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Dive into the research topics where Cherie L. Ramirez is active.

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Featured researches published by Cherie L. Ramirez.


Nature Methods | 2011

Revealing off-target cleavage specificities of zinc-finger nucleases by in vitro selection

Vikram Pattanayak; Cherie L. Ramirez; J. Keith Joung; David R. Liu

Engineered zinc-finger nucleases (ZFNs) are promising tools for genome manipulation, and determining off-target cleavage sites of these enzymes is of great interest. We developed an in vitro selection method that interrogates 1011 DNA sequences for cleavage by active, dimeric ZFNs. The method revealed hundreds of thousands of DNA sequences, some present in the human genome, that can be cleaved in vitro by two ZFNs: CCR5-224 and VF2468, which target the endogenous human CCR5 and VEGFA genes, respectively. Analysis of identified sites in one cultured human cell line revealed CCR5-224–induced changes at nine off-target loci, though this remains to be tested in other relevant cell types. Similarly, we observed 31 off-target sites cleaved by VF2468 in cultured human cells. Our findings establish an energy compensation model of ZFN specificity in which excess binding energy contributes to off-target ZFN cleavage and suggest strategies for the improvement of future ZFN design.


Nature Methods | 2008

Unexpected failure rates for modular assembly of engineered zinc fingers

Cherie L. Ramirez; Jonathan E. Foley; David A. Wright; Felix Müller-Lerch; Shamim H. Rahman; Tatjana I. Cornu; Ronnie J. Winfrey; Jeffry D. Sander; Fengli Fu; Jeffrey A. Townsend; Toni Cathomen; Daniel F. Voytas; J. Keith Joung

Nat. Methods 5, 374–375 (2008); corrected after print 29 May 2008. In the version of this correspondence initially published, the two previously published datasets analyzed were labeled with incorrect references in Figure 1b. Reference 2 should be associated with the second column (80 sites), and reference 3 should be associated with the third column (96 sites).


Stem Cells | 2011

In Situ Genetic Correction of the Sickle Cell Anemia Mutation in Human Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells Using Engineered Zinc Finger Nucleases

Vittorio Sebastiano; Morgan L. Maeder; James Angstman; Bahareh Haddad; Cyd Khayter; Dana T. Yeo; Mathew J. Goodwin; John S. Hawkins; Cherie L. Ramirez; Luis F.Z. Batista; Steven E. Artandi; Marius Wernig; J. Keith Joung

The combination of induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC) technology and targeted gene modification by homologous recombination (HR) represents a promising new approach to generate genetically corrected, patient‐derived cells that could be used for autologous transplantation therapies. This strategy has several potential advantages over conventional gene therapy including eliminating the need for immunosuppression, avoiding the risk of insertional mutagenesis by therapeutic vectors, and maintaining expression of the corrected gene by endogenous control elements rather than a constitutive promoter. However, gene targeting in human pluripotent cells has remained challenging and inefficient. Recently, engineered zinc finger nucleases (ZFNs) have been shown to substantially increase HR frequencies in human iPSCs, raising the prospect of using this technology to correct disease causing mutations. Here, we describe the generation of iPSC lines from sickle cell anemia patients and in situ correction of the disease causing mutation using three ZFN pairs made by the publicly available oligomerized pool engineering method (OPEN). Gene‐corrected cells retained full pluripotency and a normal karyotype following removal of reprogramming factor and drug‐resistance genes. By testing various conditions, we also demonstrated that HR events in human iPSCs can occur as far as 82 bps from a ZFN‐induced break. Our approach delineates a roadmap for using ZFNs made by an open‐source method to achieve efficient, transgene‐free correction of monogenic disease mutations in patient‐derived iPSCs. Our results provide an important proof of principle that ZFNs can be used to produce gene‐corrected human iPSCs that could be used for therapeutic applications. STEM CELLS 2011;29:1717–1726


Oncogene | 2008

BRD–NUT oncoproteins: a family of closely related nuclear proteins that block epithelial differentiation and maintain the growth of carcinoma cells

Christopher A. French; Cherie L. Ramirez; J. Kolmakova; Tyler Hickman; Michael J. Cameron; M.E. Thyne; Jeffrey L. Kutok; Jeffrey A. Toretsky; A.K. Tadavarthy; Ursula R. Kees; Jonathan A. Fletcher

An unusual group of carcinomas, here termed nuclear protein in testis (NUT) midline carcinomas (NMC), are characterized by translocations that involve NUT, a novel gene on chromosome 15. In about 2/3rds of cases, NUT is fused to BRD4 on chromosome 19. Using a candidate gene approach, we identified two NMCs harboring novel rearrangements that result in the fusion of NUT to BRD3 on chromosome 9. The BRD3–NUT fusion gene encodes a protein composed of two tandem chromatin-binding bromodomains, an extra-terminal domain, a bipartite nuclear localization sequence, and almost the entirety of NUT that is highly homologous to BRD4–NUT. The function of NUT is unknown, but here we show that NUT contains nuclear localization and export sequences that promote nuclear-cytoplasmic shuttling via a leptomycin-sensitive pathway. In contrast, BRD3–NUT and BRD4–NUT are strictly nuclear, implying that the BRD moiety retains NUT in the nucleus via interactions with chromatin. Consistent with this idea, FRAP studies show that BRD4, BRD4–NUT and BRD3–NUT have significantly slower rates of lateral nuclear diffusion than that of NUT. To investigate the functional role of BRD–NUT fusion proteins in NMCs, we investigated the effects of siRNA-induced BRD3–NUT and BRD4–NUT withdrawal. Silencing of these proteins in NMC cell lines resulted in squamous differentiation and cell cycle arrest. Together, these data suggest that BRD–NUT fusion proteins contribute to carcinogenesis by associating with chromatin and interfering with epithelial differentiation.


Cell | 2012

A Synthetic Biology Framework for Programming Eukaryotic Transcription Functions

Ahmad S. Khalil; Timothy K. Lu; Caleb J. Bashor; Cherie L. Ramirez; Nora Pyenson; J. Keith Joung; James J. Collins

Eukaryotic transcription factors (TFs) perform complex and combinatorial functions within transcriptional networks. Here, we present a synthetic framework for systematically constructing eukaryotic transcription functions using artificial zinc fingers, modular DNA-binding domains found within many eukaryotic TFs. Utilizing this platform, we construct a library of orthogonal synthetic transcription factors (sTFs) and use these to wire synthetic transcriptional circuits in yeast. We engineer complex functions, such as tunable output strength and transcriptional cooperativity, by rationally adjusting a decomposed set of key component properties, e.g., DNA specificity, affinity, promoter design, protein-protein interactions. We show that subtle perturbations to these properties can transform an individual sTF between distinct roles (activator, cooperative factor, inhibitory factor) within a transcriptional complex, thus drastically altering the signal processing behavior of multi-input systems. This platform provides new genetic components for synthetic biology and enables bottom-up approaches to understanding the design principles of eukaryotic transcriptional complexes and networks.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2012

Engineered zinc finger nickases induce homology-directed repair with reduced mutagenic effects

Cherie L. Ramirez; Michael T. Certo; Claudio Mussolino; Mathew J. Goodwin; Thomas Cradick; Anton P. McCaffrey; Toni Cathomen; Andrew M. Scharenberg; J. Keith Joung

Engineered zinc finger nucleases (ZFNs) induce DNA double-strand breaks at specific recognition sequences and can promote efficient introduction of desired insertions, deletions or substitutions at or near the cut site via homology-directed repair (HDR) with a double- and/or single-stranded donor DNA template. However, mutagenic events caused by error-prone non-homologous end-joining (NHEJ)-mediated repair are introduced with equal or higher frequency at the nuclease cleavage site. Furthermore, unintended mutations can also result from NHEJ-mediated repair of off-target nuclease cleavage sites. Here, we describe a simple and general method for converting engineered ZFNs into zinc finger nickases (ZFNickases) by inactivating the catalytic activity of one monomer in a ZFN dimer. ZFNickases show robust strand-specific nicking activity in vitro. In addition, we demonstrate that ZFNickases can stimulate HDR at their nicking site in human cells, albeit at a lower frequency than by the ZFNs from which they were derived. Finally, we find that ZFNickases appear to induce greatly reduced levels of mutagenic NHEJ at their target nicking site. ZFNickases thus provide a promising means for inducing HDR-mediated gene modifications while reducing unwanted mutagenesis caused by error-prone NHEJ.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Improved Somatic Mutagenesis in Zebrafish Using Transcription Activator-Like Effector Nucleases (TALENs)

Finola E. Moore; Deepak Reyon; Jeffry D. Sander; Sarah Martinez; Jessica S. Blackburn; Cyd Khayter; Cherie L. Ramirez; J. Keith Joung; David M. Langenau

Zinc Finger Nucleases (ZFNs) made by Context-Dependent Assembly (CoDA) and Transcription Activator-Like Effector Nucleases (TALENs) provide robust and user-friendly technologies for efficiently inactivating genes in zebrafish. These designer nucleases bind to and cleave DNA at particular target sites, inducing error-prone repair that can result in insertion or deletion mutations. Here, we assess the relative efficiencies of these technologies for inducing somatic DNA mutations in mosaic zebrafish. We find that TALENs exhibited a higher success rate for obtaining active nucleases capable of inducing mutations than compared with CoDA ZFNs. For example, all six TALENs tested induced DNA mutations at genomic target sites while only a subset of CoDA ZFNs exhibited detectable rates of mutagenesis. TALENs also exhibited higher mutation rates than CoDA ZFNs that had not been pre-screened using a bacterial two-hybrid assay, with DNA mutation rates ranging from 20%–76.8% compared to 1.1%–3.3%. Furthermore, the broader targeting range of TALENs enabled us to induce mutations at the methionine translation start site, sequences that were not targetable using the CoDA ZFN platform. TALENs exhibited similar toxicity to CoDA ZFNs, with >50% of injected animals surviving to 3 days of life. Taken together, our results suggest that TALEN technology provides a robust alternative to CoDA ZFNs for inducing targeted gene-inactivation in zebrafish, making it a preferred technology for creating targeted knockout mutants in zebrafish.


Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences | 2007

Human progeroid syndromes, aging and cancer: new genetic and epigenetic insights into old questions

Cherie L. Ramirez; Juan Cadiñanos; Ignacio Varela; J. M. P. Freije; Carlos López-Otín

Abstract.Disorders in which individuals exhibit certain features of aging early in life are referred to as segmental progeroid syndromes. With the progress that has been made in understanding the etiologies of these conditions in the past decade, potential therapeutic options have begun to move from the realm of improbability to initial stages of testing. Among these syndromes, relevant advances have recently been made in Werner syndrome, one of several progeroid syndromes characterized by defective DNA helicases, and Hutchinson-Gilford progeria syndrome, which is characterized by aberrant processing of the nuclear envelope protein lamin A. Although best known for their causative roles in these illnesses, Werner protein and lamin A have also recently emerged as key players vulnerable to epigenetic changes that contribute to tumorigenesis and aging. These advances further demonstrate that understanding progeroid syndromes and introducing adequate treatments will not only prove beneficial to patients suffering from these dramatic diseases, but will also provide new mechanistic insights into cancer and normal aging processes.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2013

In silico abstraction of zinc finger nuclease cleavage profiles reveals an expanded landscape of off-target sites

Jeffry D. Sander; Cherie L. Ramirez; Samantha J Linder; Vikram Pattanayak; Noam Shoresh; Manching Ku; Jennifer A. Foden; Deepak Reyon; Bradley E. Bernstein; David R. Liu; J. Keith Joung

Gene-editing nucleases enable targeted modification of DNA sequences in living cells, thereby facilitating efficient knockout and precise editing of endogenous loci. Engineered nucleases also have the potential to introduce mutations at off-target sites of action. Such unintended alterations can confound interpretation of experiments and can have implications for development of therapeutic applications. Recently, two improved methods for identifying the off-target effects of zinc finger nucleases (ZFNs) were described–one using an in vitro cleavage site selection method and the other exploiting the insertion of integration-defective lentiviruses into nuclease-induced double-stranded DNA breaks. However, application of these two methods to a ZFN pair targeted to the human CCR5 gene led to identification of largely non-overlapping off-target sites, raising the possibility that additional off-target sites might exist. Here, we show that in silico abstraction of ZFN cleavage profiles obtained from in vitro cleavage site selections can greatly enhance the ability to identify potential off-target sites in human cells. Our improved method should enable more comprehensive profiling of ZFN specificities.


Journal of the Acoustical Society of America | 2004

The dynamics and tuning of orchestral crotales

Bradley M. Deutsch; Cherie L. Ramirez; Thomas R. Moore

An experimental and theoretical investigation of the acoustic and vibrational properties of orchestral crotales within the range C6 to C8 is reported. Interferograms of the acoustically important modes of vibration are presented and the frequencies are reported. It is shown that the acoustic spectra of crotales are not predicted by assuming that they are either thin circular plates or annular plates clamped at the center, despite the physical resemblance to these objects. Results from finite element analysis are presented that demonstrate how changing the size of the central mass affects the tuning of the instruments, and it is concluded that crotales are not currently designed to ensure optimal tuning. The possibility of using annular plates as crotales is also investigated and the physical parameters for such a set of instruments are presented.

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Jeffry D. Sander

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

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Fengli Fu

Iowa State University

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