James Gusella headshot

James Francis Gusella, Ph.D.

Bullard Professor of Neurogenetics in the Department of Genetics

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.

Brigatinib causes tumor shrinkage in both NF2-deficient meningioma and schwannoma through inhibition of multiple tyrosine kinases but not ALK.
Authors: Authors: Chang LS, Oblinger JL, Smith AE, Ferrer M, Angus SP, Hawley E, Petrilli AM, Beauchamp RL, Riecken LB, Erdin S, Poi M, Huang J, Bessler WK, Zhang X, Guha R, Thomas C, Burns SS, Gilbert TSK, Jiang L, Li X, Lu Q, Yuan J, He Y, Dixon SAH, Masters A, Jones DR, Yates CW, Haggarty SJ, La Rosa S, Welling DB, Stemmer-Rachamimov AO, Plotkin SR, Gusella JF, Guinney J, Morrison H, Ramesh V, Fernandez-Valle C, Johnson GL, Blakeley JO, Clapp DW.
PLoS One
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Huntington's Disease Pathogenesis: Two Sequential Components.
Authors: Authors: Hong EP, MacDonald ME, Wheeler VC, Jones L, Holmans P, Orth M, Monckton DG, Long JD, Kwak S, Gusella JF, Lee JM.
J Huntingtons Dis
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mTOR kinase inhibition disrupts neuregulin 1-ERBB3 autocrine signaling and sensitizes NF2-deficient meningioma cellular models to IGF1R inhibition.
Authors: Authors: Beauchamp RL, Erdin S, Witt L, Jordan JT, Plotkin SR, Gusella JF, Ramesh V.
J Biol Chem
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Promotion of somatic CAG repeat expansion by Fan1 knock-out in Huntington's disease knock-in mice is blocked by Mlh1 knock-out.
Authors: Authors: Loupe JM, Pinto RM, Kim KH, Gillis T, Mysore JS, Andrew MA, Kovalenko M, Murtha R, Seong I, Gusella JF, Kwak S, Howland D, Lee R, Lee JM, Wheeler VC, MacDonald ME.
Hum Mol Genet
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Genetic and Functional Analyses Point to FAN1 as the Source of Multiple Huntington Disease Modifier Effects.
Authors: Authors: Kim KH, Hong EP, Shin JW, Chao MJ, Loupe J, Gillis T, Mysore JS, Holmans P, Jones L, Orth M, Monckton DG, Long JD, Kwak S, Lee R, Gusella JF, MacDonald ME, Lee JM.
Am J Hum Genet
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Transcriptional consequences of MBD5 disruption in mouse brain and CRISPR-derived neurons.
Authors: Authors: Seabra CM, Aneichyk T, Erdin S, Tai DJC, De Esch CEF, Razaz P, An Y, Manavalan P, Ragavendran A, Stortchevoi A, Abad C, Young JI, Maciel P, Talkowski ME, Gusella JF.
Mol Autism
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Genetic Risk Underlying Psychiatric and Cognitive Symptoms in Huntington's Disease.
Authors: Authors: Ellis N, Tee A, McAllister B, Massey T, McLauchlan D, Stone T, Correia K, Loupe J, Kim KH, Barker D, Hong EP, Chao MJ, Long JD, Lucente D, Vonsattel JPG, Pinto RM, Elneel KA, Ramos EM, Mysore JS, Gillis T, Wheeler VC, Medway C, Hall L, Kwak S, Sampaio C, Ciosi M, Maxwell A, Chatzi A, Monckton DG, Orth M, Landwehrmeyer GB, Paulsen JS, Shoulson I, Myers RH, van Duijn E, Rickards H, MacDonald ME, Lee JM, Gusella JF, Jones L, Holmans P.
Biol Psychiatry
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De novo variants in the Helicase-C domain of CHD8 are associated with severe phenotypes including autism, language disability and overgrowth.
Authors: Authors: An Y, Zhang L, Liu W, Jiang Y, Chen X, Lan X, Li G, Hang Q, Wang J, Gusella JF, Du Y, Shen Y.
Hum Genet
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A Balanced Translocation in Kallmann Syndrome Implicates a Long Noncoding RNA, RMST, as a GnRH Neuronal Regulator.
Authors: Authors: Stamou M, Ng SY, Brand H, Wang H, Plummer L, Best L, Havlicek S, Hibberd M, Khor CC, Gusella J, Balasubramanian R, Talkowski M, Stanton LW, Crowley WF.
J Clin Endocrinol Metab
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A rare case of acquired immunodeficiency associated with myelodysplastic syndrome.
Authors: Authors: Li J, Li J, Li J, Yao H, Liu F, Gusella JF, Shi X, Chen X.
Mol Genet Genomic Med
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