg4192His) causes disease through protein misfolding and ER stress. Transplantation into 4-day-old immunodeficient Crb1−/− mice resulted in the formation of morphologically and immunohistochemically recognizable photoreceptor cells, suggesting that the mutations in this patient act via post-developmental photoreceptor degeneration. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.00824.001


Archives of Ophthalmology | 2012

Three-dimensional Distribution of the Vitelliform Lesion, Photoreceptors, and Retinal Pigment Epithelium in the Macula of Patients With Best Vitelliform Macular Dystrophy

Christine N. Kay; Michael D. Abràmoff; Robert F. Mullins; Tyson R. Kinnick; Kyuongmoo Lee; Mari Eyestone; Mina Chung; Elliott H. Sohn; Edwin M. Stone

OBJECTIVE To describe the anatomical phenotypes of Best vitelliform macular dystrophy (BVMD) with spectral-domain optical coherence tomography (SD-OCT) in a large series of patients with confirmed mutations in the BEST1 gene. METHODS In our retrospective observational case series, we assessed 15 patients (30 eyes) with a clinical diagnosis of vitelliform macular dystrophy who were found to have mutations in the BEST1 gene. Color fundus photographs and SD-OCT images were evaluated and compared with those of 15 age-matched controls (30 eyes). Using a validated 3-dimensional SD-OCT segmentation algorithm, we calculated the equivalent thickness of photoreceptors and the equivalent thickness of the retinal pigment epithelium for each patient. The photoreceptor equivalent thickness and the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) equivalent thickness were compared in all patients, in a region of the macula outside the central lesion for patients with BVMD and outside the fovea in control patients. Paired t tests were used for statistical analysis. RESULTS The SD-OCT findings revealed that the vitelliform lesion consists of material above the RPE and below the outer segment tips. Additionally, drusen-like deposition of sub-RPE material was notable, and several patients exhibited a sub-RPE fibrotic nodule. Patients with BVMD had a mean photoreceptor equivalent thickness of 28.3 μm, and control patients had a mean photoreceptor equivalent thickness of 21.8 μm, a mean difference of 6.5 μm (P < .01), whereas the mean RPE equivalent thickness was not statistically different between patients with BVMD and control patients (P = .53). CONCLUSIONS The SD-OCT findings suggest that vitelliform material is located in the subretinal space and that BVMD is associated with diffuse photoreceptor outer segment abnormalities overlying a structurally normal RPE. CLINICAL RELEVANCE These findings provide new insight into the pathophysiology of BVMD and thus have implications for the development of therapeutic interventions.


American Journal of Ophthalmology | 2009

Treatment of Adult-Onset Acute Macular Retinoschisis in Enhanced S-cone Syndrome With Oral Acetazolamide

Alessandro Iannaccone; Kenneth H. Fung; Mari Eyestone; Edwin M. Stone

PURPOSE To report on the efficacy of the oral carbonic anhydrase inhibitor (CAI) acetazolamide in treating macular retinoschisis (RS) in the rare vitreoretinal dystrophy best known as the enhanced S-cone syndrome (ESCS). DESIGN Interventional case report. METHODS setting: University-based practice. patient: A 48-year old Jewish Italian male with clinically, functionally, and molecularly confirmed ESCS, attributable to homozygosity for the R311Q mutation in the NR2E3 gene, presented with sudden visual acuity (VA) loss (20/200) and metamorphopsia in the left eye resulting from acute, late-onset, asymmetric macular RS. intervention: Open-label, off-label treatment with the oral CAI acetazolamide. main outcome measure(s): Best-corrected VA, retinal thickness, and retinal microanatomy, assessed by Stratus optical coherence tomography (OCT) criteria. RESULTS Following treatment, instituted one month after the acute-onset VA loss, retinal thickness and microanatomic profile normalized in the affected eye, with restoration of 20/20 corrected VA. The fellow eye, which had remained asymptomatic at 20/16 vision, had experienced mild paracentral macular RS evident by OCT criteria, which also resolved completely following oral CAI treatment. The outcome was maintained throughout the follow-up period at a low maintenance dose. CONCLUSIONS Taken together with other recent reported benefits of topical and oral CAIs in the treatment of macular RS in X-linked retinoschisis, this interventional case report shows that CAIs can be used to treat effectively macular RS in general, and also specifically in ESCS.


Ophthalmic Genetics | 2010

novel Intragenic FRMD7 deletion in a Pedigree with congenital X-linked nystagmus

John H. Fingert; Ben R. Roos; Mari Eyestone; Joshua D. Pham; Mei L. Mellot; Edwin M. Stone

Objective: To identify the disease-causing mutation in a large 3 generation pedigree of X-linked congenital nystagmus. Methods: Twenty-three members of a single pedigree, including 7 affected males, 2 affected females, 5 obligate carriers, and 9 unaffected family members were tested for mutations in the FRMD7 gene using PCR-based DNA sequencing assays and multiplex PCR assays for deletions. Results: A hemizygous deletion of exons 2, 3, and 4 of FRMD7 was detected in all affected males in the family and was absent from 40 control subjects. Conclusions: A range of missense, nonsense, frameshift, and splicing mutations in FRMD7 have been shown to cause X-linked congenital nystagmus. Here we show for the first time that large intragenic deletions of FRMD7 can also cause this form of nystagmus.


BMC Genomics | 2006

An annotated cDNA library of juvenile Euprymna scolopes with and without colonization by the symbiont Vibrio fischeri

Carlene K. Chun; Todd E. Scheetz; Maria F. Bonaldo; Bartley Brown; Anik Clemens; Wendy J. Crookes-Goodson; Keith Crouch; Tad DeMartini; Mari Eyestone; Michael S. Goodson; Bernadette Janssens; Jennifer L. Kimbell; Tanya A. Koropatnick; Tamara A. Kucaba; Christina Smith; Jennifer J. Stewart; Deyan Tong; Joshua V. Troll; Sarahrose Webster; Jane Winhall-Rice; Cory Yap; Thomas L. Casavant; Margaret J. McFall-Ngai; M. Bento Soares


Physiological Genomics | 2004

Large-scale gene discovery in human airway epithelia reveals novel transcripts

Todd E. Scheetz; Joseph Zabner; Michael Welsh; Justin Coco; Mari Eyestone; Maria de Fatima Bonaldo; Tamara A. Kucaba; Thomas L. Casavant; M. Bento Soares; Paul B. McCray


Genome Research | 2004

High-Throughput Gene Discovery in the Rat

Todd E. Scheetz; Jennifer J.S. Laffin; Brian Berger; Sara Holte; Susan A. Baumes; Robert Brown; Shereen Chang; Justin Coco; Jim Conklin; Keith Crouch; Micca Donohue; Greg Doonan; Chris Estes; Mari Eyestone; Katrina Fishler; Jack Gardiner; Lankai Guo; Brad Johnson; Catherine Keppel; Rikki Kreger; Mark Lebeck; Rudy Marcelino; Vladan Miljkovich; Mindee Perdue; Ling Qui; Joshua Rehmann; Rebecca S. Reiter; Bridgette Rhoads; Kelly Schaefer; Christina Smith


Genome Research | 2004

1274 Full-Open Reading Frames of Transcripts Expressed in the Developing Mouse Nervous System

Maria F. Bonaldo; Thomas B. Bair; Todd E. Scheetz; Einat Snir; Ike Akabogu; Jennifer L. Bair; Brian Berger; Keith Crouch; Aja Davis; Mari Eyestone; Catherine Keppel; Tamara A. Kucaba; Mark Lebeck; Jenny Li-Chun Lin; Anna I. R. De Melo; Joshua Rehmann; Rebecca S. Reiter; Kelly Schaefer; Christina Smith; Dylan Tack; Kurtis Trout; Val C. Sheffield; Jim Jung-Ching Lin; Thomas L. Casavant; Marcelo B. Soares


Physiological Genomics | 2004

A comprehensive nonredundant expressed sequence tag collection for the developing Rattus norvegicus heart

Jennifer J.S. Laffin; Todd E. Scheetz; Maria F. Bonaldo; Rebecca S. Reiter; Shereen Chang; Mari Eyestone; Hakeem Abdulkawy; Bartley Brown; Chad A. Roberts; Dylan Tack; Tamara A. Kucaba; Jim Jung-Ching Lin; Val C. Sheffield; Thomas L. Casavant; M. Bento Soares


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2013

Gene Therapy for CEP290-associated LCA in Patient-Derived Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells

Erin R. Burnight; Emily E. Kaalberg; Mari Eyestone; Jeremy M Hoffman; Christine M. Haas; Robert F. Mullins; Edwin M. Stone; Budd A. Tucker

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