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Dive into the research topics where Anatoli S. Gleiberman is active.

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Featured researches published by Anatoli S. Gleiberman.


Cell | 2002

Identification of a Wnt/Dvl/β-Catenin → Pitx2 Pathway Mediating Cell-Type-Specific Proliferation during Development

Chrissa Kioussi; Paola Briata; Sung Hee Baek; David W. Rose; Natasha S. Hamblet; Thomas Herman; Kenneth A. Ohgi; Chijen Lin; Anatoli S. Gleiberman; Jianbo Wang; Véronique Brault; Pilar Ruiz-Lozano; H.D. Nguyen; Rolf Kemler; Christopher K. Glass; Anthony Wynshaw-Boris; Michael G. Rosenfeld

Understanding the cell type-specific molecular mechanisms by which distinct signaling pathways combinatorially control proliferation during organogenesis is a central issue in development and disease. Here, we report that the bicoid-related transcription factor Pitx2 is rapidly induced by the Wnt/Dvl/beta-catenin pathway and is required for effective cell-type-specific proliferation by directly activating specific growth-regulating genes. Regulated exchange of HDAC1/beta-catenin converts Pitx2 from repressor to activator, analogous to control of TCF/LEF1. Pitx2 then serves as a competence factor required for the temporally ordered and growth factor-dependent recruitment of a series of specific coactivator complexes that prove necessary for Cyclin D2 gene induction. The molecular strategy underlying interactions between the Wnt and growth factor-dependent signaling pathways in cardiac outflow tract and pituitary proliferation is likely to be prototypic of cell-specific proliferation strategies in other tissues.


Cell | 2000

Combinatorial Roles of the Nuclear Receptor Corepressor in Transcription and Development

Kristen Jepsen; Ola Hermanson; Thandi M. Onami; Anatoli S. Gleiberman; Victoria V. Lunyak; Robert J. McEvilly; Riki Kurokawa; Vivek Kumar; Forrest C. Liu; Edward Seto; Stephen M. Hedrick; Gail Mandel; Christopher K. Glass; David W. Rose; Michael G. Rosenfeld

Transcriptional repression plays crucial roles in diverse aspects of metazoan development, implying critical regulatory roles for corepressors such as N-CoR and SMRT. Altered patterns of transcription in tissues and cells derived from N-CoR gene-deleted mice and the resulting block at specific points in CNS, erythrocyte, and thymocyte development indicated that N-CoR was a required component of short-term active repression by nuclear receptors and MAD and of a subset of long-term repression events mediated by REST/NRSF. Unexpectedly, N-CoR and a specific deacetylase were also required for transcriptional activation of one class of retinoic acid response element. Together, these findings suggest that specific combinations of corepressors and histone deacetylases mediate the gene-specific actions of DNA-bound repressors in development of multiple organ systems.


Cell | 1999

Reciprocal Interactions of Pit1 and GATA2 Mediate Signaling Gradient–Induced Determination of Pituitary Cell Types

Jeremy S. Dasen; Shawn O' Connell; Sarah E. Flynn; Mathias Treier; Anatoli S. Gleiberman; Daniel P. Szeto; Farideh Hooshmand; Aneel K. Aggarwal; Michael G. Rosenfeld

The mechanisms by which transient gradients of signaling molecules lead to emergence of specific cell types remain a central question in mammalian organogenesis. Here, we demonstrate that the appearance of four ventral pituitary cell types is mediated via the reciprocal interactions of two transcription factors, Pit1 and GATA2, which are epistatic to the remainder of the cell type-specific transcription programs and serve as the molecular memory of the transient signaling events. Unexpectedly, this program includes a DNA binding-independent function of Pit1, suppressing the ventral GATA2-dependent gonadotrope program by inhibiting GATA2 binding to gonadotrope- but not thyrotrope-specific genes, indicating that both DNA binding-dependent and -independent actions of abundant determining factors contribute to generate distinct cell phenotypes.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

Genetic approaches identify adult pituitary stem cells

Anatoli S. Gleiberman; Tatyana V. Michurina; Juan M. Encinas; Jose L. Roig; Peter Krasnov; Francesca Balordi; Gord Fishell; Michael G. Rosenfeld; Grigori Enikolopov

Adult tissues undergo continuous cell turnover in response to stress, damage, or physiological demand. New differentiated cells are generated from dedicated or facultative stem cells or from self-renewing differentiated cells. Here we describe a different stem cell strategy for tissue maintenance, distinct from that observed for dedicated or facultative stem cells. We report the presence of nestin-expressing adult stem cells in the perilumenal region of the mature anterior pituitary and, using genetic inducible fate mapping, demonstrate that they serve to generate subsets of all six terminally differentiated endocrine cell types of the pituitary gland. These stem cells, while not playing a significant role in organogenesis, undergo postnatal expansion and start producing differentiated progeny, which colonize the organ that initially entirely consisted of differentiated cells derived from embryonic precursors. This generates a mosaic organ with two phenotypically similar subsets of endocrine cells that have different origins and different life histories. These parallel but distinct lineages of differentiated cells in the gland may help the maturing organism adapt to changes in the metabolic regulatory landscape.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Core circadian protein CLOCK is a positive regulator of NF-κB–mediated transcription

Mary L. Spengler; Karen K. Kuropatwinski; Maria Comas; Alexander V. Gasparian; Natalia Fedtsova; Anatoli S. Gleiberman; Ilya Gitlin; Natalia M. Artemicheva; Krysta A. Deluca; Andrei V. Gudkov; Marina P. Antoch

The circadian clock controls many physiological parameters including immune response to infectious agents, which is mediated by activation of the transcription factor NF-κB. It is widely accepted that circadian regulation is based on periodic changes in gene expression that are triggered by transcriptional activity of the CLOCK/BMAL1 complex. Through the use of a mouse model system we show that daily variations in the intensity of the NF-κB response to a variety of immunomodulators are mediated by core circadian protein CLOCK, which can up-regulate NF-κB–mediated transcription in the absence of BMAL1; moreover, BMAL1 counteracts the CLOCK-dependent increase in the activation of NF-κB–responsive genes. Consistent with its regulatory function, CLOCK is found in protein complexes with the p65 subunit of NF-κB, and its overexpression correlates with an increase in specific phosphorylated and acetylated transcriptionally active forms of p65. In addition, activation of NF-κB in response to immunostimuli in mouse embryonic fibroblasts and primary hepatocytes isolated from Clock-deficient mice is significantly reduced compared with WT cells, whereas Clock-Δ19 mutation, which reduces the transactivation capacity of CLOCK on E-box–containing circadian promoters, has no effect on the ability of CLOCK to up-regulate NF-κB–responsive promoters. These findings establish a molecular link between two essential determinants of the circadian and immune mechanisms, the transcription factors CLOCK and NF-κB, respectively.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2001

Tbx19, a tissue-selective regulator of POMC gene expression.

Jianxiang Liu; Chijen Lin; Anatoli S. Gleiberman; Kenneth A. Ohgi; Thomas Herman; Hsiang-Po Huang; Ming-Jer Tsai; Michael G. Rosenfeld

Pituitary cell types arise in a temporally and spatially specific fashion, in response to combinatorial actions of transcription factors induced by transient signaling gradients. The critical transcriptional determinants of the two pituitary cell types that express the pro-opiomelanocortin (POMC) gene, the anterior lobe corticotropes, producing adrenocorticotropin, and the intermediate lobe melanotropes, producing melanocyte-stimulating hormone (MSHα), have remained unknown. Here, we report that a member of the T-box gene family, Tbx19, which is expressed only in the rostral ventral diencephalon and pituitary gland, commencing on e11.5, marks pituitary cells that will subsequently express the POMC gene and is capable of altering progression of ventral cell types and inducing adrenocorticotropin in rostral tip cells. It is suggested that Tbx19, depending on the presence of synergizing transcription factors, can activate POMC gene expression and repress the α glycoprotein subunit and thyroid-stimulating hormone β promoters.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 1997

POU domain factors of the Brn-3 class recognize functional DNA elements which are distinctive, symmetrical, and highly conserved in evolution

Craig A. Gruber; Jerry M. Rhee; Anatoli S. Gleiberman; Eric E. Turner

To better understand the diversity of function within the POU domain class of transcriptional regulators, we have determined the optimal DNA recognition site of several proteins of the POU-IV (Brn-3) subclass by random oligonucleotide selection. The consensus recognition element derived in this study, ATAATTAAT, is clearly distinct from octamer sites described for the POU factor Oct-1. The optimal POU-IV site determined here also binds Brn-3.0 with significantly higher affinity than consensus recognition sites previously proposed for this POU subclass. The binding affinity of Brn-3.0 on its optimal site, several variants of this site, and several naturally occurring POU recognition elements is highly correlated with the activation of reporter gene expression by Brn-3.0 in transfection assays. The preferred DNA recognition site of Brn-3.0 resembles strongly the optimal sites of another mammalian POU-IV class protein, Brn-3.2, and of the Caenorhabditis elegans Brn-3.0 homolog Unc-86, demonstrating that the site-specific DNA recognition properties of these factors are highly conserved between widely divergent species.


Cell Cycle | 2007

Neural potential of a stem cell population in the hair follicle.

John Mignone; Jose L. Roig-Lopez; Natalia Fedtsova; Dustin E. Schones; Louis N. Manganas; Mirjana Maletic-Savatic; William M. Keyes; Alea A. Mills; Anatoli S. Gleiberman; Michael Q. Zhang; Grigori Enikolopov

The bulge region of the hair follicle serves as a repository for epithelial stem cells that can regenerate the follicle in each hair growth cycle and contribute to epidermis regeneration upon injury. Here we describe a population of multipotential stem cells in the hair follicle bulge; these cells can be identified by fluorescence in transgenic nestin-GFP mice. The morphological features of these cells suggest that they maintain close associations with each other and with the surrounding niche. Upon explantation, these cells can give rise to neurosphere-like structures in vitro. When these cells are permitted to differentiate, they produce several cell types, including cells with neuronal, astrocytic, oligodendrocytic, smooth muscle, adipocytic, and other phenotypes. Furthermore, upon implantation into the developing nervous system of chick, these cells generate neuronal cells in vivo. We used transcriptional profiling to assess the relationship between these cells and embryonic and postnatal neural stem cells and to compare them with other stem cell populations of the bulge. Our results show that nestin-expressing cells in the bulge of the hair follicle have stem cell-like properties, are multipotent, and can effectively generate cells of neural lineage in vitro and in vivo.


Genes & Development | 2008

Cooperative regulation in development by SMRT and FOXP1

Kristen Jepsen; Anatoli S. Gleiberman; Can Shi; Daniel I. Simon; Michael G. Rosenfeld

A critical aspect of mammalian development involves the actions of dedicated repressors/corepressors to prevent unregulated gene activation programs that would initiate specific cell determination events. While the role of NCoR/SMRT corepressors in nuclear receptor actions is well documented, we here report that a previously unrecognized functional interaction between SMRT and a forkhead protein, FOXP1, is required for cardiac growth and regulation of macrophage differentiation. Our studies demonstrate that SMRT and FOXP1 define a functional biological unit required to orchestrate specific programs critical for mammalian organogenesis, linking developmental roles of FOX to a specific corepressor.


Developmental Dynamics | 2005

Expression of nestin–green fluorescent protein transgene marks oval cells in the adult liver

Anatoli S. Gleiberman; Juan M. Encinas; John Mignone; Tatyana V. Michurina; Michael G. Rosenfeld; Grigori Enikolopov

Oval cells, which become apparent in the liver after chronic injury, serve as bipotent progenitors for differentiated hepatocytes and cholangiocytes. We found that, in the liver of adult transgenic mice in which expression of green fluorescent protein (GFP) is driven by regulatory elements of the nestin gene, the GFP signal marks a subpopulation of small epithelial cells that meet the criteria for oval cells, including morphology, localization, antigenic profile, and reactivity in response to injury. In the regenerating and developing liver, we also found nestin‐GFP–positive cells that express hepatocyte markers; such cells may correspond to transiently appearing differentiating progeny of oval cells. During development, GFP‐expressing cells in the liver emerge relatively late, after the appearance of differentiated hepatocytes and cholangiocytes. Our results suggest that nestin‐GFP cells in the liver correspond to a specialized cell type whose primary function may be to serve as a reserve for adult liver epithelial cell types. Development Dynamics 234:413–421, 2005.

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Andrei V. Gudkov

Roswell Park Cancer Institute

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Ilya Gitlin

Roswell Park Cancer Institute

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Katerina I. Leonova

Roswell Park Cancer Institute

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Peter Krasnov

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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Bojidar Kojouharov

Roswell Park Cancer Institute

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Jean M. Veith

Roswell Park Cancer Institute

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