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Dive into the research topics where J. Richard Chaillet is active.

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Featured researches published by J. Richard Chaillet.


Cell | 2001

Genomic Imprinting Disrupted by a Maternal Effect Mutation in the Dnmt1 Gene

Carina Y. Howell; Timothy H. Bestor; Feng Ding; Keith E. Latham; Carmen Mertineit; Jacquetta M. Trasler; J. Richard Chaillet

Maintenance of genomic methylation patterns in mammalian somatic cells depends on DNA methyltransferase-1 (Dnmt1). Mouse oocytes and preimplantation embryos lack Dnmt1 but express a variant of this protein called Dnmt1o. We eliminated Dnmt1o by deletion of the oocyte-specific promoter and first exon from the Dnmt1 locus. Homozygous animals were normal, but most heterozygous fetuses of homozygous females died during the last third of gestation. Although genomic methylation patterns were established normally in Dnmt1o-deficient oocytes, embryos derived from such oocytes showed a loss of allele-specific expression and methylation at certain imprinted loci. Transient nuclear localization of Dnmt1o in 8-cell embryos suggests that this variant of Dnmt1 provides maintenance methyltransferase activity specifically at imprinted loci during the fourth embryonic S phase.


Biology of Reproduction | 2003

Abnormal Regulation of DNA Methyltransferase Expression in Cloned Mouse Embryos

Young Chung; Sarayu Ratnam; J. Richard Chaillet; Keith E. Latham

Abstract Cloning by somatic cell nuclear transfer is inefficient. This is evident in the significant attrition in the number of surviving cloned offspring at virtually all stages of embryonic and fetal development. We find that cloned preimplantation mouse embryos aberrantly express the somatic form of the Dnmt1 DNA (cytosine-5) methyltransferase, the expression of which is normally prevented by a posttranscriptional mechanism. Additionally, the maternal oocyte-derived Dnmt1o isoform undergoes little or none of its expected translocation to embryonic nuclei at the eight-cell stage. Such defects in the regulation of Dnmt1s and Dnmt1o expression and cytoplasmic-nuclear trafficking may prevent clones from completing essential early developmental events. Furthermore, aberrant Dnmt1 localization and expression may contribute to the defects in DNA methylation and the developmental abnormalities seen in cloned mammals.


BMC Developmental Biology | 2008

Preimplantation expression of the somatic form of Dnmt1 suggests a role in the inheritance of genomic imprints.

M. Cecilia Cirio; Sarayu Ratnam; Feng Ding; Bonnie Reinhart; Chris Navara; J. Richard Chaillet

BackgroundIdentical DNA methylation differences between maternal and paternal alleles in gametes and adults suggest that the inheritance of genomic imprints is strictly due to the embryonic maintenance of DNA methylation. Such maintenance would occur in association with every cycle of DNA replication, including those of preimplantation embryos.ResultsThe expression of the somatic form of the Dnmt1 cytosine methyltransferase (Dnmt1s) was examined in cleavage-stage preimplantation mouse embryos. Low concentrations of Dnmt1s are found in 1-, 2-, 4-, and 8-cell embryos, as well as in morulae and blastocysts. Dnmt1s is present in the cytoplasm at all stages, and in the nuclei of all stages except the 1-cell, pronuclear-stage embryo. The related oocyte-derived Dnmt1o protein is also present in nuclei of 8-cell embryos, along with embryo-synthesized Dnmt1s. Dnmt1s protein expressed in 1-cell and 2-cell embryos is derived from the oocyte, whereas the embryo synthesizes its own Dnmt1s from the 2-cell stage onward.ConclusionThese observations suggest that Dnmt1s provides maintenance methyltransferase activity for the inheritance of methylation imprints in the early mouse embryo. Moreover, the ability of Dnmt1o and Dnmt1s proteins synthesized at the same time to substitute for one anothers maintenance function, but the lack of functional interchange between oocyte- and embryo-synthesized Dnmt1 proteins, suggests that the developmental source is the critical determinant of Dnmt1 function during preimplantation development.


Laboratory Investigation | 2002

Neurologic Defects and Selective Disruption of Basement Membranes in Mice Lacking Entactin-1/Nidogen-1

Lijin Dong; Yong Chen; Marcia Lewis; Jyh Cheng Hsieh; Janet E. Reing; J. Richard Chaillet; Carina Y. Howell; Mona F. Melhem; Sadayuki Inoue; Jerry R. Kuszak; Koen DeGeest; Albert E. Chung

Entactin-1 (nidogen-1) is an ubiquitous component of basement membranes. From in vitro experiments, entactin-1 was assigned a role in maintaining the structural integrity of the basement membrane because of its binding affinity to other components, such as type IV collagen and laminin. Entactin-1 also interacts with integrin receptors on the cell surface to mediate cell adhesion, spreading, and motility. Targeted disruption of the entactin-1 gene in the mouse presented in this study revealed a duplication of the entacin-1 locus. Homozygous mutants for the functional locus lacked entactin-1 mRNA and protein and often displayed seizure-like symptoms and loss of muscle control in the hind legs. The behavior patterns suggested the presence of neurologic deficits in the central nervous system, thus providing genetic evidence linking entactin-1 to proper functions of the neuromuscular system. In homozygous mutants, structural alterations in the basement membranes were found only in selected locations including brain capillaries and the lens capsule. The morphology of the basement membranes in other tissues examined superficially appeared to be normal. These observations suggest that the lost functions of entactin-1 result in pathologic changes that are highly tissue specific.


Developmental Biology | 2008

DNA methyltransferase 1o functions during preimplantation development to preclude a profound level of epigenetic variation.

M. Cecilia Cirio; Josee Martel; Mellissa R.W. Mann; Marc Toppings; Marisa S. Bartolomei; Jacquetta M. Trasler; J. Richard Chaillet

Most mouse embryos developing in the absence of the oocyte-derived DNA methyltransferase 1o (DNMT1o-deficient embryos) have significant delays in development and a wide range of anatomical abnormalities. To understand the timing and molecular basis of such variation, we studied pre- and post-implantation DNA methylation as a gauge of epigenetic variation among these embryos. DNMT1o-deficient embryos showed extensive differences in the levels of methylation in differentially methylated domains (DMDs) of imprinted genes at the 8-cell stage. Because of independent assortment of the methylated and unmethylated chromatids created by the loss of DNMT1o, the deficient embryos were found to be mosaics of cells with different, but stable epigenotypes (DNA methylation patterns). Our results suggest that loss of DNMT1o in just one cell cycle is responsible for the extensive variation in the epigenotypes in both embryos and their associated extraembryonic tissues. Thus, the maternal-effect DNMT1o protein is uniquely poised during development to normally ensure uniform parental methylation patterns at DMDs.


Journal of Hepatology | 2008

Augmenter of liver regeneration: An important intracellular survival factor for hepatocytes

Chinnasamy Thirunavukkarasu; Lian Fu Wang; Stephen A. K. Harvey; Simon C. Watkins; J. Richard Chaillet; John Prelich; Thomas E. Starzl; Chandrashekhar R. Gandhi

BACKGROUND/AIMS Augmenter of liver regeneration (ALR), a protein synthesized and stored in hepatocytes, is associated with mitochondria, and possesses sulfhydryl oxidase and cytochrome c reductase activities. We sought to determine the effects of ALR depletion in hepatocytes by antisense oligonucleotide transfection. METHODS Rat hepatocytes in primary culture were transfected with antisense oligonucleotide for ALR mRNA (ALR-AS) or scrambled oligonucleotide. Various analyses were performed at times up to 24h after transfection. RESULTS Treatment with ALR-AS caused a decrease in ALR mRNA, cellular depletion of ALR protein primarily from mitochondria, and decreased viability. Flow cytometric analysis of ALR-AS-transfected hepatocytes stained with annexin-Vcy3 and 7-aminoactinomycin D revealed apoptosis as the predominant cause of death up to 6h; incubation beyond this time resulted in necrosis in addition to apoptosis. ALR-AS-transfection caused release of mitochondrial cytochrome c, activation of caspase-3, profound reduction in the ATP content, and cellular release of LDH. Inhibition of caspase-3 inhibited the early phase of ALR-AS-induced death but not the late phase that included ALR and LDH release. CONCLUSIONS These results suggest that ALR is critically important for the survival of hepatocytes by its association with mitochondria and regulation of ATP synthesis.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2002

In vivo stabilization of the Dnmt1 (cytosine-5)- methyltransferase protein

Feng Ding; J. Richard Chaillet

The Dnmt1o form of the Dnmt1 (cytosine-5)-methyltransferase enzyme is synthesized and stored in the cytoplasm of the oocyte and is used after fertilization to maintain methylation patterns on imprinted genes. After implantation of the blastocyst, Dnmt1o is replaced by the Dnmt1 form, which has an additional 118 aa at its amino terminus. To investigate functional differences between Dnmt1o and Dnmt1, mice were generated with a mutant allele, Dnmt1V, which synthesized Dnmt1o instead of Dnmt1 in all somatic cells. Homozygous Dnmt1V mice were phenotypically normal, and had normal levels of genomic methylation, indicating that Dnmt1o adopts the maintenance methyltransferase function of Dnmt1. Despite the apparent equivalence of Dnmt1o and Dnmt1 maintenance methyltransferase function in somatic cells, the Dnmt1o protein was found at high levels (with a corresponding high enzymatic activity) in Dnmt1V mice. In heterozygous Dnmt1V/+ embryonic stem cells and early embryos, equal steady-state levels of Dnmt1o and Dnmt1 proteins were produced from the Dnmt1V and the WT Dnmt1 alleles, respectively. However, in older embryos and adults, the Dnmt1V allele produced five times the steady-state level of protein of the WT Dnmt1 allele. The difference in Dnmt1o and Dnmt1 levels is due to a developmentally regulated mechanism that degrades the Dnmt1 protein. The intrinsic stability of the Dnmt1o protein is the most likely reason for its use as a maternal-effect protein; stable ooplasmic stores of Dnmt1o would be available to traffick into the nuclei of the eight-cell stage embryo and maintain methylation patterns on alleles of imprinted genes during the fourth embryonic S phase.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2002

Shared role for differentially methylated domains of imprinted genes.

Bonnie Reinhart; Mariam Eljanne; J. Richard Chaillet

ABSTRACT For most imprinted genes, a difference in expression between the maternal and paternal alleles is associated with a corresponding difference in DNA methylation that is localized to a differentially methylated domain (DMD). Removal of a genes DMD leads to a loss of imprinting. These observations suggest that DMDs have a determinative role in genomic imprinting. To examine this possibility, we introduced sequences from the DMDs of the imprinted Igf2r, H19, and Snrpn genes into a nonimprinted derivative of the normally imprinted RSVIgmyc transgene, created by excising its own DMD. Hybrid transgenes with sequences from the Igf2r DMD2 were consistently imprinted, with the maternal allele being more methylated than the paternal allele. Only the repeated sequences within DMD2 were required for imprinting these transgenes. Hybrid transgenes containing H19 and Snrpn DMD sequences and ones containing sequences from the long terminal repeat of a murine intracisternal A particle retrotransposon were not imprinted. The Igf2r hybrid transgenes are comprised entirely of mouse genomic DNA and behave as endogenous imprinted genes in inbred wild-type and mutant mouse strains. These types of hybrid transgenes can be used to elucidate the functions of DMD sequences in genomic imprinting.


Reproductive Health | 2004

Genomic imprinting and assisted reproduction

Ariane Paoloni-Giacobino; J. Richard Chaillet

Imprinted genes exhibit a parent-of-origin specific pattern of expression. Such genes have been shown to be targets of molecular defects in particular genetic syndromes such as Beckwith-Wiedemann and Angelman syndromes. Recent reports have raised concern about the possibility that assisted reproduction techniques, such as in vitro fertilization or intracytoplasmic sperm injection, might cause genomic imprinting disorders. The number of reported cases of those disorders is still too small to draw firm conclusions and the safety of these widely used assisted reproduction techniques needs to be further evaluated.


Gastroenterology | 2015

Liver-Specific Deletion of Augmenter of Liver Regeneration Accelerates Development of Steatohepatitis and Hepatocellular Carcinoma in Mice

Chandrashekhar R. Gandhi; J. Richard Chaillet; Michael A. Nalesnik; Sudhir Kumar; Anil Dangi; A. Jake Demetris; Robert E. Ferrell; Tong Wu; Senad Divanovic; Traci Stankeiwicz; Benjamin Shaffer; Donna B. Stolz; Stephen A. K. Harvey; Jiang Wang; Thomas E. Starzl

BACKGROUND & AIMS Augmenter of liver regeneration (ALR, encoded by GFER) is a widely distributed pleiotropic protein originally identified as a hepatic growth factor. However, little is known about its roles in hepatic physiology and pathology. We created mice with liver-specific deletion of ALR to study its function. METHODS We developed mice with liver-specific deletion of ALR (ALR-L-KO) using the albumin-Cre/LoxP system. Liver tissues were collected from ALR-L-KO mice and ALR(floxed/floxed) mice (controls) and analyzed by histology, reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction, immunohistochemistry, electron microscopy, and techniques to measure fibrosis and lipids. Liver tissues from patients with and without advanced liver disease were determined by immunoblot analysis. RESULTS Two weeks after birth, livers of ALR-L-KO mice contained low levels of ALR and adenosine triphosphate (ATP); they had reduced mitochondrial respiratory function and increased oxidative stress, compared with livers from control mice, and had excessive steatosis, and hepatocyte apoptosis. Levels of carbamyl-palmitoyl transferase 1a and ATP synthase subunit ATP5G1 were reduced in livers of ALR-L-KO mice, indicating defects in mitochondrial fatty acid transport and ATP synthesis. Electron microscopy showed mitochondrial swelling with abnormalities in shapes and numbers of cristae. From weeks 2-4 after birth, levels of steatosis and apoptosis decreased in ALR-L-KO mice, and numbers of ALR-expressing cells increased, along with ATP levels. However, at weeks 4-8 after birth, livers became inflamed, with hepatocellular necrosis, ductular proliferation, and fibrosis; hepatocellular carcinoma developed by 1 year after birth in nearly 60% of the mice. Hepatic levels of ALR were also low in ob/ob mice and alcohol-fed mice with liver steatosis, compared with controls. Levels of ALR were lower in liver tissues from patients with advanced alcoholic liver disease and nonalcoholic steatohepatitis than in control liver tissues. CONCLUSIONS We developed mice with liver-specific deletion of ALR, and showed that it is required for mitochondrial function and lipid homeostasis in the liver. ALR-L-KO mice provide a useful model for investigating the pathogenesis of steatohepatitis and its complications.

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Jacquetta M. Trasler

McGill University Health Centre

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K. Naga Mohan

University of Pittsburgh

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Feng Ding

University of Pittsburgh

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Sarayu Ratnam

University of Pittsburgh

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