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Dive into the research topics where Samuel Sidi is active.

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Featured researches published by Samuel Sidi.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2008

Vesicular Glutamate Transporter 3 Is Required for Synaptic Transmission in Zebrafish Hair Cells

Nikolaus D. Obholzer; Sean Wolfson; Josef G. Trapani; Weike Mo; Alex Nechiporuk; Elisabeth M. Busch-Nentwich; Christoph Seiler; Samuel Sidi; Christian Söllner; Robert N. Duncan; Andrea Boehland; Teresa Nicolson

Hair cells detect sound and movement and transmit this information via specialized ribbon synapses. Here we report that asteroid, a gene identified in an ethylnitrosourea mutagenesis screen of zebrafish larvae for auditory/vestibular mutants, encodes vesicular glutamate transporter 3 (Vglut3). A splice site mutation in exon 2 of vglut3 results in a severe truncation of the predicted protein product and morpholinos directed against the vglut3 ATG start site or the affected splice junction replicate the asteroid phenotype. In situ hybridization shows that vglut3 is exclusively expressed in hair cells of the ear and lateral line organ. A second transporter gene, vglut1, is also expressed in zebrafish hair cells, but the level of vglut1 mRNA is not increased in the absence of Vglut3. Antibodies against Vglut3 label the basal end of hair cells and labeling is not present in asteroid/vglut3 mutants. Based on the localization of Vglut3 in hair cells, we suspected that the lack of vestibulo-ocular and acoustic startle reflexes in asteroid/vglut3 mutants was attributable to a defect in synaptic transmission in hair cells. In support of this notion, action currents in postsynaptic acousticolateralis neurons are absent in asteroid/vglut3 mutants. At the ultrastructural level, mutant asteroid/vglut3 hair cells show a decrease in the number of ribbon-associated synaptic vesicles, indicating a role for Vglut3 in synaptic vesicle biogenesis and/or tethering to the ribbon body. Lack of postsynaptic action currents in the mutants suggests that the remaining hair-cell synaptic vesicles contain insufficient levels of glutamate for generation of action potentials in first-order neurons.


Neuron | 2003

Local Tissue Interactions across the Dorsal Midline of the Forebrain Establish CNS Laterality

Miguel L. Concha; Claire Russell; Jennifer C. Regan; Marcel Tawk; Samuel Sidi; Darren Gilmour; Marika Kapsimali; Lauro Sumoy; Kim Goldstone; Enrique Amaya; David Kimelman; Teresa Nicolson; Stefan Gründer; Miranda Gomperts; Jonathan D. W. Clarke; Stephen W. Wilson

The mechanisms that establish behavioral, cognitive, and neuroanatomical asymmetries are poorly understood. In this study, we analyze the events that regulate development of asymmetric nuclei in the dorsal forebrain. The unilateral parapineal organ has a bilateral origin, and some parapineal precursors migrate across the midline to form this left-sided nucleus. The parapineal subsequently innervates the left habenula, which derives from ventral epithalamic cells adjacent to the parapineal precursors. Ablation of cells in the left ventral epithalamus can reverse laterality in wild-type embryos and impose the direction of CNS asymmetry in embryos in which laterality is usually randomized. Unilateral modulation of Nodal activity by Lefty1 can also impose the direction of CNS laterality in embryos with bilateral expression of Nodal pathway genes. From these data, we propose that laterality is determined by a competitive interaction between the left and right epithalamus and that Nodal signaling biases the outcome of this competition.


Molecular Cancer | 2009

CHK1 inhibition as a strategy for targeting Fanconi Anemia (FA) DNA repair pathway deficient tumors.

Clark C. Chen; Richard D. Kennedy; Samuel Sidi; A. Thomas Look; Alan D. D'Andrea

BackgroundDNA repair deficient tumor cells have been shown to accumulate high levels of DNA damage. Consequently, these cells become hyper-dependent on DNA damage response pathways, including the CHK1-kinase-mediated response. These observations suggest that DNA repair deficient tumors should exhibit increased sensitivity to CHK1 inhibition. Here we offer experimental evidence in support of this hypothesis.ResultsUsing isogenic pairs of cell lines differing only in the Fanconi Anemia (FA) DNA repair pathway, we showed that FA deficient cell lines were hypersensitive to CHK1 silencing by independent siRNAs as well as CHK1 pharmacologic inhibition by Gö6976 and UCN-01. In parallel, an siRNA screen designed to identify gene silencings synthetically lethal with CHK1 inhibition identified genes required for FA pathway function. To confirm these findings in vivo, we demonstrated that whole zebrafish embryos, depleted for FANCD2 by a morpholino approach, were hypersensitive to Gö6976. Silencing of FA genes led to hyper-activation of CHK1 and vice versa. Furthermore, inactivation of CHK1 in FA deficient cell lines caused increased accumulation of DNA strand and chromosomal breakages. These results suggest that the functions subserved by CHK1 and the FA pathway mutually compensate in maintaining genome integrity. As CHK1 inhibition has been under clinical trial in combination with cisplatin, we showed that the FA specific tumoricidal effect of CHK1 inhibition and cisplatin was synergistic.ConclusionTaken together, these results suggest CHK1 inhibition as a strategy for targeting FA deficient tumors.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2004

gemini Encodes a Zebrafish L-Type Calcium Channel That Localizes at Sensory Hair Cell Ribbon Synapses

Samuel Sidi; Elisabeth M. Busch-Nentwich; Rainer W. Friedrich; Ulrike Schoenberger; Teresa Nicolson

L-type Ca2+ channels (LTCCs) drive the bulk of voltage-gated Ca2+ entry in vertebrate inner ear hair cells (HCs) and are essential for mammalian auditory processing. LTCC currents have been implicated in neurotransmitter release at the HC afferent active zone, the ribbon synapse. It is likely that LTCCs play a direct role in vesicle fusion; however, the subcellular localization of the channels in HCs has not been fully resolved. Via positional cloning, we show that mutations in a zebrafish LTCC encoding gene, cav1.3a, underlie the auditory-vestibular defects of gemini (gem) circler mutants. gem homozygous receptor mutant HCs display normal cell viability, afferent synaptogenesis, and peripheral innervation, yet exhibit strongly reduced extracellular potentials (∼50% of wild-type potentials). Apical FM1-43 uptake, however, is unaffected in gem mutant HCs, suggesting that mechanotransduction channels are functional. Using a Gem-specific antibody, we show that the bulk of Gem/Cav1.3a immunoreactivity in HCs is restricted to basally located focal spots. The number and location of focal spots relative to nerve terminals, and their remarkable ring-shaped structure, which is reminiscent of synaptic dense bodies, are consistent with Gem/Cav1.3a channels clustering at HC ribbon synapses.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2003

Maternal induction of ventral fate by zebrafish radar

Samuel Sidi; Carole Goutel; Nadine Peyriéras; Frédéric M. Rosa

In vertebrate embryos, maternal determinants are thought to preestablish the dorsoventral axis by locally activating zygotic ventral- and dorsal-specifying genes, e.g., genes encoding bone morphogenetic proteins (BMPs) and BMP inhibitors, respectively. Whereas the canonical Wnt/β-catenin pathway fulfills this role dorsally, the existence of a reciprocal maternal ventralizing signal remains hypothetical. Maternal noncanonical Wnt/Ca2+ signaling may promote ventral fates by suppressing Wnt/β-catenin dorsalizing signals; however, whether any maternal determinant is directly required for the activation of zygotic ventral-specifying genes is unknown. Here, we show that such a function is achieved, in part, in the zebrafish embryo by the maternally encoded transforming growth factor β (TGF-β) signaling molecule, Radar. Loss-of-function experiments, together with epistasis analyses, identify maternal Radar as an upstream activator of bmps expression. Maternal induction of bmps by Radar is essential for zebrafish development as its removal results in larval-lethal dorsalized phenotypes. Double-morphant analyses further suggest that Radar functions through the TGF-β receptor Alk8 to initiate the expression of bmp genes. Our results support the existence of a previously uncharacterized maternal ventralizing pathway. They might further indicate that maternal TGF-β/Rdr and Wnt/Ca2+ pathways complementarily specify ventral cell fates, with the former triggering bmps expression and the latter indirectly repressing genes encoding BMP antagonists.


BMC Genomics | 2007

Large-scale mapping of mutations affecting zebrafish development

Robert Geisler; Gerd Jörg Rauch; Silke Geiger-Rudolph; Andrea N. Albrecht; Frauke van Bebber; Andrea Berger; Elisabeth M. Busch-Nentwich; Ralf Dahm; Marcus P.S. Dekens; Christopher M. Dooley; Alexandra F. Elli; Ines Gehring; Horst Geiger; Maria Geisler; Stefanie Glaser; Scott A. Holley; Matthias Huber; Andy Kerr; Anette Kirn; Martina Knirsch; Martina Konantz; Axel M. Küchler; Florian Maderspacher; Stephan C. F. Neuhauss; Teresa Nicolson; Elke A. Ober; Elke Praeg; Russell S. Ray; Brit Rentzsch; Jens M. Rick

BackgroundLarge-scale mutagenesis screens in the zebrafish employing the mutagen ENU have isolated several hundred mutant loci that represent putative developmental control genes. In order to realize the potential of such screens, systematic genetic mapping of the mutations is necessary. Here we report on a large-scale effort to map the mutations generated in mutagenesis screening at the Max Planck Institute for Developmental Biology by genome scanning with microsatellite markers.ResultsWe have selected a set of microsatellite markers and developed methods and scoring criteria suitable for efficient, high-throughput genome scanning. We have used these methods to successfully obtain a rough map position for 319 mutant loci from the Tübingen I mutagenesis screen and subsequent screening of the mutant collection. For 277 of these the corresponding gene is not yet identified. Mapping was successful for 80 % of the tested loci. By comparing 21 mutation and gene positions of cloned mutations we have validated the correctness of our linkage group assignments and estimated the standard error of our map positions to be approximately 6 cM.ConclusionBy obtaining rough map positions for over 300 zebrafish loci with developmental phenotypes, we have generated a dataset that will be useful not only for cloning of the affected genes, but also to suggest allelism of mutations with similar phenotypes that will be identified in future screens. Furthermore this work validates the usefulness of our methodology for rapid, systematic and inexpensive microsatellite mapping of zebrafish mutations.


Cell Cycle | 2017

The nucleolus: A new home for the PIDDosome

Lisa Bouchier-Hayes; Samuel Sidi

Lisa Bouchier-Hayes and Samuel Sidi Department of Pediatrics, Division of Hematology-Oncology, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX, USA; Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX, USA; Department of Medicine, Division of Hematology/Oncology, Tisch Cancer Institute, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY, USA; Department of Developmental and Regenerative Biology and Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY, USA


Molecular and Cellular Oncology | 2017

Direct pro-apoptotic role for NPM1 as a regulator of PIDDosome formation

Samuel Sidi; Lisa Bouchier-Hayes

ABSTRACT Despite being frequently mutated or deregulated in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and many other cancers, the mechanisms by which nucleophosmin (NPM1) regulates oncogenesis remain elusive. We found that NPM1 plays a direct and conserved role in DNA damage-induced assembly of the PIDDosome complex, the activating platform for caspase-2. This function is carried in the nucleolus and is essential for caspase-2-mediated apoptosis in response to a variety of DNA injuries.


Molecular and Cellular Oncology | 2016

A mitosis-sensing caspase activation platform? New insights into the PIDDosome

Richa B. Shah; Ruth Thompson; Samuel Sidi

ABSTRACT In contrast to the apoptosome and death-inducing signaling complex, the PIDDosome remains an orphan caspase activation platform unassigned to a specific apoptotic pathway. We found that DNA damage-induced PIDDosome formation is blocked by the mitotic checkpoint factor BUBR1 (budding uninhibited by benzimidazole-related 1), via a direct interaction that disrupts the PIDDosome core scaffold. This inhibition occurs at the kinetochore, thus physically connecting the mitotic and apoptotic machineries.


Molecular Cancer Therapeutics | 2013

Abstract A11: Synthetic lethal screens in zebrafish

Samuel Sidi

The zebrafish embryo enables high-content screens in the intact, whole vertebrate. The system is particularly amenable to drug screening (up to 96-well format), and the mechanism of action of identified compounds can be readily dissected via morpholino or mRNA microinjections in live embryos (Sidi et al., Cell 133:864-77, 2008). We are exploiting zebrafish lines bearing cancer-relevant mutations (e.g., p53, pten, brca2 mutants) as platforms for synthetic lethal screens, focusing mainly on libraries of kinase inhibitors or FDA-approved compounds. Drugs that selectively induce cell lethality in mutant but not wild-type embryos are rescreened against panels of genetically annotated human cancer cell lines. A key advantage of the whole-embryo approach is the ability to identify those cell- or tissue-types in which the synthetic interaction occurs, thus guiding our human cancer cell-based validation screens. We will discuss the results of our large-scale screens targeted to p53, performed in the presence or absence of ionizing radiation-induced DNA damage. This abstract is also presented as Poster A11. Citation Format: Samuel Sidi. Synthetic lethal screens in zebrafish. [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the AACR Precision Medicine Series: Synthetic Lethal Approaches to Cancer Vulnerabilities; May 17-20, 2013; Bellevue, WA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Mol Cancer Ther 2013;12(5 Suppl):Abstract nr PR07.

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Peter H. Liu

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Richa B. Shah

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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