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Dive into the research topics where Miriam Rodriguez is active.

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Featured researches published by Miriam Rodriguez.


Trends in Genetics | 2013

Worms under stress: C. elegans stress response and its relevance to complex human disease and aging

Miriam Rodriguez; L. Basten Snoek; Mario de Bono; Jan E. Kammenga

Many organisms have stress response pathways, components of which share homology with players in complex human disease pathways. Research on stress response in the nematode worm Caenorhabditis elegans has provided detailed insights into the genetic and molecular mechanisms underlying complex human diseases. In this review we focus on four different types of environmental stress responses - heat shock, oxidative stress, hypoxia, and osmotic stress - and on how these can be used to study the genetics of complex human diseases. All four types of responses involve the genetic machineries that underlie a number of complex human diseases such as cancer and neurodegenerative diseases, including Alzheimers and Parkinsons. We highlight the types of stress response experiments required to detect the genes and pathways underlying human disease and suggest that studying stress biology in worms can be translated to understanding human disease and provide potential targets for drug discovery.


Experimental Gerontology | 2012

Genetic variation for stress-response hormesis in C. elegans lifespan

Miriam Rodriguez; L. Basten Snoek; Joost A. G. Riksen; R.P.J. Bevers; Jan E. Kammenga

Increased lifespan can be associated with greater resistance to many different stressors, most notably thermal stress. Such hormetic effects have also been found in C. elegans where short-term exposure to heat lengthens the lifespan. Genetic investigations have been carried out using mutation perturbations in a single genotype, the wild type Bristol N2. Yet, induced mutations do not yield insight regarding the natural genetic variation of thermal tolerance and lifespan. We investigated the genetic variation of heat-shock recovery, i.e. hormetic effects on lifespan and associated quantitative trait loci (QTL) in C. elegans. Heat-shock resulted in an 18% lifespan increase in wild type CB4856 whereas N2 did not show a lifespan elongation. Using recombinant inbred lines (RILs) derived from a cross between wild types N2 and CB4856 we found natural variation in stress-response hormesis in lifespan. Approx. 28% of the RILs displayed a hormesis effect in lifespan. We did not find any hormesis effects for total offspring. Across the RILs there was no relation between lifespan and offspring. The ability to recover from heat-shock mapped to a significant QTL on chromosome II which overlapped with a QTL for offspring under heat-shock conditions. The QTL was confirmed by introgressing relatively small CB4856 regions into chromosome II of N2. Our observations show that there is natural variation in hormetic effects on C. elegans lifespan for heat-shock and that this variation is genetically determined.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2012

WormQTL—public archive and analysis web portal for natural variation data in Caenorhabditis spp

L. Basten Snoek; K. Joeri van der Velde; Danny Arends; Yang Li; Antje Beyer; Mark Elvin; Jasmin Fisher; Alex Hajnal; Michael O. Hengartner; Gino Poulin; Miriam Rodriguez; Tobias Schmid; Sabine P. Schrimpf; Feng Xue; Ritsert C. Jansen; Jan E. Kammenga; Morris A. Swertz

Here, we present WormQTL (http://www.wormqtl.org), an easily accessible database enabling search, comparative analysis and meta-analysis of all data on variation in Caenorhabditis spp. Over the past decade, Caenorhabditis elegans has become instrumental for molecular quantitative genetics and the systems biology of natural variation. These efforts have resulted in a valuable amount of phenotypic, high-throughput molecular and genotypic data across different developmental worm stages and environments in hundreds of C. elegans strains. WormQTL provides a workbench of analysis tools for genotype–phenotype linkage and association mapping based on but not limited to R/qtl (http://www.rqtl.org). All data can be uploaded and downloaded using simple delimited text or Excel formats and are accessible via a public web user interface for biologists and R statistic and web service interfaces for bioinformaticians, based on open source MOLGENIS and xQTL workbench software. WormQTL welcomes data submissions from other worm researchers.


G3: Genes, Genomes, Genetics | 2014

Widespread Genomic Incompatibilities in Caenorhabditis elegans

L.B. Snoek; Orbidans He; Stastna Jj; Aartse A; Miriam Rodriguez; Joost A. G. Riksen; Jan E. Kammenga; Simon C. Harvey

In the Bateson-Dobzhansky-Muller (BDM) model of speciation, incompatibilities emerge from the deleterious interactions between alleles that are neutral or advantageous in the original genetic backgrounds, i.e., negative epistatic effects. Within species such interactions are responsible for outbreeding depression and F2 (hybrid) breakdown. We sought to identify BDM incompatibilities in the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans by looking for genomic regions that disrupt egg laying; a complex, highly regulated, and coordinated phenotype. Investigation of introgression lines and recombinant inbred lines derived from the isolates CB4856 and N2 uncovered multiple incompatibility quantitative trait loci (QTL). These QTL produce a synthetic egg-laying defective phenotype not seen in CB4856 and N2 nor in other wild isolates. For two of the QTL regions, results are inconsistent with a model of pairwise interaction between two loci, suggesting that the incompatibilities are a consequence of complex interactions between multiple loci. Analysis of additional life history traits indicates that the QTL regions identified in these screens are associated with effects on other traits such as lifespan and reproduction, suggesting that the incompatibilities are likely to be deleterious. Taken together, these results indicate that numerous BDM incompatibilities that could contribute to reproductive isolation can be detected and mapped within C. elegans.


PLOS ONE | 2013

The Combined Expression Patterns of Ikaros Isoforms Characterize Different Hematological Tumor Subtypes

Carlos A. Orozco; Andrés Acevedo; Lázaro Cortina; Gina Elizabeth Cuéllar; Mónica Duarte; Liliana Martín; Néstor M. Mesa; Javier Muñoz; Carlos A. Portilla; Sandra Quijano; Guillermo Quintero; Miriam Rodriguez; Carlos Eugenio Saavedra; Helena Groot; Maria Mercedes Torres; Valeriano López-Segura

A variety of genetic alterations are considered hallmarks of cancer development and progression. The Ikaros gene family, encoding for key transcription factors in hematopoietic development, provides several examples as genetic defects in these genes are associated with the development of different types of leukemia. However, the complex patterns of expression of isoforms in Ikaros family genes has prevented their use as clinical markers. In this study, we propose the use of the expression profiles of the Ikaros isoforms to classify various hematological tumor diseases. We have standardized a quantitative PCR protocol to estimate the expression levels of the Ikaros gene exons. Our analysis reveals that these levels are associated with specific types of leukemia and we have found differences in the levels of expression relative to five interexonic Ikaros regions for all diseases studied. In conclusion, our method has allowed us to precisely discriminate between B-ALL, CLL and MM cases. Differences between the groups of lymphoid and myeloid pathologies were also identified in the same way.


Biology Open | 2013

Maintenance of muscle myosin levels in adult C. elegans requires both the double bromodomain protein BET-1 and sumoylation.

Kate Fisher; F Gee; S Wang; F Xue; Stefan Knapp; Martin Philpott; Christopher Wells; Miriam Rodriguez; L.B. Snoek; Jan E. Kammenga; Gino Poulin

Summary Attenuation of RAS-mediated signalling is a conserved process essential to control cell proliferation, differentiation, and apoptosis. Cooperative interactions between histone modifications such as acetylation, methylation and sumoylation are crucial for proper attenuation in C. elegans, implying that the proteins recognising these histone modifications could also play an important role in attenuation of RAS-mediated signalling. We sought to systematically identify these proteins and found BET-1. BET-1 is a conserved double bromodomain protein that recognises acetyl-lysines on histone tails and maintains the stable fate of various lineages. Unexpectedly, adults lacking both BET-1 and SUMO-1 are depleted of muscle myosin, an essential component of myofibrils. We also show that this muscle myosin depletion does not occur in all animals at a specific time, but rather that the penetrance of the phenotype increases with age. To gain mechanistic insights into this process, we sought to delay the occurrence of the muscle myosin depletion phenotype and found that it requires caspase activity and MEK-dependent signalling. We also performed transcription profiling on these mutants and found an up-regulation of the FGF receptor, egl-15, a tyrosine kinase receptor acting upstream of MEK. Consistent with a MEK requirement, we could delay the muscle phenotype by systemic or hypodermal knock down of egl-15. Thus, this work uncovered a caspase- and MEK-dependent mechanism that acts specifically on ageing adults to maintain the appropriate net level of muscle myosin.


PLOS ONE | 2017

Temporal dynamics of gene expression in heat-stressed Caenorhabditis elegans

Katharina Jovic; Mark G. Sterken; Jacopo Grilli; R.P.J. Bevers; Miriam Rodriguez; Joost A. G. Riksen; Stefano Allesina; Jan E. Kammenga; L. Basten Snoek

There is considerable insight into pathways and genes associated with heat-stress conditions. Most genes involved in stress response have been identified using mutant screens or gene knockdowns. Yet, there is limited understanding of the temporal dynamics of global gene expression in stressful environments. Here, we studied global gene expression profiles during 12 hours of heat stress in the nematode C. elegans. Using a high-resolution time series of increasing stress exposures, we found a distinct shift in gene expression patterns between 3–4 hours into the stress response, separating an initially highly dynamic phase from a later relatively stagnant phase. This turning point in expression dynamics coincided with a phenotypic turning point, as shown by a strong decrease in movement, survival and, progeny count in the days following the stress. Both detectable at transcriptional and phenotypic level, this study pin-points a relatively small time frame during heat stress at which enough damage is accumulated, making it impossible to recover the next few days.


PLOS ONE | 2017

reGenotyper: Detecting mislabeled samples in genetic data

Konrad Zych; Basten L. Snoek; Mark Elvin; Miriam Rodriguez; K. Joeri van der Velde; Danny Arends; Harm-Jan Westra; Morris A. Swertz; Gino Poulin; Jan E. Kammenga; Rainer Breitling; Ritsert C. Jansen; Yang Li

In high-throughput molecular profiling studies, genotype labels can be wrongly assigned at various experimental steps; the resulting mislabeled samples seriously reduce the power to detect the genetic basis of phenotypic variation. We have developed an approach to detect potential mislabeling, recover the “ideal” genotype and identify “best-matched” labels for mislabeled samples. On average, we identified 4% of samples as mislabeled in eight published datasets, highlighting the necessity of applying a “data cleaning” step before standard data analysis.


bioRxiv | 2017

Ras/MAPK modifier loci revealed by eQTL in C. elegans

Mark G. Sterken; Linda van Bemmelen van der Plaat; Joost A. G. Riksen; Miriam Rodriguez; Tobias Schmid; Alex Hajnal; Jan E. Kammenga; Basten L. Snoek

The oncogenic Ras/MAPK pathway is evolutionarily conserved across metazoans. Yet, almost all our knowledge on this pathway comes from studies using single genetic backgrounds, whereas mutational effects can be highly background dependent. Therefore, we lack insight in the interplay between genetic backgrounds and the Ras/MAPK-signaling pathway. Here, we used a Caenorhabditis elegans RIL population containing a gain-of-function mutation in the Ras/MAPK pathway gene let-60 and measured how gene expression regulation is affected by this mutation. We mapped eQTL and found that the majority (~73%) of the 1516 detected cis-eQTL were not specific for the let-60 mutation, whereas most (~76%) of the 898 detected trans-eQTL were associated with the let-60 mutation. We detected 6 eQTL trans-bands specific for the interaction between the genetic background and the mutation, one of which co-localized with the polymorphic Ras/MAPK modifier amx-2. Comparison between transgenic lines expressing allelic variants of amx-2 showed the involvement of amx-2 in 79% of the trans-eQTL for genes mapping to this trans-band. Together, our results have revealed loci hidden loci affecting Ras/MAPK signaling using sensitized backgrounds in C. elegans. These loci harbor putative polymorphic modifier genes that would not have been detected using mutant screens in single genetic backgrounds.The oncogenic Ras/MAPK pathway is evolutionary conserved across metazoans and is essential for many cellular functions. Mutant screens in the model nematode Caenorhabditis elegans have been invaluable for elucidating Ras/MAPK pathway characteristics and identification of the genes involved. Almost all of these screens have been conducted in a single genetic background. However, phenotypic traits of induced mutations can vary widely depending on the genetic background. At the moment, we lack insight into how different genetic backgrounds modulate Ras/MAPK-signaling and which genetic modifiers are involved. We previously introduced a gain-of-function mutation in the Ras/MAPK pathway gene let-60 in over 200 recombinant inbred lines (mutant introgressed RILs: miRILs) and detected genetic modifiers affecting this pathway by studying variation in vulval development. In the present study, we investigate how gene expression regulation is affected by the let-60 gain-of-function mutation and the genetic background by mapping eQTL using 33 miRILs. We found that the majority (~73%) of the 1516 detected cis-eQTL are not specific for the let-60 mutation, whereas most (~76%) of the 898 detected trans-eQTL are associated with the let-60 mutation. We detected 6 eQTL trans-bands that were specific for the interaction between the genetic background and the mutation. One of these eQTL hotspots co-localizes with the previously identified polymorphic Ras/MAPK modifier amx-2. Comparing gene expression profiles between transgenic lines expressing either the N2 or the CB4856 alleles of amx-2 showed the involvement of amx-2 in 79% of the trans-eQTLs for genes mapping to this trans-band. Together, our results have revealed hidden loci affecting Ras/MAPK signaling using sensitized backgrounds in C. elegans. These loci harbor putative polymorphic modifier genes that would not have been detected using mutant screens in single genetic backgrounds.


G3: Genes, Genomes, Genetics | 2017

Ras/MAPK Modifier Loci Revealed by eQTL in Caenorhabditis elegans

Mark G. Sterken; Linda van Bemmelen van der Plaat; Joost A. G. Riksen; Miriam Rodriguez; Tobias Schmid; Alex Hajnal; Jan E. Kammenga; Basten L. Snoek

The oncogenic Ras/MAPK pathway is evolutionarily conserved across metazoans. Yet, almost all our knowledge on this pathway comes from studies using single genetic backgrounds, whereas mutational effects can be highly background dependent. Therefore, we lack insight in the interplay between genetic backgrounds and the Ras/MAPK-signaling pathway. Here, we used a Caenorhabditis elegans RIL population containing a gain-of-function mutation in the Ras/MAPK-pathway gene let-60 and measured how gene expression regulation is affected by this mutation. We mapped eQTL and found that the majority (∼73%) of the 1516 detected cis-eQTL were not specific for the let-60 mutation, whereas most (∼76%) of the 898 detected trans-eQTL were associated with the let-60 mutation. We detected six eQTL trans-bands specific for the interaction between the genetic background and the mutation, one of which colocalized with the polymorphic Ras/MAPK modifier amx-2. Comparison between transgenic lines expressing allelic variants of amx-2 showed the involvement of amx-2 in 79% of the trans-eQTL for genes mapping to this trans-band. Together, our results have revealed hidden loci affecting Ras/MAPK signaling using sensitized backgrounds in C. elegans. These loci harbor putative polymorphic modifier genes that would not have been detected using mutant screens in single genetic backgrounds.

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Jan E. Kammenga

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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Joost A. G. Riksen

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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L. Basten Snoek

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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Mark G. Sterken

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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Basten L. Snoek

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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R.P.J. Bevers

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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Gino Poulin

University of Manchester

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Danny Arends

University of Groningen

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