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1.
Cell ; 187(13): 3165-3186, 2024 Jun 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38906093

ABSTRACT

Patterned morphologies, such as segments, spirals, stripes, and spots, frequently emerge during embryogenesis through self-organized coordination between cells. Yet, complex patterns also emerge in adults, suggesting that the capacity for spontaneous self-organization is a ubiquitous property of biological tissues. We review current knowledge on the principles and mechanisms of self-organized patterning in embryonic tissues and explore how these principles and mechanisms apply to adult tissues that exhibit features of patterning. We discuss how and why spontaneous pattern generation is integral to homeostasis and healing of tissues, illustrating it with examples from regenerative biology. We examine how aberrant self-organization underlies diverse pathological states, including inflammatory skin disorders and tumors. Lastly, we posit that based on such blueprints, targeted engineering of pattern-driving molecular circuits can be leveraged for synthetic biology and the generation of organoids with intricate patterns.


Subject(s)
Body Patterning , Animals , Humans , Embryonic Development , Homeostasis , Organoids/metabolism , Aging
2.
Cell ; 161(2): 277-90, 2015 Apr 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25860610

ABSTRACT

Coordinated organ behavior is crucial for an effective response to environmental stimuli. By studying regeneration of hair follicles in response to patterned hair plucking, we demonstrate that organ-level quorum sensing allows coordinated responses to skin injury. Plucking hair at different densities leads to a regeneration of up to five times more neighboring, unplucked resting hairs, indicating activation of a collective decision-making process. Through data modeling, the range of the quorum signal was estimated to be on the order of 1 mm, greater than expected for a diffusible molecular cue. Molecular and genetic analysis uncovered a two-step mechanism, where release of CCL2 from injured hairs leads to recruitment of TNF-α-secreting macrophages, which accumulate and signal to both plucked and unplucked follicles. By coupling immune response with regeneration, this mechanism allows skin to respond predictively to distress, disregarding mild injury, while meeting stronger injury with full-scale cooperative activation of stem cells.


Subject(s)
Hair Follicle/cytology , Stem Cells/cytology , Animals , Cell Communication , Chemokine CCL2/metabolism , Hair Follicle/physiology , Keratinocytes/metabolism , Macrophages/metabolism , Mice , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Regeneration , Skin/cytology , Skin/metabolism , Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha/metabolism
3.
Cell ; 144(6): 955-69, 2011 Mar 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21414486

ABSTRACT

Systems biology seeks not only to discover the machinery of life but to understand how such machinery is used for control, i.e., for regulation that achieves or maintains a desired, useful end. This sort of goal-directed, engineering-centered approach also has deep historical roots in developmental biology. Not surprisingly, developmental biology is currently enjoying an influx of ideas and methods from systems biology. This Review highlights current efforts to elucidate design principles underlying the engineering objectives of robustness, precision, and scaling as they relate to the developmental control of growth and pattern formation. Examples from vertebrate and invertebrate development are used to illustrate general lessons, including the value of integral feedback in achieving set-point control; the usefulness of self-organizing behavior; the importance of recognizing and appropriately handling noise; and the absence of "free lunch." By illuminating such principles, systems biology is helping to create a functional framework within which to make sense of the mechanistic complexity of organismal development.


Subject(s)
Developmental Biology/methods , Invertebrates/growth & development , Systems Biology/methods , Vertebrates/growth & development , Animals , Drosophila/growth & development , Morphogenesis
4.
Nat Methods ; 19(2): 205-215, 2022 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35132245

ABSTRACT

Transgenic expression of bacterial nitroreductase (NTR) enzymes sensitizes eukaryotic cells to prodrugs such as metronidazole (MTZ), enabling selective cell-ablation paradigms that have expanded studies of cell function and regeneration in vertebrates. However, first-generation NTRs required confoundingly toxic prodrug treatments to achieve effective cell ablation, and some cell types have proven resistant. Here we used rational engineering and cross-species screening to develop an NTR variant, NTR 2.0, which exhibits ~100-fold improvement in MTZ-mediated cell-specific ablation efficacy, eliminating the need for near-toxic prodrug treatment regimens. NTR 2.0 therefore enables sustained cell-loss paradigms and ablation of previously resistant cell types. These properties permit enhanced interrogations of cell function, extended challenges to the regenerative capacities of discrete stem cell niches, and novel modeling of chronic degenerative diseases. Accordingly, we have created a series of bipartite transgenic reporter/effector resources to facilitate dissemination of NTR 2.0 to the research community.


Subject(s)
Metronidazole/pharmacology , Nitroreductases/metabolism , Prodrugs/chemistry , Animals , Animals, Genetically Modified , CHO Cells , Cricetulus , Green Fluorescent Proteins/genetics , Green Fluorescent Proteins/metabolism , HEK293 Cells , Humans , Metronidazole/pharmacokinetics , Nitroreductases/chemistry , Nitroreductases/genetics , Prodrugs/pharmacology , Protein Engineering/methods , Recombinant Proteins/chemistry , Recombinant Proteins/genetics , Recombinant Proteins/metabolism , Retina/cytology , Retina/drug effects , Vibrio/enzymology , Zebrafish/genetics
5.
Dev Dyn ; 249(3): 383-409, 2020 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32034817

ABSTRACT

Elaborate regulatory feedback processes are thought to make biological development robust, that is, resistant to changes induced by genetic or environmental perturbations. How this might be done is still not completely understood. Previous numerical simulations on reaction-diffusion models of Dpp gradients in Drosophila wing imaginal disc have showed that feedback (of the Hill function type) on (signaling) receptors and/or non-(signaling) receptors are of limited effectiveness in promoting robustness. Spatial nonuniformity of the feedback processes has also been shown theoretically to lead to serious shape distortion and a principal cause for ineffectiveness. Through mathematical modeling and analysis, the present article shows that spatially uniform nonlocal feedback mechanisms typically modify gradient shape through a shape parameter (that does not change with location). This in turn enables us to uncover new multi-feedback instrument for effective promotion of robust signaling gradients.


Subject(s)
Drosophila Proteins/metabolism , Animals , Drosophila Proteins/genetics , Drosophila melanogaster/embryology , Drosophila melanogaster/genetics , Drosophila melanogaster/metabolism , Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental/genetics , Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental/physiology , Models, Theoretical , Signal Transduction/genetics , Signal Transduction/physiology
6.
PLoS Biol ; 14(9): e2000197, 2016 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27606604

ABSTRACT

Elucidating the causes of congenital heart defects is made difficult by the complex morphogenesis of the mammalian heart, which takes place early in development, involves contributions from multiple germ layers, and is controlled by many genes. Here, we use a conditional/invertible genetic strategy to identify the cell lineage(s) responsible for the development of heart defects in a Nipbl-deficient mouse model of Cornelia de Lange Syndrome, in which global yet subtle transcriptional dysregulation leads to development of atrial septal defects (ASDs) at high frequency. Using an approach that allows for recombinase-mediated creation or rescue of Nipbl deficiency in different lineages, we uncover complex interactions between the cardiac mesoderm, endoderm, and the rest of the embryo, whereby the risk conferred by genetic abnormality in any one lineage is modified, in a surprisingly non-additive way, by the status of others. We argue that these results are best understood in the context of a model in which the risk of heart defects is associated with the adequacy of early progenitor cell populations relative to the sizes of the structures they must eventually form.


Subject(s)
Heart Septal Defects, Atrial/genetics , Transcription Factors/genetics , Animals , Cell Cycle Proteins , Cell Line , Female , Gene Expression , Genetic Association Studies , Genetic Predisposition to Disease , Haploinsufficiency , Heart/embryology , Homeobox Protein Nkx-2.5/genetics , Homeobox Protein Nkx-2.5/metabolism , Male , Mice, Transgenic , Organ Specificity , Penetrance , Risk Factors , Transcription Factors/metabolism
7.
PLoS Genet ; 12(4): e1006003, 2016 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27123867

ABSTRACT

A major goal of human genetics is to elucidate the genetic architecture of human disease, with the goal of fueling improvements in diagnosis and the understanding of disease pathogenesis. The degree to which epistasis, or non-additive effects of risk alleles at different loci, accounts for common disease traits is hotly debated, in part because the conditions under which epistasis evolves are not well understood. Using both theory and evolutionary simulation, we show that the occurrence of common diseases (i.e. unfit phenotypes with frequencies on the order of 1%) can, under the right circumstances, be expected to be driven primarily by synergistic epistatic interactions. Conditions that are necessary, collectively, for this outcome include a strongly non-linear phenotypic landscape, strong (but not too strong) selection against the disease phenotype, and "noise" in the genotype-phenotype map that is both environmental (extrinsic, time-correlated) and developmental (intrinsic, uncorrelated) and, in both cases, neither too little nor too great. These results suggest ways in which geneticists might identify, a priori, those disease traits for which an "epistatic explanation" should be sought, and in the process better focus ongoing searches for risk alleles.


Subject(s)
Epistasis, Genetic/genetics , Genetic Predisposition to Disease , Genome, Human/genetics , Models, Genetic , Algorithms , Genetic Variation/genetics , Genetics, Population , Humans , Phenotype , Quantitative Trait Loci
8.
PLoS Comput Biol ; 13(7): e1005610, 2017 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28671940

ABSTRACT

In developing tissues, cell polarization and proliferation are regulated by morphogens and signaling pathways. Cells throughout the Drosophila wing primordium typically show subcellular localization of the unconventional myosin Dachs on the distal side of cells (nearest the center of the disc). Dachs localization depends on the spatial distribution of bonds between the protocadherins Fat (Ft) and Dachsous (Ds), which form heterodimers between adjacent cells; and the Golgi kinase Four-jointed (Fj), which affects the binding affinities of Ft and Ds. The Fj concentration forms a linear gradient while the Ds concentration is roughly uniform throughout most of the wing pouch with a steep transition region that propagates from the center to the edge of the pouch during the third larval instar. Although the Fj gradient is an important cue for polarization, it is unclear how the polarization is affected by cell division and the expanding Ds transition region, both of which can alter the distribution of Ft-Ds heterodimers around the cell periphery. We have developed a computational model to address these questions. In our model, the binding affinity of Ft and Ds depends on phosphorylation by Fj. We assume that the asymmetry of the Ft-Ds bond distribution around the cell periphery defines the polarization, with greater asymmetry promoting cell proliferation. Our model predicts that this asymmetry is greatest in the radially-expanding transition region that leaves polarized cells in its wake. These cells naturally retain their bond distribution asymmetry after division by rapidly replenishing Ft-Ds bonds at new cell-cell interfaces. Thus we predict that the distal localization of Dachs in cells throughout the pouch requires the movement of the Ds transition region and the simple presence, rather than any specific spatial pattern, of Fj.


Subject(s)
Cell Adhesion Molecules/metabolism , Cell Polarity/physiology , Drosophila Proteins/metabolism , Drosophila/physiology , Models, Biological , Wings, Animal/physiology , Animals , Cadherins/metabolism , Computer Simulation , Drosophila/cytology , Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental/physiology , Membrane Glycoproteins/metabolism , Myosins/metabolism , Organogenesis/physiology , Wings, Animal/cytology
9.
PLoS Comput Biol ; 12(3): e1004814, 2016 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26989903

ABSTRACT

Feedback regulation of cell lineage progression plays an important role in tissue size homeostasis, but whether such feedback also plays an important role in tissue morphogenesis has yet to be explored. Here we use mathematical modeling to show that a particular feedback architecture in which both positive and negative diffusible signals act on stem and/or progenitor cells leads to the appearance of bistable or bi-modal growth behaviors, ultrasensitivity to external growth cues, local growth-driven budding, self-sustaining elongation, and the triggering of self-organization in the form of lamellar fingers. Such behaviors arise not through regulation of cell cycle speeds, but through the control of stem or progenitor self-renewal. Even though the spatial patterns that arise in this setting are the result of interactions between diffusible factors with antagonistic effects, morphogenesis is not the consequence of Turing-type instabilities.


Subject(s)
Cell Differentiation/physiology , Cell Lineage/physiology , Feedback, Physiological/physiology , Models, Biological , Stem Cells/cytology , Stem Cells/physiology , Animals , Cell Cycle Proteins/metabolism , Computer Simulation , Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental/physiology , Humans , Morphogenesis/physiology , Signal Transduction/physiology
10.
PLoS Genet ; 10(9): e1004671, 2014 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25255084

ABSTRACT

Haploinsufficiency for Nipbl, a cohesin loading protein, causes Cornelia de Lange Syndrome (CdLS), the most common "cohesinopathy". It has been proposed that the effects of Nipbl-haploinsufficiency result from disruption of long-range communication between DNA elements. Here we use zebrafish and mouse models of CdLS to examine how transcriptional changes caused by Nipbl deficiency give rise to limb defects, a common condition in individuals with CdLS. In the zebrafish pectoral fin (forelimb), knockdown of Nipbl expression led to size reductions and patterning defects that were preceded by dysregulated expression of key early limb development genes, including fgfs, shha, hand2 and multiple hox genes. In limb buds of Nipbl-haploinsufficient mice, transcriptome analysis revealed many similar gene expression changes, as well as altered expression of additional classes of genes that play roles in limb development. In both species, the pattern of dysregulation of hox-gene expression depended on genomic location within the Hox clusters. In view of studies suggesting that Nipbl colocalizes with the mediator complex, which facilitates enhancer-promoter communication, we also examined zebrafish deficient for the Med12 Mediator subunit, and found they resembled Nipbl-deficient fish in both morphology and gene expression. Moreover, combined partial reduction of both Nipbl and Med12 had a strongly synergistic effect, consistent with both molecules acting in a common pathway. In addition, three-dimensional fluorescent in situ hybridization revealed that Nipbl and Med12 are required to bring regions containing long-range enhancers into close proximity with the zebrafish hoxda cluster. These data demonstrate a crucial role for Nipbl in limb development, and support the view that its actions on multiple gene pathways result from its influence, together with Mediator, on regulation of long-range chromosomal interactions.


Subject(s)
Extremities/embryology , Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental , Organogenesis/genetics , Transcription Factors/genetics , Transcription Factors/metabolism , Zebrafish Proteins/genetics , Zebrafish Proteins/metabolism , Animals , Animals, Genetically Modified , Cell Cycle Proteins , Chromatin/genetics , Chromatin/metabolism , Genes, Homeobox , Haploinsufficiency/genetics , Mice , Mice, Knockout , Phenotype , Protein Binding , Transcription Factors/deficiency , Zebrafish , Zebrafish Proteins/deficiency
11.
Am J Med Genet C Semin Med Genet ; 172(2): 146-54, 2016 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27120109

ABSTRACT

Cornelia de Lange Syndrome (CdLS) is characterized by a wide variety of structural and functional abnormalities in almost every organ system of the body. CdLS is now known to be caused by mutations that disrupt the function of the cohesin complex or its regulators, and studies of animal models and cell lines tell us that the effect of these mutations is to produce subtle yet pervasive dysregulation of gene expression. With many hundreds of mostly small gene expression changes occurring in every cell type and tissue, identifying the etiology of any particular birth defect is very challenging. Here we focus on limb abnormalities, which are commonly seen in CdLS. In the limb buds of the Nipbl-haploinsufficient mouse (Nipbl(+/-) mouse), a model for the most common form of CdLS, modest gene expression changes are observed in several candidate pathways whose disruption is known to cause limb abnormalities, yet the limbs of Nipbl(+/-) mice develop relatively normally. We hypothesized that further impairment of candidate pathways might produce limb defects similar to those seen in CdLS, and performed genetic experiments to test this. Focusing on Sonic hedgehog (Shh), Bone morphogenetic protein (Bmp), and Hox gene pathways, we show that decreasing Bmp or Hox function (but not Shh function) enhances polydactyly in Nipbl(+/-) mice, and in some cases produces novel skeletal phenotypes. However, frank limb reductions, as are seen in a subset of individuals with CdLS, do not occur, suggesting that additional signaling and/or gene regulatory pathways are involved in producing such dramatic changes. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.


Subject(s)
De Lange Syndrome/genetics , Limb Deformities, Congenital/genetics , Transcription Factors/deficiency , Animals , Bone Morphogenetic Proteins , Cell Cycle Proteins , Genes, Homeobox , Haploinsufficiency , Hedgehog Proteins/genetics , Mice , Transcription Factors/genetics
12.
Am J Med Genet C Semin Med Genet ; 172(2): 138-45, 2016 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27120001

ABSTRACT

Cornelia de Lange Syndrome (CdLS) is a multisystem birth defects disorder that affects every tissue and organ system in the body. Understanding the factors that contribute to the origins, prevalence, and severity of these developmental defects provides the most direct approach for developing screens and potential treatments for individuals with CdLS. Since the majority of cases of CdLS are caused by haploinsufficiency for NIPBL (Nipped-B-like, which encodes a cohesin-associated protein), we have developed mouse and zebrafish models of CdLS by using molecular genetic tools to create Nipbl-deficient mice and zebrafish (Nipbl(+/-) mice, zebrafish nipbl morphants). Studies of these vertebrate animal models have yielded novel insights into the developmental etiology and genes/gene pathways that contribute to CdLS-associated birth defects, particularly defects of the gut, heart, craniofacial structures, nervous system, and limbs. Studies of these mouse and zebrafish CdLS models have helped clarify how deficiency for NIPBL, a protein that associates with cohesin and other transcriptional regulators in the nucleus, affects processes important to the emergence of the structural and physiological birth defects observed in CdLS: NIPBL exerts chromosome position-specific effects on gene expression; it influences long-range interactions between different regulatory elements of genes; and it regulates combinatorial and synergistic actions of genes in developing tissues. Our current understanding is that CdLS should be considered as not only a cohesinopathy, but also a "transcriptomopathy," that is, a disease whose underlying etiology is the global dysregulation of gene expression throughout the organism. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.


Subject(s)
De Lange Syndrome/genetics , Developmental Disabilities/genetics , Gene Regulatory Networks , Animals , Cell Cycle Proteins , Congenital Abnormalities/genetics , Disease Models, Animal , Gene Expression Regulation , Humans , Mice , Proteins/genetics , Zebrafish
13.
BMC Biol ; 13: 13, 2015 Feb 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25857410

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: How tissue and organ sizes are specified is one of the great unsolved mysteries in biology. Experiments and mathematical modeling implicate feedback control of cell lineage progression, but a broad understanding of what lineage feedback accomplishes is lacking. RESULTS: By exploring the possible effects of various biologically relevant disturbances on the dynamic and steady state behaviors of stem cell lineages, we find that the simplest and most frequently studied form of lineage feedback - which we term renewal control - suffers from several serious drawbacks. These reflect fundamental performance limits dictated by universal conservation-type laws, and are independent of parameter choice. Here we show that introducing lineage branches can circumvent all such limitations, permitting effective attenuation of a wide range of perturbations. The type of feedback that achieves such performance - which we term fate control - involves promotion of lineage branching at the expense of both renewal and (primary) differentiation. We discuss the evidence that feedback of just this type occurs in vivo, and plays a role in tissue growth control. CONCLUSIONS: Regulated lineage branching is an effective strategy for dealing with disturbances in stem cell systems. The existence of this strategy provides a dynamics-based justification for feedback control of cell fate in vivo.


Subject(s)
Cell Lineage , Animals , Cell Proliferation , Feedback, Physiological , Humans , Models, Biological , Stem Cells/cytology
14.
Development ; 139(12): 2150-5, 2012 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22619388

ABSTRACT

The vitamin A derivative retinoic acid (RA) is a morphogen that patterns the anterior-posterior axis of the vertebrate hindbrain. Cellular retinoic acid-binding proteins (Crabps) transport RA within cells to both its nuclear receptors (RARs) and degrading enzymes (Cyp26s). However, mice lacking Crabps are viable, suggesting that Crabp functions are redundant with those of other fatty acid-binding proteins. Here we show that Crabps in zebrafish are essential for posterior patterning of the hindbrain and that they provide a key feedback mechanism that makes signaling robust as they are able to compensate for changes in RA production. Of the four zebrafish Crabps, Crabp2a is uniquely RA inducible and depletion or overexpression of Crabp2a makes embryos hypersensitive to exogenous RA. Computational models confirm that Crabp2a improves robustness within a narrow concentration range that optimizes a 'robustness index', integrating spatial information along the RA morphogen gradient. Exploration of signaling parameters in our models suggests that the ability of Crabp2a to transport RA to Cyp26 enzymes for degradation is a major factor in promoting robustness. These results demonstrate a previously unrecognized requirement for Crabps in RA signaling and hindbrain development, as well as a novel mechanism for stabilizing morphogen gradients despite genetic or environmental fluctuations in morphogen availability.


Subject(s)
Body Patterning/genetics , Receptors, Retinoic Acid/metabolism , Rhombencephalon/embryology , Signal Transduction/genetics , Zebrafish Proteins/metabolism , Zebrafish/embryology , Zebrafish/genetics , Animals , Body Patterning/drug effects , Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental/drug effects , Homeodomain Proteins/genetics , Homeodomain Proteins/metabolism , Mice , Models, Biological , Receptors, Retinoic Acid/genetics , Rhombencephalon/drug effects , Rhombencephalon/metabolism , Signal Transduction/drug effects , Tretinoin/pharmacology , Zebrafish Proteins/genetics
15.
Am J Med Genet A ; 167(6): 1179-92, 2015 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25899772

ABSTRACT

Cornelia de Lange Syndrome (CdLS) is the most common example of disorders of the cohesin complex, or cohesinopathies. There are a myriad of clinical issues facing individuals with CdLS, particularly in the neurodevelopmental system, which also have implications for the parents and caretakers, involved professionals, therapists, and schools. Basic research in developmental and cell biology on cohesin is showing significant progress, with improved understanding of the mechanisms and the possibility of potential therapeutics. The following abstracts are presentations from the 6th Cornelia de Lange Syndrome Scientific and Educational Symposium, which took place on June 25-26, 2014, in conjunction with the Cornelia de Lange Syndrome Foundation National Meeting in Costa Mesa, CA. The Research Committee of the CdLS Foundation organizes the meeting, reviews and accepts abstracts, and subsequently disseminates the information to the families through members of the Clinical Advisory Board. In addition to the scientific and clinical discussions, there were educationally focused talks related to practical aspects of behavior and development. AMA CME credits were provided by Greater Baltimore Medical Center, Baltimore, MD.


Subject(s)
Cell Cycle Proteins/genetics , Chromosomal Proteins, Non-Histone/genetics , De Lange Syndrome/genetics , Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental , Mutation , Adult , Animals , California , Cell Cycle Proteins/metabolism , Child , Chromosomal Proteins, Non-Histone/metabolism , De Lange Syndrome/metabolism , De Lange Syndrome/pathology , Disease Models, Animal , Drosophila melanogaster/genetics , Drosophila melanogaster/metabolism , Humans , Mice , Phenotype , Signal Transduction , Zebrafish/genetics , Zebrafish/metabolism , Cohesins
16.
PLoS Comput Biol ; 10(8): e1003802, 2014 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25121484

ABSTRACT

Stem cell divisions are either asymmetric-in which one daughter cell remains a stem cell and one does not-or symmetric, in which both daughter cells adopt the same fate, either stem or non-stem. Recent studies show that in many tissues operating under homeostatic conditions stem cell division patterns are strongly biased toward the symmetric outcome, raising the question of whether symmetry confers some benefit. Here, we show that symmetry, via extinction of damaged stem-cell clones, reduces the lifetime risk of accumulating phenotypically silent heritable damage (mutations or aberrant epigenetic changes) in individual stem cells. This effect is greatest in rapidly cycling tissues subject to accelerating rates of damage accumulation over time, a scenario that describes the progression of many cancers. A decrease in the rate of cellular damage accumulation may be an important factor favoring symmetric patterns of stem cell division.


Subject(s)
Cell Division/genetics , Models, Genetic , Mutation/genetics , Stem Cells , Animals , Genes, APC , Genomic Instability , Intestine, Small/cytology , Mice
17.
PLoS Comput Biol ; 10(2): e1003463, 2014 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24550718

ABSTRACT

Borders are important as they demarcate developing tissue into distinct functional units. A key challenge is the discovery of mechanisms that can convert morphogen gradients into tissue borders. While mechanisms that produce ultrasensitive cellular responses provide a solution, how extracellular morphogens drive such mechanisms remains poorly understood. Here, we show how Bone Morphogenetic Protein (BMP) and Fibroblast Growth Factor (FGF) pathways interact to generate ultrasensitivity and borders in the dorsal telencephalon. BMP and FGF signaling manipulations in explants produced border defects suggestive of cross inhibition within single cells, which was confirmed in dissociated cultures. Using mathematical modeling, we designed experiments that ruled out alternative cross inhibition mechanisms and identified a cross-inhibitory positive feedback (CIPF) mechanism, or "toggle switch", which acts upstream of transcriptional targets in dorsal telencephalic cells. CIPF explained several cellular phenomena important for border formation such as threshold tuning, ultrasensitivity, and hysteresis. CIPF explicitly links graded morphogen signaling in the telencephalon to switch-like cellular responses and has the ability to form multiple borders and scale pattern to size. These benefits may apply to other developmental systems.


Subject(s)
Bone Morphogenetic Proteins/metabolism , Fibroblast Growth Factors/metabolism , Prosencephalon/embryology , Prosencephalon/metabolism , Animals , Bone Morphogenetic Protein 4/metabolism , Bone Morphogenetic Protein 4/pharmacology , Bone Morphogenetic Proteins/pharmacology , Computational Biology , Embryo Culture Techniques , Feedback, Physiological , Female , Fibroblast Growth Factors/pharmacology , Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental/drug effects , MSX1 Transcription Factor/genetics , Mice , Mice, Transgenic , Models, Biological , Pregnancy , Prosencephalon/drug effects , Receptors, Fibroblast Growth Factor/antagonists & inhibitors , Signal Transduction , Telencephalon/drug effects , Telencephalon/embryology , Telencephalon/metabolism
18.
Biochim Biophys Acta ; 1832(12): 2097-102, 2013 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23920377

ABSTRACT

Cornelia de Lange Syndrome (CdLS) is a genetic disorder linked to mutations in cohesin and its regulators. To date, it is unclear which function of cohesin is more relevant to the pathology of the syndrome. A mouse heterozygous for the gene encoding the cohesin loader Nipbl recapitulates many features of CdLS. We have carefully examined Nipbl deficient cells and here report that they have robust cohesion all along the chromosome. DNA replication, DNA repair and chromosome segregation are carried out efficiently in these cells. While bulk cohesin loading is unperturbed, binding to certain promoters such as the Protocadherin genes in brain is notably affected and alters gene expression. These results provide further support for the idea that developmental defects in CdLS are caused by deregulated transcription and not by malfunction of cohesion-related processes.


Subject(s)
Cell Cycle Proteins/metabolism , Chromosomal Proteins, Non-Histone/metabolism , DNA Replication , De Lange Syndrome/pathology , Disease Models, Animal , Transcription Factors/physiology , Transcription, Genetic , Animals , Blotting, Western , Brain/metabolism , Brain/pathology , Cell Cycle Proteins/genetics , Cell Survival , Cells, Cultured , Chromosomal Proteins, Non-Histone/genetics , Chromosome Segregation , DNA Repair , De Lange Syndrome/genetics , De Lange Syndrome/metabolism , Embryo, Mammalian/metabolism , Embryo, Mammalian/pathology , Fibroblasts/metabolism , Fibroblasts/pathology , Fluorescent Antibody Technique , Heterozygote , In Situ Hybridization, Fluorescence , Mice , Mice, Knockout , Phenotype , Promoter Regions, Genetic/genetics , RNA, Messenger/genetics , Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction , Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction , Cohesins
19.
Development ; 138(19): 4131-42, 2011 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21852401

ABSTRACT

Studies of the olfactory epithelium model system have demonstrated that production of neurons is regulated by negative feedback. Previously, we showed that a locally produced signal, the TGFß superfamily ligand GDF11, regulates the genesis of olfactory receptor neurons by inhibiting proliferation of the immediate neuronal precursors (INPs) that give rise to them. GDF11 is antagonized by follistatin (FST), which is also produced locally. Here, we show that Fst(-/-) mice exhibit dramatically decreased neurogenesis, a phenotype that can only be partially explained by increased GDF11 activity. Instead, a second FST-binding factor, activin ßB (ACTßB), inhibits neurogenesis by a distinct mechanism: whereas GDF11 inhibits expansion of INPs, ACTßB inhibits expansion of stem and early progenitor cells. We present data supporting the concept that these latter cells, previously considered two distinct types, constitute a dynamic stem/progenitor population in which individual cells alternate expression of Sox2 and/or Ascl1. In addition, we demonstrate that interplay between ACTßB and GDF11 determines whether stem/progenitor cells adopt a glial versus neuronal fate. Altogether, the data indicate that the transition between stem cells and committed progenitors is neither sharp nor irreversible and that GDF11, ACTßB and FST are crucial components of a circuit that controls both total cell number and the ratio of neuronal versus glial cells in this system. Thus, our findings demonstrate a close connection between the signals involved in the control of tissue size and those that regulate the proportions of different cell types.


Subject(s)
Activins/physiology , Bone Morphogenetic Proteins/metabolism , Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental , Growth Differentiation Factors/metabolism , Neuroepithelial Cells/cytology , Olfactory Mucosa/cytology , Animals , Basic Helix-Loop-Helix Transcription Factors/metabolism , Cell Lineage , Cell Proliferation , Feedback, Physiological , Follistatin/metabolism , Inhibin-beta Subunits/metabolism , Mice , Mice, Transgenic , Models, Biological , Neuroglia/cytology , Neurons/metabolism , SOXB1 Transcription Factors/metabolism , Signal Transduction
20.
PLoS Biol ; 9(10): e1001181, 2011 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22039349

ABSTRACT

Cornelia de Lange Syndrome (CdLS) is the founding member of a class of multi-organ system birth defect syndromes termed cohesinopathies, named for the chromatin-associated protein complex cohesin, which mediates sister chromatid cohesion. Most cases of CdLS are caused by haploinsufficiency for Nipped-B-like (Nipbl), a highly conserved protein that facilitates cohesin loading. Consistent with recent evidence implicating cohesin and Nipbl in transcriptional regulation, both CdLS cell lines and tissues of Nipbl-deficient mice show changes in the expression of hundreds of genes. Nearly all such changes are modest, however--usually less than 1.5-fold--raising the intriguing possibility that, in CdLS, severe developmental defects result from the collective action of many otherwise innocuous perturbations. As a step toward testing this hypothesis, we developed a model of nipbl-deficiency in zebrafish, an organism in which we can quantitatively investigate the combinatorial effects of gene expression changes. After characterizing the structure and embryonic expression of the two zebrafish nipbl genes, we showed that morpholino knockdown of these genes produces a spectrum of specific heart and gut/visceral organ defects with similarities to those in CdLS. Analysis of nipbl morphants further revealed that, as early as gastrulation, expression of genes involved in endodermal differentiation (sox32, sox17, foxa2, and gata5) and left-right patterning (spaw, lefty2, and dnah9) is altered. Experimental manipulation of the levels of several such genes--using RNA injection or morpholino knockdown--implicated both additive and synergistic interactions in causing observed developmental defects. These findings support the view that birth defects in CdLS arise from collective effects of quantitative changes in gene expression. Interestingly, both the phenotypes and gene expression changes in nipbl morphants differed from those in mutants or morphants for genes encoding cohesin subunits, suggesting that the transcriptional functions of Nipbl cannot be ascribed simply to its role in cohesin loading.


Subject(s)
De Lange Syndrome/genetics , Gastrointestinal Tract/abnormalities , Heart Defects, Congenital/genetics , Zebrafish Proteins/deficiency , Zebrafish/genetics , Animals , Body Patterning/genetics , Cell Cycle Proteins/metabolism , Chromosomal Proteins, Non-Histone/metabolism , Disease Models, Animal , Endoderm/metabolism , Gastrointestinal Tract/growth & development , Gastrulation , Gene Expression , Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental , Gene Knockdown Techniques , Heart/growth & development , Morpholinos/genetics , Phenotype , Protein Interaction Domains and Motifs , SOX Transcription Factors/genetics , SOX Transcription Factors/metabolism , Sequence Homology, Amino Acid , Transcriptional Activation , Zebrafish/abnormalities , Zebrafish/growth & development , Zebrafish Proteins/genetics , Zebrafish Proteins/metabolism , Cohesins
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