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Dive into the research topics where Stephen Tonna is active.

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Featured researches published by Stephen Tonna.


Nature Genetics | 2010

Mutations in the formin gene INF2 cause focal segmental glomerulosclerosis

Elizabeth J. Brown; Johannes Schlöndorff; Daniel J. Becker; Hiroyasu Tsukaguchi; Stephen Tonna; Andrea L Uscinski; Henry N. Higgs; Joel Henderson; Martin R. Pollak

Focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS) is a pattern of kidney injury observed either as an idiopathic finding or as a consequence of underlying systemic conditions. Several genes have been identified that, when mutated, lead to inherited FSGS and/or the related nephrotic syndrome. These findings have accelerated the understanding of glomerular podocyte function and disease, motivating our search for additional FSGS genes. Using linkage analysis, we identified a locus for autosomal-dominant FSGS susceptibility on a region of chromosome 14q. By sequencing multiple genes in this region, we detected nine independent nonconservative missense mutations in INF2, which encodes a member of the formin family of actin-regulating proteins. These mutations, all within the diaphanous inhibitory domain of INF2, segregate with FSGS in 11 unrelated families and alter highly conserved amino acid residues. The observation that alterations in this podocyte-expressed formin cause FSGS emphasizes the importance of fine regulation of actin polymerization in podocyte function.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

Promoter polymorphism of the erythropoietin gene in severe diabetic eye and kidney complications

Zongzhong Tong; Zhenglin Yang; Shrena Patel; Haoyu Chen; Daniel Gibbs; Xian Yang; Vincent S. Hau; Yuuki Kaminoh; Jennifer Harmon; Erik G. Pearson; Jeanette Buehler; Yuhong Chen; Baifeng Yu; Nicholas H. Tinkham; Norman A. Zabriskie; Jiexi Zeng; Ling Luo; Jennifer K. Sun; Manvi Prakash; Rola N. Hamam; Stephen Tonna; Ryan Constantine; Cecinio Ronquillo; Srinivas R. Sadda; Robert L. Avery; John M. Brand; Nyall R. London; Alfred L. Anduze; George L. King; Paul S. Bernstein

Significant morbidity and mortality among patients with diabetes mellitus result largely from a greatly increased incidence of microvascular complications. Proliferative diabetic retinopathy (PDR) and end stage renal disease (ESRD) are two of the most common and severe microvascular complications of diabetes. A high concordance exists in the development of PDR and ESRD in diabetic patients, as well as strong familial aggregation of these complications, suggesting a common underlying genetic mechanism. However, the precise gene(s) and genetic variant(s) involved remain largely unknown. Erythropoietin (EPO) is a potent angiogenic factor observed in the diabetic human and mouse eye. By a combination of case–control association and functional studies, we demonstrate that the T allele of SNP rs1617640 in the promoter of the EPO gene is significantly associated with PDR and ESRD in three European-American cohorts [Utah: P = 1.91 × 10−3; Genetics of Kidneys in Diabetes (GoKinD) Study: P = 2.66 × 10−8; and Boston: P = 2.1 × 10−2]. The EPO concentration in human vitreous body was 7.5-fold higher in normal subjects with the TT risk genotype than in those with the GG genotype. Computational analysis suggests that the risk allele (T) of rs1617640 creates a matrix match with the EVI1/MEL1 or AP1 binding site, accounting for an observed 25-fold enhancement of luciferase reporter expression as compared with the G allele. These results suggest that rs1617640 in the EPO promoter is significantly associated with PDR and ESRD. This study identifies a disease risk-associated gene and potential pathway mediating severe diabetic microvascular complications.


Kidney International | 2010

A risk allele for focal segmental glomerulosclerosis in African Americans is located within a region containing APOL1 and MYH9

Giulio Genovese; Stephen Tonna; Andrea L. Uscinski Knob; Gerald B. Appel; Avi Katz; Andrea J. Bernhardy; Alexander Needham; Ross Lazarus; Martin R. Pollak

Genetic variation at the MYH9 locus is linked to the high incidence of focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS) and non-diabetic end-stage renal disease among African Americans. To further define risk alleles with FSGS we performed a genome-wide association analysis using more than one million single-nucleotide polymorphisms in 56 African-American and 61 European-American patients with biopsy-confirmed FSGS. Results were compared to 1641 European Americans and 1800 African Americans as unselected controls. While no association was observed in the cohort of European Americans, the case-control comparison of African Americans found variants within a 60 kb region of chromosome 22 containing part of the APOL1 and MYH9 genes associated with increased risk of FSGS. This region spans different linkage disequilibrium blocks, and variants associating with disease within this region are in linkage disequilibrium with variants which have shown signals of natural selection. APOL1 is a strong candidate for a gene that has undergone recent natural selection and is known to be involved in the infection by Trypanosoma brucei, a parasite common in Africa that has recently adapted to infect human hosts. Further studies will be required to establish which variants are causally related to kidney disease, what mutations caused the selective sweep, and to ultimately determine if these are the same.


Journal of Bone and Mineral Research | 2013

EphrinB2/EphB4 inhibition in the osteoblast lineage modifies the anabolic response to parathyroid hormone.

Farzin M. Takyar; Stephen Tonna; Patricia W. M. Ho; Blessing Crimeen-Irwin; Emma K. Baker; T. John Martin; Natalie A. Sims

Previous reports indicate that ephrinB2 expression by osteoblasts is stimulated by parathyroid hormone (PTH) and its related protein (PTHrP) and that ephrinB2/EphB4 signaling between osteoblasts and osteoclasts stimulates osteoblast differentiation while inhibiting osteoclast differentiation. To determine the role of the ephrinB2/EphB4 interaction in the skeleton, we used a specific inhibitor, soluble EphB4 (sEphB4), in vitro and in vivo. sEphB4 treatment of cultured osteoblasts specifically inhibited EphB4 and ephrinB2 phosphorylation and reduced mRNA levels of late markers of osteoblast/osteocyte differentiation (osteocalcin, dentin matrix protein‐1 [DMP‐1], sclerostin, matrix‐extracellular phosphoglycoprotein [MEPE]), while substantially increasing RANKL. sEphB4 treatment in vivo in the presence and absence of PTH increased osteoblast formation and mRNA levels of early osteoblast markers (Runx2, alkaline phosphatase, Collagen 1α1, and PTH receptor [PTHR1]), but despite a substantial increase in osteoblast numbers, there was no significant change in bone formation rate or in late markers of osteoblast/osteocyte differentiation. Rather, in the presence of PTH, sEphB4 treatment significantly increased osteoclast formation, an effect that prevented the anabolic effect of PTH, causing instead a decrease in trabecular number. This enhancement of osteoclastogenesis by sEphB4 was reproduced in vitro but only in the presence of osteoblasts. These data indicate that ephrinB2/EphB4 signaling within the osteoblast lineage is required for late stages of osteoblast differentiation and, further, restricts the ability of osteoblasts to support osteoclast formation, at least in part by limiting RANKL production. This indicates a key role for the ephrinB2/EphB4 interaction within the osteoblast lineage in osteoblast differentiation and support of osteoclastogenesis.


The FASEB Journal | 2014

EphrinB2 signaling in osteoblasts promotes bone mineralization by preventing apoptosis

Stephen Tonna; Farzin M. Takyar; Christina Vrahnas; Blessing Crimeen-Irwin; Patricia W. M. Ho; Ingrid J. Poulton; Holly J. Brennan; Narelle E. McGregor; Elizabeth H. Allan; Huynh Nguyen; Mark R. Forwood; Liliana Tatarczuch; Eleanor J. Mackie; T. John Martin; Natalie A. Sims

Cells that form bone (osteoblasts) express both ephrinB2 and EphB4, and previous work has shown that pharmacological inhibition of the eph‐rinB2/EphB4 interaction impairs osteoblast differentiation in vitro and in vivo. The purpose of this study was to determine the role of ephrinB2 signaling in the osteoblast lineage in the process of bone formation. Cultured osteoblasts from mice with osteoblast‐specific ablation of ephrinB2 showed delayed expression of osteoblast differentiation markers, a finding that was reproduced by ephrinB2, but not EphB4, RNA interference. Microcomputed tomography, histomorphometry, and mechanical testing of the mice lacking ephrinB2 in osteoblasts revealed a 2‐fold delay in bone mineralization, a significant reduction in bone stiffness, and a 50% reduction in osteoblast differentiation induced by anabolic parathyroid hormone (PTH) treatment, compared to littermate sex‐ and age‐matched controls. These defects were associated with significantly lower mRNA levels of late osteoblast differentiation markers and greater levels of osteoblast and osteocyte apoptosis, indicated by TUNEL staining and transmission electron microscopy of bone samples, and a 2‐fold increase in annexin V staining and 7‐fold increase in caspase 8 activation in cultured ephrinB2 deficient osteoblasts. We conclude that osteoblast differentiation and bone strength are maintained by antiapoptotic actions of ephrinB2 signaling within the osteoblast lineage.—Tonna, S., Takyar, F. M., Vrahnas, C., Crimeen‐Irwin, B., Ho, P. W. M., Poulton, I. J., Brennan, H. J., McGregor, N. E., Allan, E. H., Nguyen, H., Forwood, M. R., Tatarczuch, L., Mackie, E. J., Martin, T. J., Sims, N. A., EphrinB2 signaling in osteoblasts promotes bone mineralization by preventing apoptosis. FASEB J. 28, 4482–4496 (2014). www.fasebj.org


Pediatric Nephrology | 2007

Nine novel COL4A3 and COL4A4 mutations and polymorphisms identified in inherited membrane diseases

Kesha Rana; Stephen Tonna; Yan Yan Wang; Lydia Sin; Tina Lin; Elizabeth Shaw; Ishanee Mookerjee; Judy Savige

Both thin basement membrane nephropathy (TBMN) and autosomal recessive Alport syndrome result from mutations in the COL4A3 and COL4A4 genes, and this study documents further mutations and polymorphisms in these genes.Thirteen unrelated children with TBMN and five individuals with autosomal recessive Alport syndrome were examined for mutations in the 52 exons of COL4A3 and the 47 coding exons of COL4A4 using single-stranded conformation polymorphism (SSCP) analysis. Amplicons producing different electrophoretic patterns were sequenced, and mutations were defined as variants that changed an amino acid but were not present in 50 non-hematuric normals.Three further novel mutations were identified. These were IVS 22-5 T>A in the COL4A3 gene in a consanguineous family with autosomal recessive Alport syndrome, and R1677C and R1682Q in the COL4A4 gene. In addition, six novel polymorphisms (G455G, I462I, G736G and IVS 38-8 G>A in COL4A3, and L658L and A1577A in COL4A4) were demonstrated.Many different COL4A3 and COL4A4 mutations cause TBMN and autosomal recessive Alport syndrome. The identification of polymorphisms in these genes is particularly important to enable diagnostic laboratories to distinguish mutations from uncommon normal variants.


Calcified Tissue International | 2014

Talking among Ourselves: Paracrine Control of Bone Formation within the Osteoblast Lineage

Stephen Tonna; Natalie A. Sims

While much research focuses on the range of signals detected by the osteoblast lineage that originate from endocrine influences, or from other cells within the body, there are also multiple interactions that occur within this family of cells. Osteoblasts exist as teams and form extensive communication networks both on, and within, the bone matrix. We provide four snapshots of communication pathways that exist within the osteoblast lineage between different stages of their differentiation, as follows: (1) PTHrP, a factor produced by early osteoblasts that stimulates the activity of more mature bone-forming cells and the most mature osteoblast embedded within the bone matrix, the osteocyte; (2) sclerostin, a secreted factor, released by osteocytes into their extensive communication network to restrict the activity of younger osteoblasts on the bone surface; (3) oncostatin M, a member of the IL-6/gp130 family of cytokines, expressed throughout osteoblast differentiation and acting to stimulate osteoblast activity that works on a different receptor in the mature osteocyte compared to the preosteoblast; and (4) Eph/ephrins, cell-contact-dependent kinases, and the osteoblast-lineage-specific interaction of EphB4 and ephrinB2, which provides a checkpoint for entry to the late stages of osteoblast differentiation and restricts RANKL expression.


Gene | 2008

Functional genetic variation in aminopeptidase A (ENPEP): Lack of clear association with focal and segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS)

Stephen Tonna; Savita V. Dandapani; Andrea L Uscinski; Gerald B. Appel; Johannes Schlöndorff; Kang Zhang; Bradley M. Denker; Martin R. Pollak

The aminopeptidase A (APA) ectopeptidase is an integral membrane-bound zinc metalloprotease that cleaves aspartic and glutamic acidic residues from the N-terminus of a number of protein substrates that includes angiotensin II. Angiotensin II, the most vasoactive component of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone (RAAS) pathway, can contribute to renal disease by causing an increase in arterial blood pressure leading to glomerular injury and fibrosis. APA is expressed in many organs, including the kidney where it localizes mainly to the podocyte cell membrane and brush borders of the proximal tubule cells. Antibodies directed to the APA peptide can induce an acute massive albuminuria in wild-type BALB/c mice after intravenous injection. We examined whether variants in the APA encoding gene (ENPEP) are more frequent in individuals with the proteinuric disease focal and segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS) compared to control individuals. The ENPEP coding sequence was re-sequenced in 188 FSGS patients and 48 controls. Genetic variants were further genotyped in 181 individuals without any known kidney disease. We then examined the effect of the non-synonymous coding variants identified on their cell surface APA activity after transfection in COS-1 cells. Several of these ENPEP variants lead to reproducibly altered APA activity. However, we did not see a clear correlation between the presence of a functional ENPEP variant and FSGS. However, the existence of these variants with marked effect on APA activity suggests that both rare and common variation in ENPEP may contribute to the development of renal and hypertensive disorders and warrants further study.


Development | 2016

Chondrocytic ephrin B2 promotes cartilage destruction by osteoclasts in endochondral ossification

Stephen Tonna; Ingrid J. Poulton; Farzin Taykar; Patricia W. M. Ho; Brett A. Tonkin; Blessing Crimeen-Irwin; Liliana Tatarczuch; Narelle E. McGregor; Eleanor J. Mackie; T. John Martin; Natalie A. Sims

The majority of the skeleton arises by endochondral ossification, whereby cartilaginous templates expand and are resorbed by osteoclasts then replaced by osteoblastic bone formation. Ephrin B2 is a receptor tyrosine kinase expressed by osteoblasts and growth plate chondrocytes that promotes osteoblast differentiation and inhibits osteoclast formation. We investigated the role of ephrin B2 in endochondral ossification using Osx1Cre-targeted gene deletion. Neonatal Osx1Cre.Efnb2Δ/Δ mice exhibited a transient osteopetrosis demonstrated by increased trabecular bone volume with a high content of growth plate cartilage remnants and increased cortical thickness, but normal osteoclast numbers within the primary spongiosa. Osteoclasts at the growth plate had an abnormal morphology and expressed low levels of tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase; this was not observed in more mature bone. Electron microscopy revealed a lack of sealing zones and poor attachment of Osx1Cre.Efnb2Δ/Δ osteoclasts to growth plate cartilage. Osteoblasts at the growth plate were also poorly attached and impaired in their ability to deposit osteoid. By 6 months of age, trabecular bone mass, osteoclast morphology and osteoid deposition by Osx1Cre.Efnb2Δ/Δ osteoblasts were normal. Cultured chondrocytes from Osx1Cre.Efnb2Δ/Δ neonates showed impaired support of osteoclastogenesis but no significant change in Rankl (Tnfsf11) levels, whereas Adamts4 levels were significantly reduced. A population of ADAMTS4+ early hypertrophic chondrocytes seen in controls was absent from Osx1Cre.Efnb2Δ/Δ neonates. This suggests that Osx1Cre-expressing cells, including hypertrophic chondrocytes, are dependent on ephrin B2 for their production of cartilage-degrading enzymes, including ADAMTS4, and this might be required for attachment of osteoclasts and osteoblasts to the cartilage surface during endochondral ossification. Summary: During bone formation in neonatal mice, chondrocytic expression of the receptor tyrosine kinase Ephrin B2 regulates cartilage degradation and subsequent osteoclastic destruction of the cartilage matrix.


Pediatric Nephrology | 2007

Do mutations in COL4A1 or COL4A2 cause thin basement membrane nephropathy (TBMN)

Ke Wei Zhang; Stephen Tonna; Yan Yan Wang; Kesha Rana; Smitha Padavarat; Judy Savige

Thin basement membrane nephropathy (TBMN) is the commonest cause of persistent glomerular haematuria and often presents in childhood. Only 40% of affected individuals have mutations identified in the COL4A3 and COL4A4 genes, but mutations in the genes for other COL4A isoforms also result in thinned membranes in humans (COL4A5) and mice (COL4A1). This study examined whether COL4A1/COL4A2 represented a further genetic locus for TBMN. Nine families with TBMN in whom haematuria did not segregate with COL4A3/COL4A4, were examined for linkage to COL4A1/COL4A2 using five micro-satellite markers. In addition, index cases from these families plus a further 14 unrelated individuals with TBMN that was not due to COL4A3 or COL4A4 mutations (n=23) were screened for mutations in each of the 52 exons of COL4A1 and the 47 exons of COL4A2 using single stranded conformational analysis (SSCA). DNA samples that demonstrated bandshifts were sequenced. Haplotype analysis demonstrated that haematuria segregated with the COL4A1/COL4A2 locus in only two small families (2/9, 22%). No definite COL4A1 or COL4A2 mutations were identified in the 23 unrelated individuals with TBMN although novel polymorphisms were demonstrated. This study indicates that COL4A1/COL4A2 does not represent a further major genetic locus for TBMN.

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Judy Savige

University of Melbourne

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Yan Yan Wang

University of Melbourne

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Kesha Rana

University of Melbourne

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Natalie A. Sims

St. Vincent's Institute of Medical Research

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Blessing Crimeen-Irwin

St. Vincent's Institute of Medical Research

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Patricia W. M. Ho

St. Vincent's Institute of Medical Research

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T. John Martin

St. Vincent's Institute of Medical Research

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Martin R. Pollak

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Ingrid J. Poulton

St. Vincent's Institute of Medical Research

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