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Dive into the research topics where Daria Merkurjev is active.

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Featured researches published by Daria Merkurjev.


Nature | 2013

Functional roles of enhancer RNAs for oestrogen-dependent transcriptional activation

Wenbo Li; Dimple Notani; Qi Ma; Bogdan Tanasa; Esperanza Nunez; Aaron Yun Chen; Daria Merkurjev; Jie Zhang; Kenneth A. Ohgi; Xiaoyuan Song; Soohwan Oh; Hong-Sook Kim; Christopher K. Glass; Michael G. Rosenfeld

The functional importance of gene enhancers in regulated gene expression is well established. In addition to widespread transcription of long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs) in mammalian cells, bidirectional ncRNAs are transcribed on enhancers, and are thus referred to as enhancer RNAs (eRNAs). However, it has remained unclear whether these eRNAs are functional or merely a reflection of enhancer activation. Here we report that in human breast cancer cells 17β-oestradiol (E2)-bound oestrogen receptor α (ER-α) causes a global increase in eRNA transcription on enhancers adjacent to E2-upregulated coding genes. These induced eRNAs, as functional transcripts, seem to exert important roles for the observed ligand-dependent induction of target coding genes, increasing the strength of specific enhancer–promoter looping initiated by ER-α binding. Cohesin, present on many ER-α-regulated enhancers even before ligand treatment, apparently contributes to E2-dependent gene activation, at least in part by stabilizing E2/ER-α/eRNA-induced enhancer–promoter looping. Our data indicate that eRNAs are likely to have important functions in many regulated programs of gene transcription.


Nature | 2013

lncRNA-dependent mechanisms of androgen-receptor-regulated gene activation programs

Liuqing Yang; Chunru Lin; Chunyu Jin; Joy C. Yang; Bogdan Tanasa; Wenbo Li; Daria Merkurjev; Kenneth A. Ohgi; Da Meng; Jie Zhang; Christopher P. Evans; Michael G. Rosenfeld

Although recent studies have indicated roles of long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs) in physiological aspects of cell-type determination and tissue homeostasis, their potential involvement in regulated gene transcription programs remains rather poorly understood. The androgen receptor regulates a large repertoire of genes central to the identity and behaviour of prostate cancer cells, and functions in a ligand-independent fashion in many prostate cancers when they become hormone refractory after initial androgen deprivation therapy. Here we report that two lncRNAs highly overexpressed in aggressive prostate cancer, PRNCR1 (also known as PCAT8) and PCGEM1, bind successively to the androgen receptor and strongly enhance both ligand-dependent and ligand-independent androgen-receptor-mediated gene activation programs and proliferation in prostate cancer cells. Binding of PRNCR1 to the carboxy-terminally acetylated androgen receptor on enhancers and its association with DOT1L appear to be required for recruitment of the second lncRNA, PCGEM1, to the androgen receptor amino terminus that is methylated by DOT1L. Unexpectedly, recognition of specific protein marks by PCGEM1-recruited pygopus 2 PHD domain enhances selective looping of androgen-receptor-bound enhancers to target gene promoters in these cells. In ‘resistant’ prostate cancer cells, these overexpressed lncRNAs can interact with, and are required for, the robust activation of both truncated and full-length androgen receptor, causing ligand-independent activation of the androgen receptor transcriptional program and cell proliferation. Conditionally expressed short hairpin RNA targeting these lncRNAs in castration-resistant prostate cancer cell lines strongly suppressed tumour xenograft growth in vivo. Together, these results indicate that these overexpressed lncRNAs can potentially serve as a required component of castration-resistance in prostatic tumours.


Cell | 2014

Enhancer Activation Requires trans-Recruitment of a Mega Transcription Factor Complex

Zhijie Liu; Daria Merkurjev; Feng Yang; Wenbo Li; Soohwan Oh; Meyer Friedman; Xiaoyuan Song; Feng Zhang; Qi Ma; Kenneth A. Ohgi; Anna Krones; Michael G. Rosenfeld

Enhancers provide critical information directing cell-type-specific transcriptional programs, regulated by binding of signal-dependent transcription factors and their associated cofactors. Here, we report that the most strongly activated estrogen (E2)-responsive enhancers are characterized by trans-recruitment and in situ assembly of a large 1-2 MDa complex of diverse DNA-binding transcription factors by ERα at ERE-containing enhancers. We refer to enhancers recruiting these factors as mega transcription factor-bound in trans (MegaTrans) enhancers. The MegaTrans complex is a signature of the most potent functional enhancers and is required for activation of enhancer RNA transcription and recruitment of coactivators, including p300 and Med1. The MegaTrans complex functions, in part, by recruiting specific enzymatic machinery, exemplified by DNA-dependent protein kinase. Thus, MegaTrans-containing enhancers represent a cohort of functional enhancers that mediate a broad and important transcriptional program and provide a molecular explanation for transcription factor clustering and hotspots noted in the genome.


Nature Neuroscience | 2015

LSD1n is an H4K20 demethylase regulating memory formation via transcriptional elongation control

Jianxun Wang; Francesca Telese; Yuliang Tan; Wenbo Li; Chunyu Jin; Xin He; Harihar Basnet; Qi Ma; Daria Merkurjev; Zhijie Liu; Jie Zhang; Kenny Ohgi; Havilah Taylor; Ryan R. White; Cagdas Tazearslan; Yousin Suh; Todd S. Macfarlan; Samuel L. Pfaff; Michael G. Rosenfeld

We found that a neuron-specific isoform of LSD1, LSD1n, which results from an alternative splicing event, acquires a new substrate specificity, targeting histone H4 Lys20 methylation, both in vitro and in vivo. Selective genetic ablation of LSD1n led to deficits in spatial learning and memory, revealing the functional importance of LSD1n in neuronal activity–regulated transcription that is necessary for long-term memory formation. LSD1n occupied neuronal gene enhancers, promoters and transcribed coding regions, and was required for transcription initiation and elongation steps in response to neuronal activity, indicating the crucial role of H4K20 methylation in coordinating gene transcription with neuronal function. Our results indicate that this alternative splicing of LSD1 in neurons, which was associated with altered substrate specificity, serves as a mechanism acquired by neurons to achieve more precise control of gene expression in the complex processes underlying learning and memory.


Molecular Cell | 2015

Condensin I and II Complexes License Full Estrogen Receptor α-Dependent Enhancer Activation

Wenbo Li; Yiren Hu; Soohwan Oh; Qi Ma; Daria Merkurjev; Xiaoyuan Song; Xiang Zhou; Zhijie Liu; Bogdan Tanasa; Xin He; Aaron Yun Chen; Kenny Ohgi; Jie Zhang; Wen Liu; Michael G. Rosenfeld

Enhancers instruct spatio-temporally specific gene expression in a manner tightly linked to higher-order chromatin architecture. Critical chromatin architectural regulators condensin I and condensin II play non-redundant roles controlling mitotic chromosomes. But the chromosomal locations of condensins and their functional roles in interphase are poorly understood. Here we report that both condensin complexes exhibit an unexpected, dramatic estrogen-induced recruitment to estrogen receptor α (ER-α)-bound eRNA(+) active enhancers in interphase breast cancer cells, exhibiting non-canonical interaction with ER-α via its DNA-binding domain (DBD). Condensins positively regulate ligand-dependent enhancer activation at least in part by recruiting an E3 ubiquitin ligase, HECTD1, to modulate the binding of enhancer-associated coactivators/corepressors, including p300 and RIP140, permitting full eRNA transcription, formation of enhancer:promoter looping, and the resultant coding gene activation. Collectively, our results reveal an important, unanticipated transcriptional role of interphase condensins in modulating estrogen-regulated enhancer activation and coding gene transcriptional program.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Chem-seq permits identification of genomic targets of drugs against androgen receptor regulation selected by functional phenotypic screens

Chunyu Jin; Liuqing Yang; Min Xie; Chunru Lin; Daria Merkurjev; Joy C. Yang; Bogdan Tanasa; Soohwan Oh; Jie Zhang; Kenneth A. Ohgi; Hongyan Zhou; Wenbo Li; Christopher P. Evans; Sheng Ding; Michael G. Rosenfeld

Significance The emergence of powerful new chemical library-screening approaches and the generation of new types of chemical structures makes novel methods available to link candidate chemicals to potential target genes, e.g., as in the interaction with and effects on chromatin-bound targets. Here we report a method that can provide the genome-wide location of a candidate drug. One such synthetic chemical, SD70—first identified in a screen for inhibitors of tumor translocation events—was resynthesized with a tag permitting a ChIP-sequencing–like analysis, referred to as “Chemical affinity capture and massively parallel DNA sequencing (Chem-seq).” As a consequence of finding its recruitment on androgen receptor-bound functional enhancers, we were able to demonstrate that SD70 could inhibit the prostate cancer cell transcriptional program, in part by inhibition of the demethylase KDM4C. Understanding the mechanisms by which compounds discovered using cell-based phenotypic screening strategies might exert their effects would be highly augmented by new approaches exploring their potential interactions with the genome. For example, altered androgen receptor (AR) transcriptional programs, including castration resistance and subsequent chromosomal translocations, play key roles in prostate cancer pathological progression, making the quest for identification of new therapeutic agents and an understanding of their actions a continued priority. Here we report an approach that has permitted us to uncover the sites and mechanisms of action of a drug, referred to as “SD70,” initially identified by phenotypic screening for inhibitors of ligand and genotoxic stress-induced translocations in prostate cancer cells. Based on synthesis of a derivatized form of SD70 that permits its application for a ChIP-sequencing–like approach, referred to as “Chem-seq,” we were next able to efficiently map the genome-wide binding locations of this small molecule, revealing that it largely colocalized with AR on regulatory enhancers. Based on these observations, we performed the appropriate global analyses to ascertain that SD70 inhibits the androgen-dependent AR program, and prostate cancer cell growth, acting, at least in part, by functionally inhibiting the Jumonji domain-containing demethylase, KDM4C. Global location of candidate drugs represents a powerful strategy for new drug development by mapping genome-wide location of small molecules, a powerful adjunct to contemporary drug development strategies.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015

Enhancer-bound LDB1 regulates a corticotrope promoter-pausing repression program.

Feng Zhang; Bogdan Tanasa; Daria Merkurjev; Chijen Lin; Xiaoyuan Song; Wenbo Li; Yuliang Tan; Zhijie Liu; Jie Zhang; Kenneth A. Ohgi; Anna Krones; Dorota Skowronska-Krawczyk; Michael G. Rosenfeld

Significance The apparent importance of promoter:enhancer looping is well established; however, the molecular mechanisms of these interactions in gene activation vs. gene repression remain to be fully elucidated. Here, we report that LIM domain-binding protein 1 (LDB1) can function in transcriptional enhancer-mediated gene activation mainly at the level of transcription initiation by regulating promoter:enhancer looping, consequent to the recruitment to basic helix-loop-helix–bound enhancers in pituitary corticotrope cells. Intriguingly, LDB1 also mediates promoter:enhancer looping required for target gene repression, acting at the level of promoter pausing, by recruiting metastasis-associated 1 family, member 2 to these repressive enhancers. These findings shed light on a regulatory aspect of the molecular function of LDB1, providing a putative mechanism of enhancer-dependent transcriptional repression. Substantial evidence supports the hypothesis that enhancers are critical regulators of cell-type determination, orchestrating both positive and negative transcriptional programs; however, the basic mechanisms by which enhancers orchestrate interactions with cognate promoters during activation and repression events remain incompletely understood. Here we report the required actions of LIM domain-binding protein 1 (LDB1)/cofactor of LIM homeodomain protein 2/nuclear LIM interactor, interacting with the enhancer-binding protein achaete-scute complex homolog 1, to mediate looping to target gene promoters and target gene regulation in corticotrope cells. LDB1-mediated enhancer:promoter looping appears to be required for both activation and repression of these target genes. Although LDB1-dependent activated genes are regulated at the level of transcriptional initiation, the LDB1-dependent repressed transcription units appear to be regulated primarily at the level of promoter pausing, with LDB1 regulating recruitment of metastasis-associated 1 family, member 2, a component of the nucleosome remodeling deacetylase complex, on these negative enhancers, required for the repressive enhancer function. These results indicate that LDB1-dependent looping events can deliver repressive cargo to cognate promoters to mediate promoter pausing events in a pituitary cell type.


Nature | 2018

Pluripotency factors functionally premark cell-type-restricted enhancers in ES cells

Hong Sook Kim; Yuliang Tan; Wubin Ma; Daria Merkurjev; Eugin Destici; Qi Ma; Tom Suter; Kenneth A. Ohgi; Meyer Friedman; Dorota Skowronska-Krawczyk; Michael G. Rosenfeld

Enhancers for embryonic stem (ES) cell-expressed genes and lineage-determining factors are characterized by conventional marks of enhancer activation in ES cells1–3, but it remains unclear whether enhancers destined to regulate cell-type-restricted transcription units might also have distinct signatures in ES cells. Here we show that cell-type-restricted enhancers are ‘premarked’ and activated as transcription units by the binding of one or two ES cell transcription factors, although they do not exhibit traditional enhancer epigenetic marks in ES cells, thus uncovering the initial temporal origins of cell-type-restricted enhancers. This premarking is required for future cell-type-restricted enhancer activity in the differentiated cells, with the strength of the ES cell signature being functionally important for the subsequent robustness of cell-type-restricted enhancer activation. We have experimentally validated this model in macrophage-restricted enhancers and neural precursor cell (NPC)-restricted enhancers using ES cell-derived macrophages or NPCs, edited to contain specific ES cell transcription factor motif deletions. DNA hydroxyl-methylation of enhancers in ES cells, determined by ES cell transcription factors, may serve as a potential molecular memory for subsequent enhancer activation in mature macrophages. These findings suggest that the massive repertoire of cell-type-restricted enhancers are essentially hierarchically and obligatorily premarked by binding of a defining ES cell transcription factor in ES cells, dictating the robustness of enhancer activation in mature cells.Binding of an embryonic stem in two cases cell-specific transcription factor pre-marks cell-type-restricted enhancers in embryonic stem in two cases cells, and this premarking is required for the robustness of enhancer activation in differentiated cells.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2018

Histone demethylase LSD1 regulates hematopoietic stem cells homeostasis and protects from death by endotoxic shock

Jianxun Wang; Kaoru Saijo; Dylan Skola; Chunyu Jin; Qi Ma; Daria Merkurjev; Christopher K. Glass; Michael G. Rosenfeld

Significance The histone demethylase LSD1, a critical regulator of mammalian hematopoiesis, serves as an important suppressor of endotoxic shock. Inflammation-induced deletion of LSD1 results in failure to generate all mature hematopoietic cells, and induces acute expansion of a pathological population of hyperproliferative and hyperinflammatory myeloid progenitors that cause “cytokine storm” and acute lethality. LSD1 proves to be a downstream target of Toll-like/cytokine receptors in HSCs during endotoxic shock, with its down-regulation caused by a cohort of inflammation-induced microRNAs. The resultant acute expansion of a population of pathological myeloid progenitors in bone marrow causes a septic shock phenotype. Inhibitors of these inflammation-induced microRNAs block the down-regulation of LSD1 and prevent LPS-induced mortality, suggesting a potential therapeutic approach for treatment of septic shock. Hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) maintain a quiescent state during homeostasis, but with acute infection, they exit the quiescent state to increase the output of immune cells, the so-called “emergency hematopoiesis.” However, HSCs’ response to severe infection during septic shock and the pathological impact remain poorly elucidated. Here, we report that the histone demethylase KDM1A/LSD1, serving as a critical regulator of mammalian hematopoiesis, is a negative regulator of the response to inflammation in HSCs during endotoxic shock typically observed during acute bacterial or viral infection. Inflammation-induced LSD1 deficiency results in an acute expansion of a pathological population of hyperproliferative and hyperinflammatory myeloid progenitors, resulting in a septic shock phenotype and acute death. Unexpectedly, in vivo administration of bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS) to wild-type mice results in acute suppression of LSD1 in HSCs with a septic shock phenotype that resembles that observed following induced deletion of LSD1. The suppression of LSD1 in HSCs is caused, at least in large part, by a cohort of inflammation-induced microRNAs. Significantly, reconstitution of mice with bone marrow progenitor cells expressing inhibitors of these inflammation-induced microRNAs blocked the suppression of LSD1 in vivo following acute LPS administration and prevented mortality from endotoxic shock. Our results indicate that LSD1 activators or miRNA antagonists could serve as a therapeutic approach for life-threatening septic shock characterized by dysfunction of HSCs.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016

Epithelial cell integrin β1 is required for developmental angiogenesis in the pituitary gland

Kathleen M. Scully; Dorota Skowronska-Krawczyk; Michal Krawczyk; Daria Merkurjev; Havilah Taylor; Antonia Livolsi; Jessica Tollkuhn; Radu V. Stan; Michael G. Rosenfeld

Significance During embryogenesis, a dense vascular network develops in the pituitary gland through the process of angiogenesis. In tandem, pituitary gland precursor cells differentiate into hormone-producing cells that will rely on the vasculature to carry out regulated endocrine function. Our data show that expression of the cell surface adhesion molecule, integrin β1, in the epithelial-derived precursor cells is required for development of the vasculature and coordinated terminal differentiation of endocrine cells. As a key component of the vertebrate neuroendocrine system, the pituitary gland relies on the progressive and coordinated development of distinct hormone-producing cell types and an invading vascular network. The molecular mechanisms that drive formation of the pituitary vasculature, which is necessary for regulated synthesis and secretion of hormones that maintain homeostasis, metabolism, and endocrine function, remain poorly understood. Here, we report that expression of integrin β1 in embryonic pituitary epithelial cells is required for angiogenesis in the developing mouse pituitary gland. Deletion of pituitary epithelial integrin β1 before the onset of angiogenesis resulted in failure of invading endothelial cells to recruit pericytes efficiently, whereas deletion later in embryogenesis led to decreased vascular density and lumen formation. In both cases, lack of epithelial integrin β1 was associated with a complete absence of vasculature in the pituitary gland at birth. Within pituitary epithelial cells, integrin β1 directs a large transcriptional program that includes components of the extracellular matrix and associated signaling factors that are linked to the observed non–cell-autonomous effects on angiogenesis. We conclude that epithelial integrin β1 functions as a critical and canonical regulator of developmental angiogenesis in the pituitary gland, thus providing insight into the long-standing systems biology conundrum of how vascular invasion is coordinated with tissue development.

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Wenbo Li

University of California

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Qi Ma

University of California

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Bogdan Tanasa

University of California

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Chunyu Jin

University of California

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Jie Zhang

Chalmers University of Technology

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Soohwan Oh

University of California

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Yuliang Tan

University of California

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Zhijie Liu

University of California

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