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Dive into the research topics where Dmytro S. Lituiev is active.

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Featured researches published by Dmytro S. Lituiev.


PLOS Biology | 2013

ANXUR Receptor-Like Kinases Coordinate Cell Wall Integrity with Growth at the Pollen Tube Tip Via NADPH Oxidases

Aurélien Boisson-Dernier; Dmytro S. Lituiev; Anna Nestorova; Christina Maria Franck; Sharme Thirugnanarajah; Ueli Grossniklaus

Pollen tubes grow extremely rapidly to effect fertilization in plants. ANXUR receptor-like kinases facilitate this growth by linking the intracellular growth machinery of pollen tubes to the status of the extracellular matrix via H2O2 and Ca2+ signaling.


Plant Physiology | 2013

A robust and sensitive synthetic sensor to monitor the transcriptional output of the cytokinin signaling network in planta

Evelyne Zürcher; Deborah Tavor-Deslex; Dmytro S. Lituiev; Katalin Enkerli; Paul T. Tarr; Bruno Müller

An improved synthetic reporter monitors cytokinin signaling in planta. Cytokinins are classic plant hormones that orchestrate plant growth, development, and physiology. They affect gene expression in target cells by activating a multistep phosphorelay network. Type-B response regulators, acting as transcriptional activators, mediate the final step in the signaling cascade. Previously, we have introduced a synthetic reporter, Two Component signaling Sensor (TCS)::green fluorescent protein (GFP), which reflects the transcriptional activity of type-B response regulators. TCS::GFP was instrumental in uncovering roles of cytokinin and deepening our understanding of existing functions. However, TCS-mediated expression of reporters is weak in some developmental contexts where cytokinin signaling has a documented role, such as in the shoot apical meristem or in the vasculature of Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana). We also observed that GFP expression becomes rapidly silenced in TCS::GFP transgenic plants. Here, we present an improved version of the reporter, TCS new (TCSn), which, compared with TCS, is more sensitive to phosphorelay signaling in Arabidopsis and maize (Zea mays) cellular assays while retaining its specificity. Transgenic Arabidopsis TCSn::GFP plants exhibit strong and dynamic GFP expression patterns consistent with known cytokinin functions. In addition, GFP expression has been stable over generations, allowing for crosses with different genetic backgrounds. Thus, TCSn represents a significant improvement to report the transcriptional output profile of phosphorelay signaling networks in Arabidopsis, maize, and likely other plants that display common response regulator DNA-binding specificities.


Developmental Cell | 2014

A calcium dialog mediated by the FERONIA Signal transduction pathway controls plant sperm delivery

Quy A. Ngo; Hannes Vogler; Dmytro S. Lituiev; Anna Nestorova; Ueli Grossniklaus

Sperm delivery for double fertilization of flowering plants relies on interactions between the pollen tube (PT) and two synergids, leading to programmed cell death (PCD) of the PT and one synergid. The mechanisms underlying the communication among these cells during PT reception is unknown. We discovered that the synergids control this process by coordinating their distinct calcium signatures in response to the calcium dynamics and growth behavior of the PT. Induced and spontaneous aberrant calcium responses in the synergids abolish the two coordinated PCD events. Components of the FERONIA (FER) signaling pathway are required for initiating and modulating these calcium responses and for coupling the PCD events. Intriguingly, the calcium signatures are interchangeable between the two synergids, implying that their fates of death and survival are determined by reversible interactions with the PT. Thus, complex intercellular interactions involving a receptor kinase pathway and calcium-mediated signaling control sperm delivery in plants.


Development | 2013

Theoretical and experimental evidence indicates that there is no detectable auxin gradient in the angiosperm female gametophyte

Dmytro S. Lituiev; Nádia Graciele Krohn; Bruno Müller; David Jackson; Barbara Hellriegel; Thomas Dresselhaus; Ueli Grossniklaus

The plant life cycle alternates between a diploid sporophytic and a haploid gametophytic generation. The female gametophyte (FG) of flowering plants is typically formed through three syncytial mitoses, followed by cellularisation that forms seven cells belonging to four cell types. The specification of cell fates in the FG has been suggested to depend on positional information provided by an intrinsic auxin concentration gradient. The goal of this study was to develop mathematical models that explain the formation of this gradient in a syncytium. Two factors were proposed to contribute to the maintenance of the auxin gradient in Arabidopsis FGs: polar influx at early stages and localised auxin synthesis at later stages. However, no gradient could be generated using classical, one-dimensional theoretical models under these assumptions. Thus, we tested other hypotheses, including spatial confinement by the large central vacuole, background efflux and localised degradation, and investigated the robustness of cell specification under different parameters and assumptions. None of the models led to the generation of an auxin gradient that was steep enough to allow sufficiently robust patterning. This led us to re-examine the response to an auxin gradient in developing FGs using various auxin reporters, including a novel degron-based reporter system. In agreement with the predictions of our models, auxin responses were not detectable within the FG of Arabidopsis or maize, suggesting that the effects of manipulating auxin production and response on cell fate determination might be indirect.


Nature | 2017

Discovery of stimulation-responsive immune enhancers with CRISPR activation

Dimitre R. Simeonov; Benjamin G. Gowen; Mandy Boontanrart; Theodore L. Roth; John D. Gagnon; Maxwell R. Mumbach; Ansuman T. Satpathy; Youjin Lee; Nicolas Bray; Alice Y. Chan; Dmytro S. Lituiev; Michelle L. Nguyen; Rachel E. Gate; Meena Subramaniam; Zhongmei Li; Jonathan M. Woo; Therese Mitros; Graham J. Ray; Gemma L. Curie; Nicki Naddaf; Julia S. Chu; Hong Ma; Eric Boyer; Frédéric Van Gool; Hailiang Huang; Ruize Liu; Victoria R. Tobin; Kathrin Schumann; Mark J. Daly; Kyle Kai-How Farh

The majority of genetic variants associated with common human diseases map to enhancers, non-coding elements that shape cell-type-specific transcriptional programs and responses to extracellular cues. Systematic mapping of functional enhancers and their biological contexts is required to understand the mechanisms by which variation in non-coding genetic sequences contributes to disease. Functional enhancers can be mapped by genomic sequence disruption, but this approach is limited to the subset of enhancers that are necessary in the particular cellular context being studied. We hypothesized that recruitment of a strong transcriptional activator to an enhancer would be sufficient to drive target gene expression, even if that enhancer was not currently active in the assayed cells. Here we describe a discovery platform that can identify stimulus-responsive enhancers for a target gene independent of stimulus exposure. We used tiled CRISPR activation (CRISPRa) to synthetically recruit a transcriptional activator to sites across large genomic regions (more than 100 kilobases) surrounding two key autoimmunity risk loci, CD69 and IL2RA. We identified several CRISPRa-responsive elements with chromatin features of stimulus-responsive enhancers, including an IL2RA enhancer that harbours an autoimmunity risk variant. Using engineered mouse models, we found that sequence perturbation of the disease-associated Il2ra enhancer did not entirely block Il2ra expression, but rather delayed the timing of gene activation in response to specific extracellular signals. Enhancer deletion skewed polarization of naive T cells towards a pro-inflammatory T helper (TH17) cell state and away from a regulatory T cell state. This integrated approach identifies functional enhancers and reveals how non-coding variation associated with human immune dysfunction alters context-specific gene programs.


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

Receptor-like cytoplasmic kinase MARIS functions downstream of CrRLK1L-dependent signaling during tip growth

Aurélien Boisson-Dernier; Christina Maria Franck; Dmytro S. Lituiev; Ueli Grossniklaus

Significance Plant cells constantly survey their environment to fine-tune their internal processes. Plant receptor-like kinases (RLKs) of the Catharanthus roseus RLK1-like (CrRLK1L) subfamily have been implicated in many signaling processes, including the coordination of the intracellular growth machinery with the performance of the extracellular matrix, i.e. the cell wall (CW). To avoid loss of integrity and growth and to adapt their CWs to developmental and environmental perturbations, growing plant cells have developed complex sensing mechanisms. The CrRLK1Ls ANXUR1 and ANXUR2 and their closest homolog FERONIA control CW integrity in the tip-growing pollen tubes and root hairs, respectively. Here, we identify and characterize the receptor-like cytoplasmic kinase MARIS as a novel downstream component of the CrRLK1L-dependent signaling cascade that controls CW integrity in tip-growing cells. Growing plant cells need to rigorously coordinate external signals with internal processes. For instance, the maintenance of cell wall (CW) integrity requires the coordination of CW sensing with CW remodeling and biosynthesis to avoid growth arrest or integrity loss. Despite the involvement of receptor-like kinases (RLKs) of the Catharanthus roseus RLK1-like (CrRLK1L) subfamily and the reactive oxygen species-producing NADPH oxidases, it remains largely unknown how this coordination is achieved. ANXUR1 (ANX1) and ANX2, two redundant members of the CrRLK1L subfamily, are required for tip growth of the pollen tube (PT), and their closest homolog, FERONIA, controls root-hair tip growth. Previously, we showed that ANX1 overexpression mildly inhibits PT growth by oversecretion of CW material, whereas pollen tubes of anx1 anx2 double mutants burst spontaneously after germination. Here, we report the identification of suppressor mutants with improved fertility caused by the rescue of anx1 anx2 pollen tube bursting. Mapping of one these mutants revealed an R240C nonsynonymous substitution in the activation loop of a receptor-like cytoplasmic kinase (RLCK), which we named MARIS (MRI). We show that MRI is a plasma membrane-localized member of the RLCK-VIII subfamily and is preferentially expressed in both PTs and root hairs. Interestingly, mri-knockout mutants display spontaneous PT and root-hair bursting. Moreover, expression of the MRIR240C mutant, but not its wild-type form, partially rescues the bursting phenotypes of anx1 anx2 PTs and fer root hairs but strongly inhibits wild-type tip growth. Thus, our findings identify a novel positive component of the CrRLK1L-dependent signaling cascade that coordinates CW integrity and tip growth.


bioRxiv | 2016

Genetic determinants of chromatin accessibility and gene regulation in T cell activation across human individuals

Christine S. Cheng; Rachel E. Gate; Aviva Presser Aiden; Atsede Siba; Marcin Tabaka; Dmytro S. Lituiev; Ido Machol; Meena Subramaniam; Muhammad Shammim; Kendrick L. Hougen; Ivo Wortman; Su-Chen Huang; Neva C. Durand; Ting Feng; Philip L. De Jager; Howard Y. Chang; Erez Lieberman Aiden; Christophe Benoist; Micheal A Beer; Chun Ye; Aviv Regev

The vast majority of genetic variants associated with complex human traits map to non-coding regions, but little is understood about how they modulate gene regulation in health and disease. Here, we analyzed Assay for Transposase-Accessible Chromatin (ATAC-seq) profiles from activated primary CD4+ T cells of 105 healthy donors to identify ATAC-QTLs: genetic variants that affect chromatin accessibility. We found that ATAC-QTLs are widespread, disrupt binding sites for transcription factors known to be important for CD4+ T cell differentiation and activation, overlap and mediate expression QTLs from the same cells and are enriched for SNPs associated with autoimmune diseases. We also identified numerous pairs of ATAC-peaks with highly correlated chromatin accessibility. When we characterize 3D chromosome organization in primary CD4+ T cells by in situ-Hi-C, we found that correlated peaks tend to reside in the same chromatin contact domains, span super-enhancers, and are more impacted by ATAC-QTLs than single peaks. Thus, variability in chromatin accessibility in primary CD4+ T cells is heritable, is determined by genetic variation in a manner affected by the 3D organization of the genome, and mediates genetic effects on gene expression. Our results provide insights into how genetic variants modulate chromatin state and gene expression in primary immune cells that play a key role in many human diseases.


Biochemical Society Transactions | 2014

Patterning of the angiosperm female gametophyte through the prism of theoretical paradigms.

Dmytro S. Lituiev; Ueli Grossniklaus

The FG (female gametophyte) of flowering plants (angiosperms) is a simple highly polar structure composed of only a few cell types. The FG develops from a single cell through mitotic divisions to generate, depending on the species, four to 16 nuclei in a syncytium. These nuclei are then partitioned into three or four distinct cell types. The mechanisms underlying the specification of the nuclei in the FG has been a focus of research over the last decade. Nevertheless, we are far from understanding the patterning mechanisms that govern cell specification. Although some results were previously interpreted in terms of static positional information, several lines of evidence now show that local interactions are important. In the present article, we revisit the available data on developmental mutants and cell fate markers in the light of theoretical frameworks for biological patterning. We argue that a further dissection of the mechanisms may be impeded by the combinatorial and dynamical nature of developmental cues. However, accounting for these properties of developing systems is necessary to disentangle the diversity of the phenotypic manifestations of the underlying molecular interactions.


The Plant Cell | 2018

The Protein Phosphatases ATUNIS1 and ATUNIS2 Regulate Cell Wall Integrity in Tip-Growing Cells

Christina Maria Franck; Jens Westermann; Simon Bürssner; Roswitha Lentz; Dmytro S. Lituiev; Aurélien Boisson-Dernier

The serine/threonine protein phosphatases ATUNIS1 and ATUNIS2 function downstream of CrRLK1Ls to negatively regulate cell wall integrity during tip growth. Fast tip-growing plant cells such as pollen tubes (PTs) and root hairs (RHs) require a robust coordination between their internal growth machinery and modifications of their extracellular rigid, yet extensible, cell wall (CW). Part of this essential coordination is governed by members of the Catharanthus roseus receptor-like kinase1-like (CrRLK1L) subfamily of RLKs with FERONIA (FER) and its closest homologs, ANXUR1 (ANX1) and ANX2, controlling CW integrity during RH and PT growth, respectively. Recently, Leucine-Rich Repeat Extensin 8 (LRX8) to LRX11 were also shown to be important for CW integrity in PTs. We previously reported an anx1 anx2 suppressor screen in Arabidopsis thaliana that revealed MARIS (MRI) as a positive regulator of both FER- and ANX1/2-dependent CW integrity pathways. Here, we characterize a suppressor that exhibits a weak rescue of the anx1 anx2 PT bursting phenotype and a short RH phenotype. The corresponding suppressor mutation causes a D94N substitution in a Type One Protein Phosphatase we named ATUNIS1 (AUN1). We show that AUN1 and its closest homolog, AUN2, are nucleocytoplasmic negative regulators of tip growth. Moreover, we demonstrate that AUN1D94N and AUN1H127A harboring mutations in key amino acids of the conserved catalytic site of phosphoprotein phosphatases function as dominant amorphic variants that repress PT growth. Finally, genetic interaction studies using the hypermorph MRIR240C and amorph AUN1D94N dominant variants indicate that LRX8-11 and ANX1/2 function in distinct but converging pathways to fine-tune CW integrity during tip growth.


Nature Genetics | 2018

Genetic determinants of co-accessible chromatin regions in activated T cells across humans

Rachel E. Gate; Christine S. Cheng; Aviva P. Aiden; Atsede Siba; Marcin Tabaka; Dmytro S. Lituiev; Ido Machol; M. Grace Gordon; Meena Subramaniam; Muhammad S. Shamim; Kendrick L. Hougen; Ivo Wortman; Su-Chen Huang; Neva C. Durand; Ting Feng; Philip L. De Jager; Howard Y. Chang; Erez Lieberman Aiden; Christophe Benoist; Michael Beer; Chun Ye; Aviv Regev

Over 90% of genetic variants associated with complex human traits map to non-coding regions, but little is understood about how they modulate gene regulation in health and disease. One possible mechanism is that genetic variants affect the activity of one or more cis-regulatory elements leading to gene expression variation in specific cell types. To identify such cases, we analyzed ATAC-seq and RNA-seq profiles from stimulated primary CD4+ T cells in up to 105 healthy donors. We found that regions of accessible chromatin (ATAC-peaks) are co-accessible at kilobase and megabase resolution, consistent with the three-dimensional chromatin organization measured by in situ Hi-C in T cells. Fifteen percent of genetic variants located within ATAC-peaks affected the accessibility of the corresponding peak (local-ATAC-QTLs). Local-ATAC-QTLs have the largest effects on co-accessible peaks, are associated with gene expression and are enriched for autoimmune disease variants. Our results provide insights into how natural genetic variants modulate cis-regulatory elements, in isolation or in concert, to influence gene expression.Analysis of ATAC-seq and RNA-seq data from stimulated T cells identifies genetic variants that disrupt transcription factor binding sites within ATAC-seq peaks. ATAC quantitative trait loci (ATAC-QTLs) are enriched for autoimmune disease-associated variants.

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Rachel E. Gate

University of California

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Alice Y. Chan

University of California

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