Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER

Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER
HomeNewsGraduate’s zebrafish research could unlock 
key to genetic defect in people

Graduate’s zebrafish research could unlock 
key to genetic defect in people

Genetic research by a USC PhD graduate in England has used laboratory modelling in zebrafish to identify a key feature of a rare kidney disease in humans.

USC 2018 graduate Dr Jennie Chandler is a member of the team that conducted the world-first research at the University College London Great Ormond Street Institute of Child Health (ICH), which is the academic research partner of Great Ormond Street Hospital (GOSH).

The study, based on two patient cohorts in the UK and Hungary, also involved Semmelweis University in Budapest.

Its findings were outlined in the 28-year-old’s first postdoctoral paper as joint lead author, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.

Dr Chandler, a molecular biologist who has worked at the ICH in London for three years, was recently awarded funding for a trip to Yale School of Medicine in the US to continue her breakthrough research when COVID-19 travel restrictions are lifted.

The London resident said she was excited about the results, the opportunity to further investigate how and why the defect damaged certain organs, and the potential to find therapies to help families affected by kidney disease in the future.

“We used genetic sequencing to study the patients’ DNA – the unique set of instructions that control how the body grows, works and looks,” Dr Chandler said.

“Key ‘spelling mistakes’ were found in these instructions, in an area of DNA responsible for a process called pseudouridylation. This process is critical for the healthy functioning of cells.

“To learn more, the team developed a laboratory model of the genetic problem, using zebrafish. The fish developed the same kinds of symptoms seen in both patient cohorts, such as kidney failure, cataracts, hearing loss and inflammation of the intestine.

“From this, we were able to demonstrate that disruption of pseudouridylation and its impact on cell functions is a key feature of this new syndrome.”

GOSH consultant paediatric nephrologist Dr Aoife Waters said, “This work provides a great example of how understanding rare genetic mutations from our patients at GOSH can help us understand broader disease mechanisms. It is the first to describe defective pseudouridylation in the context of kidney disease, adding to our understanding of childhood renal failure.”

Dr Chandler won Best Abstract Award out of more than 500 submissions at UK Kidney Week 2019 and was funded by The Genetic Society to present her work in Berlin.

“We selected the zebrafish because it carries a version of the gene that is very similar to that of humans, making it a great model system to study the process of pseudouridylation,” she said.

“It also has a primitive kidney that is similar to the same organ in mammals, so it is a great model organism to study kidney development and damage in the context of human disease.”

Digital Edition
Subscribe

Get an all ACCESS PASS to the News and your Digital Edition with an online subscription

Pedal and pump on local tracks

Rollers, berms and flowing turns are drawing riders back again and again to two popular Sunshine Coast pump tracks. These purpose-built spaces...

Community update

More News

Melbourne Olympics 70 years

Triple gold medallist Dawn Fraser and fellow Olympians from the Sunshine Coast will be among those celebrating the 70th anniversary of the 1956 Melbourne...

Home battery rebate, a game changer

When Andrew and Jenny moved into their new townhouse in Tewantin in late 2025, one of the first things they did was install solar...

Community update

From singing and bush care to service clubs and art, there is a wide variety of groups in Noosa. YANDINA COUNTRY MUSIC ACMA welcomes WOTYAGET as...

A more sustainable Bali

Bali has always been a popular ‘go to’ destination for antipodeans, and more recently the World. Tourists are now travelling far and wide for...

Council to highlight issues at NGA

Noosa Council have submitted six motions, all initiated by Cr Amelia Lorentson, for consideration by the Australian Local Government Association (ALGA) National General Assembly...

$15m Noosaville Bus Depot Opens

A $15 million investment in Noosa’s public transport network is set to bolster bus services across the northern Sunshine Coast, with operator Kinetic officially...

Lachlan’s legacy makes powerful impression

Precede The creation of the Lachlan Hughes Foundation to honour the life of a young farmer is making dramatic changes in the lives of others...

Surfing culture muscles up

To be honest, it doesn’t take that much to get our surfing councillor, Tom Wegener, excited – a one-foot wave at Tea Tree will...

Jazzing it up

Jazz lovers are in for a treat on Friday 27 March as live music comes to the heart of the Noosa in Noosaville with...

Huge drug bust

Police have seized more than $3 million worth of dangerous drugs and charged 25 people following a major trafficking investigation in Gladstone, about four...