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Dive into the research topics where Jacqueline A. Sharpe is active.

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Featured researches published by Jacqueline A. Sharpe.


Molecular Cell | 2012

Intragenic enhancers act as alternative promoters

Monika S. Kowalczyk; Jim R. Hughes; David Garrick; Magnus Lynch; Jacqueline A. Sharpe; Jacqueline A. Sloane-Stanley; Simon J. McGowan; Marco Gobbi; Mona Hosseini; Douglas Vernimmen; Jill M. Brown; Nicola E. Gray; Licio Collavin; Richard J. Gibbons; Jonathan Flint; Stephen Taylor; Veronica J. Buckle; Thomas A. Milne; William G. Wood; Douglas R. Higgs

A substantial amount of organismal complexity is thought to be encoded by enhancers which specify the location, timing, and levels of gene expression. In mammals there are more enhancers than promoters which are distributed both between and within genes. Here we show that activated, intragenic enhancers frequently act as alternative tissue-specific promoters producing a class of abundant, spliced, multiexonic poly(A)(+) RNAs (meRNAs) which reflect the host genes structure. meRNAs make a substantial and unanticipated contribution to the complexity of the transcriptome, appearing as alternative isoforms of the host gene. The low protein-coding potential of meRNAs suggests that many meRNAs may be byproducts of enhancer activation or underlie as-yet-unidentified RNA-encoded functions. Distinguishing between meRNAs and mRNAs will transform our interpretation of dynamic changes in transcription both at the level of individual genes and of the genome as a whole.


The EMBO Journal | 2012

An interspecies analysis reveals a key role for unmethylated CpG dinucleotides in vertebrate Polycomb complex recruitment.

Magnus Lynch; Andrew Smith; Marco Gobbi; Maria Flenley; Jim R. Hughes; Douglas Vernimmen; Helena Ayyub; Jacqueline A. Sharpe; Jacqueline A. Sloane-Stanley; Linda Sutherland; Stephen Meek; Tom Burdon; Richard J. Gibbons; David Garrick; Douglas R. Higgs

The role of DNA sequence in determining chromatin state is incompletely understood. We have previously demonstrated that large chromosomal segments from human cells recapitulate their native chromatin state in mouse cells, but the relative contribution of local sequences versus their genomic context remains unknown. In this study, we compare orthologous chromosomal regions for which the human locus establishes prominent sites of Polycomb complex recruitment in pluripotent stem cells, whereas the corresponding mouse locus does not. Using recombination‐mediated cassette exchange at the mouse locus, we establish the primacy of local sequences in the encoding of chromatin state. We show that the signal for chromatin bivalency is redundantly encoded across a bivalent domain and that this reflects competition between Polycomb complex recruitment and transcriptional activation. Furthermore, our results suggest that a high density of unmethylated CpG dinucleotides is sufficient for vertebrate Polycomb recruitment. This model is supported by analysis of DNA methyltransferase‐deficient embryonic stem cells.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 1991

Characterization of the major regulatory element upstream of the human alpha-globin gene cluster.

A P Jarman; William G. Wood; Jacqueline A. Sharpe; Gourdon G; Helena Ayyub; Douglas R. Higgs

The major positive regulatory activity of the human alpha-globin gene complex has been localized to an element associated with a strong erythroid-specific DNase I hypersensitive site (HS -40) located 40 kb upstream of the zeta 2-globin mRNA cap site. Footprint and gel shift analyses of the element have demonstrated the presence of four binding sites for the nuclear factor GATA-1 and two sites corresponding to the AP-1 consensus binding sequence. This region resembles one of the major elements of the beta-globin locus control region in its constitution and characteristics; this together with evidence from expression studies suggests that HS -40 is a primary element controlling alpha-globin gene expression.


Nature Genetics | 2016

Genetic dissection of the α-globin super-enhancer in vivo

Deborah Hay; Jim R. Hughes; Christian Babbs; James O. J. Davies; Bryony Graham; Lars L.P. Hanssen; Mira T. Kassouf; A. Marieke Oudelaar; Jacqueline A. Sharpe; Maria C. Suciu; Jelena Telenius; Ruth Williams; Christina Rode; Pik Shan Li; Len A. Pennacchio; Jacqueline A. Sloane-Stanley; Helena Ayyub; Sue Butler; Tatjana Sauka-Spengler; Richard J. Gibbons; Andrew Smith; William G. Wood; Douglas R. Higgs

Many genes determining cell identity are regulated by clusters of Mediator-bound enhancer elements collectively referred to as super-enhancers. These super-enhancers have been proposed to manifest higher-order properties important in development and disease. Here we report a comprehensive functional dissection of one of the strongest putative super-enhancers in erythroid cells. By generating a series of mouse models, deleting each of the five regulatory elements of the α-globin super-enhancer individually and in informative combinations, we demonstrate that each constituent enhancer seems to act independently and in an additive fashion with respect to hematological phenotype, gene expression, chromatin structure and chromosome conformation, without clear evidence of synergistic or higher-order effects. Our study highlights the importance of functional genetic analyses for the identification of new concepts in transcriptional regulation.


The EMBO Journal | 1995

Contrasting effects of alpha and beta globin regulatory elements on chromatin structure may be related to their different chromosomal environments.

Craddock Cf; Paresh Vyas; Jacqueline A. Sharpe; Helena Ayyub; William G. Wood; Douglas R. Higgs

Expression of the human alpha and beta globin gene clusters is regulated by remote sequences, referred to as HS ‐40 and the beta‐locus control region (beta‐LCR) that lie 5‐40 kb upstream of the genes they activate. Because of their common ancestry, similar organization and coordinate expression it has often been assumed that regulation of the globin gene clusters by HS ‐40 and the beta‐LCR occurs via similar mechanisms. Using interspecific hybrids containing chromosomes with naturally occurring deletions of HS ‐40 we have shown that, in contrast to the beta‐LCR, this element exerts no discernible effect on long‐range chromatin structure and in addition does not influence formation of DNase I hypersensitive sites at the alpha globin promoters. These differences in the behaviour of HS ‐40 and the beta‐LCR may reflect their contrasting influence on gene expression in transgenic mice and may result from the differing requirements of these elements in their radically different, natural chromosomal environments; the alpha cluster lying within a region of constitutively ‘open’ chromatin and the beta cluster in a segment of chromatin which opens in a tissue‐specific manner. Differences in the hierarchical control of the alpha and beta globin clusters may exemplify more general differences in the regulation of eukaryotic genes which lie in similar open or closed chromosomal regions.


Blood | 2009

Chromosome looping at the human alpha-globin locus is mediated via the major upstream regulatory element (HS -40).

Douglas Vernimmen; Fatima Marques-Kranc; Jacqueline A. Sharpe; Jacqueline A. Sloane-Stanley; William G. Wood; Helen Wallace; Andrew Smith; Douglas R. Higgs

Previous studies in the mouse have shown that high levels of alpha-globin gene expression in late erythropoiesis depend on long-range, physical interactions between remote upstream regulatory elements and the globin promoters. Using quantitative chromosome conformation capture (q3C), we have now analyzed all interactions between 4 such elements lying 10 to 50 kb upstream of the human alpha cluster and their interactions with the alpha-globin promoter. All of these elements interact with the alpha-globin gene in an erythroid-specific manner. These results were confirmed in a mouse model of human alpha globin expression in which the human cluster replaces the mouse cluster in situ (humanized mouse). We have also shown that expression and all of the long-range interactions depend largely on just one of these elements; removal of the previously characterized major regulatory element (called HS -40) results in loss of all the interactions and alpha-globin expression. Reinsertion of this element at an ectopic location restores both expression and the intralocus interactions. In contrast to other more complex systems involving multiple upstream elements and promoters, analysis of the human alpha-globin cluster during erythropoiesis provides a simple and tractable model to understand the mechanisms underlying long-range gene regulation.


Genes & Development | 2011

Polycomb eviction as a new distant enhancer function

Douglas Vernimmen; Magnus D. Lynch; Marco Gobbi; David Garrick; Jacqueline A. Sharpe; Jacqueline A. Sloane-Stanley; Andrew Smith; Douglas R. Higgs

Remote distal enhancers may be located tens or thousands of kilobases away from their promoters. How they control gene expression is still poorly understood. Here, we analyze the influence of a remote enhancer on the balance between repression (Polycomb-PcG) and activation (Trithorax-TrxG) of a developmentally regulated gene associated with a CpG island. We reveal its essential, nonredundant role in clearing the PcG complex and H3K27me3 from the CpG island. In the absence of the enhancer, the H3K27me3 demethylase (JMJD3) is not recruited to the CpG island. We propose a new role of long-range regulatory elements in removing repressive PcG complexes.


The EMBO Journal | 1992

Analysis of the human alpha globin upstream regulatory element (HS-40) in transgenic mice.

Jacqueline A. Sharpe; P S Chan-Thomas; J Lida; Helena Ayyub; William G. Wood; Douglas R. Higgs

We have analysed the effect of a 1.4 kb segment of DNA containing the upstream alpha globin regulatory element (HS‐40) on human alpha globin gene expression in fetal mice and lines of transgenic mice. High levels of tissue‐specific, human alpha mRNA expression were seen in all transgenic animals and in this sense expression was position independent. However, the level of human alpha mRNA expression per integrated gene copy decreased during development and was inversely related to copy number. The limitation in expression with increasing gene copy number was shown to be in cis since homozygotes for the transgene produced twice as much human alpha mRNA as hemizygotes. In many respects HS −40 appears similar to single elements within the previously described beta globin locus control region and in cross breeding experiments we have shown that HS −40 behaves in a similar manner to such elements in transgenic mice.


Developmental Dynamics | 2009

Skeletal Analysis of the Fgfr3(P244R) Mouse, a Genetic Model for the Muenke Craniosynostosis Syndrome

Stephen R.F. Twigg; Chris Healy; Christian Babbs; Jacqueline A. Sharpe; William G. Wood; Paul T. Sharpe; Gillian M. Morriss-Kay; Andrew O.M. Wilkie

Muenke syndrome, defined by heterozygosity for a Pro250Arg substitution in fibroblast growth factor receptor 3 (FGFR3), is the most common genetic cause of craniosynostosis in humans. We have used gene targeting to introduce the Muenke syndrome mutation (equivalent to P244R) into the murine Fgfr3 gene. A rounded skull and shortened snout (often skewed) with dental malocclusion was observed in a minority of heterozygotes and many homozygotes. Development of this incompletely penetrant skull phenotype was dependent on genetic background and sex, with males more often affected. However, these cranial abnormalities were rarely attributable to craniosynostosis, which was only present in 2/364 mutants; more commonly, we found fusion of the premaxillary and/or zygomatic sutures. We also found decreased cortical thickness and bone mineral densities in long bones. We conclude that although both cranial and long bone development is variably affected by the murine Fgfr3P244R mutation, coronal craniosynostosis is not reliably reproduced. Developmental Dynamics 238:331–342, 2009.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 1992

A single beta-globin locus control region element (5' hypersensitive site 2) is sufficient for developmental regulation of human globin genes in transgenic mice.

B J Morley; C A Abbott; Jacqueline A. Sharpe; J Lida; P S Chan-Thomas; William G. Wood

The beta-globin gene complex is regulated by an upstream locus control region (LCR) which is responsible for high-level, position-independent, erythroid-cell-specific expression of the genes in the cluster. Its role in the developmental regulation of beta-like globin gene transcription remains to be established. We have examined the effect of a single LCR element, hypersensitive site 2 (HS2), on the developmental regulation of the human fetal gamma and adult beta genes in transgenic mice. In mice bearing HS2A gamma beta and HS2G gamma A gamma-117 delta beta human globin gene constructs, switching from gamma- to beta-gene expression begins at about day 13.5 of gestation and is largely completed shortly after birth. The larger construct also demonstrates a switch in G gamma- to A gamma-gene expression during the gamma-to-beta switch similar to that observed during normal human development. We conclude that HS2 alone is sufficient for developmental regulation of the human beta-globin genes.

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Helena Ayyub

John Radcliffe Hospital

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Marco Gobbi

University of Strasbourg

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Andrew Smith

John Radcliffe Hospital

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