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Dive into the research topics where Di Kim Nguyen is active.

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Featured researches published by Di Kim Nguyen.


Nature Genetics | 2006

Dosage compensation of the active X chromosome in mammals

Di Kim Nguyen; Christine M. Disteche

Monosomy of the X chromosome owing to divergence between the sex chromosomes leads to dosage compensation mechanisms to restore balanced expression between the X and the autosomes. In Drosophila melanogaster, upregulation of the male X leads to dosage compensation. It has been hypothesized that mammals likewise upregulate their active X chromosome. Together with X inactivation, this mechanism would maintain balanced expression between the X chromosome and autosomes and between the sexes. Here, we show that doubling of the global expression level of the X chromosome leads to dosage compensation in somatic tissues from several mammalian species. X-linked genes are highly expressed in brain tissues, consistent with a role in cognitive functions. Furthermore, the X chromosome is expressed but not upregulated in spermatids and secondary oocytes, preserving balanced expression of the genome in these haploid cells. Upon fertilization, upregulation of the active X must occur to achieve the observed dosage compensation in early embryos.


Brain Research | 2006

High expression of the mammalian X chromosome in brain

Di Kim Nguyen; Christine M. Disteche

Divergence between the sex chromosomes has led to loss and differentiation of Y-linked genes and haplo-insufficiency for X-linked genes in males. A mechanism of dosage compensation, for which we recently found evidence in mammals, evolved to restore a balanced expression of the genome by doubling the transcriptional output from the X chromosome. X inactivation would then serve to avoid hyper-transcription of X-linked genes in females by silencing one X chromosome. We also found that, compared to the rest of the genome, the X chromosome contains an excess of genes highly expressed in brain tissues. The exceptionally important role of the X chromosome in brain function, evident from the prevalence of X-linked forms of mental retardation, is discussed in view of sex chromosome regulation and evolution and sexual reproduction.


Developmental Cell | 2013

Mammalian X Upregulation Is Associated with Enhanced Transcription Initiation, RNA Half-Life, and MOF-Mediated H4K16 Acetylation

Xinxian Deng; Joel B. Berletch; Wenxiu Ma; Di Kim Nguyen; Joseph Hiatt; William Stafford Noble; Jay Shendure; Christine M. Disteche

X upregulation in mammals increases levels of expressed X-linked transcripts to compensate for autosomal biallelic expression. Here, we present molecular mechanisms that enhance X expression at transcriptional and posttranscriptional levels. Active mouse X-linked promoters are enriched in the initiation form of RNA polymerase II (PolII-S5p) and in specific histone marks, including histone H4 acetylated at lysine 16 (H4K16ac) and histone variant H2AZ. The H4K16 acetyltransferase males absent on the first (MOF), known to mediate the Drosophila X upregulation, is also enriched on the mammalian X. Depletion of MOF or male-specific lethal 1 (MSL1) in mouse ES cells causes a specific decrease in PolII-S5p and in expression of a subset of X-linked genes. Analyses of RNA half-life data sets show increased stability of mammalian X-linked transcripts. Both ancestral X-linked genes, defined as those conserved on chicken autosomes, and newly acquired X-linked genes are upregulated by similar mechanisms but to a different extent, suggesting that subsets of genes are distinctly regulated depending on their evolutionary history.


PLOS Genetics | 2013

Female bias in Rhox6 and 9 regulation by the histone demethylase KDM6A.

Joel B. Berletch; Xinxian Deng; Di Kim Nguyen; Christine M. Disteche

The Rhox cluster on the mouse X chromosome contains reproduction-related homeobox genes expressed in a sexually dimorphic manner. We report that two members of the Rhox cluster, Rhox6 and 9, are regulated by de-methylation of histone H3 at lysine 27 by KDM6A, a histone demethylase with female-biased expression. Consistent with other homeobox genes, Rhox6 and 9 are in bivalent domains prior to embryonic stem cell differentiation and thus poised for activation. In female mouse ES cells, KDM6A is specifically recruited to Rhox6 and 9 for gene activation, a process inhibited by Kdm6a knockdown in a dose-dependent manner. In contrast, KDM6A occupancy at Rhox6 and 9 is low in male ES cells and knockdown has no effect on expression. In mouse ovary where Rhox6 and 9 remain highly expressed, KDM6A occupancy strongly correlates with expression. Our study implicates Kdm6a, a gene that escapes X inactivation, in the regulation of genes important in reproduction, suggesting that KDM6A may play a role in the etiology of developmental and reproduction-related effects of X chromosome anomalies.


PLOS Genetics | 2009

Dosage regulation of the active X chromosome in human triploid cells.

Xinxian Deng; Di Kim Nguyen; R. Scott Hansen; Daniel L. Van Dyke; Stanley M. Gartler; Christine M. Disteche

In mammals, dosage compensation is achieved by doubling expression of X-linked genes in both sexes, together with X inactivation in females. Up-regulation of the active X chromosome may be controlled by DNA sequence–based and/or epigenetic mechanisms that double the X output potentially in response to autosomal factor(s). To determine whether X expression is adjusted depending on ploidy, we used expression arrays to compare X-linked and autosomal gene expression in human triploid cells. While the average X:autosome expression ratio was about 1 in normal diploid cells, this ratio was lower (0.81–0.84) in triploid cells with one active X and higher (1.32–1.4) in triploid cells with two active Xs. Thus, overall X-linked gene expression in triploid cells does not strictly respond to an autosomal factor, nor is it adjusted to achieve a perfect balance. The unbalanced X:autosome expression ratios that we observed could contribute to the abnormal phenotypes associated with triploidy. Absolute autosomal expression levels per gene copy were similar in triploid versus diploid cells, indicating no apparent global effect on autosomal expression. In triploid cells with two active Xs our data support a basic doubling of X-linked gene expression. However, in triploid cells with a single active X, X-linked gene expression is adjusted upward presumably by an epigenetic mechanism that senses the ratio between the number of active X chromosomes and autosomal sets. Such a mechanism may act on a subset of genes whose expression dosage in relation to autosomal expression may be critical. Indeed, we found that there was a range of individual X-linked gene expression in relation to ploidy and that a small subset (∼7%) of genes had expression levels apparently proportional to the number of autosomal sets.


Access Science | 2009

Dosage compensation of the active X chromosome

Christine M. Disteche; Di Kim Nguyen

Sex chromosomes have evolved from an ordinary pair of autosomes (non-sex chromosomes) in multiple li…


Developmental Cell | 2005

Boundaries between Chromosomal Domains of X Inactivation and Escape Bind CTCF and Lack CpG Methylation during Early Development

Galina N. Filippova; Mimi K. Cheng; James M. Moore; Jean Pierre Truong; Ying J. Hu; Di Kim Nguyen; Karen D. Tsuchiya; Christine M. Disteche


Nature Genetics | 2011

Evidence for compensatory upregulation of expressed X-linked genes in mammals, Caenorhabditis elegans and Drosophila melanogaster

Xinxian Deng; Joseph Hiatt; Di Kim Nguyen; Sevinc Ercan; David Sturgill; LaDeana W. Hillier; Felix Schlesinger; Carrie A. Davis; Valerie Reinke; Thomas R. Gingeras; Jay Shendure; Robert H. Waterston; Brian Oliver; Jason D. Lieb; Christine M. Disteche


Genome Research | 2011

Clcn4-2 genomic structure differs between the X locus in Mus spretus and the autosomal locus in Mus musculus: AT motif enrichment on the X

Di Kim Nguyen; Fan Yang; Rajinder Kaul; Can Alkan; Anthony Antonellis; Karen F. Friery; Baoli Zhu; Pieter J. de Jong; Christine M. Disteche


International Congress Series | 2006

Dosage compensation of the X chromosome and Turner syndrome

Mimi K. Cheng; Di Kim Nguyen; Christine M. Disteche

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Xinxian Deng

University of Washington

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Jay Shendure

University of Washington

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Joseph Hiatt

University of Washington

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Carrie A. Davis

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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David Sturgill

National Institutes of Health

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Felix Schlesinger

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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Mimi K. Cheng

University of Washington

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