Try a new search

Format these results:

Searched for:

person:reinbd01

Total Results:

321


SIRT1 regulates DNA damage signaling through the PP4 phosphatase complex

Rasti, George; Becker, Maximilian; Vazquez, Berta N; Espinosa-Alcantud, Maria; Fernández-Duran, Irene; Gámez-García, Andrés; Ianni, Alessandro; Gonzalez, Jessica; Bosch-Presegué, Laia; Marazuela-Duque, Anna; Guitart-Solanes, Anna; Segura-Bayona, Sandra; Bech-Serra, Joan-Josep; Scher, Michael; Serrano, Lourdes; Shankavaram, Uma; Erdjument-Bromage, Hediye; Tempst, Paul; Reinberg, Danny; Olivella, Mireia; Stracker, Travis H; de la Torre, Carolina; Vaquero, Alejandro
The Sirtuin family of NAD+-dependent enzymes plays an important role in maintaining genome stability upon stress. Several mammalian Sirtuins have been linked directly or indirectly to the regulation of DNA damage during replication through Homologous recombination (HR). The role of one of them, SIRT1, is intriguing as it seems to have a general regulatory role in the DNA damage response (DDR) that has not yet been addressed. SIRT1-deficient cells show impaired DDR reflected in a decrease in repair capacity, increased genome instability and decreased levels of γH2AX. Here we unveil a close functional antagonism between SIRT1 and the PP4 phosphatase multiprotein complex in the regulation of the DDR. Upon DNA damage, SIRT1 interacts specifically with the catalytical subunit PP4c and promotes its inhibition by deacetylating the WH1 domain of the regulatory subunits PP4R3α/β. This in turn regulates γH2AX and RPA2 phosphorylation, two key events in the signaling of DNA damage and repair by HR. We propose a mechanism whereby during stress, SIRT1 signaling ensures a global control of DNA damage signaling through PP4.
PMCID:10359614
PMID: 37309898
ISSN: 1362-4962
CID: 5620062

Gain and loss of function variants in EZH1 disrupt neurogenesis and cause dominant and recessive neurodevelopmental disorders

Gracia-Diaz, Carolina; Zhou, Yijing; Yang, Qian; Maroofian, Reza; Espana-Bonilla, Paula; Lee, Chul-Hwan; Zhang, Shuo; Padilla, Natàlia; Fueyo, Raquel; Waxman, Elisa A; Lei, Sunyimeng; Otrimski, Garrett; Li, Dong; Sheppard, Sarah E; Mark, Paul; Harr, Margaret H; Hakonarson, Hakon; Rodan, Lance; Jackson, Adam; Vasudevan, Pradeep; Powel, Corrina; Mohammed, Shehla; Maddirevula, Sateesh; Alzaidan, Hamad; Faqeih, Eissa A; Efthymiou, Stephanie; Turchetti, Valentina; Rahman, Fatima; Maqbool, Shazia; Salpietro, Vincenzo; Ibrahim, Shahnaz H; di Rosa, Gabriella; Houlden, Henry; Alharbi, Maha Nasser; Al-Sannaa, Nouriya Abbas; Bauer, Peter; Zifarelli, Giovanni; Estaras, Conchi; Hurst, Anna C E; Thompson, Michelle L; Chassevent, Anna; Smith-Hicks, Constance L; de la Cruz, Xavier; Holtz, Alexander M; Elloumi, Houda Zghal; Hajianpour, M J; Rieubland, Claudine; Braun, Dominique; Banka, Siddharth; French, Deborah L; Heller, Elizabeth A; Saade, Murielle; Song, Hongjun; Ming, Guo-Li; Alkuraya, Fowzan S; Agrawal, Pankaj B; Reinberg, Danny; Bhoj, Elizabeth J; Martínez-Balbás, Marian A; Akizu, Naiara
Genetic variants in chromatin regulators are frequently found in neurodevelopmental disorders, but their effect in disease etiology is rarely determined. Here, we uncover and functionally define pathogenic variants in the chromatin modifier EZH1 as the cause of dominant and recessive neurodevelopmental disorders in 19 individuals. EZH1 encodes one of the two alternative histone H3 lysine 27 methyltransferases of the PRC2 complex. Unlike the other PRC2 subunits, which are involved in cancers and developmental syndromes, the implication of EZH1 in human development and disease is largely unknown. Using cellular and biochemical studies, we demonstrate that recessive variants impair EZH1 expression causing loss of function effects, while dominant variants are missense mutations that affect evolutionarily conserved aminoacids, likely impacting EZH1 structure or function. Accordingly, we found increased methyltransferase activity leading to gain of function of two EZH1 missense variants. Furthermore, we show that EZH1 is necessary and sufficient for differentiation of neural progenitor cells in the developing chick embryo neural tube. Finally, using human pluripotent stem cell-derived neural cultures and forebrain organoids, we demonstrate that EZH1 variants perturb cortical neuron differentiation. Overall, our work reveals a critical role of EZH1 in neurogenesis regulation and provides molecular diagnosis for previously undefined neurodevelopmental disorders.
PMCID:10336078
PMID: 37433783
ISSN: 2041-1723
CID: 5537042

Terri Grodzicker: the quintessential scientist-Editor

Reinberg, Danny
PMCID:10046440
PMID: 37061963
ISSN: 1549-5477
CID: 5464352

Insulin signaling in the long-lived reproductive caste of ants

Yan, Hua; Opachaloemphan, Comzit; Carmona-Aldana, Francisco; Mancini, Giacomo; Mlejnek, Jakub; Descostes, Nicolas; Sieriebriennikov, Bogdan; Leibholz, Alexandra; Zhou, Xiaofan; Ding, Long; Traficante, Maria; Desplan, Claude; Reinberg, Danny
In most organisms, reproduction is correlated with shorter life span. However, the reproductive queen in eusocial insects exhibits a much longer life span than that of workers. In Harpegnathos ants, when the queen dies, workers can undergo an adult caste switch to reproductive pseudo-queens (gamergates), exhibiting a five-times prolonged life span. To explore the relation between reproduction and longevity, we compared gene expression during caste switching. Insulin expression is increased in the gamergate brain that correlates with increased lipid synthesis and production of vitellogenin in the fat body, both transported to the egg. This results from activation of the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) branch of the insulin signaling pathway. By contrast, the production in the gamergate developing ovary of anti-insulin Imp-L2 leads to decreased signaling of the AKT/forkhead box O (FOXO) branch in the fat body, which is consistent with their extended longevity.
PMID: 36048960
ISSN: 1095-9203
CID: 5332152

Inheritance of repressed chromatin domains during S phase requires the histone chaperone NPM1

Escobar, Thelma M; Yu, Jia-Ray; Liu, Sanxiong; Lucero, Kimberly; Vasilyev, Nikita; Nudler, Evgeny; Reinberg, Danny
The epigenetic process safeguards cell identity during cell division through the inheritance of appropriate gene expression profiles. We demonstrated previously that parental nucleosomes are inherited by the same chromatin domains during DNA replication only in the case of repressed chromatin. We now show that this specificity is conveyed by NPM1, a histone H3/H4 chaperone. Proteomic analyses of late S-phase chromatin revealed NPM1 in association with both H3K27me3, an integral component of facultative heterochromatin, and MCM2, an integral component of the DNA replication machinery; moreover, NPM1 interacts directly with PRC2 and with MCM2. Given that NPM1 is essential, the inheritance of repressed chromatin domains was examined anew using mESCs expressing an auxin-degradable version of endogenous NPM1. Upon NPM1 degradation, cells accumulated in the G1-S phase of the cell cycle and parental nucleosome inheritance from repressed chromatin domains was markedly compromised. NPM1 chaperone activity may contribute to the integrity of this process as appropriate inheritance required the NPM1 acidic patches.
PMCID:9045712
PMID: 35476441
ISSN: 2375-2548
CID: 5217492

CRISPR and biochemical screens identify MAZ as a cofactor in CTCF-mediated insulation at Hox clusters

Ortabozkoyun, Havva; Huang, Pin-Yao; Cho, Hyunwoo; Narendra, Varun; LeRoy, Gary; Gonzalez-Buendia, Edgar; Skok, Jane A; Tsirigos, Aristotelis; Mazzoni, Esteban O; Reinberg, Danny
CCCTC-binding factor (CTCF) is critical to three-dimensional genome organization. Upon differentiation, CTCF insulates active and repressed genes within Hox gene clusters. We conducted a genome-wide CRISPR knockout (KO) screen to identify genes required for CTCF-boundary activity at the HoxA cluster, complemented by biochemical approaches. Among the candidates, we identified Myc-associated zinc-finger protein (MAZ) as a cofactor in CTCF insulation. MAZ colocalizes with CTCF at chromatin borders and, similar to CTCF, interacts with the cohesin subunit RAD21. MAZ KO disrupts gene expression and local contacts within topologically associating domains. Similar to CTCF motif deletions, MAZ motif deletions lead to derepression of posterior Hox genes immediately after CTCF boundaries upon differentiation, giving rise to homeotic transformations in mouse. Thus, MAZ is a factor contributing to appropriate insulation, gene expression and genomic architecture during development.
PMID: 35145304
ISSN: 1546-1718
CID: 5167272

NRF1 association with AUTS2-Polycomb mediates specific gene activation in the brain

Liu, Sanxiong; Aldinger, Kimberly A; Cheng, Chi Vicky; Kiyama, Takae; Dave, Mitali; McNamara, Hanna K; Zhao, Wukui; Stafford, James M; Descostes, Nicolas; Lee, Pedro; Caraffi, Stefano G; Ivanovski, Ivan; Errichiello, Edoardo; Zweier, Christiane; Zuffardi, Orsetta; Schneider, Michael; Papavasiliou, Antigone S; Perry, M Scott; Humberson, Jennifer; Cho, Megan T; Weber, Astrid; Swale, Andrew; Badea, Tudor C; Mao, Chai-An; Garavelli, Livia; Dobyns, William B; Reinberg, Danny
The heterogeneous family of complexes comprising Polycomb repressive complex 1 (PRC1) is instrumental for establishing facultative heterochromatin that is repressive to transcription. However, two PRC1 species, ncPRC1.3 and ncPRC1.5, are known to comprise novel components, AUTS2, P300, and CK2, that convert this repressive function to that of transcription activation. Here, we report that individuals harboring mutations in the HX repeat domain of AUTS2 exhibit defects in AUTS2 and P300 interaction as well as a developmental disorder reflective of Rubinstein-Taybi syndrome, which is mainly associated with a heterozygous pathogenic variant in CREBBP/EP300. Moreover, the absence of AUTS2 or mutation in its HX repeat domain gives rise to misregulation of a subset of developmental genes and curtails motor neuron differentiation of mouse embryonic stem cells. The transcription factor nuclear respiratory factor 1 (NRF1) has a novel and integral role in this neurodevelopmental process, being required for ncPRC1.3 recruitment to chromatin.
PMID: 34637754
ISSN: 1097-4164
CID: 5061952

A molecular toolkit for superorganisms

Sieriebriennikov, Bogdan; Reinberg, Danny; Desplan, Claude
Social insects, such as ants, bees, wasps, and termites, draw biologists' attention due to their distinctive lifestyles. As experimental systems, they provide unique opportunities to study organismal differentiation, division of labor, longevity, and the evolution of development. Ants are particularly attractive because several ant species can be propagated in the laboratory. However, the same lifestyle that makes social insects interesting also hampers the use of molecular genetic techniques. Here, we summarize the efforts of the ant research community to surmount these hurdles and obtain novel mechanistic insight into the biology of social insects. We review current approaches and propose novel ones involving genomics, transcriptomics, chromatin and DNA methylation profiling, RNA interference (RNAi), and genome editing in ants and discuss future experimental strategies.
PMID: 34116864
ISSN: 0168-9525
CID: 4911092

The H3K36me2 writer-reader dependency in H3K27M-DIPG

Yu, Jia-Ray; LeRoy, Gary; Bready, Devin; Frenster, Joshua D; Saldana-Meyer, Ricardo; Jin, Ying; Descostes, Nicolas; Stafford, James M; Placantonakis, Dimitris G; Reinberg, Danny
Histone H3K27M is a driving mutation in diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma (DIPG), a deadly pediatric brain tumor. H3K27M reshapes the epigenome through a global inhibition of PRC2 catalytic activity and displacement of H3K27me2/3, promoting oncogenesis of DIPG. As a consequence, a histone modification H3K36me2, antagonistic to H3K27me2/3, is aberrantly elevated. Here, we investigate the role of H3K36me2 in H3K27M-DIPG by tackling its upstream catalyzing enzymes (writers) and downstream binding factors (readers). We determine that NSD1 and NSD2 are the key writers for H3K36me2. Loss of NSD1/2 in H3K27M-DIPG impedes cellular proliferation and tumorigenesis by disrupting tumor-promoting transcriptional programs. Further, we demonstrate that LEDGF and HDGF2 are the main readers mediating the protumorigenic effects downstream of NSD1/2-H3K36me2. Treatment with a chemically modified peptide mimicking endogenous H3K36me2 dislodges LEDGF/HDGF2 from chromatin and specifically inhibits the proliferation of H3K27M-DIPG. Our results indicate a functional pathway of NSD1/2-H3K36me2-LEDGF/HDGF2 as an acquired dependency in H3K27M-DIPG.
PMCID:8279504
PMID: 34261657
ISSN: 2375-2548
CID: 4995792

Parental nucleosome segregation and the inheritance of cellular identity

Escobar, Thelma M; Loyola, Alejandra; Reinberg, Danny
Gene expression programmes conferring cellular identity are achieved through the organization of chromatin structures that either facilitate or impede transcription. Among the key determinants of chromatin organization are the histone modifications that correlate with a given transcriptional status and chromatin state. Until recently, the details for the segregation of nucleosomes on DNA replication and their implications in re-establishing heritable chromatin domains remained unclear. Here, we review recent findings detailing the local segregation of parental nucleosomes and highlight important advances as to how histone methyltransferases associated with the establishment of repressive chromatin domains facilitate epigenetic inheritance.
PMID: 33500558
ISSN: 1471-0064
CID: 4767212