ACD can configure probes for the various manual and automated assays for INS for RNAscope Assay, or for Basescope Assay compatible for your species of interest.
Nature
2019 Jan 30
Baser A, Skabkin M, Kleber S, Dang Y, Gülcüler Balta GS, Kalamakis G, Göpferich M, Ibañez DC, Schefzik R, Lopez AS, Bobadilla EL, Schultz C, Fischer B, Martin-Villalba A.
PMID: 30700908 | DOI: 10.1038/s41586-019-0888-x
Whether post-transcriptional regulation of gene expression controls differentiation of stem cells for tissue renewal remains unknown. Quiescent stem cells exhibit a low level of protein synthesis1, which is key to maintaining the pool of fully functional stem cells, not only in the brain but also in the bone marrow and hair follicles2-6. Neurons also maintain a subset of messenger RNAs in a translationally silent state, which react 'on demand' to intracellular and extracellular signals. This uncoupling of general availability of mRNA from translation into protein facilitates immediate responses to environmental changes and avoids excess production of proteins, which is the most energy-consuming process within the cell. However, when post-transcriptional regulation is acquired and how protein synthesis changes along the different steps of maturation are not known. Here we show that protein synthesis undergoes highly dynamic changes when stem cells differentiate to neurons in vivo. Examination of individual transcripts using RiboTag mouse models reveals that whereas stem cells translate abundant transcripts with little discrimination, translation becomes increasingly regulated with the onset of differentiation. The generation of neurogenic progeny involves translational repression of a subset of mRNAs, including mRNAs that encode the stem cell identity factors SOX2 and PAX6, and components of the translation machinery, which are enriched in a pyrimidine-rich motif. The decrease of mTORC1 activity as stem cells exit the cell cycle selectively blocks translation of these transcripts. Our results reveal a control mechanism by which the cell cycle is coupled to post-transcriptional repression of key stem cell identity factors, thereby promoting exit from stemness.
Osteoarthritis and cartilage
2022 Sep 20
Han, S;
PMID: 36150676 | DOI: 10.1016/j.joca.2022.09.003
PLoS Genet.
2016 Jul 14
Perdigoto CN, Dauber KL, Bar C, Tsai PC, Valdes VJ, Cohen I, Santoriello FJ, Zhao D, Zheng D, Hsu YC, Ezhkova E.
PMID: 27414999 | DOI: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1006151.
An increasing amount of evidence indicates that developmental programs are tightly regulated by the complex interplay between signalingpathways, as well as transcriptional and epigenetic processes. Here, we have uncovered coordination between transcriptional and morphogen cues to specify Merkel cells, poorly understood skin cells that mediate light touch sensations. In murine dorsal skin, Merkel cells are part of touch domes, which are skin structures consisting of specialized keratinocytes, Merkel cells, and afferent neurons, and are located exclusively around primary hair follicles. We show that the developing primary hair follicle functions as a niche required for Merkel cell specification. We find that intraepidermal Sonic hedgehog (Shh) signaling, initiated by the production of Shh ligand in the developing hair follicles, is required forMerkel cell specification. The importance of Shh for Merkel cell formation is further reinforced by the fact that Shh overexpression in embryonic epidermal progenitors leads to ectopic Merkel cells. Interestingly, Shh signaling is common to primary, secondary, and tertiary hair follicles, raising the possibility that there are restrictive mechanisms that regulate Merkel cell specification exclusively around primary hair follicles. Indeed, we find that loss of Polycomb repressive complex 2 (PRC2) in the epidermis results in the formation of ectopic Merkel cells that are associated with all hair types. We show that PRC2 loss expands the field of epidermal cells competent to differentiate into Merkel cells through the upregulation of key Merkel-differentiation genes, which are known PRC2 targets. Importantly, PRC2-mediated repression of the Merkel celldifferentiation program requires inductive Shh signaling to form mature Merkel cells. Our study exemplifies how the interplay between epigenetic and morphogen cues regulates the complex patterning and formation of the mammalian skin structures.
Cancer Cell
2018 Jan 27
Eberl M, Mangelberger D, Swanson JB, Verhaegen ME, Harms PW, Frohm ML, Dlugosz AA, Wong SY.
PMID: - | DOI: 10.1016/j.ccell.2017.12.015
Hedgehog (Hh) pathway inhibitors such as vismodegib are highly effective for treating basal cell carcinoma (BCC); however, residual tumor cells frequently persist and regenerate the primary tumor upon drug discontinuation. Here, we show that BCCs are organized into two molecularly and functionally distinct compartments. Whereas interior Hh+/Notch+ suprabasal cells undergo apoptosis in response to vismodegib, peripheral Hh+++/Notch− basal cells survive throughout treatment. Inhibiting Notch specifically promotes tumor persistence without causing drug resistance, while activating Notch is sufficient to regress already established lesions. Altogether, these findings suggest that the three-dimensional architecture of BCCs establishes a natural hierarchy of drug response in the tumor and that this hierarchy can be overcome, for better or worse, by modulating Notch.
Science advances
2022 Jun 10
Hu, Y;Jiang, Y;Behnan, J;Ribeiro, MM;Kalantzi, C;Zhang, MD;Lou, D;Häring, M;Sharma, N;Okawa, S;Del Sol, A;Adameyko, I;Svensson, M;Persson, O;Ernfors, P;
PMID: 35675414 | DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.abm6340
Cell Rep
2019 Jun 04
Coquenlorge S, Yin WC, Yung T, Pan J, Zhang X, Mo R, Belik J, Hui CC, Kim TH.
PMID: 31167144 | DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2019.05.016
Gut mesenchyme provides key stem cell niche signals such as Wnt ligands, but how these signals are regulated is unclear. Because Hedgehog (Hh) signaling is critical for gut mesenchymal development and tumorigenesis, we investigated Hh-mediated mechanisms by analyzing mice deleted for key negative regulators of Hh signaling, Sufu and/or Spop, in the gut mesenchyme, and demonstrated their dosage-dependent roles. Although these mutants exhibit abnormal mesenchymal cell growth and functionally defective muscle layers, villification is completed with proper mesenchymal clustering, implying a permissive role for Hh signaling. These mesenchymal defects are partially rescued by Gli2 reduction. Consistent with increased epithelial proliferation caused by abnormal Hh activation in development, Sufu reduction promotes intestinal tumorigenesis, whereas Gli2 heterozygosity suppresses it. Our analyses of chromatin and GLI2 binding genomic regions reveal its transcriptional regulation of stem cell niche signals through enhancers, providing mechanistic insight into the intestinal stem cell niche in development and tumorigenesis
Neuron
2022 Sep 26
Bulstrode, H;Girdler, GC;Gracia, T;Aivazidis, A;Moutsopoulos, I;Young, AMH;Hancock, J;He, X;Ridley, K;Xu, Z;Stockley, JH;Finlay, J;Hallou, C;Fajardo, T;Fountain, DM;van Dongen, S;Joannides, A;Morris, R;Mair, R;Watts, C;Santarius, T;Price, SJ;Hutchinson, PJA;Hodson, EJ;Pollard, SM;Mohorianu, I;Barker, RA;Sweeney, TR;Bayraktar, O;Gergely, F;Rowitch, DH;
PMID: 36174572 | DOI: 10.1016/j.neuron.2022.09.002
Life (Basel, Switzerland)
2021 Oct 18
Paterson, C;Kilmister, EJ;Brasch, HD;Bockett, N;Patel, J;Paterson, E;Purdie, G;Galvin, S;Davis, PF;Itinteang, T;Tan, ST;
PMID: 34685477 | DOI: 10.3390/life11101106
Cell stem cell
2021 Apr 14
Vercauteren Drubbel, A;Pirard, S;Kin, S;Dassy, B;Lefort, A;Libert, F;Nomura, S;Beck, B;
PMID: 33882290 | DOI: 10.1016/j.stem.2021.03.019
Nat Cell Biol.
2017 May 29
Hoeck JD, Biehs B, Kurtova AV, Kljavin NM, de Sousa E Melo F, Alicke B, Koeppen H, Modrusan Z, Piskol R, de Sauvage FJ.
PMID: 28553937 | DOI: 10.1038/ncb3535
Under injury conditions, dedicated stem cell populations govern tissue regeneration. However, the molecular mechanisms that induce stem cell regeneration and enable plasticity are poorly understood. Here, we investigate stem cell recovery in the context of the hair follicle to understand how two molecularly distinct stem cell populations are integrated. Utilizing diphtheria-toxin-mediated cell ablation of Lgr5+(leucine-rich repeat-containing G-protein-coupled receptor 5) stem cells, we show that killing of Lgr5+ cells in mice abrogates hair regeneration but this is reversible. During recovery, CD34+ (CD34 antigen) stem cells activate inflammatory response programs and start dividing. Pharmacological attenuation of inflammation inhibits CD34+ cell proliferation. Subsequently, the Wnt pathway controls the recovery of Lgr5+ cells and inhibition of Wnt signalling prevents Lgr5+ cell and hair germ recovery. Thus, our study uncovers a compensatory relationship between two stem cell populations and the underlying molecular mechanisms that enable hair follicle regeneration.
EMBO J.
2018 Jul 23
Maglic D, Schlegelmilch K, Dost AF, Panero R, Dill M, Calogero RA, Camargo FD.
PMID: 30037824 | DOI: 10.15252/embj.201798642
The mammalian Hippo signaling pathway, through its effectors YAP and TAZ, coerces epithelial progenitor cell expansion for appropriate tissue development or regeneration upon damage. Its ability to drive rapid tissue growth explains why many oncogenic events frequently exploit this pathway to promote cancer phenotypes. Indeed, several tumor types including basal cell carcinoma (BCC) show genetic aberrations in the Hippo (or YAP/TAZ) regulators. Here, we uncover that while YAP is dispensable for homeostatic epidermal regeneration, it is required for BCC development. Our clonal analyses further demonstrate that the few emerging Yap-null dysplasia have lower fitness and thus are diminished as they progress to invasive BCC Mechanistically, YAP depletion in BCC tumors leads to effective impairment of the JNK-JUN signaling, a well-established tumor-driving cascade. Importantly, in this context, YAP does not influence canonical Wnt or Hedgehog signaling. Overall, we reveal Hippo signaling as an independent promoter of BCC pathogenesis and thereby a viable target for drug-resistant BCC.
Nature neuroscience
2021 Dec 01
Pellegrino, G;Martin, M;Allet, C;Lhomme, T;Geller, S;Franssen, D;Mansuy, V;Manfredi-Lozano, M;Coutteau-Robles, A;Delli, V;Rasika, S;Mazur, D;Loyens, A;Tena-Sempere, M;Siepmann, J;Pralong, FP;Ciofi, P;Corfas, G;Parent, AS;Ojeda, SR;Sharif, A;Prevot, V;
PMID: 34795451 | DOI: 10.1038/s41593-021-00960-z
Description | ||
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sense Example: Hs-LAG3-sense | Standard probes for RNA detection are in antisense. Sense probe is reverse complent to the corresponding antisense probe. | |
Intron# Example: Mm-Htt-intron2 | Probe targets the indicated intron in the target gene, commonly used for pre-mRNA detection | |
Pool/Pan Example: Hs-CD3-pool (Hs-CD3D, Hs-CD3E, Hs-CD3G) | A mixture of multiple probe sets targeting multiple genes or transcripts | |
No-XSp Example: Hs-PDGFB-No-XMm | Does not cross detect with the species (Sp) | |
XSp Example: Rn-Pde9a-XMm | designed to cross detect with the species (Sp) | |
O# Example: Mm-Islr-O1 | Alternative design targeting different regions of the same transcript or isoforms | |
CDS Example: Hs-SLC31A-CDS | Probe targets the protein-coding sequence only | |
EnEm | Probe targets exons n and m | |
En-Em | Probe targets region from exon n to exon m | |
Retired Nomenclature | ||
tvn Example: Hs-LEPR-tv1 | Designed to target transcript variant n | |
ORF Example: Hs-ACVRL1-ORF | Probe targets open reading frame | |
UTR Example: Hs-HTT-UTR-C3 | Probe targets the untranslated region (non-protein-coding region) only | |
5UTR Example: Hs-GNRHR-5UTR | Probe targets the 5' untranslated region only | |
3UTR Example: Rn-Npy1r-3UTR | Probe targets the 3' untranslated region only | |
Pan Example: Pool | A mixture of multiple probe sets targeting multiple genes or transcripts |
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