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Dive into the research topics where Kasey R. Hutt is active.

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Featured researches published by Kasey R. Hutt.


Nature Neuroscience | 2011

Long pre-mRNA depletion and RNA missplicing contribute to neuronal vulnerability from loss of TDP-43

Magdalini Polymenidou; Clotilde Lagier-Tourenne; Kasey R. Hutt; Stephanie C. Huelga; Jacqueline Moran; Tiffany Y. Liang; Shuo-Chien Ling; Eveline Sun; Edward Wancewicz; Curt Mazur; Holly Kordasiewicz; Yalda Sedaghat; John Paul Donohue; Lily Shiue; C. Frank Bennett; Gene W. Yeo; Don W. Cleveland

We used cross-linking and immunoprecipitation coupled with high-throughput sequencing to identify binding sites in 6,304 genes as the brain RNA targets for TDP-43, an RNA binding protein that, when mutated, causes amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. Massively parallel sequencing and splicing-sensitive junction arrays revealed that levels of 601 mRNAs were changed (including Fus (Tls), progranulin and other transcripts encoding neurodegenerative disease–associated proteins) and 965 altered splicing events were detected (including in sortilin, the receptor for progranulin) following depletion of TDP-43 from mouse adult brain with antisense oligonucleotides. RNAs whose levels were most depleted by reduction in TDP-43 were derived from genes with very long introns and that encode proteins involved in synaptic activity. Lastly, we found that TDP-43 autoregulates its synthesis, in part by directly binding and enhancing splicing of an intron in the 3′ untranslated region of its own transcript, thereby triggering nonsense-mediated RNA degradation.


Cell | 2009

Nuclear receptor-induced chromosomal proximity and DNA breaks underlie specific translocations in cancer.

Chunru Lin; Liuqing Yang; Bogdan Tanasa; Kasey R. Hutt; Bong-Gun Ju; Kenneth A. Ohgi; Jie Zhang; David W. Rose; Xiang-Dong Fu; Christopher K. Glass; Michael G. Rosenfeld

Chromosomal translocations are a hallmark of leukemia/lymphoma and also appear in solid tumors, but the underlying mechanism remains elusive. By establishing a cellular model that mimics the relative frequency of authentic translocation events without proliferation selection, we report mechanisms of nuclear receptor-dependent tumor translocations. Intronic binding of liganded androgen receptor (AR) first juxtaposes translocation loci by triggering intra- and interchromosomal interactions. AR then promotes site-specific DNA double-stranded breaks (DSBs) at translocation loci by recruiting two types of enzymatic activities induced by genotoxic stress and liganded AR, including activation-induced cytidine deaminase and the LINE-1 repeat-encoded ORF2 endonuclease. These enzymes synergistically generate site-selective DSBs at juxtaposed translocation loci that are ligated by nonhomologous end joining pathway for specific translocations. Our data suggest that the confluence of two parallel pathways initiated by liganded nuclear receptor and genotoxic stress underlies nonrandom tumor translocations, which may function in many types of tumors and pathological processes.


Cell | 2007

Histone Methylation-Dependent Mechanisms Impose Ligand Dependency for Gene Activation by Nuclear Receptors

Ivan Garcia-Bassets; Young-Soo Kwon; Francesca Telese; Gratien G. Prefontaine; Kasey R. Hutt; Christine S. Cheng; Bong-Gun Ju; Kenneth A. Ohgi; Jianxun Wang; Laure Escoubet-Lozach; David W. Rose; Christopher K. Glass; Xiang-Dong Fu; Michael G. Rosenfeld

Nuclear receptors undergo ligand-dependent conformational changes that are required for corepressor-coactivator exchange, but whether there is an actual requirement for specific epigenetic landmarks to impose ligand dependency for gene activation remains unknown. Here we report an unexpected and general strategy that is based on the requirement for specific cohorts of inhibitory histone methyltransferases (HMTs) to impose gene-specific gatekeeper functions that prevent unliganded nuclear receptors and other classes of regulated transcription factors from binding to their target gene promoters and causing constitutive gene activation in the absence of stimulating signals. This strategy, based at least in part on an HMT-dependent inhibitory histone code, imposes a requirement for specific histone demethylases, including LSD1, to permit ligand- and signal-dependent activation of regulated gene expression. These events link an inhibitory methylation component of the histone code to a broadly used strategy that circumvents pathological constitutive gene induction by physiologically regulated transcription factors.


Nature Neuroscience | 2012

Divergent roles of ALS-linked proteins FUS/TLS and TDP-43 intersect in processing long pre-mRNAs

Clotilde Lagier-Tourenne; Magdalini Polymenidou; Kasey R. Hutt; Anthony Q. Vu; Michael Baughn; Stephanie C. Huelga; Kevin M. Clutario; Shuo-Chien Ling; Tiffany Y. Liang; Curt Mazur; Edward Wancewicz; Aneeza S. Kim; Andy Watt; Sue Freier; Geoffrey G. Hicks; John Paul Donohue; Lily Shiue; C. Frank Bennett; John Ravits; Don W. Cleveland; Gene W. Yeo

FUS/TLS (fused in sarcoma/translocated in liposarcoma) and TDP-43 are integrally involved in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and frontotemporal dementia. We found that FUS/TLS binds to RNAs from >5,500 genes in mouse and human brain, primarily through a GUGGU-binding motif. We identified a sawtooth-like binding pattern, consistent with co-transcriptional deposition of FUS/TLS. Depletion of FUS/TLS from the adult nervous system altered the levels or splicing of >950 mRNAs, most of which are distinct from RNAs dependent on TDP-43. Abundance of only 45 RNAs was reduced after depletion of either TDP-43 or FUS/TLS from mouse brain, but among these were mRNAs that were transcribed from genes with exceptionally long introns and that encode proteins that are essential for neuronal integrity. Expression levels of a subset of these were lowered after TDP-43 or FUS/TLS depletion in stem cell–derived human neurons and in TDP-43 aggregate–containing motor neurons in sporadic ALS, supporting a common loss-of-function pathway as one component underlying motor neuron death from misregulation of TDP-43 or FUS/TLS.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Targeted degradation of sense and antisense C9orf72 RNA foci as therapy for ALS and frontotemporal degeneration.

Clotilde Lagier-Tourenne; Michael Baughn; Frank Rigo; Shuying Sun; Patrick Liu; Hairi Li; Jie Jiang; Andrew T. Watt; Seung Chun; Melanie Katz; Jinsong Qiu; Ying Sun; Shuo-Chien Ling; Qiang Zhu; Magdalini Polymenidou; Kevin Drenner; Jonathan W. Artates; Melissa McAlonis-Downes; Sebastian Markmiller; Kasey R. Hutt; Donald P. Pizzo; Janet Cady; Matthew B. Harms; Robert H. Baloh; Scott R. VandenBerg; Gene W. Yeo; Xiang-Dong Fu; C. Frank Bennett; Don W. Cleveland; John Ravits

Significance The most frequent genetic cause of ALS and frontotemporal degeneration is a hexanucleotide expansion in a noncoding region of the C9orf72 gene. Similar to other repeat expansion diseases, we characterize the hallmark feature of repeat expansion RNA-mediated toxicity: nuclear RNA foci. Remarkably, two distinct sets of foci are found, one containing RNAs transcribed in the sense direction and the other containing antisense RNAs. Antisense oligonucleotides (ASOs) are developed that selectively target sense strand repeat-containing RNAs and reduce sense-oriented foci without affecting overall C9orf72 expression. Importantly, reducing C9orf72 expression does not cause behavioral or pathological changes in mice and induces only a few genome-wide mRNA alterations. These findings establish ASO-mediated degradation of repeat-containing RNAs as a significant therapeutic approach. Expanded hexanucleotide repeats in the chromosome 9 open reading frame 72 (C9orf72) gene are the most common genetic cause of ALS and frontotemporal degeneration (FTD). Here, we identify nuclear RNA foci containing the hexanucleotide expansion (GGGGCC) in patient cells, including white blood cells, fibroblasts, glia, and multiple neuronal cell types (spinal motor, cortical, hippocampal, and cerebellar neurons). RNA foci are not present in sporadic ALS, familial ALS/FTD caused by other mutations (SOD1, TDP-43, or tau), Parkinson disease, or nonneurological controls. Antisense oligonucleotides (ASOs) are identified that reduce GGGGCC-containing nuclear foci without altering overall C9orf72 RNA levels. By contrast, siRNAs fail to reduce nuclear RNA foci despite marked reduction in overall C9orf72 RNAs. Sustained ASO-mediated lowering of C9orf72 RNAs throughout the CNS of mice is demonstrated to be well tolerated, producing no behavioral or pathological features characteristic of ALS/FTD and only limited RNA expression alterations. Genome-wide RNA profiling identifies an RNA signature in fibroblasts from patients with C9orf72 expansion. ASOs targeting sense strand repeat-containing RNAs do not correct this signature, a failure that may be explained, at least in part, by discovery of abundant RNA foci with C9orf72 repeats transcribed in the antisense (GGCCCC) direction, which are not affected by sense strand-targeting ASOs. Taken together, these findings support a therapeutic approach by ASO administration to reduce hexanucleotide repeat-containing RNAs and raise the potential importance of targeting expanded RNAs transcribed in both directions.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

Enhancing nuclear receptor-induced transcription requires nuclear motor and LSD1-dependent gene networking in interchromatin granules.

Qidong Hu; Young-Soo Kwon; Esperanza Nunez; Maria Dafne Cardamone; Kasey R. Hutt; Kenneth A. Ohgi; Ivan Garcia-Bassets; David W. Rose; Christopher K. Glass; Michael G. Rosenfeld; Xiang-Dong Fu

Although the role of liganded nuclear receptors in mediating coactivator/corepressor exchange is well-established, little is known about the potential regulation of chromosomal organization in the 3-dimensional space of the nucleus in achieving integrated transcriptional responses to diverse signaling events. Here, we report that ligand induces rapid interchromosomal interactions among specific subsets of estrogen receptor α-bound transcription units, with a dramatic reorganization of nuclear territories, which depends on the actions of nuclear actin/myosin-I machinery and dynein light chain 1. The histone lysine demethylase, LSD1, is required for these ligand-induced interactive loci to associate with distinct interchromatin granules, long thought to serve as “storage” sites for the splicing machinery, some critical transcription elongation factors, and various chromatin remodeling complexes. We demonstrate that this 2-step nuclear rearrangement is essential for achieving enhanced, coordinated transcription of nuclear receptor target genes.


Molecular Cell | 2012

LIN28 Binds Messenger RNAs at GGAGA Motifs and Regulates Splicing Factor Abundance

Melissa L. Wilbert; Stephanie C. Huelga; Katannya Kapeli; Thomas J. Stark; Tiffany Y. Liang; Stella Chen; Bernice Y. Yan; Jason L. Nathanson; Kasey R. Hutt; Michael Lovci; Hilal Kazan; Anthony Q. Vu; Katlin B. Massirer; Quaid Morris; Shawn Hoon; Gene W. Yeo

LIN28 is a conserved RNA-binding protein implicated in pluripotency, reprogramming, and oncogenesis. It was previously shown to act primarily by blocking let-7 microRNA (miRNA) biogenesis, but here we elucidate distinct roles of LIN28 regulation via its direct messenger RNA (mRNA) targets. Through crosslinking and immunoprecipitation coupled with high-throughput sequencing (CLIP-seq) in human embryonic stem cells and somatic cells expressing exogenous LIN28, we have defined discrete LIN28-binding sites in a quarter of human transcripts. These sites revealed that LIN28 binds to GGAGA sequences enriched within loop structures in mRNAs, reminiscent of its interaction with let-7 miRNA precursors. Among LIN28 mRNA targets, we found evidence for LIN28 autoregulation and also direct but differing effects on the protein abundance of splicing regulators in somatic and pluripotent stem cells. Splicing-sensitive microarrays demonstrated that exogenous LIN28 expression causes widespread downstream alternative splicing changes. These findings identify important regulatory functions of LIN28 via direct mRNA interactions.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

Sensitive ChIP-DSL technology reveals an extensive estrogen receptor α-binding program on human gene promoters

Young-Soo Kwon; Ivan Garcia-Bassets; Kasey R. Hutt; Christine S. Cheng; Mingjie Jin; Dongyan Liu; Christopher Benner; Dong Wang; Zhen Ye; Marina Bibikova; Jian-Bing Fan; Lingxun Duan; Christopher K. Glass; Michael G. Rosenfeld; Xiang-Dong Fu

ChIP coupled with microarray provides a powerful tool to determine in vivo binding profiling of transcription factors to deduce regulatory circuitries in mammalian cells. Aiming at improving the specificity and sensitivity of such analysis, we developed a new technology called ChIP-DSL using the DNA selection and ligation (DSL) strategy, permitting robust analysis with much reduced materials compared with standard procedures. We profiled general and sequence-specific DNA binding transcription factors using a full human genome promoter array based on the ChIP-DSL technology, revealing an unprecedented number of the estrogen receptor (ERα) target genes in MCF-7 cells. Coupled with gene expression profiling, we found that only a fraction of these direct ERα target genes were highly responsive to estrogen and that the expression of those ERα-bound, estrogen-inducible genes was associated with breast cancer progression in humans. This study demonstrates the power of the ChIP-DSL technology in revealing regulatory gene expression programs that have been previously invisible in the human genome.


Brain Research | 2012

Misregulated RNA processing in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis

Magdalini Polymenidou; Clotilde Lagier-Tourenne; Kasey R. Hutt; C. Frank Bennett; Don W. Cleveland; Gene W. Yeo

Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) research is undergoing an era of unprecedented discoveries with the identification of new genes as major genetic causes of this disease. These discoveries reinforce the genetic, clinical and pathological overlap between ALS and frontotemporal lobar degeneration (FTLD). Common causes of these diseases include mutations in the RNA/DNA-binding proteins, TDP-43 and FUS/TLS and most recently, hexanucleotide expansions in the C9orf72 gene, discoveries that highlight the overlapping pathogenic mechanisms that trigger ALS and FTLD. TDP-43 and FUS/TLS, both of which participate in several steps of RNA processing, are abnormally aggregated and mislocalized in ALS and FTLD, while the expansion in the C9orf72 pre-mRNA strongly suggests sequestration of one or more RNA binding proteins in pathologic RNA foci. Hence, ALS and FTLD converge in pathogenic pathways disrupting the regulation of RNA processing. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled RNA-Binding Proteins.


PLOS Genetics | 2013

Decoding a signature-based model of transcription cofactor recruitment dictated by cardinal cis-regulatory elements in proximal promoter regions.

Christopher Benner; Sergiy Konovalov; Carlos Mackintosh; Kasey R. Hutt; Rieka Stunnenberg; Ivan Garcia-Bassets

Genome-wide maps of DNase I hypersensitive sites (DHSs) reveal that most human promoters contain perpetually active cis-regulatory elements between −150 bp and +50 bp (−150/+50 bp) relative to the transcription start site (TSS). Transcription factors (TFs) recruit cofactors (chromatin remodelers, histone/protein-modifying enzymes, and scaffold proteins) to these elements in order to organize the local chromatin structure and coordinate the balance of post-translational modifications nearby, contributing to the overall regulation of transcription. However, the rules of TF-mediated cofactor recruitment to the −150/+50 bp promoter regions remain poorly understood. Here, we provide evidence for a general model in which a series of cis-regulatory elements (here termed ‘cardinal’ motifs) prefer acting individually, rather than in fixed combinations, within the −150/+50 bp regions to recruit TFs that dictate cofactor signatures distinctive of specific promoter subsets. Subsequently, human promoters can be subclassified based on the presence of cardinal elements and their associated cofactor signatures. In this study, furthermore, we have focused on promoters containing the nuclear respiratory factor 1 (NRF1) motif as the cardinal cis-regulatory element and have identified the pervasive association of NRF1 with the cofactor lysine-specific demethylase 1 (LSD1/KDM1A). This signature might be distinctive of promoters regulating nuclear-encoded mitochondrial and other particular genes in at least some cells. Together, we propose that decoding a signature-based, expanded model of control at proximal promoter regions should lead to a better understanding of coordinated regulation of gene transcription.

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Gene W. Yeo

University of California

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Xiang-Dong Fu

University of California

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Anthony Q. Vu

University of California

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David W. Rose

University of California

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John Ravits

University of California

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Young-Soo Kwon

University of California

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