BioInfoBank Library


 
author name recommending commenting favorite    papers recom. cited
0 0 0 38 0 1915 [Update]
0 0 0 19 0 1419 [Update]
0 0 0 37 0 2490 [Update]
0 0 0 1 0 42 [Update]

Latest Paper:

go to Publishergo to Pubmedgo to Scholargo to Googleshow EndNote Citationshow BibTex Citation
Department of Molecular and Cell Biology, Helen Wills Neuroscience Institute & Functional Genomics Laboratory, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720-3200, USA.
The olfactory epithelium is a sensory neuroepithelium that supports adult neurogenesis and tissue regeneration following injury, making it an excellent model for investigating neural stem cell regulation in vivo. Previous studies have identified the horizontal basal cell (HBC) as the neural stem cell of the postnatal olfactory epithelium. However, the molecules and pathways regulating HBC self-renewal and differentiation are unknown. In the present study, we demonstrate that the transcription factor p63, a member of the p53 tumor suppressor gene family known to regulate stem cell dynamics in other epithelia, is highly enriched in HBCs. We show that p63 is required cell autonomously for olfactory stem cell renewal and further demonstrate that p63 functions to repress HBC differentiation. These results provide critical insight into the genetic regulation of the olfactory stem cell in vivo and more generally provide an entrée toward understanding the coordination of stem cell self-renewal and differentiation.
go to Publishergo to Pubmedgo to Scholargo to Googleshow EndNote Citationshow BibTex Citation
1 University of California - San Diego;
The Murphy Roths Large (MRL) mouse, a strain capable of regenerating right ventricular myocardium, has a high post-myocardial infarction (MI) survival rate compared with C57BL/6J (C57) mice. The biological processes responsible for this survival advantage are unknown. To assess the effect of genetic background, the LG/J strain, which harbors 75% of the MRL composite genome, was included in the study. The MRL survival advantage versus C57 mice (92% vs. 68%, P < 0.05) occurred primarily in the first 5 days; LG/J survival was intermediate (P = NS). Microarray data analysis revealed an attenuation of apoptotic (P < 0.05) and stress response transcripts in MRL hearts compared with C57 hearts after MI. Supporting the microarray results, there were fewer TUNEL-positive cells 1 day post-MI in MRL infarcts compared with C57 infarcts (P = 0.001) and fewer CD45-positive cells in the MRL infarct border zone 2 days post-MI (P < 0.01). LG/J results were intermediate (P = NS). MRL hearts had smaller infarct scars and attenuated ventricular dilation 30 days post-MI compared with C57 hearts (P < 0.05). We conclude that the early post-MI survival advantage of MRL mice over the C57 strain is mediated at least in part by reductions in apoptosis and inflammatory infiltration, and that these reductions may influence chronic remodeling. The intermediate survival, apoptosis and inflammation profile of LG/J mice suggests this high tolerance for MI in the MRL could be derived from its shared genetic background with the LG/J.
go to Publishergo to Pubmedgo to Scholargo to Googleshow EndNote Citationshow BibTex Citation
Department of Neurology, Ernest Gallo Clinic and Research Center, University of California San Francisco, Emeryville, California, United States of America.
Anaplastic lymphoma kinase (Alk) is a gene expressed in the nervous system that encodes a receptor tyrosine kinase commonly known for its oncogenic function in various human cancers. We have determined that Alk is associated with altered behavioral responses to ethanol in the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster, in mice, and in humans. Mutant flies containing transposon insertions in dAlk demonstrate increased resistance to the sedating effect of ethanol. Database analyses revealed that Alk expression levels in the brains of recombinant inbred mice are negatively correlated with ethanol-induced ataxia and ethanol consumption. We therefore tested Alk gene knockout mice and found that they sedate longer in response to high doses of ethanol and consume more ethanol than wild-type mice. Finally, sequencing of human ALK led to the discovery of four polymorphisms associated with a low level of response to ethanol, an intermediate phenotype that is predictive of future alcohol use disorders (AUDs). These results suggest that Alk plays an evolutionary conserved role in ethanol-related behaviors. Moreover, ALK may be a novel candidate gene conferring risk for AUDs as well as a potential target for pharmacological intervention.
go to Publishergo to Pubmedgo to Scholargo to Googleshow EndNote Citationshow BibTex Citation
Gladstone Institute of Cardiovascular Disease, San Francisco, CA 94158, USA.
Two major goals of regenerative medicine are to reproducibly transform adult somatic cells into a pluripotent state and to control their differentiation into specific cell fates. Progress toward these goals would be greatly helped by obtaining a complete picture of the RNA isoforms produced by these cells due to alternative splicing (AS) and alternative promoter selection (APS). To investigate the roles of AS and APS, reciprocal exon-exon junctions were interrogated on a genome-wide scale in differentiating mouse embryonic stem (ES) cells with a prototype Affymetrix microarray. Using a recently released open-source software package named AltAnalyze, we identified 144 genes for 170 putative isoform variants, the majority (67%) of which were predicted to alter protein sequence and domain composition. Verified alternative exons were largely associated with pathways of Wnt signaling and cell-cycle control, and most were conserved between mouse and human. To examine the functional impact of AS, we characterized isoforms for two genes. As predicted by AltAnalyze, we found that alternative isoforms of the gene Serca2 were targeted by distinct microRNAs (miRNA-200b, miRNA-214), suggesting a critical role for AS in cardiac development. Analysis of the Wnt transcription factor Tcf3, using selective knockdown of an ES cell-enriched and characterized isoform, revealed several distinct targets for transcriptional repression (Stmn2, Ccnd2, Atf3, Klf4, Nodal, and Jun) as well as distinct differentiation outcomes in ES cells. The findings herein illustrate a critical role for AS in the specification of ES cells with differentiation, and highlight the utility of global functional analyses of AS.
go to Publishergo to Pubmedgo to Scholargo to Googleshow EndNote Citationshow BibTex Citation
From the Ernest Gallo Clinic and Research Center (ECK, LA, PAC, MSM, UH, FWW), Emeryville, California; Functional Genomics Laboratory (KV), University of California, Berkeley, California; Department of Anatomy, and Program in Neuroscience (UH), University of California at San Francisco, San Francisco, California.
Background: Increased ethanol intake, a major predictor for the development of alcohol use disorders, is facilitated by the development of tolerance to both the aversive and pleasurable effects of the drug. The molecular mechanisms underlying ethanol tolerance development are complex and are not yet well understood. Methods: To identify genetic mechanisms that contribute to ethanol tolerance, we examined the time course of gene expression changes elicited by a single sedating dose of ethanol in Drosophila, and completed a behavioral survey of strains harboring mutations in ethanol-regulated genes. Results: Enrichment for genes in metabolism, nucleic acid binding, olfaction, regulation of signal transduction, and stress suggests that these biological processes are coordinately affected by ethanol exposure. We also detected a coordinate up-regulation of genes in the Toll and Imd innate immunity signal transduction pathways. A multi-study comparison revealed a small set of genes showing similar regulation, including increased expression of 3 genes for serine biosynthesis. A survey of Drosophila strains harboring mutations in ethanol-regulated genes for ethanol sensitivity and tolerance phenotypes revealed roles for serine biosynthesis, olfaction, transcriptional regulation, immunity, and metabolism. Flies harboring deletions of the genes encoding the olfactory co-receptor Or83b or the sirtuin Sir2 showed marked changes in the development of ethanol tolerance. Conclusions: Our findings implicate novel roles for these genes in regulating ethanol behavioral responses.
go to Publishergo to Pubmedgo to Scholargo to Googleshow EndNote Citationshow BibTex Citation
Gladstone Institute of Cardiovascular Disease, San Francisco, California, United States of America.
The role of alternative splicing in self-renewal, pluripotency and tissue lineage specification of human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) is largely unknown. To better define these regulatory cues, we modified the H9 hESC line to allow selection of pluripotent hESCs by neomycin resistance and cardiac progenitors by puromycin resistance. Exon-level microarray expression data from undifferentiated hESCs and cardiac and neural precursors were used to identify splice isoforms with cardiac-restricted or common cardiac/neural differentiation expression patterns. Splice events for these groups corresponded to the pathways of cytoskeletal remodeling, RNA splicing, muscle specification, and cell cycle checkpoint control as well as genes with serine/threonine kinase and helicase activity. Using a new program named AltAnalyze (http://www.AltAnalyze.org), we identified novel changes in protein domain and microRNA binding site architecture that were predicted to affect protein function and expression. These included an enrichment of splice isoforms that oppose cell-cycle arrest in hESCs and that promote calcium signaling and cardiac development in cardiac precursors. By combining genome-wide predictions of alternative splicing with new functional annotations, our data suggest potential mechanisms that may influence lineage commitment and hESC maintenance at the level of specific splice isoforms and microRNA regulation.
go to Publishergo to Pubmedgo to Scholargo to Googleshow EndNote Citationshow BibTex Citation
Department of Mol. Cell Biology, Division of Genetics Genomics and Development, Center for Integrative Genomics, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA.
During the evolution of the Diptera there is a dramatic modification of the embryonic ectoderm, whereby mosquitoes contain separate amnion and serosa lineages while higher flies such as Drosophila melanogaster contain a single amnioserosa. Whole-genome transcriptome assays were performed with isolated serosa from Anopheles gambiae embryos. These assays identified a large number of genes implicated in the production of the larval cuticle. In D. melanogaster, these genes are activated just once during embryogenesis, during late stages where they are used for the production of the larval cuticle. Evidence is presented that the serosal cells secrete a dedicated serosal cuticle, which protects A. gambiae embryos from desiccation. Detailed temporal microarray assays of mosquito gene expression profiles revealed that the cuticular genes display biphasic expression during A. gambiae embryogenesis, first in the serosa of early embryos and then again during late stages as seen in D. melanogaster. We discuss how evolutionary modifications in the well-defined dorsal-ventral patterning network led to the wholesale deployment of the cuticle biosynthesis pathway in early embryos of A. gambiae.
go to Publishergo to Pubmedgo to Scholargo to Googleshow EndNote Citationshow BibTex Citation
[My paper] Roger McLendon, Allan Friedman, Darrell Bigner, Erwin G Van Meir, Daniel J Brat, Gena Marie Mastrogianakis, Jeffrey J Olson, Tom Mikkelsen, Norman Lehman, Ken Aldape, W K Alfred Yung, Oliver Bogler, Scott Vandenberg, Mitchel Berger, Michael Prados, Donna Muzny, Margaret Morgan, Steve Scherer, Aniko Sabo, Lynn Nazareth, Lora Lewis, Otis Hall, Yiming Zhu, Yanru Ren, Omar Alvi, Jiqiang Yao, Alicia Hawes, Shalini Jhangiani, Gerald Fowler, Anthony San Lucas, Christie Kovar, Andrew Cree, Huyen Dinh, Jireh Santibanez, Vandita Joshi, Manuel L Gonzalez-Garay, Christopher A Miller, Aleksandar Milosavljevic, Larry Donehower, David A Wheeler, Richard A Gibbs, Kristian Cibulskis, Carrie Sougnez, Tim Fennell, Scott Mahan, Jane Wilkinson, Liuda Ziaugra, Robert Onofrio, Toby Bloom, Rob Nicol, Kristin Ardlie, Jennifer Baldwin, Stacey Gabriel, Eric S Lander, Li Ding, Robert S Fulton, Michael D McLellan, John Wallis, David E Larson, Xiaoqi Shi, Rachel Abbott, Lucinda Fulton, Ken Chen, Daniel C Koboldt, Michael C Wendl, Rick Meyer, Yuzhu Tang, Ling Lin, John R Osborne, Brian H Dunford-Shore, Tracie L Miner, Kim Delehaunty, Chris Markovic, Gary Swift, William Courtney, Craig Pohl, Scott Abbott, Amy Hawkins, Shin Leong, Carrie Haipek, Heather Schmidt, Maddy Wiechert, Tammi Vickery, Sacha Scott, David J Dooling, Asif Chinwalla, George M Weinstock, Elaine R Mardis, Richard K Wilson, Gad Getz, Wendy Winckler, Roel G W Verhaak, Michael S Lawrence, Michael O'Kelly, Jim Robinson, Gabriele Alexe, Rameen Beroukhim, Scott Carter, Derek Chiang, Josh Gould, Supriya Gupta, Josh Korn, Craig Mermel, Jill Mesirov, Stefano Monti, Huy Nguyen, Melissa Parkin, Michael Reich, Nicolas Stransky, Barbara A Weir, Levi Garraway, Todd Golub, Matthew Meyerson, Lynda Chin, Alexei Protopopov, Jianhua Zhang, Ilana Perna, Sandy Aronson, Narayan Sathiamoorthy, Georgia Ren, Jun Yao, W Ruprecht Wiedemeyer, Hyunsoo Kim, Sek Won Kong, Yonghong Xiao, Isaac S Kohane, Jon Seidman, Peter J Park, Raju Kucherlapati, Peter W Laird, Leslie Cope, James G Herman, Daniel J Weisenberger, Fei Pan, David Van Den Berg, Leander Van Neste, Joo Mi Yi, Kornel E Schuebel, Stephen B Baylin, Devin M Absher, Jun Z Li, Audrey Southwick, Shannon Brady, Amita Aggarwal, Tisha Chung, Gavin Sherlock, James D Brooks, Richard M Myers, Paul T Spellman, Elizabeth Purdom, Lakshmi R Jakkula, Anna V Lapuk, Henry Marr, Shannon Dorton, Yoon Gi Choi, Ju Han, Amrita Ray, Victoria Wang, Steffen Durinck, Mark Robinson, Nicholas J Wang, Karen Vranizan, Vivian Peng, Eric Van Name, Gerald V Fontenay, John Ngai, John G Conboy, Bahram Parvin, Heidi S Feiler, Terence P Speed, Joe W Gray, Cameron Brennan, Nicholas D Socci, Adam Olshen, Barry S Taylor, Alex Lash, Nikolaus Schultz, Boris Reva, Yevgeniy Antipin, Alexey Stukalov, Benjamin Gross, Ethan Cerami, Wei Qing Wang, Li-Xuan Qin, Venkatraman E Seshan, Liliana Villafania, Magali Cavatore, Laetitia Borsu, Agnes Viale, William Gerald, Chris Sander, Marc Ladanyi, Charles M Perou, D Neil Hayes, Michael D Topal, Katherine A Hoadley, Yuan Qi, Sai Balu, Yan Shi, Junyuan Wu, Robert Penny, Michael Bittner, Troy Shelton, Elizabeth Lenkiewicz, Scott Morris, Debbie Beasley, Sheri Sanders, Ari Kahn, Robert Sfeir, Jessica Chen, David Nassau, Larry Feng, Erin Hickey, Jinghui Zhang, John N Weinstein, Anna Barker, Daniela S Gerhard, Joseph Vockley, Carolyn Compton, Jim Vaught, Peter Fielding, Martin L Ferguson, Carl Schaefer, Subhashree Madhavan, Kenneth H Buetow, Francis Collins, Peter Good, Mark Guyer, Brad Ozenberger, Jane Peterson, Elizabeth Thomson
A list of participants and affiliations appears at the end of the paper.
Human cancer cells typically harbour multiple chromosomal aberrations, nucleotide substitutions and epigenetic modifications that drive malignant transformation. The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) pilot project aims to assess the value of large-scale multi-dimensional analysis of these molecular characteristics in human cancer and to provide the data rapidly to the research community. Here we report the interim integrative analysis of DNA copy number, gene expression and DNA methylation aberrations in 206 glioblastomas-the most common type of adult brain cancer-and nucleotide sequence aberrations in 91 of the 206 glioblastomas. This analysis provides new insights into the roles of ERBB2, NF1 and TP53, uncovers frequent mutations of the phosphatidylinositol-3-OH kinase regulatory subunit gene PIK3R1, and provides a network view of the pathways altered in the development of glioblastoma. Furthermore, integration of mutation, DNA methylation and clinical treatment data reveals a link between MGMT promoter methylation and a hypermutator phenotype consequent to mismatch repair deficiency in treated glioblastomas, an observation with potential clinical implications. Together, these findings establish the feasibility and power of TCGA, demonstrating that it can rapidly expand knowledge of the molecular basis of cancer.
go to Publishergo to Pubmedgo to Scholargo to Googleshow EndNote Citationshow BibTex Citation
Department of Molecular and Cell Biology, Division of Genetics, Genomics and Development, Center for Integrative Genomics, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA. lionelchristiaen@berkeley.edu
Gene regulatory networks direct the progressive determination of cell fate during embryogenesis, but how they control cell behavior during morphogenesis remains largely elusive. Cell sorting, microarrays, and targeted molecular manipulations were used to analyze cardiac cell migration in the ascidian Ciona intestinalis. The heart network regulates genes involved in most cellular activities required for migration, including adhesion, cell polarity, and membrane protrusions. We demonstrated that fibroblast growth factor signaling and the forkhead transcription factor FoxF directly upregulate the small guanosine triphosphatase RhoDF, which synergizes with Cdc42 to contribute to the protrusive activity of migrating cells. Moreover, RhoDF induces membrane protrusions independently of other cellular activities required for migration. We propose that transcription regulation of specific effector genes determines the coordinated deployment of discrete cellular modules underlying migration.
go to Publishergo to Pubmedgo to Scholargo to Googleshow EndNote Citationshow BibTex Citation
Department of Molecular and Cell Biology, University of California at Berkeley, 16 Barker Hall (102 Donner Lab), Berkeley, CA, 94720-3206, USA.
Curcumin (diferuloyl), from the Indian spice turmeric, reduces oxidative damage and induces apoptosis. Utilizing DNA microarrays, we have demonstrated that a low (5 muM) dose of curcumin added to a mixture of astrocytes and oligodendrocytes (C6 rat glioma cells) in culture for 24 and 48 h significantly modulates gene expression in four primary pathways: oxidative stress, cell cycle control, and DNA transcription and metabolism. Contribution of the pentose phosphate pathway to the pool of NADH upregulates glutathione and activates aldehyde oxidase. We have identified also several new genes, up- or downregulated by curcumin, namely, aldo-keto reductase, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, and aldehyde oxidase that protect against oxidative stress. The identification of several new cell cycle control genes, including the apoptosis-related protein (pirin) and insulin-like growth factor (IGF), and of the neurofilament M protein involved in neurogenesis suggests that curcumin may have applicability in the treatment of a spectrum of neurodegenerative diseases.
pickwonder
 

Polish News
2012-05-17 11:20:42 © BioInfoBank Institute