Johanna Flach
University of California, San Francisco
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Publication
Featured researches published by Johanna Flach.
Nature | 2013
Matthew R. Warr; Mikhail Binnewies; Johanna Flach; Damien Reynaud; Trit Garg; Ritu Malhotra; Jayanta Debnath; Emmanuelle Passegué
Blood production is ensured by rare, self-renewing haematopoietic stem cells (HSCs). How HSCs accommodate the diverse cellular stresses associated with their life-long activity remains elusive. Here we identify autophagy as an essential mechanism protecting HSCs from metabolic stress. We show that mouse HSCs, in contrast to their short-lived myeloid progeny, robustly induce autophagy after ex vivo cytokine withdrawal and in vivo calorie restriction. We demonstrate that FOXO3A is critical to maintain a gene expression program that poises HSCs for rapid induction of autophagy upon starvation. Notably, we find that old HSCs retain an intact FOXO3A-driven pro-autophagy gene program, and that ongoing autophagy is needed to mitigate an energy crisis and allow their survival. Our results demonstrate that autophagy is essential for the life-long maintenance of the HSC compartment and for supporting an old, failing blood system.
Nature | 2014
Johanna Flach; Sietske T. Bakker; Mary Mohrin; Pauline C. Conroy; Eric M. Pietras; Damien Reynaud; Silvia Alvarez; Morgan E. Diolaiti; Fernando Ugarte; E. Camilla Forsberg; Michelle M. Le Beau; Bradley A. Stohr; Juan Mendez; Ciaran G. Morrison; Emmanuelle Passegué
Haematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) self-renew for life, thereby making them one of the few blood cells that truly age. Paradoxically, although HSCs numerically expand with age, their functional activity declines over time, resulting in degraded blood production and impaired engraftment following transplantation. While many drivers of HSC ageing have been proposed, the reason why HSC function degrades with age remains unknown. Here we show that cycling old HSCs in mice have heightened levels of replication stress associated with cell cycle defects and chromosome gaps or breaks, which are due to decreased expression of mini-chromosome maintenance (MCM) helicase components and altered dynamics of DNA replication forks. Nonetheless, old HSCs survive replication unless confronted with a strong replication challenge, such as transplantation. Moreover, once old HSCs re-establish quiescence, residual replication stress on ribosomal DNA (rDNA) genes leads to the formation of nucleolar-associated γH2AX signals, which persist owing to ineffective H2AX dephosphorylation by mislocalized PP4c phosphatase rather than ongoing DNA damage. Persistent nucleolar γH2AX also acts as a histone modification marking the transcriptional silencing of rDNA genes and decreased ribosome biogenesis in quiescent old HSCs. Our results identify replication stress as a potent driver of functional decline in old HSCs, and highlight the MCM DNA helicase as a potential molecular target for rejuvenation therapies.
Nature | 2017
Theodore T. Ho; Matthew R. Warr; Emmalee R. Adelman; Olivia M. Lansinger; Johanna Flach; Evgenia Verovskaya; Maria E. Figueroa; Emmanuelle Passegué
With age, haematopoietic stem cells lose their ability to regenerate the blood system, and promote disease development. Autophagy is associated with health and longevity, and is critical for protecting haematopoietic stem cells from metabolic stress. Here we show that loss of autophagy in haematopoietic stem cells causes accumulation of mitochondria and an activated metabolic state, which drives accelerated myeloid differentiation mainly through epigenetic deregulations, and impairs haematopoietic stem-cell self-renewal activity and regenerative potential. Strikingly, most haematopoietic stem cells in aged mice share these altered metabolic and functional features. However, approximately one-third of aged haematopoietic stem cells exhibit high autophagy levels and maintain a low metabolic state with robust long-term regeneration potential similar to healthy young haematopoietic stem cells. Our results demonstrate that autophagy actively suppresses haematopoietic stem-cell metabolism by clearing active, healthy mitochondria to maintain quiescence and stemness, and becomes increasingly necessary with age to preserve the regenerative capacity of old haematopoietic stem cells.
Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2014
Eric M. Pietras; Ranjani Lakshminarasimhan; Jose-Marc Techner; Sarah Fong; Johanna Flach; Mikhail Binnewies; Emmanuelle Passegué
Quiescence acts as a safeguard mechanism to ensure survival of the HSC pool during chronic IFN-1 exposure
Haematologica | 2010
Johanna Flach; Susanne Schnittger; Alexander Kohlmann; Torsten Haferlach; Claudia Haferlach
The WHO classification of 2008 characterized refractory anemia with ring sideroblasts associated with marked thrombocytosis (RARS-T) by the presence of less than 5% marrow blasts, 15% or more ring sideroblasts and a persistent platelet count over 450×109/L to be in line with the revised
Nature Communications | 2015
Maike Buchner; Eugene Park; Huimin Geng; Lars Klemm; Johanna Flach; Emmanuelle Passegué; Hilde Schjerven; Ari Melnick; Elisabeth Paietta; Dragana Kopanja; Pradip Raychaudhuri; Markus Müschen
Despite recent advances in the cure rate of acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL), the prognosis for patients with relapsed ALL remains poor. Here we identify FOXM1 as a candidate responsible for an aggressive clinical course. We show that FOXM1 levels peak at the pre-B-cell receptor checkpoint but are dispensable for normal B-cell development. Compared with normal B-cell populations, FOXM1 levels are 2- to 60-fold higher in ALL cells and are predictive of poor outcome in ALL patients. FOXM1 is negatively regulated by FOXO3A, supports cell survival, drug resistance, colony formation and proliferation in vitro, and promotes leukemogenesis in vivo. Two complementary approaches of pharmacological FOXM1 inhibition—(i) FOXM1 transcriptional inactivation using the thiazole antibiotic thiostrepton and (ii) an FOXM1 inhibiting ARF-derived peptide—recapitulate the findings of genetic FOXM1 deletion. Taken together, our data identify FOXM1 as a novel therapeutic target, and demonstrate feasibility of FOXM1 inhibition in ALL.
eLife | 2015
Jasmine Wong; Kelley Weinfurtner; Maria del pilar Alzamora; Scott C. Kogan; Michael R. Burgess; Yan Zhang; Joy Nakitandwe; Jing Ma; Jinjun Cheng; Shann-Ching Chen; Theodore T. Ho; Johanna Flach; Damien Reynaud; Emmanuelle Passegué; James R. Downing; Kevin Shannon
Chromosome 7 deletions are highly prevalent in myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) and likely contribute to aberrant growth through haploinsufficiency. We generated mice with a heterozygous germ line deletion of a 2-Mb interval of chromosome band 5A3 syntenic to a commonly deleted segment of human 7q22 and show that mutant hematopoietic cells exhibit cardinal features of MDS. Specifically, the long-term hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) compartment is expanded in 5A3+/del mice, and the distribution of myeloid progenitors is altered. 5A3+/del HSCs are defective for lymphoid repopulating potential and show a myeloid lineage output bias. These cell autonomous abnormalities are exacerbated by physiologic aging and upon serial transplantation. The 5A3 deletion partially rescues defective repopulation in Gata2 mutant mice. 5A3+/del hematopoietic cells exhibit decreased expression of oxidative phosphorylation genes, increased levels of reactive oxygen species, and perturbed oxygen consumption. These studies provide the first functional data linking 7q22 deletions to MDS pathogenesis. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.07839.001
Nature Communications | 2016
Wenyuan Wang; Tonis Org; Amelie Montel-Hagen; Peter D. Pioli; Dan Duan; Edo Israely; Daniel Malkin; Trent Su; Johanna Flach; Siavash K. Kurdistani; Robert H. Schiestl; Hanna Mikkola
DNA double strand break (DSB) repair is critical for generation of B-cell receptors, which are pre-requisite for B-cell progenitor survival. However, the transcription factors that promote DSB repair in B cells are not known. Here we show that MEF2C enhances the expression of DNA repair and recombination factors in B-cell progenitors, promoting DSB repair, V(D)J recombination and cell survival. Although Mef2c-deficient mice maintain relatively intact peripheral B-lymphoid cellularity during homeostasis, they exhibit poor B-lymphoid recovery after sub-lethal irradiation and 5-fluorouracil injection. MEF2C binds active regulatory regions with high-chromatin accessibility in DNA repair and V(D)J genes in both mouse B-cell progenitors and human B lymphoblasts. Loss of Mef2c in pre-B cells reduces chromatin accessibility in multiple regulatory regions of the MEF2C-activated genes. MEF2C therefore protects B lymphopoiesis during stress by ensuring proper expression of genes that encode DNA repair and B-cell factors.
Cell Stem Cell | 2013
Koen Schepers; Eric M. Pietras; Damien Reynaud; Johanna Flach; Mikhail Binnewies; Trit Garg; Amy J. Wagers; Edward C. Hsiao; Emmanuelle Passegué
Nature Communications | 2015
Silvia Alvarez; Marcos Díaz; Johanna Flach; Sara Rodriguez-Acebes; Andrés J. López-Contreras; Dolores Martínez; Marta Cañamero; Oscar Fernandez-Capetillo; Joan Isern; Emmanuelle Passegué; Juan Méndez