Joan Isern
Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai
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Featured researches published by Joan Isern.
Blood | 2012
Margaret H. Baron; Joan Isern; Stuart T. Fraser
Erythroid (red blood) cells are the first cell type to be specified in the postimplantation mammalian embryo and serve highly specialized, essential functions throughout gestation and postnatal life. The existence of 2 developmentally and morphologically distinct erythroid lineages, primitive (embryonic) and definitive (adult), was described for the mammalian embryo more than a century ago. Cells of the primitive erythroid lineage support the transition from rapidly growing embryo to fetus, whereas definitive erythrocytes function during the transition from fetal life to birth and continue to be crucial for a variety of normal physiologic processes. Over the past few years, it has become apparent that the ontogeny and maturation of these lineages are more complex than previously appreciated. In this review, we highlight some common and distinguishing features of the red blood cell lineages and summarize advances in our understanding of how these cells develop and differentiate throughout mammalian ontogeny.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008
Joan Isern; Stuart T. Fraser; Zhiyong He; Margaret H. Baron
Primitive erythroid cells (EryP) are the earliest differentiated cell type of the mammalian embryo. They appear in the yolk sac by embryonic day 7.5, begin to enter the embryonic circulation 2 days later and continue to mature in a stepwise and synchronous fashion. Like their adult counterparts, EryP enucleate. However, EryP circulate throughout the embryo for several days before the first enucleated forms can be identified in the blood. We have used transgenic mouse lines in which GFP marks EryP to investigate this seemingly long lag and have identified a previously unrecognized developmental niche for EryP maturation. After exiting the yolk sac, EryP begin to express cell adhesion proteins, including α4, α5, and β1 integrins, on their surface and migrate into the fetal liver (FL), where they interact with macrophages within erythroblastic islands. Binding of EryP to FL macrophages in vitro is stage-specific and partly depends on VCAM-1. The ability to tag and track EryP nuclei using a transgenic mouse line expressing an H2B-EGFP fusion allowed us to identify and characterize extruded EryP nuclei and to demonstrate that molecules such as α4, α5, and β1 integrins are redistributed onto the plasma membrane surrounding the extruding nucleus. FL macrophages engulf extruded EryP nuclei in cocultures and in the native FL in vivo. We conclude that EryP home to, complete their maturation, and enucleate within the FL, a tissue that is just developing as EryP begin to circulate. Our observations suggest a simple solution for a puzzling aspect of the development of the primitive erythroid lineage.
Developmental Dynamics | 2006
Gloria S. Kwon; Stuart T. Fraser; Guy S. Eakin; Michael Mangano; Joan Isern; Kenneth E. Sahr; Anna-Katerina Hadjantonakis; Margaret H. Baron
Alpha‐fetoprotein (Afp) is the most abundant serum protein in the developing embryo. It is secreted by the visceral endoderm, its derivative yolk sac endoderm, fetal liver hepatocytes, and the developing gut epithelium. The abundance of this protein suggested that Afp gene regulatory elements might serve to effectively drive reporter gene expression in developing endodermal tissues. To this end, we generated transgenic mouse lines Tg(Afp‐GFP) using an Afp promoter/enhancer to drive expression of green fluorescent protein (GFP). Bright GFP fluorescence allowed the visualization, in real time, of visceral endoderm, yolk sac endoderm, fetal liver hepatocytes, and the epithelium of the gut and pancreas. Comparison of the localization of green fluorescence with that of endogenous Afp transcripts and protein indicated that the regulatory elements used to generate these mouse lines directed transgene expression in what appeared to be all Afp‐expressing cells of the embryo, but only in a subset of fetal liver cells. The bright GFP signal permitted flow cytometric analysis of fetal liver hepatocytes. These mice represent a valuable resource for live imaging as well as identification, quantitation, and isolation of cells from the primitive and definitive endoderm lineages of the developing mouse embryo. Developmental Dynamics 235:2549–2558, 2006.
Blood | 2011
Joan Isern; Zhiyong He; Stuart T. Fraser; Sonja Nowotschin; Anna Ferrer-Vaquer; Rebecca Moore; Anna-Katerina Hadjantonakis; Vincent P. Schulz; David Tuck; Patrick G. Gallagher; Margaret H. Baron
Primitive erythroid (EryP) progenitors are the first cell type specified from the mesoderm late in gastrulation. We used a transgenic reporter to image and purify the earliest blood progenitors and their descendants from developing mouse embryos. EryP progenitors exhibited remarkable proliferative capacity in the yolk sac immediately before the onset of circulation, when these cells comprise nearly half of all cells of the embryo. Global expression profiles generated at 24-hour intervals from embryonic day 7.5 through 2.5 revealed 2 abrupt changes in transcript diversity that coincided with the entry of EryPs into the circulation and with their late maturation and enucleation, respectively. These changes were paralleled by the expression of critical regulatory factors. Experiments designed to test predictions from these data demonstrated that the Wnt-signaling pathway is active in EryP progenitors, which display an aerobic glycolytic profile and the numbers of which are regulated by transforming growth factor-β1 and hypoxia. This is the first transcriptome assembled for a single hematopoietic lineage of the embryo over the course of its differentiation.
Developmental Biology | 2012
Jérôme Artus; Panagiotis Douvaras; Anna Piliszek; Joan Isern; Margaret H. Baron; Anna-Katerina Hadjantonakis
The visceral endoderm (VE) is an epithelial tissue in the early postimplantation mouse embryo that encapsulates the pluripotent epiblast distally and the extraembryonic ectoderm proximally. In addition to facilitating nutrient exchange before the establishment of a circulation, the VE is critical for patterning the epiblast. Since VE is derived from the primitive endoderm (PrE) of the blastocyst, and PrE-derived eXtraembryonic ENdoderm (XEN) cells can be propagated in vitro, XEN cells should provide an important tool for identifying factors that direct VE differentiation. In this study, we demonstrated that BMP4 signaling induces the formation of a polarized epithelium in XEN cells. This morphological transition was reversible, and was associated with the acquisition of a molecular signature comparable to extraembryonic (ex) VE. Resembling exVE which will form the endoderm of the visceral yolk sac, BMP4-treated XEN cells regulated hematopoiesis by stimulating the expansion of primitive erythroid progenitors. We also observed that LIF exerted an antagonistic effect on BMP4-induced XEN cell differentiation, thereby impacting the extrinsic conditions used for the isolation and maintenance of XEN cells in an undifferentiated state. Taken together, our data suggest that XEN cells can be differentiated towards an exVE identity upon BMP4 stimulation and therefore represent a valuable tool for investigating PrE lineage differentiation.
Blood | 2010
Joan Isern; Stuart T. Fraser; Zhiyong He; Hailan Zhang; Margaret H. Baron
The primitive erythroid (EryP) lineage is the first to differentiate during mammalian embryogenesis. Eklf/Klf1 is a transcriptional regulator that is essential for definitive erythropoiesis in the fetal liver. Dissection of the role(s) of Eklf within the EryP compartment has been confounded by the simultaneous presence of EryP and fetal liver-derived definitive erythroid (EryD) cells in the blood. To address this problem, we have distinguished EryP from their definitive counterparts by crossing Eklf(+/-) mutant and ε-globin::histone H2B-GFP transgenic mice. Eklf-deficient EryP exhibit membrane ruffling and a failure to acquire the typical discoidal erythroid shape but they can enucleate. Flow cytometric analyses of H2B-GFP(+) EryP revealed that Eklf heterozygosity results in the loss of Ter119 surface expression on EryP but not on EryD. Null mutation of Eklf resulted in abnormal expression of a range of surface proteins by EryP. In particular, several megakaryocyte markers were ectopically expressed by maturing Eklf-null EryP. Unexpectedly, the platelet tetraspanin CD9 was detected on nucleated wild-type EryP but not on mature EryD and thus provides a useful marker for purifying circulating EryP. We conclude that Eklf gene dosage is crucial for regulating the surface phenotype and molecular identity of maturing primitive erythroid cells.
Blood Cells Molecules and Diseases | 2010
Joan Isern; Stuart T. Fraser; Zhiyong He; Margaret H. Baron
Primitive erythroid cells (EryP) are the first differentiated cell type to be specified during mammalian embryogenesis. EryP arise from a pool of lineage-restricted progenitors in the yolk sac (YS) and then enter the newly formed embryonic circulation to mature in a stepwise, synchronous fashion. Numbering in the millions in the mid-gestation mouse embryo, EryP are the dominant circulating blood cell prior to the rapid generation of adult-type definitive erythroid (EryD) cells in the fetal liver. The identification of maturational events in this lineage presented a significant challenge, as EryD begin to outnumber EryP in the bloodstream from approximately E14.5 onwards. We used human epsilon-globin gene regulatory elements to drive lineage-specific expression of a histone-H2B::EGFP fusion protein, allowing us to label the chromatin of EryP during their development and to track and quantify EryP nuclei following their expulsion from the cell. Using this transgenic fluorescent reporter mouse line, we have monitored primitive erythropoiesis in three distinct niches: the YS, where EryP progenitors arise; the circulation, where EryP continue to divide and mature; and the fetal liver, where EryP complete the terminal stages of their differentiation.
Methods in Enzymology | 2010
Stuart T. Fraser; Joan Isern; Margaret H. Baron
The use of fluorescent reporter proteins such as GFP, RFP, and their variants to tag and track cells within the embryo has revolutionized developmental biology. Expression of these proteins within restricted populations has been achieved through the use of lineage-specific regulatory elements. This approach has proven especially powerful in the hematopoietic system, where it has been possible to monitor the generation, expansion, maturation, and migration of primitive erythroid cells, macrophages, and megakaryocytes during embryogenesis at unprecedented resolution. Such analyses have provided novel insights into the development of these lineages. In this chapter, we discuss the design considerations and methodologies involved in the production and analysis of transgenic mouse lines in which fluorescent reporters are expressed in the hematopoietic system of the mouse embryo.
Stem Cells | 2014
Hailan Zhang; Johnathan Nieves; Stuart T. Fraser; Joan Isern; Panagiotis Douvaras; Dmitri Papatsenko; Sunita L. D'Souza; Ihor R. Lemischka; Michael A. Dyer; Margaret H. Baron
In the mouse embryo and differentiating embryonic stem cells, the hematopoietic, endothelial, and cardiomyocyte lineages are derived from Flk1+ mesodermal progenitors. Here, we report that surface expression of Podocalyxin (Podxl), a member of the CD34 family of sialomucins, can be used to subdivide the Flk1+ cells in differentiating embryoid bodies at day 4.75 into populations that develop into distinct mesodermal lineages. Definitive hematopoietic potential was restricted to the Flk1+Podxl+ population, while the Flk1‐negative Podxl+ population displayed only primitive erythroid potential. The Flk1+Podxl‐negative population contained endothelial cells and cardiomyocyte potential. Podxl expression distinguishes Flk1+ mesoderm populations in mouse embryos at days 7.5, 8.5, and 9.5 and is a marker of progenitor stage primitive erythroblasts. These findings identify Podxl as a useful tool for separating distinct mesodermal lineages. Stem Cells 2014;32:191–203
Genesis | 2013
Andrei M. Vacaru; Joan Isern; Stuart T. Fraser; Margaret H. Baron
Primitive erythropoiesis is a vital process for mammalian embryonic development. Here we report the generation and characterization of a new transgenic mouse line that expresses a histone H2B‐CFP fusion protein in the nuclei of primitive erythroid cells. We demonstrate the potential of this ε‐globin‐histone H2B‐CFP line for multicolor imaging and flow cytometry analysis. The ε‐globin‐H2B‐CFP line was used to analyze the cell cycle distribution and proliferation of CFP‐expressing primitive erythroblasts from E8.5‐E13.5. We also evaluated phagocytosis of extruded CFP‐positive nuclei by macrophages in fetal liver and placenta. The ε‐globin‐H2B‐CFP transgenic mouse line adds to the available tools for studying the development of the primitive erythroid lineage. genesis 51:751–762.