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Dive into the research topics where Jose M. Polo is active.

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Featured researches published by Jose M. Polo.


Nature Biotechnology | 2010

Cell type of origin influences the molecular and functional properties of mouse induced pluripotent stem cells

Jose M. Polo; Susanna Liu; Maria E. Figueroa; Warakorn Kulalert; Sarah Eminli; Kah Yong Tan; Effie Apostolou; Matthias Stadtfeld; Yushan Li; Toshihiro Shioda; Sridaran Natesan; Amy J. Wagers; Ari Melnick; Todd Evans

Induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) have been derived from various somatic cell populations through ectopic expression of defined factors. It remains unclear whether iPSCs generated from different cell types are molecularly and functionally similar. Here we show that iPSCs obtained from mouse fibroblasts, hematopoietic and myogenic cells exhibit distinct transcriptional and epigenetic patterns. Moreover, we demonstrate that cellular origin influences the in vitro differentiation potentials of iPSCs into embryoid bodies and different hematopoietic cell types. Notably, continuous passaging of iPSCs largely attenuates these differences. Our results suggest that early-passage iPSCs retain a transient epigenetic memory of their somatic cells of origin, which manifests as differential gene expression and altered differentiation capacity. These observations may influence ongoing attempts to use iPSCs for disease modeling and could also be exploited in potential therapeutic applications to enhance differentiation into desired cell lineages.


Nature | 2009

Immortalization eliminates a roadblock during cellular reprogramming into iPS cells

Jochen Utikal; Jose M. Polo; Matthias Stadtfeld; Nimet Maherali; Warakorn Kulalert; Ryan M. Walsh; Adam Khalil; James G. Rheinwald

The overexpression of defined transcription factors in somatic cells results in their reprogramming into induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells. The extremely low efficiency and slow kinetics of in vitro reprogramming suggest that further rare events are required to generate iPS cells. The nature and identity of these events, however, remain elusive. We noticed that the reprogramming potential of primary murine fibroblasts into iPS cells decreases after serial passaging and the concomitant onset of senescence. Consistent with the notion that loss of replicative potential provides a barrier for reprogramming, here we show that cells with low endogenous p19Arf (encoded by the Ink4a/Arf locus, also known as Cdkn2a locus) protein levels and immortal fibroblasts deficient in components of the Arf–Trp53 pathway yield iPS cell colonies with up to threefold faster kinetics and at a significantly higher efficiency than wild-type cells, endowing almost every somatic cell with the potential to form iPS cells. Notably, the acute genetic ablation of Trp53 (also known as p53) in cellular subpopulations that normally fail to reprogram rescues their ability to produce iPS cells. Our results show that the acquisition of immortality is a crucial and rate-limiting step towards the establishment of a pluripotent state in somatic cells and underscore the similarities between induced pluripotency and tumorigenesis.


Cell | 2012

A Molecular Roadmap of Reprogramming Somatic Cells into iPS Cells

Jose M. Polo; Endre Anderssen; Ryan M. Walsh; Benjamin A. Schwarz; Christian M. Nefzger; Sue Mei Lim; Marti Borkent; Effie Apostolou; Sara Alaei; Jennifer Cloutier; Ori Bar-Nur; Sihem Cheloufi; Matthias Stadtfeld; Maria E. Figueroa; Daisy Robinton; Sridaran Natesan; Ari Melnick; Jinfang Zhu; Sridhar Ramaswamy

Factor-induced reprogramming of somatic cells into induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) is inefficient, complicating mechanistic studies. Here, we examined defined intermediate cell populations poised to becoming iPSCs by genome-wide analyses. We show that induced pluripotency elicits two transcriptional waves, which are driven by c-Myc/Klf4 (first wave) and Oct4/Sox2/Klf4 (second wave). Cells that become refractory to reprogramming activate the first but fail to initiate the second transcriptional wave and can be rescued by elevated expression of all four factors. The establishment of bivalent domains occurs gradually after the first wave, whereas changes in DNA methylation take place after the second wave when cells acquire stable pluripotency. This integrative analysis allowed us to identify genes that act as roadblocks during reprogramming and surface markers that further enrich for cells prone to forming iPSCs. Collectively, our data offer new mechanistic insights into the nature and sequence of molecular events inherent to cellular reprogramming.


Nature Cell Biology | 2011

Incomplete DNA methylation underlies a transcriptional memory of somatic cells in human iPS cells

Yuki Ohi; Han Qin; Chibo Hong; Laure Blouin; Jose M. Polo; Tingxia Guo; Zhongxia Qi; Sara L. Downey; Philip D. Manos; Derrick J. Rossi; Jingwei Yu; Matthias Hebrok; Joseph F. Costello; Jun S. Song; Miguel Ramalho-Santos

Human induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells are remarkably similar to embryonic stem (ES) cells, but recent reports indicate that there may be important differences between them. We carried out a systematic comparison of human iPS cells generated from hepatocytes (representative of endoderm), skin fibroblasts (mesoderm) and melanocytes (ectoderm). All low-passage iPS cells analysed retain a transcriptional memory of the original cells. The persistent expression of somatic genes can be partially explained by incomplete promoter DNA methylation. This epigenetic mechanism underlies a robust form of memory that can be found in iPS cells generated by multiple laboratories using different methods, including RNA transfection. Incompletely silenced genes tend to be isolated from other genes that are repressed during reprogramming, indicating that recruitment of the silencing machinery may be inefficient at isolated genes. Knockdown of the incompletely reprogrammed gene C9orf64 (chromosome 9 open reading frame 64) reduces the efficiency of human iPS cell generation, indicating that somatic memory genes may be functionally relevant during reprogramming.


Cell Stem Cell | 2011

Sox2+ Adult Stem and Progenitor Cells Are Important for Tissue Regeneration and Survival of Mice

Katrin Arnold; Abby Sarkar; Mary Anna Yram; Jose M. Polo; Rod Bronson; Sumitra Sengupta; Marco Seandel; Niels Geijsen

The transcription factor Sox2 maintains the pluripotency of early embryonic cells and regulates the formation of several epithelia during fetal development. Whether Sox2 continues to play a role in adult tissues remains largely unknown. We show here that Sox2 marks adult cells in several epithelial tissues where its expression has not previously been characterized, including the stomach, cervix, anus, testes, lens, and multiple glands. Genetic lineage tracing and transplantation experiments demonstrate that Sox2-expressing cells continuously give rise to mature cell types within these tissues, documenting their self-renewal and differentiation potentials. Consistent with these findings, ablation of Sox2(+) cells in mice results in a disruption of epithelial tissue homeostasis and lethality. Developmental fate mapping reveals that Sox2(+) adult stem cells originate from fetal Sox2(+) tissue progenitors. Thus, our results identify Sox2 expression in numerous adult endodermal and ectodermal stem cell compartments, which are critical for normal tissue regeneration and survival.


Nature Medicine | 2004

Specific peptide interference reveals BCL6 transcriptional and oncogenic mechanisms in B-cell lymphoma cells.

Jose M. Polo; Tania Dell'Oso; Stella M. Ranuncolo; Leandro Cerchietti; David Beck; Gustavo F. Da Silva; Gilbert G. Privé; Jonathan D. Licht; Ari Melnick

The BTB/POZ transcriptional repressor and candidate oncogene BCL6 is frequently misregulated in B-cell lymphomas. The interface through which the BCL6 BTB domain mediates recruitment of the SMRT, NCoR and BCoR corepressors was recently identified. To determine the contribution of this interface to BCL6 transcriptional and biological properties, we generated a peptide that specifically binds BCL6 and blocks corepressor recruitment in vivo. This inhibitor disrupts BCL6-mediated repression and establishment of silenced chromatin, reactivates natural BCL6 target genes, and abrogates BCL6 biological function in B cells. In BCL6-positive lymphoma cells, peptide blockade caused apoptosis and cell cycle arrest. BTB domain peptide inhibitors may constitute a novel therapeutic agent for B-cell lymphomas.


Cancer Cell | 2010

A Small-Molecule Inhibitor of BCL6 Kills DLBCL Cells In Vitro and In Vivo

Leandro Cerchietti; Alexandru F. Ghetu; Xiao-Han Zhu; Gustavo F. Da Silva; Shijun Zhong; Marilyn Matthews; Karen L. Bunting; Jose M. Polo; Christophe Farès; C.H. Arrowsmith; Shao Ning Yang; Monica Garcia; Andrew Coop; Alexander D. MacKerell; Gilbert G. Privé; Ari Melnick

The BCL6 transcriptional repressor is the most frequently involved oncogene in diffuse large B cell lymphoma (DLBCL). We combined computer-aided drug design with functional assays to identify low-molecular-weight compounds that bind to the corepressor binding groove of the BCL6 BTB domain. One such compound disrupted BCL6/corepressor complexes in vitro and in vivo, and was observed by X-ray crystallography and NMR to bind the critical site within the BTB groove. This compound could induce expression of BCL6 target genes and kill BCL6-positive DLBCL cell lines. In xenotransplantation experiments, the compound was nontoxic and potently suppressed DLBCL tumors in vivo. The compound also killed primary DLBCLs from human patients.


Blood | 2009

The BCL6 transcriptional program features repression of multiple oncogenes in primary B cells and is deregulated in DLBCL

Weimin Ci; Jose M. Polo; Leandro Cerchietti; Rita Shaknovich; Ling Wang; Shao Ning Yang; Kenny Ye; Pedro Farinha; Douglas E. Horsman; Randy D. Gascoyne; Olivier Elemento; Ari Melnick

The BCL6 transcriptional repressor is required for development of germinal center (GC) B cells and when expressed constitutively causes diffuse large B-cell lymphomas (DLBCLs). We examined genome-wide BCL6 promoter binding in GC B cells versus DLBCLs to better understand its function in these settings. BCL6 bound to both distinct and common sets of functionally related gene in normal GC cells versus DLBCL cells. Certain BCL6 target genes were preferentially repressed in GC B cells, but not DLBCL cells. Several such genes have prominent oncogenic functions, such as BCL2, MYC, BMI1, EIF4E, JUNB, and CCND1. BCL6 and BCL2 expression was negatively correlated in primary DLBCLs except in the presence of BCL2 translocations. The specific BCL6 inhibitor retro-inverso BCL6 peptidomimetic inhibitor-induced expression of BCL2 and other oncogenes, consistent with direct repression effects by BCL6. These data are consistent with a model whereby BCL6 can directly silence oncogenes in GC B cells and counterbalance its own tumorigenic potential. Finally, a BCL6 consensus sequence and binding sites for other physiologically relevant transcription factors were highly enriched among target genes and distributed in a pathway-dependent manner, suggesting that BCL6 forms specific regulatory circuits with other B-cell transcriptional factors.


Cell Reports | 2012

Highly coordinated proteome dynamics during reprogramming of somatic cells to pluripotency.

Jenny Hansson; Mahmoud Reza Rafiee; Sonja Reiland; Jose M. Polo; Julian S. Gehring; Satoshi Okawa; Wolfgang Huber; Jeroen Krijgsveld

Generation of induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) is a process whose mechanistic underpinnings are only beginning to emerge. Here, we applied in-depth quantitative proteomics to monitor proteome changes during the course of reprogramming of fibroblasts to iPSCs. We uncover a two-step resetting of the proteome during the first and last 3 days of reprogramming, with multiple functionally related proteins changing in expression in a highly coordinated fashion. This comprised several biological processes, including changes in the stoichiometry of electron transport-chain complexes, repressed vesicle-mediated transport during the intermediate stage, and an EMT-like process in the late phase. In addition, we demonstrate that the nucleoporin Nup210 is essential for reprogramming by its permitting of rapid cellular proliferation and subsequent progression through MET. Along with the identification of proteins expressed in a stage-specific manner, this study provides a rich resource toward an enhanced mechanistic understanding of cellular reprogramming.


Blood | 2009

A peptomimetic inhibitor of BCL6 with potent antilymphoma effects in vitro and in vivo

Leandro Cerchietti; Shao Ning Yang; Rita Shaknovich; Katerina Hatzi; Jose M. Polo; Amy Chadburn; Steven F. Dowdy; Ari Melnick

The BCL6 transcriptional repressor is the most commonly involved oncogene in diffuse large B-cell lymphomas (DLBCLs). BCL6 lymphomagenic activity is dependent on its ability to recruit corepressor proteins to a unique binding site on its N-terminal BTB domain. A recombinant peptide fragment of the SMRT (silencing mediator for retinoid and thyroid hormone receptor) corepressor that blocks this site can inhibit BCL6 biologic functions. Shortening and conversion of this peptide to D-amino acid and retro configuration as well as the addition of a fusogenic motif yielded a far more potent and stable BCL6 inhibitor that still retained the specificity of the original SMRT fragment. Like the L-peptide, retroinverso BCL6 peptide inhibitor (RI-BPI) selectively killed BCR rather than OxPhos-type DLBCL cells. The RI-BPI could recapitulate the failure to form germinal centers seen in BCL6 null mice yet was nontoxic and nonimmunogenic even when administered for up to 52 weeks. RI-BPI showed superior duration of tissue penetration and could accordingly powerfully suppress the growth of human DLBCLs xenografts in a dose-dependent manner. Finally, RI-BPI could kill primary human DLBCL cells but had no effect on normal lymphoid tissue or other tumors.

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Christian M. Nefzger

Australian Regenerative Medicine Institute

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Stella M. Ranuncolo

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Fernando J. Rossello

Australian Regenerative Medicine Institute

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Xiaodong Liu

Australian Regenerative Medicine Institute

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Jaber Firas

Australian Regenerative Medicine Institute

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