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Dive into the research topics where Amy E. Campbell is active.

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Featured researches published by Amy E. Campbell.


Genes & Development | 2013

Role of SWI/SNF in acute leukemia maintenance and enhancer-mediated Myc regulation

Junwei Shi; Warren A. Whyte; Cinthya J. Zepeda-Mendoza; Joseph P. Milazzo; Chen Shen; Jae-Seok Roe; Jessica Minder; Fatih Mercan; Eric Wang; Mélanie A. Eckersley-Maslin; Amy E. Campbell; Shinpei Kawaoka; Sarah Shareef; Zhu Zhu; Jude Kendall; Matthias Muhar; Christian Haslinger; Ming Yu; Robert G. Roeder; Michael Wigler; Gerd A. Blobel; Johannes Zuber; David L. Spector; Richard A. Young; Christopher R. Vakoc

Cancer cells frequently depend on chromatin regulatory activities to maintain a malignant phenotype. Here, we show that leukemia cells require the mammalian SWI/SNF chromatin remodeling complex for their survival and aberrant self-renewal potential. While Brg1, an ATPase subunit of SWI/SNF, is known to suppress tumor formation in several cell types, we found that leukemia cells instead rely on Brg1 to support their oncogenic transcriptional program, which includes Myc as one of its key targets. To account for this context-specific function, we identify a cluster of lineage-specific enhancers located 1.7 Mb downstream from Myc that are occupied by SWI/SNF as well as the BET protein Brd4. Brg1 is required at these distal elements to maintain transcription factor occupancy and for long-range chromatin looping interactions with the Myc promoter. Notably, these distal Myc enhancers coincide with a region that is focally amplified in ∼3% of acute myeloid leukemias. Together, these findings define a leukemia maintenance function for SWI/SNF that is linked to enhancer-mediated gene regulation, providing general insights into how cancer cells exploit transcriptional coactivators to maintain oncogenic gene expression programs.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

Bromodomain protein Brd3 associates with acetylated GATA1 to promote its chromatin occupancy at erythroid target genes

Janine M. Lamonica; Wulan Deng; Stephan Kadauke; Amy E. Campbell; Roland Gamsjaeger; Hongxin Wang; Yong Cheng; Andrew N. Billin; Ross C. Hardison; Joel P. Mackay; Gerd A. Blobel

Acetylation of histones triggers association with bromodomain-containing proteins that regulate diverse chromatin-related processes. Although acetylation of transcription factors has been appreciated for some time, the mechanistic consequences are less well understood. The hematopoietic transcription factor GATA1 is acetylated at conserved lysines that are required for its stable association with chromatin. We show that the BET family protein Brd3 binds via its first bromodomain (BD1) to GATA1 in an acetylation-dependent manner in vitro and in vivo. Mutation of a single residue in BD1 that is involved in acetyl-lysine binding abrogated recruitment of Brd3 by GATA1, demonstrating that acetylation of GATA1 is essential for Brd3 association with chromatin. Notably, Brd3 is recruited by GATA1 to both active and repressed target genes in a fashion seemingly independent of histone acetylation. Anti-Brd3 ChIP followed by massively parallel sequencing in GATA1-deficient erythroid precursor cells and those that are GATA1 replete revealed that GATA1 is a major determinant of Brd3 recruitment to genomic targets within chromatin. A pharmacologic compound that occupies the acetyl-lysine binding pockets of Brd3 bromodomains disrupts the Brd3-GATA1 interaction, diminishes the chromatin occupancy of both proteins, and inhibits erythroid maturation. Together these findings provide a mechanism for GATA1 acetylation and suggest that Brd3 “reads” acetyl marks on nuclear factors to promote their stable association with chromatin.


Blood | 2015

Functions of BET proteins in erythroid gene expression

Aaron J. Stonestrom; Sarah C. Hsu; Kristen S. Jahn; Peng Huang; Cheryl A. Keller; Belinda Giardine; Stephan Kadauke; Amy E. Campbell; Perry Evans; Ross C. Hardison; Gerd A. Blobel

Inhibitors of bromodomain and extraterminal motif proteins (BETs) are being evaluated for the treatment of cancer and other diseases, yet much remains to be learned about how BET proteins function during normal physiology. We used genomic and genetic approaches to examine BET function in a hematopoietic maturation system driven by GATA1, an acetylated transcription factor previously shown to interact with BETs. We found that BRD2, BRD3, and BRD4 were variably recruited to GATA1-regulated genes, with BRD3 binding the greatest number of GATA1-occupied sites. Pharmacologic BET inhibition impaired GATA1-mediated transcriptional activation, but not repression, genome-wide. Mechanistically, BETs promoted chromatin occupancy of GATA1 and subsequently supported transcriptional activation. Using a combination of CRISPR-Cas9-mediated genomic engineering and shRNA approaches, we observed that depletion of either BRD2 or BRD4 alone blunted erythroid gene activation. Surprisingly, depletion of BRD3 only affected erythroid transcription in the context of BRD2 deficiency. Consistent with functional overlap among BET proteins, forced BRD3 expression substantially rescued defects caused by BRD2 deficiency. These results suggest that pharmacologic BET inhibition should be interpreted in the context of distinct steps in transcriptional activation and overlapping functions among BET family members.


Blood | 2013

Analysis of disease-causing GATA1 mutations in murine gene complementation systems

Amy E. Campbell; Lorna Wilkinson-White; Joel P. Mackay; Jacqueline M. Matthews; Gerd A. Blobel

Missense mutations in transcription factor GATA1 underlie a spectrum of congenital red blood cell and platelet disorders. We investigated how these alterations cause distinct clinical phenotypes by combining structural, biochemical, and genomic approaches with gene complementation systems that examine GATA1 function in biologically relevant cellular contexts. Substitutions that disrupt FOG1 cofactor binding impair both gene activation and repression and are associated with pronounced clinical phenotypes. Moreover, clinical severity correlates with the degree of FOG1 disruption. Surprisingly, 2 mutations shown to impair DNA binding of GATA1 in vitro did not measurably affect in vivo target gene occupancy. Rather, one of these disrupted binding to the TAL1 complex, implicating it in diseases caused by GATA1 mutations. Diminished TAL1 complex recruitment mainly impairs transcriptional activation and is linked to relatively mild disease. Notably, different substitutions at the same amino acid can selectively inhibit TAL1 complex or FOG1 binding, producing distinct cellular and clinical phenotypes. The structure-function relationships elucidated here were not predicted by prior in vitro or computational studies. Thus, our findings uncover novel disease mechanisms underlying GATA1 mutations and highlight the power of gene complementation assays for elucidating the molecular basis of genetic diseases.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2015

Pluripotent stem cells reveal erythroid-specific activities of the GATA1 N-terminus

Marta Byrska-Bishop; Daniel VanDorn; Amy E. Campbell; Marisol Betensky; Philip R. Arca; Yu Yao; Paul Gadue; Fernando Ferreira Costa; Richard L. Nemiroff; Gerd A. Blobel; Deborah L. French; Ross C. Hardison; Mitchell J. Weiss; Stella T. Chou

Germline GATA1 mutations that result in the production of an amino-truncated protein termed GATA1s (where s indicates short) cause congenital hypoplastic anemia. In patients with trisomy 21, similar somatic GATA1s-producing mutations promote transient myeloproliferative disease and acute megakaryoblastic leukemia. Here, we demonstrate that induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) from patients with GATA1-truncating mutations exhibit impaired erythroid potential, but enhanced megakaryopoiesis and myelopoiesis, recapitulating the major phenotypes of the associated diseases. Similarly, in developmentally arrested GATA1-deficient murine megakaryocyte-erythroid progenitors derived from murine embryonic stem cells (ESCs), expression of GATA1s promoted megakaryopoiesis, but not erythropoiesis. Transcriptome analysis revealed a selective deficiency in the ability of GATA1s to activate erythroid-specific genes within populations of hematopoietic progenitors. Although its DNA-binding domain was intact, chromatin immunoprecipitation studies showed that GATA1s binding at specific erythroid regulatory regions was impaired, while binding at many nonerythroid sites, including megakaryocytic and myeloid target genes, was normal. Together, these observations indicate that lineage-specific GATA1 cofactor associations are essential for normal chromatin occupancy and provide mechanistic insights into how GATA1s mutations cause human disease. More broadly, our studies underscore the value of ESCs and iPSCs to recapitulate and study disease phenotypes.


Scientific Reports | 2017

A Pilot Characterization of the Human Chronobiome

Carsten Skarke; Nicholas F. Lahens; Seth D. Rhoades; Amy E. Campbell; Kyle Bittinger; Aubrey Bailey; Christian Hoffmann; Randal S. Olson; Lihong Chen; Guangrui Yang; Thomas S. Price; Jason H. Moore; Frederic D. Bushman; Casey S. Greene; Gregory R. Grant; Aalim M. Weljie; Garret A. FitzGerald

Physiological function, disease expression and drug effects vary by time-of-day. Clock disruption in mice results in cardio-metabolic, immunological and neurological dysfunction; circadian misalignment using forced desynchrony increases cardiovascular risk factors in humans. Here we integrated data from remote sensors, physiological and multi-omics analyses to assess the feasibility of detecting time dependent signals - the chronobiome – despite the “noise” attributable to the behavioral differences of free-living human volunteers. The majority (62%) of sensor readouts showed time-specific variability including the expected variation in blood pressure, heart rate, and cortisol. While variance in the multi-omics is dominated by inter-individual differences, temporal patterns are evident in the metabolome (5.4% in plasma, 5.6% in saliva) and in several genera of the oral microbiome. This demonstrates, despite a small sample size and limited sampling, the feasibility of characterizing at scale the human chronobiome “in the wild”. Such reference data at scale are a prerequisite to detect and mechanistically interpret discordant data derived from patients with temporal patterns of disease expression, to develop time-specific therapeutic strategies and to refine existing treatments.


BioTechniques | 2014

Comparative analysis of mitosis-specific antibodies for bulk purification of mitotic populations by fluorescence-activated cell sorting.

Amy E. Campbell; Chris C.-S. Hsiung; Gerd A. Blobel

Mitosis entails complex chromatin changes that have garnered increasing interest from biologists who study genome structure and regulation-fields that are being advanced by high-throughput sequencing (Seq) technologies. The application of these technologies to study the mitotic genome requires large numbers of highly pure mitotic cells, with minimal contamination from interphase cells, to ensure accurate measurement of phenomena specific to mitosis. Here, we optimized a fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS)-based method for isolating formaldehyde-fixed mitotic cells--at virtually 100% mitotic purity and in quantities sufficient for high-throughput genomic studies. We compared several commercially available antibodies that react with mitosis-specific epitopes over a range of concentrations and cell numbers, finding antibody MPM2 to be the most robust and cost-effective.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2018

The BRD3 ET domain recognizes a short peptide motif through a mechanism that is conserved across chromatin remodelers and transcriptional regulators.

Dorothy C.C. Wai; Taylor N. Szyszka; Amy E. Campbell; Cherry Kwong; Lorna Wilkinson-White; Ana P. G. Silva; Jason K. K. Low; Ann H. Kwan; Roland Gamsjaeger; James D. Chalmers; Wayne M. Patrick; Bin Lu; Christopher R. Vakoc; Gerd A. Blobel; Joel P. Mackay


Blood | 2013

Dissecting Molecular Pathways That Underlie Disease-Causing Gata1 Mutations

Amy E. Campbell


Blood | 2012

GATA1 and the BET Family Protein Brd3 Form a Mitotic Bookmarking Complex

Stephan Kadauke; Amy E. Campbell; Aaron J. Stonestrom; Deepti Jain; Ross C. Hardison; Gerd A. Blobel

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Gerd A. Blobel

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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Ross C. Hardison

Pennsylvania State University

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Stephan Kadauke

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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Aaron J. Stonestrom

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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Christopher R. Vakoc

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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Aalim M. Weljie

University of Pennsylvania

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