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Featured researches published by María Julia Calonge.


Human Genetics | 1996

Molecular analysis of the cystinuria disease gene: identification of four new mutations, one large deletion, and one polymorphism

Luigi Bisceglia; María Julia Calonge; Luca Dello Strologo; Gianfranco Rizzoni; Luisa de Sanctis; M. Gallucci; Ercole Beccia; Xavier Testar; Antonio Zorzano; Xavier Estivill; Leopolde Zelante; Manuel Palacín; Paolo Gasparini; Virginia Nunes

Abstract A cystinuria disease gene (rBAT) has recently been identified, but evidence strongly suggests that only Type-I cystinuria is due to mutations in this gene. Sixteen point mutations and a large deletion causing the disease have so far been described in the rBAT gene sequence. To identify new mutated alleles, genomic DNA was analyzed, after the determination of the entire genomic structure of the rBAT gene, by RNA-single strand conformation polymorphism analysis, an accurate and sensitive method able to detect nucleotide changes. Four new point mutations, a large deletion, and a common intragenic polymorphism were detected. These new mutations increase to 22 the number of mutated alleles so far characterized in rBAT. In addition, the frequency of 21 mutations was assessed in a sample of accurately defined Type-I cystinuria choromosomes. They account for about 58% of all Type-I chromosomes, mutation M467T being the most common (0.26).


Amino Acids | 1996

The molecular basis of cystinuria: the role of the rBAT gene

Manuel Palacín; C. Mora; Josep Chillarón; María Julia Calonge; Raúl Estévez; David Torrents; Xavier Testar; Antonio Zorzano; Virginia Nunes; Jesús Purroy; Xavier Estivill; Paolo Gasparini; Luigi Bisceglia; Leopoldo Zelante

SummaryThe cDNAs of mammalian amino acid transporters already identified could be grouped into four families. One of these protein families is composed of the protein rBAT and the heavy chain of the cell surface antigen 4F2 (4F2hc). The cRNAs of rBAT and 4F2hc induce amino acid transport activity via systems b0,+ -like and y+L -like inXenopus oocytes respectively. Surprisingly, neither rBAT nor 4F2hc is very hydrophobic, and they seem to be unable to form a pore in the plasma membrane. This prompted the hypothesis that rBAT and 4F2hc are subunits or modulators of the corresponding amino acid transporters. The association of rBAT with a light subunit of ~40kDa has been suggested, and such an association has been demonstrated for 4F2hc.The b0,+-like system expressed in oocytes by rBAT cRNA transports L-cystine, L-dibasic and L-neutral amino acids with high-affinity. This transport system shows exchange of amino acids through the plasma membrane ofXenopus oocytes, suggesting a tertiary active transport mechanism. The rBAT gene is mainly expressed in the outer stripe of the outer medulla of the kidney and in the mucosa of the small intestine. The protein localizes to the microvilli of the proximal straight tubules (S3 segment) of the nephron and the mucosa of the small intestine. All this suggested the participation of rBAT in a high-affinity reabsorption system of cystine and dibasic amino acids in kidney and intestine, and indicated rBAT (named SLC3A1 in Gene Data Bank) as a good candidate gene for cystinuria. This is an inherited aminoaciduria due to defective renal and intestinal reabsorption of cystine and dibasic amino acids. The poor solubility of cystine causes the formation of renal cystine calculi. Mutational analysis of the rBAT gene of patients with cystinuria is revealing a growing number (~20) of cystinuria-specific mutations, including missense, nonsense, deletions and insertions. Mutations M467T (substitution of methionine 467 residue for threonine) and R270X (stop codon at arginine residue 270) represent approximately half of the cystinuric chromosomes where mutations have been found. Mutation M467T reduces transport activity of rBAT in oocytes. All this demonstrates that mutations in the rBAT gene cause cystinuria.Three types of cystinuria (types, I, II and III) have been described on the basis of the genetic, biochemical and clinical manifestations of the disease. Type I cystinuria has a complete recessive inheritance; type I heterozygotes are totally silent. In contrast, type II and III heterozygotes show, respectively, high or moderate hyperaminoaciduria of cystine and dibasic amino acids. Type III homozygotes show moderate, if any, alteration of intestinal absorption of cystine and dibasic amino acids; type II homozygotes clearly show defective intestinal absorption of these amino acids. To date, all the rBAT cystinuria-specific mutations we have found are associated with type I cystinuria (~70% of the chromosomes studied) but not to types II or III. This strongly suggests genetic heterogeneity for cystinuria. Genetic linkage analysis with markers of the genomic region of rBAT in chromosome 2 (G band 2p16.3) and intragenic markers of rBAT have demonstrated genetic heterogeneity for cystinuria; the rBAT gene is linked to type I cystinuria, but not to type III. Biochemical, genetic and clinical studies are needed to identify the additional cystinuria genes; a low-affinity cystine reabsortion system and the putative light subunit of rBAT are additional candidate genes for cystinuria.


Nature Genetics | 1994

Cystinuria caused by mutations in rBAT, a gene involved in the transport of cystine.

María Julia Calonge; Paolo Gasparini; Josep Chillarón; Miguel Chillón; M. Gallucci; Ferran Rousaud; Leopoldo Zelante; Xavier Testar; Bruno Dallapiccola; Franco Di Silverio; Pedro Barceló; Xavier Estivill; Antonio Zorzano; Virginia Nunes; Manuel Palacín


American Journal of Human Genetics | 1997

Localization, by linkage analysis, of the cystinuria type III gene to chromosome 19q13.1

Luigi Bisceglia; María Julia Calonge; A. Totaro; Lídia Feliubadaló; Salvatore Melchionda; Judith García; Xavier Testar; M. Gallucci; Alberto Ponzone; Lepoldo Zelante; Antonio Zorzano; Xavier Estivill; Paolo Gasparini; Virginia Nunes; Manuel Palacín


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1995

Genetic heterogeneity in cystinuria: the SLC3A1 gene is linked to type I but not to type III cystinuria.

María Julia Calonge; Victor Volpini; Luigi Bisceglia; Ferran Rousaud; L De Sanctis; Ercole Beccia; Leopoldo Zelante; Xavier Testar; Antonio Zorzano; Xavier Estivill


American Journal of Human Genetics | 1995

Molecular genetics of cystinuria : identification of four new mutations and seven polymorphisms, and evidence for genetic heterogeneity

Paolo Gasparini; María Julia Calonge; Luigi Bisceglia; Jesús Purroy; I. Dianzani; Angelo Notarangelo; Ferran Rousaud; M. Gallucci; Xavier Testar; Alberto Ponzone; Xavier Estivill; Antonio Zorzano; M Palacín; Virginia Nunes; Leopoldo Zelante


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1996

The rBAT gene is responsible for L-cystine uptake via the b0,(+)-like amino acid transport system in a "renal proximal tubular" cell line (OK cells).

C. Mora; Josep Chillarón; María Julia Calonge; Judith Forgo; Xavier Testar; Virginia Nunes; Heini Murer; Antonio Zorzano; Manuel Palacín


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2004

Opposite Smad and Chicken Ovalbumin Upstream Promoter Transcription Factor Inputs in the Regulation of the Collagen VII Gene Promoter by Transforming Growth Factor-β

María Julia Calonge; Joan Seoane; Joan Massagué


Genomics | 1996

Genomic structure and organization of the human rBAT gene (SLC3A1)

Jesús Purroy; Luigi Bisceglia; María Julia Calonge; Leopoldo Zelante; Xavier Testar; Antonio Zorzano; Xavier Estivill; Manuel Palacín; Virginia Nunes; Paolo Gasparini


Pediatric Nephrology | 1996

Assignment of the gene responsible for cystinuria (rBAT) and of markers D2S119 and D2S177 to 2p16 by fluorescence in situ hybridization

María Julia Calonge; Marga Nadal; Savino Calvano; Xavier Testar; Leopoldo Zelante; Antonio Zorzano; Xavier Estivill; Paolo Gasparini; Manuel Palacn; Virginia Nunes

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Leopoldo Zelante

Casa Sollievo della Sofferenza

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Luigi Bisceglia

Casa Sollievo della Sofferenza

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M. Gallucci

University of Barcelona

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