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Dive into the research topics where Valerie A. Arboleda is active.

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Featured researches published by Valerie A. Arboleda.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2004

Highly Efficient Small Interfering RNA Delivery to Primary Mammalian Neurons Induces MicroRNA-Like Effects before mRNA Degradation

Thomas J. Davidson; Sivan Harel; Valerie A. Arboleda; Giselle F. Prunell; Michael L. Shelanski; Lloyd A. Greene; Carol M. Troy

The study of protein function in neurons has been hindered by the lack of highly efficient, nontoxic methods of inducing RNA interference in such cells. Here we show that application of synthetic small interfering RNA (siRNA) linked to the vector peptide Penetratin1 results in rapid, highly efficient uptake of siRNA by entire populations of cultured primary mammalian hippocampal and sympathetic neurons. This treatment leads to specific knock-down of targeted proteins within hours without the toxicity associated with transfection. In contrast to current methods, our technique permits study of protein function across entire populations with minimal disturbance of complex cellular networks. Using this technique, we found that protein knock-down (evident after 6 hr) precedes any decrease in targeted message (evident after 24 hr), suggesting an early, translational repression by perfectly targeted siRNAs.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2011

Identification of SOX3 as an XX male sex reversal gene in mice and humans

Edwina Sutton; James N. Hughes; Stefan J. White; Ryohei Sekido; Jacqueline Tan; Valerie A. Arboleda; Nicholas Rogers; Kevin C. Knower; Lynn Rowley; Helen J. Eyre; Karine Rizzoti; Dale McAninch; João Gonçalves; Jennie Slee; Erin Turbitt; Damien Bruno; Henrik Bengtsson; Vincent R. Harley; Eric Vilain; Andrew H. Sinclair; Robin Lovell-Badge; Paul Q. Thomas

Sex in mammals is genetically determined and is defined at the cellular level by sex chromosome complement (XY males and XX females). The Y chromosome-linked gene sex-determining region Y (SRY) is believed to be the master initiator of male sex determination in almost all eutherian and metatherian mammals, functioning to upregulate expression of its direct target gene Sry-related HMG box-containing gene 9 (SOX9). Data suggest that SRY evolved from SOX3, although there is no direct functional evidence to support this hypothesis. Indeed, loss-of-function mutations in SOX3 do not affect sex determination in mice or humans. To further investigate Sox3 function in vivo, we generated transgenic mice overexpressing Sox3. Here, we report that in one of these transgenic lines, Sox3 was ectopically expressed in the bipotential gonad and that this led to frequent complete XX male sex reversal. Further analysis indicated that Sox3 induced testis differentiation in this particular line of mice by upregulating expression of Sox9 via a similar mechanism to Sry. Importantly, we also identified genomic rearrangements within the SOX3 regulatory region in three patients with XX male sex reversal. Together, these data suggest that SOX3 and SRY are functionally interchangeable in sex determination and support the notion that SRY evolved from SOX3 via a regulatory mutation that led to its de novo expression in the early gonad.


Nature Genetics | 2012

Mutations in the PCNA-binding domain of CDKN1C cause IMAGe syndrome

Valerie A. Arboleda; Hane Lee; Rahul Parnaik; Alice Fleming; Abhik Banerjee; Bruno Ferraz-de-Souza; Emmanuèle Délot; Imilce A Rodriguez-Fernandez; Débora Braslavsky; Ignacio Bergadá; Esteban C. Dell'Angelica; Stanley F. Nelson; Julian A. Martinez-Agosto; John C. Achermann; Eric Vilain

IMAGe syndrome (intrauterine growth restriction, metaphyseal dysplasia, adrenal hypoplasia congenita and genital anomalies) is an undergrowth developmental disorder with life-threatening consequences. An identity-by-descent analysis in a family with IMAGe syndrome identified a 17.2-Mb locus on chromosome 11p15 that segregated in the affected family members. Targeted exon array capture of the disease locus, followed by high-throughput genomic sequencing and validation by dideoxy sequencing, identified missense mutations in the imprinted gene CDKN1C (also known as P57KIP2) in two familial and four unrelated patients. A familial analysis showed an imprinted mode of inheritance in which only maternal transmission of the mutation resulted in IMAGe syndrome. CDKN1C inhibits cell-cycle progression, and we found that targeted expression of IMAGe-associated CDKN1C mutations in Drosophila caused severe eye growth defects compared to wild-type CDKN1C, suggesting a gain-of-function mechanism. All IMAGe-associated mutations clustered in the PCNA-binding domain of CDKN1C and resulted in loss of PCNA binding, distinguishing them from the mutations of CDKN1C that cause Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome, an overgrowth syndrome.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2014

Mutant cohesin in premature ovarian failure

Sandrine Caburet; Valerie A. Arboleda; Elena Llano; Paul A. Overbeek; José Luis Barbero; Kazuhiro Oka; Wilbur R. Harrison; Daniel Vaiman; Ziva Ben-Neriah; Ignacio García-Tuñón; Marc Fellous; Alberto M. Pendás; Reiner A. Veitia; Eric Vilain

Premature ovarian failure is a major cause of female infertility. The genetic causes of this disorder remain unknown in most patients. Using whole-exome sequence analysis of a large consanguineous family with inherited premature ovarian failure, we identified a homozygous 1-bp deletion inducing a frameshift mutation in STAG3 on chromosome 7. STAG3 encodes a meiosis-specific subunit of the cohesin ring, which ensures correct sister chromatid cohesion. Female mice devoid of Stag3 are sterile, and their fetal oocytes are arrested at early prophase I, leading to oocyte depletion at 1 week of age.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Copy Number Variation in Patients with Disorders of Sex Development Due to 46,XY Gonadal Dysgenesis

Stefan J. White; Thomas Ohnesorg; Amanda J. Notini; Kelly N. Roeszler; Jacqueline K. Hewitt; Hinda Daggag; Craig A. Smith; Erin Turbitt; Sonja E. Gustin; Jocelyn A. van den Bergen; Denise C. Miles; Patrick S. Western; Valerie A. Arboleda; Valérie Schumacher; Lavinia Gordon; Katrina M. Bell; Henrik Bengtsson; Terence P. Speed; John M. Hutson; Garry L. Warne; Vincent R. Harley; Peter Koopman; Eric Vilain; Andrew H. Sinclair

Disorders of sex development (DSD), ranging in severity from mild genital abnormalities to complete sex reversal, represent a major concern for patients and their families. DSD are often due to disruption of the genetic programs that regulate gonad development. Although some genes have been identified in these developmental pathways, the causative mutations have not been identified in more than 50% 46,XY DSD cases. We used the Affymetrix Genome-Wide Human SNP Array 6.0 to analyse copy number variation in 23 individuals with unexplained 46,XY DSD due to gonadal dysgenesis (GD). Here we describe three discrete changes in copy number that are the likely cause of the GD. Firstly, we identified a large duplication on the X chromosome that included DAX1 (NR0B1). Secondly, we identified a rearrangement that appears to affect a novel gonad-specific regulatory region in a known testis gene, SOX9. Surprisingly this patient lacked any signs of campomelic dysplasia, suggesting that the deletion affected expression of SOX9 only in the gonad. Functional analysis of potential SRY binding sites within this deleted region identified five putative enhancers, suggesting that sequences additional to the known SRY-binding TES enhancer influence human testis-specific SOX9 expression. Thirdly, we identified a small deletion immediately downstream of GATA4, supporting a role for GATA4 in gonad development in humans. These CNV analyses give new insights into the pathways involved in human gonad development and dysfunction, and suggest that rearrangements of non-coding sequences disturbing gene regulation may account for significant proportion of DSD cases.


The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2015

Exome Sequencing for the Diagnosis of 46,XY Disorders of Sex Development

Ruth Baxter; Valerie A. Arboleda; Hane Lee; Hayk Barseghyan; Adam Mp; Patricia Y Fechner; Renee Bargman; Catherine E. Keegan; Sharon Travers; Susan Schelley; Louanne Hudgins; Revi P. Mathew; Heather J. Stalker; Roberto T. Zori; Ora Gordon; Leigh Ramos-Platt; Anna Pawlikowska-Haddal; Ascia Eskin; Stanley F. Nelson; Emmanuèle Délot; Eric Vilain

CONTEXT Disorders of sex development (DSD) are clinical conditions where there is a discrepancy between the chromosomal sex and the phenotypic (gonadal or genital) sex of an individual. Such conditions can be stressful for patients and their families and have historically been difficult to diagnose, especially at the genetic level. In particular, for cases of 46,XY gonadal dysgenesis, once variants in SRY and NR5A1 have been ruled out, there are few other single gene tests available. OBJECTIVE We used exome sequencing followed by analysis with a list of all known human DSD-associated genes to investigate the underlying genetic etiology of 46,XY DSD patients who had not previously received a genetic diagnosis. DESIGN Samples were either submitted to the research laboratory or submitted as clinical samples to the UCLA Clinical Genomic Center. Sequencing data were filtered using a list of genes known to be involved in DSD. RESULTS We were able to identify a likely genetic diagnosis in more than a third of cases, including 22.5% with a pathogenic finding, an additional 12.5% with likely pathogenic findings, and 15% with variants of unknown clinical significance. CONCLUSIONS Early identification of the genetic cause of a DSD will in many cases streamline and direct the clinical management of the patient, with more focused endocrine and imaging studies and better-informed surgical decisions. Exome sequencing proved an efficient method toward such a goal in 46,XY DSD patients.


Clinical Genetics | 2013

Targeted massively parallel sequencing provides comprehensive genetic diagnosis for patients with disorders of sex development

Valerie A. Arboleda; Hane Lee; Fj Sánchez; Emmanuèle Délot; De Sandberg; Wayne W. Grody; Stanley F. Nelson; Eric Vilain

Arboleda VA, Lee H, Sánchez FJ, Délot EC, Sandberg DE, Grody WW, Nelson SF, Vilain E. Targeted massively parallel sequencing provides comprehensive genetic diagnosis for patients with disorders of sex development.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2015

De Novo Nonsense Mutations in KAT6A, a Lysine Acetyl-Transferase Gene, Cause a Syndrome Including Microcephaly and Global Developmental Delay

Valerie A. Arboleda; Hane Lee; Naghmeh Dorrani; Neda Zadeh; Mary Willis; Colleen Forsyth Macmurdo; Melanie A. Manning; Andrea Kwan; Louanne Hudgins; Florian Barthelemy; M. Carrie Miceli; Fabiola Quintero-Rivera; Sibel Kantarci; Samuel P. Strom; Joshua L. Deignan; Wayne W. Grody; Eric Vilain; Stanley F. Nelson

Chromatin remodeling through histone acetyltransferase (HAT) and histone deactylase (HDAC) enzymes affects fundamental cellular processes including the cell-cycle, cell differentiation, metabolism, and apoptosis. Nonsense mutations in genes that are involved in histone acetylation and deacetylation result in multiple congenital anomalies with most individuals displaying significant developmental delay, microcephaly and dysmorphism. Here, we report a syndrome caused by de novo heterozygous nonsense mutations in KAT6A (a.k.a., MOZ, MYST3) identified by clinical exome sequencing (CES) in four independent families. The same de novo nonsense mutation (c.3385C>T [p.Arg1129∗]) was observed in three individuals, and the fourth individual had a nearby de novo nonsense mutation (c.3070C>T [p.Arg1024∗]). Neither of these variants was present in 1,815 in-house exomes or in public databases. Common features among all four probands include primary microcephaly, global developmental delay including profound speech delay, and craniofacial dysmorphism, as well as more varied features such as feeding difficulties, cardiac defects, and ocular anomalies. We further demonstrate that KAT6A mutations result in dysregulation of H3K9 and H3K18 acetylation and altered P53 signaling. Through histone and non-histone acetylation, KAT6A affects multiple cellular processes and illustrates the complex role of acetylation in regulating development and disease.


Nature Reviews Endocrinology | 2014

DSDs: genetics, underlying pathologies and psychosexual differentiation

Valerie A. Arboleda; David E. Sandberg; Eric Vilain

Mammalian sex determination is the unique process whereby a single organ, the bipotential gonad, undergoes a developmental switch that promotes its differentiation into either a testis or an ovary. Disruptions of this complex genetic process during human development can manifest as disorders of sex development (DSDs). Sex development can be divided into two distinct processes: sex determination, in which the bipotential gonads form either testes or ovaries, and sex differentiation, in which the fully formed testes or ovaries secrete local and hormonal factors to drive differentiation of internal and external genitals, as well as extragonadal tissues such as the brain. DSDs can arise from a number of genetic lesions, which manifest as a spectrum of gonadal (gonadal dysgenesis to ovotestis) and genital (mild hypospadias or clitoromegaly to ambiguous genitalia) phenotypes. The physical attributes and medical implications associated with DSDs confront families of affected newborns with decisions, such as gender of rearing or genital surgery, and additional concerns, such as uncertainty over the childs psychosexual development and personal wishes later in life. In this Review, we discuss the underlying genetics of human sex determination and focus on emerging data, genetic classification of DSDs and other considerations that surround gender development and identity in individuals with DSDs.


Current Drug Targets - Cns & Neurological Disorders | 2005

Caspase function in neuronal death: delineation of the role of caspases in ischemia.

Giselle F. Prunell; Valerie A. Arboleda; Carol M. Troy

Cerebral ischemia is one of the major causes of morbidity and mortality in the Western world. Despite extensive research, adequate therapies are still elusive. Neuronal degeneration and death are hallmarks of stroke/ischemia. Understanding how the death machinery executes neuronal death in ischemia will provide therapeutic targets. Key to the death machinery are caspases: the family of cell death proteases. While much data has been published regarding caspase involvement in models of ischemia, the pathways have not been thoroughly defined. The specification of the caspases critical for death has been hampered by the use of non-specific reagents. Thus many conclusions about specificity are unwarranted. In this review we discuss how caspases can be measured and review the existing knowledge of the roles of specific caspases in ischemia. We also discuss approaches to determining the molecules that execute ischemic death.

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Eric Vilain

University of California

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Ascia Eskin

University of California

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Hane Lee

University of California

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Alice Fleming

University of California

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Omai B. Garner

University of California

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