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Cassandra Martinez

Gladstone Institutes

ORCID: 0000-0003-4899-8888

Publishes on Retinal Development and Disorders, Photoreceptor and optogenetics research, Retinal Diseases and Treatments. 27 papers and 176 citations.

27Publications
176Total Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Timed Notch Inhibition Drives Photoreceptor Fate Specification in Human Retinal Organoids
Shereen Chew, Cassandra Martinez, Kathleen R. Chirco et al.|Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science|2022
Cited by 19Open Access

Purpose: Transplanting photoreceptors from human pluripotent stem cell-derived retinal organoids have the potential to reverse vision loss in affected individuals. However, transplantable photoreceptors are only a subset of all cells in the organoids. Hence, the goal of our current study was to accelerate and synchronize photoreceptor differentiation in retinal organoids by inhibiting the Notch signaling pathway at different developmental time-points using a small molecule, PF-03084014 (PF). Methods: Human induced pluripotent stem cell- and human embryonic stem cells-derived retinal organoids were treated with 10 µM PF for 3 days starting at day 45 (D45), D60, D90, and D120 of differentiation. Organoids were collected at post-treatment days 14, 28, and 42 and analyzed for progenitor and photoreceptor markers and Notch pathway inhibition by immunohistochemistry (IHC), quantitative PCR, and bulk RNA sequencing (n = 3-5 organoids from three independent experiments). Results: Retinal organoids collected after treatment showed a decrease in progenitor markers (KI67, VSX2, PAX6, and LHX2) and an increase in differentiated pan-photoreceptor markers (OTX2, CRX, and RCVRN) at all organoid stages except D120. PF-treated organoids at D45 and D60 exhibited an increase in cone photoreceptor markers (RXRG and ARR3). PF treatment at D90 revealed an increase in cone and rod photoreceptors markers (ARR3, NRL, and NR2E3). Bulk RNA sequencing analysis mirrored the immunohistochemistry data and quantitative PCR confirmed Notch effector inhibition. Conclusions: Timing the Notch pathway inhibition in human retinal organoids to align with progenitor competency stages can yield an enriched population of early cone or rod photoreceptors.

Human iPSC-derived photoreceptor transplantation in the cone dominant 13-lined ground squirrel
Ching Tzu Yu, Sangeetha Kandoi, Ramesh Periasamy et al.|Stem Cell Reports|2024
Cited by 17Open Access

Several retinal degenerations affect the human central retina, which is primarily comprised of cones and is essential for high acuity and color vision. Transplanting cone photoreceptors is a promising strategy to replace degenerated cones in this region. Although this approach has been investigated in a handful of animal models, commonly used rodent models lack a cone-rich region and larger models can be expensive and inaccessible, impeding the translation of therapies. Here, we transplanted dissociated GFP-expressing photoreceptors from retinal organoids differentiated from human induced pluripotent stem cells into the subretinal space of damaged and undamaged cone-dominant 13-lined ground squirrel eyes. Transplanted cell survival was documented via noninvasive high-resolution imaging and immunohistochemistry to confirm the presence of human donor photoreceptors for up to 4 months posttransplantation. These results demonstrate the utility of a cone-dominant rodent model for advancing the clinical translation of cell replacement therapies.

Characterization of Retinal Development in 13-Lined Ground Squirrels
Sangeetha Kandoi, Cassandra Martinez, Dana K. Merriman et al.|Translational Vision Science & Technology|2022
Cited by 14Open Access

Purpose: The cone-dominant, 13-lined ground squirrel (13-LGS) retina mimics the human central retina, but a thorough examination of retinal development in this species has not been reported. Here, the embryonic and postnatal development of the 13-LGS retina was studied to further characterize 13-LGS as a practical alternative animal model for investigating cone-based vision in health and disease. Methods: The spatiotemporal expression of key progenitor and cell type markers was examined in retinas from defined embryonic and postnatal stages using immunohistochemistry. Postnatal gene expression changes were validated by quantitative PCR. Results: The 13-LGS neuroblastic layer expressed key progenitor markers (Sox2, Vsx2, Pax6, and Lhx2) at E18. Sequential cell fate determination evidenced by the first appearance of cell-type-specific marker labeling was at embryonic stage 18 (E18) with ganglion cells (Brn-3A, HuC/D) and microglia (Iba1); at E22.5 with photoreceptor progenitors (Otx2, recoverin) followed shortly by horizontal and amacrine cells (Lhx1, Oc1) at E24 to E25.5; and at postnatal stage 15 (P15) with bipolar cells (Vsx1, CaBP5) and Müller glia cells (GS, Rlbp1). Photoreceptor maturation indicated by opsin-positive outer segments and peanut agglutinin (PNA) labeling of cone sheaths was completed at the time of eye opening (P21-P24). Conclusions: The timeline and order of retinal cell development in the 13-LGS generally matches that recorded from other mammalian models but with a stark variation in the proportion of various cell types due to cone-dense photoreceptors. Translational Relevance: This thorough examination of an emerging translationally relevant cone-dominant specie provides a baseline for future disease modeling and stem cell approach studies of human vision.

Disease modeling and pharmacological rescue of autosomal dominant retinitis pigmentosa associated with RHO copy number variation
Cited by 11Open Access

Retinitis pigmentosa (RP), a heterogenous group of inherited retinal disorder, causes slow progressive vision loss with no effective treatments available. Mutations in the rhodopsin gene ( RHO ) account for ~25% cases of autosomal dominant RP (adRP). In this study, we describe the disease characteristics of the first-ever reported mono-allelic copy number variation (CNV) in RHO as a novel cause of adRP. We (a) show advanced retinal degeneration in a male patient (68 years of age) harboring four transcriptionally active intact copies of rhodopsin, (b) recapitulated the clinical phenotypes using retinal organoids, and (c) assessed the utilization of a small molecule, Photoregulin3 (PR3), as a clinically viable strategy to target and modify disease progression in RP patients associated with RHO -CNV. Patient retinal organoids showed photoreceptors dysgenesis, with rod photoreceptors displaying stunted outer segments with occasional elongated cilia-like projections (microscopy); increased RHO mRNA expression (quantitative real-time PCR [qRT-PCR] and bulk RNA sequencing); and elevated levels and mislocalization of rhodopsin protein (RHO) within the cell body of rod photoreceptors (western blotting and immunohistochemistry) over the extended (300 days) culture time period when compared against control organoids. Lastly, we utilized PR3 to target NR2E3 , an upstream regulator of RHO , to alter RHO expression and observed a partial rescue of RHO protein localization from the cell body to the inner/outer segments of rod photoreceptors in patient organoids. These results provide a proof-of-principle for personalized medicine and suggest that RHO expression requires precise control. Taken together, this study supports the clinical data indicating that RHO-CNV associated adRPdevelops as a result of protein overexpression, thereby overloading the photoreceptor post-translational modification machinery.