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Dive into the research topics where June V. Harriss is active.

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Featured researches published by June V. Harriss.


Nature Genetics | 2002

Bop encodes a muscle-restricted protein containing MYND and SET domains and is essential for cardiac differentiation and morphogenesis

Paul Gottlieb; Stephanie A. Pierce; Robert J. Sims; Hiroyuki Yamagishi; Elizabeth Weihe; June V. Harriss; Shanna D. Maika; William A. Kuziel; Heather King; Eric N. Olson; Osamu Nakagawa; Deepak Srivastava

Many transcription factors regulate specific temporal-spatial events during cardiac differentiation; however, the mechanisms that regulate such events are largely unknown. Using a modified subtractive hybridization method to identify specific genes that influence early cardiac development, we found that Bop is expressed specifically in cardiac and skeletal muscle precursors before differentiation of these lineages. Bop encodes a protein containing MYND and SET domains, which have been shown to regulate transcription by mediating distinct chromatin modifications. We show that m-Bop is a histone deacetylase–dependent transcriptional repressor. Targeted deletion of Bop in mice disrupted maturation of ventricular cardiomyocytes and interfered with formation of the right ventricle. Normal expression of Hand2, a transcription factor essential for right ventricular development, in cardiomyocyte precursors is dependent upon m-Bop. These results indicate that m-Bop is essential for cardiomyocyte differentiation and cardiac morphogenesis.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1997

Interaction of the Nuclear Matrix-associated Region (MAR)-Binding Proteins, SATB1 and CDP/Cux, with a MAR Element (L2a) in an Upstream Regulatory Region of the Mouse CD8a Gene

Mehdi Banan; Ingrid C. Rojas; Won-Ha Lee; Heather King; June V. Harriss; Ryuji Kobayashi; Carol F. Webb; Paul Gottlieb

Matrix-associated regions (MARs), AT-rich DNA segments that have an affinity for the nuclear matrix, have been shown to play a role in transcriptional regulation of eukaryotic genes. The present study demonstrates that a DNA element, called L2a, which has been implicated in the transcriptional regulation of the mouseCD8a gene encoding an important T cell coreceptor, is a MAR. Moreover, the identities of two nuclear proteins, L2a-P1 and L2a-P2, previously shown to bind to the L2a element, have been determined. The L2a-P1 protein found to be present in all CD8-positive T cell lines tested is SATB1, a known MAR-binding protein. The widely expressed L2a-P2 protein is CDP/Cux, a MAR-binding protein that has been associated with repression of gene transcription. Interaction of both proteins with the L2a element was studied using the missing nucleoside approach, DNase I footprinting, and electrophoretic mobility shift assays with wild type and mutant L2a elements. The data suggest that CDP/Cux bound to the L2a element is displaced by binding of SATB1 and the accompanying conformational change in the DNA lying between the primary binding sites of SATB1 and CDP/Cux. We suggest that displacement of CDP/Cux by SATB1 favors transcription of theCD8a gene, possibly by enhancing or altering its association with the nuclear matrix.


Blood | 2010

Foxp1 is an essential transcriptional regulator for the generation of quiescent naive T cells during thymocyte development.

Xiaoming Feng; Gregory C. Ippolito; Lifeng Tian; Karla Wiehagen; Soyoung Oh; Arivazhagan Sambandam; Jessica Willen; Ralph M. Bunte; Shanna D. Maika; June V. Harriss; Andrew J. Caton; Avinash Bhandoola; Philip W. Tucker; Hui Hu

Proper thymocyte development is required to establish T-cell central tolerance and to generate naive T cells, both of which are essential for T-cell homeostasis and a functional immune system. Here we demonstrate that the loss of transcription factor Foxp1 results in the abnormal development of T cells. Instead of generating naive T cells, Foxp1-deficient single-positive thymocytes acquire an activated phenotype prematurely in the thymus and lead to the generation of peripheral CD4(+) T and CD8(+) T cells that exhibit an activated phenotype and increased apoptosis and readily produce cytokines upon T-cell receptor engagement. These results identify Foxp1 as an essential transcriptional regulator for thymocyte development and the generation of quiescent naive T cells.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Structural and functional profiling of the human histone methyltransferase SMYD3.

Kenneth Foreman; Mark S Brown; Frances E. Park; Spencer Emtage; June V. Harriss; Chhaya Das; Li-li Zhu; Andy Crew; Lee D. Arnold; Salam Shaaban; Philip W. Tucker

The SET and MYND Domain (SMYD) proteins comprise a unique family of multi-domain SET histone methyltransferases that are implicated in human cancer progression. Here we report an analysis of the crystal structure of the full length human SMYD3 in a complex with an analog of the S-adenosyl methionine (SAM) methyl donor cofactor. The structure revealed an overall compact architecture in which the “split-SET” domain adopts a canonical SET domain fold and closely assembles with a Zn-binding MYND domain and a C-terminal superhelical 9 α-helical bundle similar to that observed for the mouse SMYD1 structure. Together, these structurally interlocked domains impose a highly confined binding pocket for histone substrates, suggesting a regulated mechanism for its enzymatic activity. Our mutational and biochemical analyses confirm regulatory roles of the unique structural elements both inside and outside the core SET domain and establish a previously undetected preference for trimethylation of H4K20.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2011

The ARID Family Transcription Factor Bright Is Required for both Hematopoietic Stem Cell and B Lineage Development

Carol F. Webb; James Bryant; Melissa Popowski; Laura Allred; Dongkoon Kim; June V. Harriss; Christian Schmidt; Cathrine Miner; Kira Rose; Hwei Ling Cheng; Courtney Griffin; Philip W. Tucker

ABSTRACT Bright/Arid3a has been characterized both as an activator of immunoglobulin heavy-chain transcription and as a proto-oncogene. Although Bright expression is highly B lineage stage restricted in adult mice, its expression in the earliest identifiable hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) population suggests that Bright might have additional functions. We showed that >99% of Bright−/− embryos die at midgestation from failed hematopoiesis. Bright−/− embryonic day 12.5 (E12.5) fetal livers showed an increase in the expression of immature markers. Colony-forming assays indicated that the hematopoietic potential of Bright−/− mice is markedly reduced. Rare survivors of lethality, which were not compensated by the closely related paralogue Bright-derived protein (Bdp)/Arid3b, suffered HSC deficits in their bone marrow as well as B lineage-intrinsic developmental and functional deficiencies in their peripheries. These include a reduction in a natural antibody, B-1 responses to phosphocholine, and selective T-dependent impairment of IgG1 class switching. Our results place Bright/Arid3a on a select list of transcriptional regulators required to program both HSC and lineage-specific differentiation.


PLOS ONE | 2010

Cardiac Deletion of Smyd2 Is Dispensable for Mouse Heart Development

Florian Diehl; Mark A. Brown; Machteld J. van Amerongen; Tatyana Novoyatleva; Astrid Wietelmann; June V. Harriss; Fulvia Ferrazzi; Thomas Böttger; Richard P. Harvey; Philip W. Tucker; Felix B. Engel

Chromatin modifying enzymes play a critical role in cardiac differentiation. Previously, it has been shown that the targeted deletion of the histone methyltransferase, Smyd1, the founding member of the SET and MYND domain containing (Smyd) family, interferes with cardiomyocyte maturation and proper formation of the right heart ventricle. The highly related paralogue, Smyd2 is a histone 3 lysine 4- and lysine 36-specific methyltransferase expressed in heart and brain. Here, we report that Smyd2 is differentially expressed during cardiac development with highest expression in the neonatal heart. To elucidate the functional role of Smyd2 in the heart, we generated conditional knockout (cKO) mice harboring a cardiomyocyte-specific deletion of Smyd2 and performed histological, functional and molecular analyses. Unexpectedly, cardiac deletion of Smyd2 was dispensable for proper morphological and functional development of the murine heart and had no effect on global histone 3 lysine 4 or 36 methylation. However, we provide evidence for a potential role of Smyd2 in the transcriptional regulation of genes associated with translation and reveal that Smyd2, similar to Smyd3, interacts with RNA Polymerase II as well as to the RNA helicase, HELZ.


Immunogenetics | 1988

Nucleotide sequence analysis of the C.AKR Lyt-2a gene: structural polymorphism in alleles encoding the Lyt-2.1 T-cell surface alloantigen

Hyun J. Youn; June V. Harriss; Paul Gottlieb

The Lyt-2aallele of the C.AKR strain of mice (genotype Lyt-2a, Lyt-3a) was cloned, and its complete nucleotide sequence as well as that of 2 kb of 5′ flanking DNA was determined. The sequence was comapred with the partial sequence of the Lyt-2aallele of DBA/2 (genotype Lyt-2a, Lyt-3b) and the nearly complete sequence of the B10.CAS2 Lyt-2ballele reported by Liaw and coworkers (1986). The coding regions of the two Lyt-2aalleles differ from each other by two nucleotide substitutions in the three exons over which they could be compared, resulting in two amino acid substitutions in the leader and transmembrane segments. The coding region of the C.AKR Lyt-2aallele differs from the Lyt-2ballele by two nucleotide substitutions in the extracellular V-like domain, one of which is silent and the second of which leads to substitution of valine for methionine at amino acid position 78 giving rise to the Lyt-2.1 allotypic specificity. The coding region of the DBA/2 Lyt-2aallele shares with C.AKR the allotypic substitution at position 78 and differs from Lyt-2bby three additional nucleotide substitutions in the coding regions, two of which lead to amino acid substitutions in the leader and transmembrane segments. It would therefore appear that the Lyt-2 alleles of the three strains analyzed are distinct, and the nomenclature Lyt-2a1 and Lyt-2a2 is suggested to distinguish the alleles of C.AKR and DBA/2, respectively. These alleles share a common difference from the Lyt-2bgene product at position 78, and since the amino acid substitutions which distinguish them from each other are in the leader and transmembrane segments, their mature Lyt-2 gene products appear antigenically identical.


Immunogenetics | 1988

Structure and expression of the Lyt-3a gene of C.AKR mice.

Hyun J. Youn; June V. Harriss; Paul Gottlieb

The mouse Lyt-3agene, which encodes the Lyt-3.1 T-cell surface alloantigen of the C.AKR strain, has been cloned, and the nucleotide sequence of its exons and more than 2 kb of 5′ flanking sequence have been determined. The gene extends over approximately 16 kb of DNA and consists of six exons encoding leader, leader plus V-like domain, membrane-proximal, transmembrane, and cytoplasmic domains. The only difference between the coding region of the Lyt-3agene and the cDNA sequences reported for Lyt-3b(Nakauchi et al. 1987, Panaccio et al. 1987) is at position 77 of the mature protein where Lyt-3aencodes serine and Lyt-3bencodes arginine. This substitution must therefore be the basis for the serological distinction between the Lyt-3.1 and Lyt-3.2 alloantigens. Potential TATA and CAAT sequences, two Sp1 protein binding sites, two extended repeats of the dinucleotide, CA, a number of short inverted repeats, and an inverted segment of the mouse B1 repetitive sequence are found 5′ to the Lyt-3agene. Two consensus poly-A addition signals and a complete copy of the mouse B1 sequence are found 3′ to the gene. Both B1-related regions are flanked by short direct repeats suggesting that they arose by an insertional mechanism. Cotransfection of the Lyt-3agene together with a cloned Lyt-2agene resulted in expression of both Lyt-2 and Lyt-3.1 on the surface of Ltk− and BW5147 cells. Transfection of the Lyt-3agene without Lyt-2aled to expression of Lyt-3-related cellular RNA but did not result in surface expression of Lyt-3.1, suggesting that the Lyt-3 glycoprotein is not expressed on the cell surface in the absence of Lyt-2.


Blood | 2016

Interferon-α signaling promotes embryonic HSC maturation.

Peter Geon Kim; Matthew C. Canver; Catherine Rhee; Samantha J. Ross; June V. Harriss; Ho-Chou Tu; Stuart H. Orkin; Haley O. Tucker; George Q. Daley

In the developing mouse embryo, the first hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) arise in the aorta-gonad-mesonephros (AGM) and mature as they transit through the fetal liver (FL). Compared with FL and adult HSCs, AGM HSCs have reduced repopulation potential in irradiated adult transplant recipients but mechanisms underlying this deficiency in AGM HSCs are poorly understood. By co-expression gene network analysis, we deduced that AGM HSCs show lower levels of interferon-α (IFN-α)/Jak-Stat1-associated gene expression than FL HSCs. Treatment of AGM HSCs with IFN-α enhanced long-term hematopoietic engraftment and donor chimerism. Conversely, IFN-α receptor-deficient AGMs (Ifnαr1(-/-)), had significantly reduced donor chimerism. We identify adenine-thymine-rich interactive domain-3a (Arid3a), a factor essential for FL and B lymphopoiesis, as a key transcriptional co-regulator of IFN-α/Stat1 signaling. Arid3a occupies the genomic loci of Stat1 as well as several IFN-α effector genes, acting to regulate their expression. Accordingly, Arid3a(-/-) AGM HSCs had significantly reduced transplant potential, which was rescued by IFN-α treatment. Our results implicate the inflammatory IFN-α/Jak-Stat pathway in the developmental maturation of embryonic HSCs, whose manipulation may lead to increased potency of reprogrammed HSCs for transplantation.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Smyd1 facilitates heart development by antagonizing oxidative and ER stress responses

Tara L. Rasmussen; Yanlin Ma; Chong Yon Park; June V. Harriss; Stephanie A. Pierce; Joseph D. Dekker; Nicolas Valenzuela; Deepak Srivastava; Robert J. Schwartz; M. David Stewart; Haley O. Tucker

Smyd1/Bop is an evolutionary conserved histone methyltransferase previously shown by conventional knockout to be critical for embryonic heart development. To further explore the mechanism(s) in a cell autonomous context, we conditionally ablated Smyd1 in the first and second heart fields of mice using a knock-in (KI) Nkx2.5-cre driver. Robust deletion of floxed-Smyd1 in cardiomyocytes and the outflow tract (OFT) resulted in embryonic lethality at E9.5, truncation of the OFT and right ventricle, and additional defects consistent with impaired expansion and proliferation of the second heart field (SHF). Using a transgenic (Tg) Nkx2.5-cre driver previously shown to not delete in the SHF and OFT, early embryonic lethality was bypassed and both ventricular chambers were formed; however, reduced cardiomyocyte proliferation and other heart defects resulted in later embryonic death at E11.5-12.5. Proliferative impairment prior to both early and mid-gestational lethality was accompanied by dysregulation of transcripts critical for endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress. Mid-gestational death was also associated with impairment of oxidative stress defense—a phenotype highly similar to the previously characterized knockout of the Smyd1-interacting transcription factor, skNAC. We describe a potential feedback mechanism in which the stress response factor Tribbles3/TRB3, when directly methylated by Smyd1, acts as a co-repressor of Smyd1-mediated transcription. Our findings suggest that Smyd1 is required for maintaining cardiomyocyte proliferation at minimally two different embryonic heart developmental stages, and its loss leads to linked stress responses that signal ensuing lethality.

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Paul Gottlieb

City University of New York

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Philip W. Tucker

University of Texas at Austin

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Shanna D. Maika

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Carol F. Webb

University of Texas at Austin

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Chhaya Das

University of Texas at Austin

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Haley O. Tucker

University of Texas at Austin

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Heather King

University of Texas at Austin

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Hyun J. Youn

University of Texas at Austin

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