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Dive into the research topics where Claire C. Cutting is active.

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Featured researches published by Claire C. Cutting.


Cell | 2009

Hematopoietic Stem Cell Development Is Dependent on Blood Flow

Trista E. North; Wolfram Goessling; Marian Peeters; Pulin Li; Craig J. Ceol; Allegra M. Lord; Gerhard J. Weber; James M. Harris; Claire C. Cutting; Paul L. Huang; Elaine Dzierzak; Leonard I. Zon

During vertebrate embryogenesis, hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) arise in the aorta-gonads-mesonephros (AGM) region. We report here that blood flow is a conserved regulator of HSC formation. In zebrafish, chemical blood flow modulators regulated HSC development, and silent heart (sih) embryos, lacking a heartbeat and blood circulation, exhibited severely reduced HSCs. Flow-modifying compounds primarily affected HSC induction after the onset of heartbeat; however, nitric oxide (NO) donors regulated HSC number even when treatment occurred before the initiation of circulation, and rescued HSCs in sih mutants. Morpholino knockdown of nos1 (nnos/enos) blocked HSC development, and its requirement was shown to be cell autonomous. In the mouse, Nos3 (eNos) was expressed in HSCs in the AGM. Intrauterine Nos inhibition or embryonic Nos3 deficiency resulted in a reduction of hematopoietic clusters and transplantable murine HSCs. This work links blood flow to AGM hematopoiesis and identifies NO as a conserved downstream regulator of HSC development.


Blood | 2013

Glucose metabolism impacts the spatiotemporal onset and magnitude of HSC induction in vivo

James M. Harris; Virginie Esain; Gregory M. Frechette; Lauren Harris; Andrew G. Cox; Mauricio Cortes; Maija Garnaas; Kelli J. Carroll; Claire C. Cutting; Tahsin M. Khan; Phillip M. Elks; Stephen A. Renshaw; Bryan C. Dickinson; Christopher J. Chang; Michael P. Murphy; Barry H. Paw; Matthew G. Vander Heiden; Wolfram Goessling; Trista E. North

Many pathways regulating blood formation have been elucidated, yet how each coordinates with embryonic biophysiology to modulate the spatiotemporal production of hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) is currently unresolved. Here, we report that glucose metabolism impacts the onset and magnitude of HSC induction in vivo. In zebrafish, transient elevations in physiological glucose levels elicited dose-dependent effects on HSC development, including enhanced runx1 expression and hematopoietic cluster formation in the aorta-gonad-mesonephros region; embryonic-to-adult transplantation studies confirmed glucose increased functional HSCs. Glucose uptake was required to mediate the enhancement in HSC development; likewise, metabolic inhibitors diminished nascent HSC production and reversed glucose-mediated effects on HSCs. Increased glucose metabolism preferentially impacted hematopoietic and vascular targets, as determined by gene expression analysis, through mitochondrial-derived reactive oxygen species (ROS)-mediated stimulation of hypoxia-inducible factor 1α (hif1α). Epistasis assays demonstrated that hif1α regulates HSC formation in vivo and mediates the dose-dependent effects of glucose metabolism on the timing and magnitude of HSC production. We propose that this fundamental metabolic-sensing mechanism enables the embryo to respond to changes in environmental energy input and adjust hematopoietic output to maintain embryonic growth and ensure viability.


Developmental Biology | 2012

Rargb regulates organ laterality in a zebrafish model of right atrial isomerism.

Maija Garnaas; Claire C. Cutting; Alison Meyers; Peter B. Kelsey; James M. Harris; Trista E. North; Wolfram Goessling

Developmental signals determine organ morphology and position during embryogenesis. To discover novel modifiers of liver development, we performed a chemical genetic screen in zebrafish and identified retinoic acid as a positive regulator of hepatogenesis. Knockdown of the four RA receptors revealed that all receptors affect liver formation, however specific receptors exert differential effects. Rargb knockdown results in bilateral livers but does not impact organ size, revealing a unique role for Rargb in conferring left-right positional information. Bilateral populations of hepatoblasts are detectable in rargb morphants, indicating Rargb acts during hepatic specification to position the liver, and primitive endoderm is competent to form liver on both sides. Hearts remain at the midline and gut looping is perturbed in rargb morphants, suggesting Rargb affects lateral plate mesoderm migration. Overexpression of Bmp during somitogenesis similarly results in bilateral livers and midline hearts, and inhibition of Bmp signaling rescues the rargb morphant phenotype, indicating Rargb functions upstream of Bmp to regulate organ sidedness. Loss of rargb causes biliary and organ laterality defects as well as asplenia, paralleling symptoms of the human condition right atrial isomerism. Our findings uncover a novel role for RA in regulating organ laterality and provide an animal model of one form of human heterotaxia.


Developmental Cell | 2014

Estrogen Defines the Dorsal-Ventral Limit of VEGF Regulation to Specify the Location of the Hemogenic Endothelial Niche

Kelli J. Carroll; Virginie Esain; Maija Garnaas; Mauricio Cortes; Michael Dovey; Sahar Nissim; Gregory M. Frechette; Sarah Y. Liu; Wanda Kwan; Claire C. Cutting; James M. Harris; Daniel A. Gorelick; Marnie E. Halpern; Nathan D. Lawson; Wolfram Goessling; Trista E. North

Genetic control of hematopoietic stem and progenitor cell (HSPC) function is increasingly understood; however, less is known about the interactions specifying the embryonic hematopoietic niche. Here, we report that 17β-estradiol (E2) influences production of runx1+ HSPCs in the AGM region by antagonizing VEGF signaling and subsequent assignment of hemogenic endothelial (HE) identity. Exposure to exogenous E2 during vascular niche development significantly disrupted flk1+ vessel maturation, ephrinB2+ arterial identity, and specification of scl+ HE by decreasing expression of VEGFAa and downstream arterial Notch-pathway components; heat shock induction of VEGFAa/Notch rescued E2-mediated hematovascular defects. Conversely, repression of endogenous E2 activity increased somitic VEGF expression and vascular target regulation, shifting assignment of arterial/venous fate and HE localization; blocking E2 signaling allowed venous production of scl+/runx1+ cells, independent of arterial identity acquisition. Together, these data suggest that yolk-derived E2 sets the ventral boundary of hemogenic vascular niche specification by antagonizing the dorsal-ventral regulatory limits of VEGF.


Developmental Neuroscience | 2011

Bilateral consequences of chronic unilateral deafferentation in the auditory system of the cricket Gryllus bimaculatus.

Hadley Wilson Horch; Elizabeth Sheldon; Claire C. Cutting; Claire R. Williams; Dana M. Riker; Hannah R. Peckler; Rohit Sangal

The auditory system of the cricket has the unusual ability to respond to deafferentation by compensatory growth and synapse formation. Auditory interneurons such as ascending neuron 2 (AN-2) in the cricket Gryllus bimaculatus possess a dendritic arbor that normally grows up to, but not over, the midline of the prothoracic ganglion. After chronic deafferentation throughout larval development, however, the AN-2 dendritic arbor changes dramatically, and medial dendrites sprout across the midline where they form compensatory synapses with the auditory afferents from the contralateral ear. We quantified the extent of the effects of chronic, unilateral deafferentation by measuring several cellular parameters of 3 different neuronal components of the auditory system: the deafferented AN-2, the contralateral (or nondeafferented) AN-2 and the contralateral auditory afferents. Neuronal tracers and confocal microscopy were used to visualize neurons, and double-label experiments were performed to examine the cellular relationship between pairs of cells. Dendritic complexity was quantified using a modified Sholl analysis, and the length and volume of processes and presynaptic varicosities were assessed under control and deafferented conditions. Chronic deafferentation significantly influenced the morphology of all 3 neuronal components examined. The overall dendritic complexity of the deafferented AN-2 dendritic arbor was reduced, while both the contralateral AN-2 dendritic arbor and the remaining, intact, auditory afferents grew longer. We found no significant changes in the volume or density of varicosities after deafferentation. These complex cellular changes after deafferentation are interpreted in the light of the reported differential regulation of vesicle-associated membrane protein and semaphorin 2a.


Developmental Cell | 2014

Prostaglandin E2 Regulates Liver versus Pancreas Cell-Fate Decisions and Endodermal Outgrowth

Sahar Nissim; Richard I. Sherwood; Julia Wucherpfennig; Diane Saunders; James M. Harris; Virginie Esain; Kelli J. Carroll; Gregory M. Frechette; Andrew J. Kim; Katie L. Hwang; Claire C. Cutting; Susanna Elledge; Trista E. North; Wolfram Goessling


Experimental Hematology | 2013

17beta-estradiol has a biphasic effect on the formation of hematopoietic stem cells

Kelli J. Carroll; Michael Dovey; Claire C. Cutting; Maija Garnaas; Virginie Esain; Gregory M. Frechette; Sahar Nissim; Wanda Kwan; James M. Harris; Daniel Gorelick; Marnie Halpern; Wolfram Goessling; Trista E. North


Blood | 2011

Metabolism-Induced Reactive Oxygen Species and Hif1α-Mediated Gene Regulation Control the Timing and Magnitude of Hematopoietic Stem Cell Induction

James M. Harris; Lauren Harris; Andrew G. Cox; Maija Garnaas; Gregory M. Frechette; Mauricio Cortes; Claire C. Cutting; Michael Dovey; Barry H. Paw; Matthew G. Vander Heiden; Wolfram Goessling; Trista E. North


Blood | 2010

Estrogen Receptors 1 and 2 Have Stage-Specific Effects on Hematopoietic Stem Cell Regulation In Zebrafish.

Kelli J. Carroll; Michael Dovey; Claire C. Cutting; James M. Harris; Lea Vedder; Wolfram Goessling; Trista E. North


Blood | 2013

Estrogens Act As a Dorsal-Ventral Limiting Factor To Pattern The Hematopoietic Stem Cell Niche

Michael Dovey; Maija Garnaas; Claire C. Cutting; Gregory M. Frechette; Virginie Esain; Sahar Nissim; Wanda Kwan; James M. Harris; Daniel A. Gorelick; Marnie E. Halpern; Wolfram Goessling; Trista E. North

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James M. Harris

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Trista E. North

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Michael Dovey

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Gregory M. Frechette

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Kelli J. Carroll

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Virginie Esain

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Mauricio Cortes

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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