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Dive into the research topics where Ehsan Habibi is active.

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Featured researches published by Ehsan Habibi.


Cell Stem Cell | 2013

Whole-Genome Bisulfite Sequencing of Two Distinct Interconvertible DNA Methylomes of Mouse Embryonic Stem Cells

Ehsan Habibi; Arie B. Brinkman; Julia Arand; Leonie I. Kroeze; Hindrik Hd Kerstens; Filomena Matarese; Konstantin Lepikhov; Marta Gut; Isabelle Brun-Heath; Nina C. Hubner; Rosaria Benedetti; Lucia Altucci; Joop H. Jansen; Jörn Walter; Ivo Gut; Hendrik Marks; Hendrik G. Stunnenberg

The use of two kinase inhibitors (2i) enables derivation of mouse embryonic stem cells (ESCs) in the pluripotent ground state. Using whole-genome bisulfite sequencing (WGBS), we show that male 2i ESCs are globally hypomethylated compared to conventional ESCs maintained in serum. In serum, female ESCs are hypomethyated similarly to male ESCs in 2i, and DNA methylation is further reduced in 2i. Regions with elevated DNA methylation in 2i strongly correlate with the presence of H3K9me3 on endogenous retroviruses (ERVs) and imprinted loci. The methylome of male ESCs in serum parallels postimplantation blastocyst cells, while 2i stalls ESCs in a hypomethylated, ICM-like state. WGBS analysis during adaptation of 2i ESCs to serum suggests that deposition of DNA methylation is largely random, while loss of DNA methylation during reversion to 2i occurs passively, initiating at TET1 binding sites. Together, our analysis provides insight into DNA methylation dynamics in cultured ESCs paralleling early developmental processes.


Cell | 2016

Genetic Drivers of Epigenetic and Transcriptional Variation in Human Immune Cells

Lu Chen; Bing Ge; Francesco Paolo Casale; Louella Vasquez; Tony Kwan; Diego Garrido-Martín; Stephen Watt; Ying Yan; Kousik Kundu; Simone Ecker; Avik Datta; David C. Richardson; Frances Burden; Daniel Mead; Alice L. Mann; José María Fernández; Sophia Rowlston; Steven P. Wilder; Samantha Farrow; Xiaojian Shao; John J. Lambourne; Adriana Redensek; Cornelis A. Albers; Vyacheslav Amstislavskiy; Sofie Ashford; Kim Berentsen; Lorenzo Bomba; Guillaume Bourque; David Bujold; Stephan Busche

Summary Characterizing the multifaceted contribution of genetic and epigenetic factors to disease phenotypes is a major challenge in human genetics and medicine. We carried out high-resolution genetic, epigenetic, and transcriptomic profiling in three major human immune cell types (CD14+ monocytes, CD16+ neutrophils, and naive CD4+ T cells) from up to 197 individuals. We assess, quantitatively, the relative contribution of cis-genetic and epigenetic factors to transcription and evaluate their impact as potential sources of confounding in epigenome-wide association studies. Further, we characterize highly coordinated genetic effects on gene expression, methylation, and histone variation through quantitative trait locus (QTL) mapping and allele-specific (AS) analyses. Finally, we demonstrate colocalization of molecular trait QTLs at 345 unique immune disease loci. This expansive, high-resolution atlas of multi-omics changes yields insights into cell-type-specific correlation between diverse genomic inputs, more generalizable correlations between these inputs, and defines molecular events that may underpin complex disease risk.


Molecular Cell | 2016

Impairment of DNA Methylation Maintenance Is the Main Cause of Global Demethylation in Naive Embryonic Stem Cells

Ferdinand von Meyenn; Mario Iurlaro; Ehsan Habibi; Ning Qing Liu; Ali Salehzadeh-Yazdi; Fátima Santos; Edoardo Petrini; Inês Milagre; Miao Yu; Zhenqing Xie; Leonie I. Kroeze; Tatyana B. Nesterova; Joop H. Jansen; Hehuang Xie; Chuan He; Wolf Reik; Hendrik G. Stunnenberg

Summary Global demethylation is part of a conserved program of epigenetic reprogramming to naive pluripotency. The transition from primed hypermethylated embryonic stem cells (ESCs) to naive hypomethylated ones (serum-to-2i) is a valuable model system for epigenetic reprogramming. We present a mathematical model, which accurately predicts global DNA demethylation kinetics. Experimentally, we show that the main drivers of global demethylation are neither active mechanisms (Aicda, Tdg, and Tet1-3) nor the reduction of de novo methylation. UHRF1 protein, the essential targeting factor for DNMT1, is reduced upon transition to 2i, and so is recruitment of the maintenance methylation machinery to replication foci. Concurrently, there is global loss of H3K9me2, which is needed for chromatin binding of UHRF1. These mechanisms synergistically enforce global DNA hypomethylation in a replication-coupled fashion. Our observations establish the molecular mechanism for global demethylation in naive ESCs, which has key parallels with those operating in primordial germ cells and early embryos.


Cell Metabolism | 2016

Glutaminolysis and Fumarate Accumulation Integrate Immunometabolic and Epigenetic Programs in Trained Immunity

Rob J.W. Arts; Boris Novakovic; Rob ter Horst; Agostinho Carvalho; Siroon Bekkering; Ekta Lachmandas; Fernando Rodrigues; Ricardo Silvestre; Shih-Chin Cheng; Shuang-Yin Wang; Ehsan Habibi; Luís G. Gonçalves; Inês Mesquita; Cristina Cunha; Arjan van Laarhoven; Frank L. van de Veerdonk; David L. Williams; Jos W. M. van der Meer; Colin Logie; Luke A. J. O'Neill; Charles A. Dinarello; Niels P. Riksen; Reinout van Crevel; Clary B. Clish; Richard A. Notebaart; Leo A. B. Joosten; Hendrik G. Stunnenberg; Ramnik J. Xavier; Mihai G. Netea

Induction of trained immunity (innate immune memory) is mediated by activation of immune and metabolic pathways that result in epigenetic rewiring of cellular functional programs. Through network-level integration of transcriptomics and metabolomics data, we identify glycolysis, glutaminolysis, and the cholesterol synthesis pathway as indispensable for the induction of trained immunity by β-glucan in monocytes. Accumulation of fumarate, due to glutamine replenishment of the TCA cycle, integrates immune and metabolic circuits to induce monocyte epigenetic reprogramming by inhibiting KDM5 histone demethylases. Furthermore, fumarate itself induced an epigenetic program similar to β-glucan-induced trained immunity. In line with this, inhibition of glutaminolysis and cholesterol synthesis in mice reduced the induction of trained immunity by β-glucan. Identification of the metabolic pathways leading to induction of trained immunity contributes to our understanding of innate immune memory and opens new therapeutic avenues.


Cell | 2016

β-Glucan Reverses the Epigenetic State of LPS-Induced Immunological Tolerance.

Boris Novakovic; Ehsan Habibi; Shuang-Yin Wang; Rob J.W. Arts; Robab Davar; Wout Megchelenbrink; Bowon Kim; Tatyana Kuznetsova; Matthijs Kox; Jelle Zwaag; Filomena Matarese; Simon J. van Heeringen; Eva M. Janssen-Megens; Nilofar Sharifi; Cheng Wang; Farid Keramati; Vivien Schoonenberg; Paul Flicek; Laura Clarke; Peter Pickkers; Simon Heath; Ivo Gut; Mihai G. Netea; Joost H.A. Martens; Colin Logie; Hendrik G. Stunnenberg

Summary Innate immune memory is the phenomenon whereby innate immune cells such as monocytes or macrophages undergo functional reprogramming after exposure to microbial components such as lipopolysaccharide (LPS). We apply an integrated epigenomic approach to characterize the molecular events involved in LPS-induced tolerance in a time-dependent manner. Mechanistically, LPS-treated monocytes fail to accumulate active histone marks at promoter and enhancers of genes in the lipid metabolism and phagocytic pathways. Transcriptional inactivity in response to a second LPS exposure in tolerized macrophages is accompanied by failure to deposit active histone marks at promoters of tolerized genes. In contrast, β-glucan partially reverses the LPS-induced tolerance in vitro. Importantly, ex vivo β-glucan treatment of monocytes from volunteers with experimental endotoxemia re-instates their capacity for cytokine production. Tolerance is reversed at the level of distal element histone modification and transcriptional reactivation of otherwise unresponsive genes.


Cell Stem Cell | 2015

Dynamic Reorganization of Extremely Long-Range Promoter-Promoter Interactions between Two States of Pluripotency

Onkar Joshi; Shuang-Yin Wang; Tatyana Kuznetsova; Yaser Atlasi; Tianran Peng; Pierre J. Fabre; Ehsan Habibi; Jani Shaik; Sadia Saeed; Lusy Handoko; Todd Richmond; Mikhail Spivakov; Daniel Burgess; Hendrik G. Stunnenberg

Serum-to-2i interconversion of mouse embryonic stem cells (mESCs) is a valuable in vitro model for early embryonic development. To assess whether 3D chromatin organization changes during this transition, we established Capture Hi-C with target-sequence enrichment of DNase I hypersensitive sites. We detected extremely long-range intra- and inter-chromosomal interactions between a small subset of H3K27me3 marked bivalent promoters involving the Hox clusters in serum-grown cells. Notably, these promoter-mediated interactions are not present in 2i ground-state pluripotent mESCs but appear upon their further development into primed-like serum mESCs. Reverting serum mESCs to ground-state 2i mESCs removes these promoter-promoter interactions in a spatiotemporal manner. H3K27me3, which is largely absent at bivalent promoters in ground-state 2i mESCs, is necessary, but not sufficient, to establish these interactions, as confirmed by Capture Hi-C on Eed(-/-) serum mESCs. Our results implicate H3K27me3 and PRC2 as critical players in chromatin alteration during priming of ESCs for differentiation.


Stem cell reports | 2017

Vitamin C and l-Proline Antagonistic Effects Capture Alternative States in the Pluripotency Continuum

Cristina D'Aniello; Ehsan Habibi; Federica Cermola; Debora Paris; Francesco Russo; Alessandro Fiorenzano; Gabriele Di Napoli; Dominique Melck; Gilda Cobellis; Claudia Angelini; Annalisa Fico; Robert Blelloch; Andrea Motta; Hendrik G. Stunnenberg; Dario De Cesare; Eduardo J. Patriarca; Gabriella Minchiotti

Summary Metabolites and cofactors are emerging as key regulators of cell plasticity and reprogramming, and their role in the control of pluripotency is just being discovered. Here we provide unprecedented evidence that embryonic stem cell (ESC) pluripotency relies on the relative levels of two physiological metabolites, namely ascorbic acid (vitamin C, VitC) and l-proline (l-Pro), which affect global DNA methylation, transcriptional profile, and energy metabolism. Specifically, while a high VitC/l-Pro ratio drives ESCs toward a naive state, the opposite condition (l-Pro excess) captures a fully reversible early primed pluripotent state, which depends on autocrine fibroblast growth factor and transforming growth factor β signaling pathways. Our findings highlight the pivotal role of metabolites availability in controlling the pluripotency continuum from naive to primed states.


bioRxiv | 2018

Epigenomic and functional dynamics of human bone marrow myeloid differentiation to mature blood neutrophils

Luigi Grassi; Farzin Pourfarzad; Sebastian Ullrich; Angelika Merkel; Felipe Were; Enrique Carrillo de Santa Pau; Guoqiang Yi; Ida H. Hiemstra; Anton Tool; Erik Mul; Juliane Perner; Eva M. Janssen-Megens; Kim Berentsen; Hinri Kerstens; Ehsan Habibi; Marta Gut; Marie-Laure Yaspo; Matthias Linser; Ernesto Lowy; Avik Datta; Laura Clarke; Paul Flicek; Martin Vingron; Dirk Roos; Timo K. van den Berg; Simon Heath; Daniel Rico; Mattia Frontini; Myrto Kostadima; Ivo Gut

Neutrophils are short-lived blood cells that play a critical role in host defense against infections. To better comprehend neutrophil functions and their regulation, we provide a complete epigenetic and functional overview of their differentiation stages from bone marrow-residing progenitors to mature circulating cells. Integration of epigenetic and transcriptome dynamics reveals an enforced regulation of differentiation, through cellular functions such as: release of proteases, respiratory burst, cell cycle regulation and apoptosis. We observe an early establishment of the cytotoxic capability, whilst the signaling components that activate antimicrobial mechanisms are transcribed at later stages, outside the bone marrow, thus preventing toxic effects in the bone marrow niche. Altogether, these data reveal how the developmental dynamics of the epigenetic landscape orchestrate the daily production of large number of neutrophils required for innate host defense and provide a comprehensive overview of the epigenomes of differentiating human neutrophils. Key points Dynamic acetylation enforces human neutrophil progenitor differentiation. Neutrophils cytotoxic capability is established early at the (pro)myelocyte stage. Coordinated signaling component expression prevents unwanted toxic effects to the bone marrow niche.


Oncotarget | 2018

Multi-omics profiling reveals a distinctive epigenome signature for high-risk acute promyelocytic leukemia

Abhishek A. Singh; Francesca Petraglia; Angela Nebbioso; Guoqiang Yi; Mariarosaria Conte; Sergio Valente; Amit Mandoli; Lucia Scisciola; Rik G.H. Lindeboom; Hinri Kerstens; Eva M. Janssen-Megens; Farzin Pourfarzad; Ehsan Habibi; Kim Berentsen; Bowon Kim; Colin Logie; Simon Heath; Albertus T. J. Wierenga; Laura Clarke; Paul Flicek; Joop H. Jansen; Taco W. Kuijpers; Marie-Laure Yaspo; Véronique Della Valle; Olivier Bernard; Ivo Gut; Edo Vellenga; Hendrik G. Stunnenberg; Antonello Mai; Lucia Altucci

Epigenomic alterations have been associated with both pathogenesis and progression of cancer. Here, we analyzed the epigenome of two high-risk APL (hrAPL) patients and compared it to non-high-risk APL cases. Despite the lack of common genetic signatures, we found that human hrAPL blasts from patients with extremely poor prognosis display specific patterns of histone H3 acetylation, specifically hyperacetylation at a common set of enhancer regions. In addition, unique profiles of the repressive marks H3K27me3 and DNA methylation were exposed in high-risk APLs. Epigenetic comparison with low/intermediate-risk APLs and AMLs revealed hrAPL-specific patterns of histone acetylation and DNA methylation, suggesting these could be further developed into markers for clinical identification. The epigenetic drug MC2884, a newly generated general HAT/EZH2 inhibitor, induces apoptosis of high-risk APL blasts and reshapes their epigenomes by targeting both active and repressive marks. Together, our analysis uncovers distinctive epigenome signatures of hrAPL patients, and provides proof of concept for use of epigenome profiling coupled to epigenetic drugs to ‘personalize’ precision medicine.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2018

Increased H3K9 methylation and impaired expression of Protocadherins are associated with the cognitive dysfunctions of the Kleefstra syndrome

Giovanni Iacono; Aline Dubos; Hamid Meziane; Marco Benevento; Ehsan Habibi; Amit Mandoli; Fabrice Riet; Mohammed Selloum; Robert Feil; Huiqing Zhou; Tjitske Kleefstra; Nael Nadif Kasri; Hans van Bokhoven; Yann Herault; Hendrik G. Stunnenberg

Abstract Kleefstra syndrome, a disease with intellectual disability, autism spectrum disorders and other developmental defects is caused in humans by haploinsufficiency of EHMT1. Although EHMT1 and its paralog EHMT2 were shown to be histone methyltransferases responsible for deposition of the di-methylated H3K9 (H3K9me2), the exact nature of epigenetic dysfunctions in Kleefstra syndrome remains unknown. Here, we found that the epigenome of Ehmt1+/− adult mouse brain displays a marked increase of H3K9me2/3 which correlates with impaired expression of protocadherins, master regulators of neuronal diversity. Increased H3K9me3 was present already at birth, indicating that aberrant methylation patterns are established during embryogenesis. Interestingly, we found that Ehmt2+/− mice do not present neither the marked increase of H3K9me2/3 nor the cognitive deficits found in Ehmt1+/− mice, indicating an evolutionary diversification of functions. Our finding of increased H3K9me3 in Ehmt1+/− mice is the first one supporting the notion that EHMT1 can quench the deposition of tri-methylation by other Histone methyltransferases, ultimately leading to impaired neurocognitive functioning. Our insights into the epigenetic pathophysiology of Kleefstra syndrome may offer guidance for future developments of therapeutic strategies for this disease.

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Ivo Gut

Pompeu Fabra University

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Kim Berentsen

Radboud University Nijmegen

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Simon Heath

Pompeu Fabra University

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Laura Clarke

European Bioinformatics Institute

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Paul Flicek

European Bioinformatics Institute

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Colin Logie

Radboud University Nijmegen

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Guoqiang Yi

Radboud University Nijmegen

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