Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Alexander van Oudenaarden is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Alexander van Oudenaarden.


Cell | 2015

Design and Analysis of Single-Cell Sequencing Experiments

Dominic Grün; Alexander van Oudenaarden

Recent advances in single-cell sequencing hold great potential for exploring biological systems with unprecedented resolution. Sequencing the genome of individual cells can reveal somatic mutations and allows the investigation of clonal dynamics. Single-cell transcriptome sequencing can elucidate the cell type composition of a sample. However, single-cell sequencing comes with major technical challenges and yields complex data output. In this Primer, we provide an overview of available methods and discuss experimental design and single-cell data analysis. We hope that these guidelines will enable a growing number of researchers to leverage the power of single-cell sequencing.


Cell | 2014

Every cell is special: genome-wide studies add a new dimension to single-cell biology

Jan Philipp Junker; Alexander van Oudenaarden

Single-cell analyses have provided invaluable insights into studying heterogenity, signaling, and stochastic gene expression. Recent technological advances now open the door to genome-wide single-cell studies.


Cell Stem Cell | 2016

De Novo Prediction of Stem Cell Identity using Single-Cell Transcriptome Data

Dominic Grün; Mauro J. Muraro; Jean Charles Boisset; Kay Wiebrands; Anna Lyubimova; Gitanjali Dharmadhikari; Maaike van den Born; Johan H. van Es; Erik W.L. Jansen; Hans Clevers; Eelco J.P. de Koning; Alexander van Oudenaarden

Summary Adult mitotic tissues like the intestine, skin, and blood undergo constant turnover throughout the life of an organism. Knowing the identity of the stem cell is crucial to understanding tissue homeostasis and its aberrations upon disease. Here we present a computational method for the derivation of a lineage tree from single-cell transcriptome data. By exploiting the tree topology and the transcriptome composition, we establish StemID, an algorithm for identifying stem cells among all detectable cell types within a population. We demonstrate that StemID recovers two known adult stem cell populations, Lgr5+ cells in the small intestine and hematopoietic stem cells in the bone marrow. We apply StemID to predict candidate multipotent cell populations in the human pancreas, a tissue with largely uncharacterized turnover dynamics. We hope that StemID will accelerate the search for novel stem cells by providing concrete markers for biological follow-up and validation.


Cell | 2014

Genome-wide RNA Tomography in the Zebrafish Embryo

Jan Philipp Junker; Emily S. Noël; Victor Guryev; Kevin A. Peterson; Gopi Shah; Jan Huisken; Andrew P. McMahon; Eugene Berezikov; Jeroen Bakkers; Alexander van Oudenaarden

Advancing our understanding of embryonic development is heavily dependent on identification of novel pathways or regulators. Although genome-wide techniques such as RNA sequencing are ideally suited for discovering novel candidate genes, they are unable to yield spatially resolved information in embryos or tissues. Microscopy-based approaches, using in situ hybridization, for example, can provide spatial information about gene expression, but are limited to analyzing one or a few genes at a time. Here, we present a method where we combine traditional histological techniques with low-input RNA sequencing and mathematical image reconstruction to generate a high-resolution genome-wide 3D atlas of gene expression in the zebrafish embryo at three developmental stages. Importantly, our technique enables searching for genes that are expressed in specific spatial patterns without manual image annotation. We envision broad applicability of RNA tomography as an accurate and sensitive approach for spatially resolved transcriptomics in whole embryos and dissected organs.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016

Reg4+ deep crypt secretory cells function as epithelial niche for Lgr5+ stem cells in colon

Nobuo Sasaki; Norman Sachs; Kay Wiebrands; Saskia I. J. Ellenbroek; Arianna Fumagalli; Anna Lyubimova; Harry Begthel; Maaike van den Born; Johan H. van Es; Wouter R. Karthaus; Vivian Li; Peter J. Peters; Jacco van Rheenen; Alexander van Oudenaarden; Hans Clevers

Significance Stem cells crucially depend on their complex microenvironment, also called niche. The niche is defined as an anatomic site, consisting of specialized niche cells. These niche cells anchor stem cells and provide the stem cells with physical protection and essential growth and maintenance signals. In the murine small intestinal crypts, Paneth cells constitute an important part of cellular niche for Lgr5+ stem cells with which they are intermingled. Paneth cells provide molecules such as Wnt3, EGF, and Notch ligands to maintain intestinal stem cell. There exists no typical Paneth cell in the colon. Here, we show that Reg4-expressing deep crypt secretory cells function as the colon equivalent of Paneth cells. Leucine-rich repeat-containing G-protein coupled receptor 5-positive (Lgr5+) stem cells reside at crypt bottoms of the small and large intestine. Small intestinal Paneth cells supply Wnt3, EGF, and Notch signals to neighboring Lgr5+ stem cells. Whereas the colon lacks Paneth cells, deep crypt secretory (DCS) cells are intermingled with Lgr5+ stem cells at crypt bottoms. Here, we report regenerating islet-derived family member 4 (Reg4) as a marker of DCS cells. To investigate a niche function, we eliminated DCS cells by using the diphtheria-toxin receptor gene knocked into the murine Reg4 locus. Ablation of DCS cells results in loss of stem cells from colonic crypts and disrupts gut homeostasis and colon organoid growth. In agreement, sorted Reg4+ DCS cells promote organoid formation of single Lgr5+ colon stem cells. DCS cells can be massively produced from Lgr5+ colon stem cells in vitro by combined Notch inhibition and Wnt activation. We conclude that Reg4+ DCS cells serve as Paneth cell equivalents in the colon crypt niche.


Nature Communications | 2014

Transformation of intestinal stem cells into gastric stem cells on loss of transcription factor Cdx2

Salvatore Simmini; Monika Bialecka; Meritxell Huch; Lennart Kester; Marc van de Wetering; Toshiro Sato; Felix Beck; Alexander van Oudenaarden; Hans Clevers; Jacqueline Deschamps

The endodermal lining of the adult gastro-intestinal tract harbours stem cells that are responsible for the day-to-day regeneration of the epithelium. Stem cells residing in the pyloric glands of the stomach and in the small intestinal crypts differ in their differentiation programme and in the gene repertoire that they express. Both types of stem cells have been shown to grow from single cells into 3D structures (organoids) in vitro. We show that single adult Lgr5-positive stem cells, isolated from small intestinal organoids, require Cdx2 to maintain their intestinal identity and are converted cell-autonomously into pyloric stem cells in the absence of this transcription factor. Clonal descendants of Cdx2null small intestinal stem cells enter the gastric differentiation program instead of producing intestinal derivatives. We show that the intestinal genetic programme is critically dependent on the single transcription factor encoding gene Cdx2.


Molecular Cell | 2015

Single-Cell Transcriptomics Enters the Age of Mass Production

Jan Philipp Junker; Alexander van Oudenaarden

Two publications in the current issue of Cell introduce novel methods for high-throughput single-cell transcriptomics by using droplet microfluidics and sophisticated barcoding schemes for transcriptional profiling of thousands of individual cells.


EMBO Reports | 2015

DAZL regulates Tet1 translation in murine embryonic stem cells

Maaike Welling; Hsu Hsin Chen; Javier Muñoz; Michael Musheev; Lennart Kester; Jan Philipp Junker; Nikolai Mischerikow; Mandana Arbab; Ewart W. Kuijk; Lev Silberstein; Peter V. Kharchenko; Mieke Geens; Christof Niehrs; Hilde Van de Velde; Alexander van Oudenaarden; Albert J. R. Heck; Niels Geijsen

Embryonic stem cell (ESC) cultures display a heterogeneous gene expression profile, ranging from a pristine naïve pluripotent state to a primed epiblast state. Addition of inhibitors of GSK3β and MEK (so‐called 2i conditions) pushes ESC cultures toward a more homogeneous naïve pluripotent state, but the molecular underpinnings of this naïve transition are not completely understood. Here, we demonstrate that DAZL, an RNA‐binding protein known to play a key role in germ‐cell development, marks a subpopulation of ESCs that is actively transitioning toward naïve pluripotency. Moreover, DAZL plays an essential role in the active reprogramming of cytosine methylation. We demonstrate that DAZL associates with mRNA of Tet1, a catalyst of 5‐hydroxylation of methyl‐cytosine, and enhances Tet1 mRNA translation. Overexpression of DAZL in heterogeneous ESC cultures results in elevated TET1 protein levels as well as increased global hydroxymethylation. Conversely, null mutation of Dazl severely stunts 2i‐mediated TET1 induction and hydroxymethylation. Our results provide insight into the regulation of the acquisition of naïve pluripotency and demonstrate that DAZL enhances TET1‐mediated cytosine hydroxymethylation in ESCs that are actively reprogramming to a pluripotent ground state.


EMBO Reports | 2017

Circadian networks in human embryonic stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes

Pieterjan Dierickx; Marit W. Vermunt; Mauro J. Muraro; Menno P. Creyghton; Pieter A. Doevendans; Alexander van Oudenaarden; Niels Geijsen; Linda W. van Laake

Cell‐autonomous circadian oscillations strongly influence tissue physiology and pathophysiology of peripheral organs including the heart, in which the circadian clock is known to determine cardiac metabolism and the outcome of for instance ischemic stress. Human pluripotent stem cells represent a powerful tool to study developmental processes in vitro, but the extent to which human embryonic stem (ES) cell‐derived cardiomyocytes establish circadian rhythmicity in the absence of a systemic context is unknown. Here we demonstrate that while undifferentiated human ES cells do not possess an intrinsic functional clock, oscillatory expression of known core clock genes emerges spontaneously during directed cardiac differentiation. We identify a set of clock‐controlled output genes that contain an oscillatory network of stress‐related transcripts. Furthermore, we demonstrate that this network results in a time‐dependent functional response to doxorubicin, a frequently used anti‐cancer drug with known cardiotoxic side effects. Taken together, our data provide a framework from which the effect of oscillatory gene expression on cardiomyocyte physiology can be modeled in vitro, and demonstrate the influence of a functional clock on experimental outcome.


Circulation | 2017

Tomo-Seq Identifies SOX9 as a Key Regulator of Cardiac Fibrosis During Ischemic Injury

Gregory Lacraz; Jan Philipp Junker; M.M. Gladka; Bas Molenaar; Koen T. Scholman; Marta Vigil-Garcia; Danielle Versteeg; Hesther de Ruiter; Marit W. Vermunt; Menno P. Creyghton; Manon M.H. Huibers; Nicolaas de Jonge; Alexander van Oudenaarden; Eva Van Rooij

Background: Cardiac ischemic injury induces a pathological remodeling response, which can ultimately lead to heart failure. Detailed mechanistic insights into molecular signaling pathways relevant for different aspects of cardiac remodeling will support the identification of novel therapeutic targets. Methods: Although genome-wide transcriptome analysis on diseased tissues has greatly advanced our understanding of the regulatory networks that drive pathological changes in the heart, this approach has been disadvantaged by the fact that the signals are derived from tissue homogenates. Here we used tomo-seq to obtain a genome-wide gene expression signature with high spatial resolution spanning from the infarcted area to the remote to identify new regulators of cardiac remodeling. Cardiac tissue samples from patients suffering from ischemic heart disease were used to validate our findings. Results: Tracing transcriptional differences with a high spatial resolution across the infarcted heart enabled us to identify gene clusters that share a comparable expression profile. The spatial distribution patterns indicated a separation of expressional changes for genes involved in specific aspects of cardiac remodeling, such as fibrosis, cardiomyocyte hypertrophy, and calcium handling (Col1a2, Nppa, and Serca2). Subsequent correlation analysis allowed for the identification of novel factors that share a comparable transcriptional regulation pattern across the infarcted tissue. The strong correlation between the expression levels of these known marker genes and the expression of the coregulated genes could be confirmed in human ischemic cardiac tissue samples. Follow-up analysis identified SOX9 as common transcriptional regulator of a large portion of the fibrosis-related genes that become activated under conditions of ischemic injury. Lineage-tracing experiments indicated that the majority of COL1-positive fibroblasts stem from a pool of SOX9-expressing cells, and in vivo loss of Sox9 blunted the cardiac fibrotic response on ischemic injury. The colocalization between SOX9 and COL1 could also be confirmed in patients suffering from ischemic heart disease. Conclusions: Based on the exact local expression cues, tomo-seq can serve to reveal novel genes and key transcription factors involved in specific aspects of cardiac remodeling. Using tomo-seq, we were able to unveil the unknown relevance of SOX9 as a key regulator of cardiac fibrosis, pointing to SOX9 as a potential therapeutic target for cardiac fibrosis.

Collaboration


Dive into the Alexander van Oudenaarden's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Hans Clevers

Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jan Philipp Junker

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Mauro J. Muraro

Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Anna Lyubimova

Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge