James Gusella headshot

James Francis Gusella, Ph.D.

Bullard Professor of Neurogenetics in the Department of Genetics, Harvard Medical School
Research Staff, Massachusetts General Hospital

My laboratory is focused on understanding nervous system disease using molecular genetic strategies, beginning with human patients and proceeding through in vitro and modeling studies, with the ultimate goal of improving diagnosis, management and treatment.In any given disorder, the research can usually be divided into four sequential stages:

1. Determination of the chromosomal location of a gene defect, susceptibility gene or genetic modifier, usually based on linkage or association studies with polymorphic genetic markers.
2. Identification of the gene responsible for the phenotypic effect based upon its chromosomal location using a variety of genome analysis strategies.
3. Characterization of the mechanism of action based upon analysis of the allelic versions of the culprit gene in man, and in appropriate in vitro or in vivo model systems, including cultured human cells, genetically engineered mice, and lower organisms such as Drosophila and Dictyostelium.
4. Exploration of the potential for rational therapies, including genetic therapies.

We are currently searching for susceptibility and modifier genes in autism, Parkinson's disease, and Huntington's disease. As part of the Developmental Genome Anatomy Project, we also identify genes at breakpoints of balanced translocations associated with developmental abnormality. Finally we are examining the mechanism of pathogenesis of genetic defects in autism, biotin-responsive basal ganglia disease, Huntington's disease, Parkinson's disease, and neurofibromatosis, and pursuing assays to identify genetic and chemical modifiers, with the ultimate goal of contributing to effective rational therapies.

Expanding the notion of disease in Huntington's disease.
Authors: Authors: Gusella JF, MacDonald ME.
Biol Psychiatry
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Development of a focused oligonucleotide-array comparative genomic hybridization chip for clinical diagnosis of genomic imbalance.
Authors: Authors: Shen Y, Irons M, Miller DT, Cheung SW, Lip V, Sheng X, Tomaszewicz K, Shao H, Fang H, Tang HS, Irons M, Walsh CA, Platt O, Gusella JF, Wu BL.
Clin Chem
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Extensive molecular genetic analysis of the 3p14.3 region in patients with Zimmermann-Laband syndrome.
Authors: Authors: Abo-Dalo B, Kim HG, Roes M, Stefanova M, Higgins A, Shen Y, Mundlos S, Quade BJ, Gusella JF, Kutsche K.
Am J Med Genet A
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Mediator subunit MED28 (Magicin) is a repressor of smooth muscle cell differentiation.
Authors: Authors: Beyer KS, Beauchamp RL, Lee MF, Gusella JF, Näär AM, Ramesh V.
J Biol Chem
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Factors associated with HD CAG repeat instability in Huntington disease.
Authors: Authors: Wheeler VC, Persichetti F, McNeil SM, Mysore JS, Mysore SS, MacDonald ME, Myers RH, Gusella JF, Wexler NS.
J Med Genet
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A humanized IKBKAP transgenic mouse models a tissue-specific human splicing defect.
Authors: Authors: Hims MM, Shetty RS, Pickel J, Mull J, Leyne M, Liu L, Gusella JF, Slaugenhaupt SA.
Genomics
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Is the disruption of an N-myristoyltransferase (NMT2) associated with hypoplastic testes?
Authors: Authors: Quintero-Rivera F, Leach NT, de la Chapelle A, Gusella JF, Morton CC, Harris DJ.
Am J Med Genet A
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Unbiased gene expression analysis implicates the huntingtin polyglutamine tract in extra-mitochondrial energy metabolism.
Authors: Authors: Lee JM, Ivanova EV, Seong IS, Cashorali T, Kohane I, Gusella JF, MacDonald ME.
PLoS Genet
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NFIA haploinsufficiency is associated with a CNS malformation syndrome and urinary tract defects.
Authors: Authors: Lu W, Quintero-Rivera F, Fan Y, Alkuraya FS, Donovan DJ, Xi Q, Turbe-Doan A, Li QG, Campbell CG, Shanske AL, Sherr EH, Ahmad A, Peters R, Rilliet B, Parvex P, Bassuk AG, Harris DJ, Ferguson H, Kelly C, Walsh CA, Gronostajski RM, Devriendt K, Higgins A, Ligon AH, Quade BJ, Morton CC, Gusella JF, Maas RL.
PLoS Genet
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The relationship between CAG repeat length and age of onset differs for Huntington's disease patients with juvenile onset or adult onset.
Authors: Authors: Andresen JM, Gayán J, Djoussé L, Roberts S, Brocklebank D, Cherny SS, Cardon LR, Gusella JF, MacDonald ME, Myers RH, Housman DE, Wexler NS.
Ann Hum Genet
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