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Dive into the research topics where Egor Prokhortchouk is active.

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Featured researches published by Egor Prokhortchouk.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2006

A Family of Human Zinc Finger Proteins That Bind Methylated DNA and Repress Transcription

Guillaume J. Filion; Svetlana Zhenilo; Sergey Salozhin; Daisuke Yamada; Egor Prokhortchouk; Pierre-Antoine Defossez

ABSTRACT In vertebrates, densely methylated DNA is associated with inactive transcription. Actors in this process include proteins of the MBD family that can recognize methylated CpGs and repress transcription. Kaiso, a structurally unrelated protein, has also been shown to bind methylated CGCGs through its three Krüppel-like C2H2 zinc fingers. The human genome contains two uncharacterized proteins, ZBTB4 and ZBTB38, that contain Kaiso-like zinc fingers. We report that ZBTB4 and ZBTB38 bind methylated DNA in vitro and in vivo. Unlike Kaiso, they can bind single methylated CpGs. When transfected in mouse cells, the proteins colocalize with foci of heavily methylated satellite DNA and become delocalized upon loss of DNA methylation. Chromatin immunoprecipitation suggests that both of these proteins specifically bind to the methylated allele of the H19/Igf2 differentially methylated region. ZBTB4 and ZBTB38 repress the transcription of methylated templates in transfection assays. The two genes have distinct tissue-specific expression patterns, but both are highly expressed in the brain. Our results reveal the existence of a family of Kaiso-like proteins that bind methylated CpGs. Like proteins of the MBD family, they are able to repress transcription in a methyl-dependent manner, yet their tissue-specific expression pattern suggests nonoverlapping functions.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2006

Kaiso-deficient mice show resistance to intestinal cancer.

Anna Prokhortchouk; Owen J. Sansom; Jim Selfridge; Isabel Martín Caballero; Sergey Salozhin; Dana Aithozhina; Leandro Cerchietti; Fan Guo Meng; Leonard H. Augenlicht; John M. Mariadason; Brian Hendrich; Ari Melnick; Egor Prokhortchouk; Alan Richard Clarke; Adrian Bird

ABSTRACT Kaiso is a BTB domain protein that associates with the signaling molecule p120-catenin and binds to the methylated sequence mCGmCG or the nonmethylated sequence CTGCNA to modulate transcription. In Xenopus laevis, xKaiso deficiency leads to embryonic death accompanied by premature gene activation in blastulae and upregulation of the xWnt11 gene. Kaiso has also been proposed to play an essential role in mammalian synapse-specific transcription. We disrupted the Kaiso gene in mice to assess its role in mammalian development. Kaiso-null mice were viable and fertile, with no detectable abnormalities of development or gene expression. However, when crossed with tumor-susceptible Apc Min/+ mice, Kaiso-null mice showed a delayed onset of intestinal tumorigenesis. Kaiso was found to be upregulated in murine intestinal tumors and is expressed in human colon cancers. Our data suggest that Kaiso plays a role in intestinal cancer and may therefore represent a potential target for therapeutic intervention.


Development | 2004

Kaiso is a genome-wide repressor of transcription that is essential for amphibian development

Alexey Ruzov; Donncha S. Dunican; Anna Prokhortchouk; Sari Pennings; Irina Stancheva; Egor Prokhortchouk; Richard R. Meehan

DNA methylation in animals is thought to repress transcription via methyl-CpG specific binding proteins, which recruit enzymatic machinery promoting the formation of inactive chromatin at targeted loci. Loss of DNA methylation can result in the activation of normally silent genes during mouse and amphibian development. Paradoxically, global changes in gene expression have not been observed in mice that are null for the methyl-CpG specific repressors MeCP2, MBD1 or MBD2. Here, we demonstrate that xKaiso, a novel methyl-CpG specific repressor protein, is required to maintain transcription silencing during early Xenopus laevis development. In the absence of xKaiso function, premature zygotic gene expression occurs before the mid-blastula transition (MBT). Subsequent phenotypes (developmental arrest and apoptosis) strongly resemble those observed for hypomethylated embryos. Injection of wild-type human kaiso mRNA can rescue the phenotype and associated gene expression changes of xKaiso-depleted embryos. Our results, including gene expression profiling, are consistent with an essential role for xKaiso as a global repressor of methylated genes during early vertebrate development.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2008

The cell biology of DNA methylation in mammals.

Egor Prokhortchouk; Pierre-Antoine Defossez

In this review, we will provide a brief reminder of epigenetic phenomena in general, and DNA methylation in particular. We will then underline the characteristics of the in vivo organization of the genome that limit the applicability of in vitro results. We will use several examples to point out the connections between DNA methylation and nuclear architecture. Finally, we will outline some of the hopes and challenges for future research in the field. The study of DNA methylation, its effectors, and its roles, illustrates the complementarity of in vitro approaches and cell biology.


Genome Research | 2014

Genome-wide nucleosome map and cytosine methylation levels of an ancient human genome

Jakob Skou Pedersen; Eivind Valen; Amhed M. V. Velazquez; Brian J. Parker; Morten Rasmussen; Stinus Lindgreen; Berit Lilje; Desmond J. Tobin; Theresa K. Kelly; Søren Vang; Robin Andersson; Peter A. Jones; Cindi A. Hoover; Alexei Tikhonov; Egor Prokhortchouk; Edward M. Rubin; Albin Sandelin; M. Thomas P. Gilbert; Anders Krogh; Ludovic Orlando

Epigenetic information is available from contemporary organisms, but is difficult to track back in evolutionary time. Here, we show that genome-wide epigenetic information can be gathered directly from next-generation sequence reads of DNA isolated from ancient remains. Using the genome sequence data generated from hair shafts of a 4000-yr-old Paleo-Eskimo belonging to the Saqqaq culture, we generate the first ancient nucleosome map coupled with a genome-wide survey of cytosine methylation levels. The validity of both nucleosome map and methylation levels were confirmed by the recovery of the expected signals at promoter regions, exon/intron boundaries, and CTCF sites. The top-scoring nucleosome calls revealed distinct DNA positioning biases, attesting to nucleotide-level accuracy. The ancient methylation levels exhibited high conservation over time, clustering closely with modern hair tissues. Using ancient methylation information, we estimated the age at death of the Saqqaq individual and illustrate how epigenetic information can be used to infer ancient gene expression. Similar epigenetic signatures were found in other fossil material, such as 110,000- to 130,000-yr-old bones, supporting the contention that ancient epigenomic information can be reconstructed from a deep past. Our findings lay the foundation for extracting epigenomic information from ancient samples, allowing shifts in epialleles to be tracked through evolutionary time, as well as providing an original window into modern epigenomics.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1998

Molecular cloning and characterization of the mouse tag7 gene encoding a novel cytokine.

Sergei L. Kiselev; Olga S. Kustikova; Elena V. Korobko; Egor Prokhortchouk; Andrei A. Kabishev; Lukanidin Em; Georgii P. Georgiev

Cloning of the mouse tag7 gene encoding a novel cytokine is described. The Tag7 protein consists of 182 amino acids. Genomic organization of the tag7 gene and its promoter region remind those of the genes of the tumor necrosis factor locus, although the tag7 gene is not linked to this locus. The gene is located on chromosome 7 at the area that corresponds to band 7A3, which has genetic linkage with lupus-like disease in mouse models. tag7 transcription is essential for lymphoid organs. It is also detected in certain areas of lungs, brain, and intestine and in some tumors. Tag7 protein is detectable in both cell-associated and soluble forms. The soluble form of Tag7 triggers apoptosis in mouse L929 cells in vitro and does not involve NF-κB activation. The relationship between Tag7 and tumor necrosis factor family of ligands is discussed.


Nature Communications | 2014

Variation in genomic landscape of clear cell renal cell carcinoma across Europe

Ghislaine Scelo; Yasser Riazalhosseini; Liliana Greger; Louis Letourneau; Mar Gonzàlez-Porta; Magdalena B. Wozniak; Bourgey M; Patricia Harnden; Lars Egevad; Sharon Jackson; Mehran Karimzadeh; Madeleine Arseneault; Lepage P; Alexandre How-Kit; Antoine Daunay; Hélène Blanché; Tubacher E; Sehmoun J; Juris Viksna; Edgars Celms; Martins Opmanis; Andris Zarins; Naveen S. Vasudev; Seywright M; Behnoush Abedi-Ardekani; Carreira C; Peter Selby; J Cartledge; Byrnes G; Zavadil J

The incidence of renal cell carcinoma (RCC) is increasing worldwide, and its prevalence is particularly high in some parts of Central Europe. Here we undertake whole-genome and transcriptome sequencing of clear cell RCC (ccRCC), the most common form of the disease, in patients from four different European countries with contrasting disease incidence to explore the underlying genomic architecture of RCC. Our findings support previous reports on frequent aberrations in the epigenetic machinery and PI3K/mTOR signalling, and uncover novel pathways and genes affected by recurrent mutations and abnormal transcriptome patterns including focal adhesion, components of extracellular matrix (ECM) and genes encoding FAT cadherins. Furthermore, a large majority of patients from Romania have an unexpected high frequency of A:T>T:A transversions, consistent with exposure to aristolochic acid (AA). These results show that the processes underlying ccRCC tumorigenesis may vary in different populations and suggest that AA may be an important ccRCC carcinogen in Romania, a finding with major public health implications.


Development | 2009

The interaction of xKaiso with xTcf3: a revised model for integration of epigenetic and Wnt signalling pathways

Alexey Ruzov; Jamie A. Hackett; Anna Prokhortchouk; James P. Reddington; Monika J. Madej; Donncha S. Dunican; Egor Prokhortchouk; Sari Pennings; Richard R. Meehan

We demonstrate that a direct interaction between the methyl-CpG-dependent transcription repressor Kaiso and xTcf3, a transducer of the Wnt signalling pathway, results in their mutual disengagement from their respective DNA-binding sites. Thus, the transcription functions of xTcf3 can be inhibited by overexpression of Kaiso in cell lines and Xenopus embryos. The interaction of Kaiso with xTcf3 is highly conserved and is dependent on its zinc-finger domains (ZF1-3) and the corresponding HMG DNA-binding domain of TCF3/4 factors. Our data rule out a model suggesting that xKaiso is a direct repressor of Wnt signalling target genes in early Xenopus development via binding to promoter-proximal CTGCNA sequences as part of a xTcf3 repressor complex. Instead, we propose that mutual inhibition by Kaiso/TCF3 of their DNA-binding functions may be important in developmental or cancer contexts and acts as a regulatory node that integrates epigenetic and Wnt signalling pathways.


Development | 2009

The non-methylated DNA-binding function of Kaiso is not required in early Xenopus laevis development

Alexey Ruzov; Ekaterina Savitskaya; Jamie A. Hackett; James P. Reddington; Anna Prokhortchouk; Monika J. Madej; Nikolai Chekanov; Minghui Li; Donncha S. Dunican; Egor Prokhortchouk; Sari Pennings; Richard R. Meehan

Mammalian forms of the transcription repressor, Kaiso, can reportedly bind methylated DNA and non-methylated CTGCNA motifs. Here we compare the DNA-binding properties of Kaiso from frog, fish and chicken and demonstrate that only the methyl-CpG-binding function of Kaiso is evolutionarily conserved. We present several independent experimental lines of evidence that the phenotypic abnormalities associated with xKaiso-depleted Xenopus laevis embryos are independent of the putative CTGCNA-dependent DNA-binding function of xKaiso. Our analysis suggests that xKaiso does not play a role in the regulation of either xWnt11 or Siamois, key signalling molecules in the Wnt pathway during X. laevis gastrulation. The major phenotypic defects associated with xKaiso depletion are premature transcription activation before the mid-blastula transition and concomitant activation of a p53-dependent cell-death pathway.


Oncogene | 2002

Methyl-CpG binding proteins and cancer: are MeCpGs more important than MBDs?

Egor Prokhortchouk; Brian Hendrich

There are two major steps in cancer. Firstly, somatic cells lose growth controls and become sporadically transformed. The cause of transformation might be one or several of a variety of different environmental or genetic factors. However at this first stage there is only a minor risk for poor clinical prognosis. These primary tumours can then undergo a second step in which previously benign tumours are said to become malignant by their ability to form secondary tumours called metastases. Clinical prognosis for patients with metastasizing tumours is not optimistic. The aim of this review is to consider the role, if any, of methylCpG binding proteins in both stages of tumour progression.

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K. G. Skryabin

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Alexander M. Mazur

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Alexey Sokolov

Russian Academy of Sciences

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F. S. Sharko

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Nikolay Chekanov

Russian Academy of Sciences

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