Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Carole A. Stagg is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Carole A. Stagg.


Nature | 2010

Zscan4 regulates telomere elongation and genomic stability in ES cells

Michal Zalzman; Geppino Falco; Lioudmila V. Sharova; Akira Nishiyama; Marshall Thomas; Sung Lim Lee; Carole A. Stagg; Hien G. Hoang; Hsih Te Yang; Fred E. Indig; Robert P. Wersto; Minoru S.H. Ko

Exceptional genomic stability is one of the hallmarks of mouse embryonic stem (ES) cells. However, the genes contributing to this stability remain obscure. We previously identified Zscan4 as a specific marker for two-cell embryo and ES cells. Here we show that Zscan4 is involved in telomere maintenance and long-term genomic stability in ES cells. Only 5% of ES cells express Zscan4 at a given time, but nearly all ES cells activate Zscan4 at least once during nine passages. The transient Zscan4-positive state is associated with rapid telomere extension by telomere recombination and upregulation of meiosis-specific homologous recombination genes, which encode proteins that are colocalized with ZSCAN4 on telomeres. Furthermore, Zscan4 knockdown shortens telomeres, increases karyotype abnormalities and spontaneous sister chromatid exchange, and slows down cell proliferation until reaching crisis by passage eight. Together, our data show a unique mode of genome maintenance in ES cells.


PLOS Biology | 2003

Transcriptome analysis of mouse stem cells and early embryos.

Alexei A. Sharov; Yulan Piao; Ryo Matoba; Dawood B. Dudekula; Yong Qian; Vincent VanBuren; Geppino Falco; Patrick R. Martin; Carole A. Stagg; Uwem C. Bassey; Yuxia Wang; Mark G. Carter; Toshio Hamatani; Kazuhiro Aiba; Hidenori Akutsu; Lioudmila V. Sharova; Tetsuya S. Tanaka; Wendy L. Kimber; Toshiyuki Yoshikawa; Saied A. Jaradat; Serafino Pantano; Ramaiah Nagaraja; Kenneth R. Boheler; Dennis D. Taub; Richard J. Hodes; Dan L. Longo; David Schlessinger; Jonathan R. Keller; Emily Klotz; Garnett Kelsoe

Understanding and harnessing cellular potency are fundamental in biology and are also critical to the future therapeutic use of stem cells. Transcriptome analysis of these pluripotent cells is a first step towards such goals. Starting with sources that include oocytes, blastocysts, and embryonic and adult stem cells, we obtained 249,200 high-quality EST sequences and clustered them with public sequences to produce an index of approximately 30,000 total mouse genes that includes 977 previously unidentified genes. Analysis of gene expression levels by EST frequency identifies genes that characterize preimplantation embryos, embryonic stem cells, and adult stem cells, thus providing potential markers as well as clues to the functional features of these cells. Principal component analysis identified a set of 88 genes whose average expression levels decrease from oocytes to blastocysts, stem cells, postimplantation embryos, and finally to newborn tissues. This can be a first step towards a possible definition of a molecular scale of cellular potency. The sequences and cDNA clones recovered in this work provide a comprehensive resource for genes functioning in early mouse embryos and stem cells. The nonrestricted community access to the resource can accelerate a wide range of research, particularly in reproductive and regenerative medicine.


Cell Stem Cell | 2009

Uncovering early response of gene regulatory networks in ESCs by systematic induction of transcription factors.

Akira Nishiyama; Li Xin; Alexei A. Sharov; Marshall Thomas; Gregory Mowrer; Emily Meyers; Yulan Piao; Samir Mehta; Sarah Yee; Yuhki Nakatake; Carole A. Stagg; Lioudmila V. Sharova; Lina S. Correa-Cerro; Uwem C. Bassey; Hien G. Hoang; Eugene Kim; Richard Tapnio; Yong Qian; Dawood B. Dudekula; Michal Zalzman; Manxiang Li; Geppino Falco; Hsih Te Yang; Sung-Lim Lee; Manuela Monti; Ilaria Stanghellini; Md. Nurul Islam; Ramaiah Nagaraja; Ilya G. Goldberg; Weidong Wang

To examine transcription factor (TF) network(s), we created mouse ESC lines, in each of which 1 of 50 TFs tagged with a FLAG moiety is inserted into a ubiquitously controllable tetracycline-repressible locus. Of the 50 TFs, Cdx2 provoked the most extensive transcriptome perturbation in ESCs, followed by Esx1, Sox9, Tcf3, Klf4, and Gata3. ChIP-Seq revealed that CDX2 binds to promoters of upregulated target genes. By contrast, genes downregulated by CDX2 did not show CDX2 binding but were enriched with binding sites for POU5F1, SOX2, and NANOG. Genes with binding sites for these core TFs were also downregulated by the induction of at least 15 other TFs, suggesting a common initial step for ESC differentiation mediated by interference with the binding of core TFs to their target genes. These ESC lines provide a fundamental resource to study biological networks in ESCs and mice.


Gene Expression Patterns | 2008

An in situ hybridization-based screen for heterogeneously expressed genes in mouse ES cells

Mark G. Carter; Carole A. Stagg; Geppino Falco; Toshiyuki Yoshikawa; Uwem C. Bassey; Kazuhiro Aiba; Lioudmila V. Sharova; Nabeebi Shaik; Minoru S.H. Ko

We previously reported that Zscan4 showed heterogeneous expression patterns in mouse embryonic stem (ES) cells. To identify genes that show similar expression patterns, we carried out high-throughput in situ hybridization assays on ES cell cultures for 244 genes. Most of the genes are involved in transcriptional regulation, and were selected using microarray-based comparisons of gene expression profiles in ES and embryonal carcinoma (EC) cells versus differentiated cell types. Pou5f1 (Oct4, Oct3/4) and Krt8 (EndoA) were used as controls. Hybridization signals were detected on ES cell colonies for 147 genes (60%). The majority (136 genes) of them showed relatively homogeneous expression in ES cell colonies. However, we found that two genes unequivocally showed Zscan4-like spotted expression pattern (spot-in-colony pattern; Whsc2 and Rhox9). We also found that nine genes showed relatively heterogeneous expression pattern (mosaic-in-colony pattern: Zfp42/Rex1, Rest, Atf4, Pa2g4, E2f2, Nanog, Dppa3/Pgc7/Stella, Esrrb, and Fscn1). Among these genes, Zfp42/Rex1 showed unequivocally heterogeneous expression in individual ES cells prepared by the CytoSpin. These results show the presence of different types or states of cells within ES cell cultures otherwise thought to be undifferentiated and homogeneous, suggesting a previously unappreciated complexity in ES cell cultures.


Nature Communications | 2013

Zscan4 restores the developmental potency of embryonic stem cells

Tomokazu Amano; Tetsuya Hirata; Geppino Falco; Manuela Monti; Lioudmila V. Sharova; Misa Amano; Sarah Sheer; Hien G. Hoang; Yulan Piao; Carole A. Stagg; Kohei Yamamizu; Tomohiko Akiyama; Minoru S.H. Ko

The developmental potency of mouse embryonic stem (ES) cells, which is the ability to contribute to a whole embryo is known to deteriorate during long-term cell culture. Previously we have shown that ES cells oscillate between Zscan4- and Zscan4+ states, and the transient activation of Zscan4 is required for the maintenance of telomeres and genome stability of ES cells. Here we show that increasing the frequency of Zscan4 activation in mouse ES cells restores and maintains their developmental potency in long-term cell culture. Injection of a single ES cell with such increased potency into a tetraploid blastocyst gives rise to an entire embryo with a higher success rate. These results not only provide a means to rejuvenate ES cells by manipulating Zscan4 expression, but also indicate the active roles of Zscan4 in the long-term maintenance of ES cell potency.


Scientific Reports | 2013

Systematic repression of transcription factors reveals limited patterns of gene expression changes in ES cells

Akira Nishiyama; Alexei A. Sharov; Yulan Piao; Misa Amano; Tomokazu Amano; Hien G. Hoang; Bernard Y.K. Binder; Richard Tapnio; Uwem C. Bassey; Justin N. Malinou; Lina S. Correa-Cerro; Hong Yu; Li Xin; Emily Meyers; Michal Zalzman; Yuhki Nakatake; Carole A. Stagg; Lioudmila V. Sharova; Yong Qian; Dawood B. Dudekula; Sarah Sheer; Jean S. Cadet; Tetsuya Hirata; Hsih Te Yang; Ilya G. Goldberg; Michele K. Evans; Dan L. Longo; David Schlessinger; Minoru S.H. Ko

Networks of transcription factors (TFs) are thought to determine and maintain the identity of cells. Here we systematically repressed each of 100 TFs with shRNA and carried out global gene expression profiling in mouse embryonic stem (ES) cells. Unexpectedly, only the repression of a handful of TFs significantly affected transcriptomes, which changed in two directions/trajectories: one trajectory by the repression of either Pou5f1 or Sox2; the other trajectory by the repression of either Esrrb, Sall4, Nanog, or Tcfap4. The data suggest that the trajectories of gene expression change are already preconfigured by the gene regulatory network and roughly correspond to extraembryonic and embryonic fates of cell differentiation, respectively. These data also indicate the robustness of the pluripotency gene network, as the transient repression of most TFs did not alter the transcriptomes.


Experimental Biology and Medicine | 1989

Impaired Down-Regulation of Pituitary Dopamine Receptors by Estradiol in Aged Rats

Kazimierz Kochman; James A. Joseph; Marc R. Blackman; Carole A. Stagg; George S. Roth

Abstract Administration of 17β-estradiol to mature (6–12 months) rats results in a more than 50% reduction in pituitary dopamine receptor concentrations, without affecting binding affinity. In contrast, when the same manipulation is performed on senescent (24–25 months) rats, negligible change in receptor concentration occurs. These results suggest that age-related increases in estrogen-stimulated prolactin release are not due to decreased dopaminergic inhibition at the receptor level.


In Vitro Cellular & Developmental Biology – Animal | 2016

Emergence of undifferentiated colonies from mouse embryonic stem cells undergoing differentiation by retinoic acid treatment

Lioudmila V. Sharova; Alexei A. Sharov; Yulan Piao; Carole A. Stagg; Tomokazu Amano; Yong Qian; Dawood B. Dudekula; David Schlessinger; Minoru S.H. Ko

Retinoic acid (RA) is one of the most potent inducers of differentiation of mouse embryonic stem cells (ESCs). However, previous studies show that RA treatment of cells cultured in the presence of a leukemia inhibitory factor (LIF) also result in the upregulation of a gene called Zscan4, whose transient expression is a marker for undifferentiated ESCs. We explored the balance between these two seemingly antagonistic effects of RA. ESCs indeed differentiated in the presence of LIF after RA treatment, but colonies of undifferentiated ESCs eventually emerged from these differentiated cells — even in the presence of RA. These colonies, named secondary colonies, consist of three cell types: typical undifferentiated ESCs expressing pluripotency genes such as Pou5f1, Sox2, and Nanog; cells expressing Zscan4; and endodermal-like cells located at the periphery of the colony. The capacity to form secondary colonies was confirmed for all eight tested ESC lines. Cells from the secondary colonies — after transfer to the standard ESC medium — retained pluripotency, judged by their strong alkaline phosphatase (ALP) staining, typical colony morphology, gene expression profile, stable karyotype, capacity to differentiate into all three germ layers in embryoid body formation assays, and successful contribution to chimeras after injection into blastocysts. Based on flow cytometry analysis (FACS), the proportion of Zscan4-positive cells in secondary colonies was higher than in standard ESC colonies, which may explain the capacity of ESCs to resist the differentiating effects of RA and instead form secondary colonies of undifferentiated ESCs. This hypothesis is supported by cell-lineage tracing analysis, which showed that most cells in the secondary colonies were descendents of cells transiently expressing Zscan4.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2004

Age-associated alteration of gene expression patterns in mouse oocytes

Toshio Hamatani; Geppino Falco; Mark G. Carter; Hidenori Akutsu; Carole A. Stagg; Alexei A. Sharov; Dawood B. Dudekula; Vincent VanBuren; Minoru S.H. Ko


Genome Research | 2002

Gene Expression Profiling of Embryo-Derived Stem Cells Reveals Candidate Genes Associated With Pluripotency and Lineage Specificity

Tetsuya S. Tanaka; Tilo Kunath; Wendy L. Kimber; Saied A. Jaradat; Carole A. Stagg; Masayuki Usuda; Takashi Yokota; Hitoshi Niwa; Janet Rossant; Minoru S.H. Ko

Collaboration


Dive into the Carole A. Stagg's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Dawood B. Dudekula

National Institutes of Health

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Yulan Piao

National Institutes of Health

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Alexei A. Sharov

National Institutes of Health

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Lioudmila V. Sharova

National Institutes of Health

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Uwem C. Bassey

National Institutes of Health

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Yong Qian

National Institutes of Health

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Geppino Falco

National Institutes of Health

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Mark G. Carter

National Institutes of Health

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Kazuhiro Aiba

National Institutes of Health

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge