Kristin K. Biris
National Institutes of Health
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Featured researches published by Kristin K. Biris.
Development | 2007
William C. Dunty; Kristin K. Biris; Ravindra B. Chalamalasetty; Makoto M. Taketo; Mark Lewandoski; Terry P. Yamaguchi
Somitogenesis is thought to be controlled by a segmentation clock, which consists of molecular oscillators in the Wnt3a, Fgf8 and Notch pathways. Using conditional alleles of Ctnnb1 (β-catenin), we show that the canonical Wnt3a/β-catenin pathway is necessary for molecular oscillations in all three signaling pathways but does not function as an integral component of the oscillator. Small, irregular somites persist in abnormally posterior locations in the absence of β-catenin and cycling clock gene expression. Conversely, Notch pathway genes continue to oscillate in the presence of stabilized β-catenin but boundary formation is delayed and anteriorized. Together, these results suggest that the Wnt3a/β-catenin pathway is permissive but not instructive for oscillating clock genes and that it controls the anterior-posterior positioning of boundary formation in the presomitic mesoderm (PSM). The Wnt3a/β-catenin pathway does so by regulating the activation of the segment boundary determination genes Mesp2 and Ripply2 in the PSM through the activation of the Notch ligand Dll1 and the mesodermal transcription factors T and Tbx6. Spatial restriction of Ripply2 to the anterior PSM is ensured by the Wnt3a/β-catenin-mediated repression of Ripply2 in posterior PSM. Thus, Wnt3a regulates somitogenesis by activating a network of interacting target genes that promote mesodermal fates, activate the segmentation clock, and position boundary determination genes in the anterior PSM.
Development | 2005
Masa Aki Nakaya; Kristin K. Biris; Tadasuke Tsukiyama; Shaulan Jaime; J. Alan Rawls; Terry P. Yamaguchi
The alignment of the left-right (LR) body axis relative to the anteroposterior (AP) and dorsoventral (DV) axes is central to the organization of the vertebrate body plan and is controlled by the node/organizer. Somitogenesis plays a key role in embryo morphogenesis as a principal component of AP elongation. How morphogenesis is coupled to axis specification is not well understood. We demonstrate that Wnt3a is required for LR asymmetry. Wnt3a activates the Delta/Notch pathway to regulate perinodal expression of the left determinant Nodal, while simultaneously controlling the segmentation clock and the molecular oscillations of the Wnt/β-catenin and Notch pathways. We provide evidence that Wnt3a, expressed in the primitive streak and dorsal posterior node, acts as a long-range signaling molecule, directly regulating target gene expression throughout the node and presomitic mesoderm. Wnt3a may also modulate the symmetry-breaking activity of mechanosensory cilia in the node. Thus, Wnt3a links the segmentation clock and AP axis elongation with key left-determining events, suggesting that Wnt3a is an integral component of the trunk organizer.
Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2008
Vitezslav Bryja; Emma R. Andersson; Alexandra Schambony; Milan Esner; Lenka Bryjova; Kristin K. Biris; Anita C. Hall; Bianca Kraft; Lukas Cajanek; Terry P. Yamaguchi; Margaret Buckingham; Ernest Arenas
Lrp5/6 are crucial coreceptors for Wnt/beta-catenin signaling, a pathway biochemically distinct from noncanonical Wnt signaling pathways. Here, we examined the possible participation of Lrp5/6 in noncanonical Wnt signaling. We found that Lrp6 physically interacts with Wnt5a, but that this does not lead to phosphorylation of Lrp6 or activation of the Wnt/beta-catenin pathway. Overexpression of Lrp6 blocks activation of the Wnt5a downstream target Rac1, and this effect is dependent on intact Lrp6 extracellular domains. These results suggested that the extracellular domain of Lrp6 inhibits noncanonical Wnt signaling in vitro. In vivo, Lrp6-/- mice exhibited exencephaly and a heart phenotype. Surprisingly, these defects were rescued by deletion of Wnt5a, indicating that the phenotypes resulted from noncanonical Wnt gain-of-function. Similarly, Lrp5 and Lrp6 antisense morpholino-treated Xenopus embryos exhibited convergent extension and heart phenotypes that were rescued by knockdown of noncanonical XWnt5a and XWnt11. Thus, we provide evidence that the extracellular domains of Lrp5/6 behave as physiologically relevant inhibitors of noncanonical Wnt signaling during Xenopus and mouse development in vivo.
Nature Communications | 2011
Ravindra B. Chalamalasetty; William C. Dunty; Kristin K. Biris; Rieko Ajima; Michelina Iacovino; Arica Beisaw; Lionel Feigenbaum; Deborah L. Chapman; Jeong Kyo Yoon; Michael Kyba; Terry P. Yamaguchi
Segmentation is an organizing principle of body plans. The segmentation clock, a molecular oscillator best illustrated by the cyclic expression of Notch signalling genes, controls the periodic cleavage of somites from unsegmented presomitic mesoderm during vertebrate segmentation. Wnt3a controls the spatiotemporal expression of cyclic Notch genes; however, the underlying mechanisms remain obscure. Here we show by transcriptional profiling of Wnt3a (-/-) embryos that the bHLH transcription factor, Mesogenin1 (Msgn1), is a direct target gene of Wnt3a. To identify Msgn1 targets, we conducted genome-wide studies of Msgn1 activity in embryonic stem cells. We show that Msgn1 is a major transcriptional activator of a Notch signalling program and synergizes with Notch to trigger clock gene expression. Msgn1 also indirectly regulates cyclic genes in the Fgf and Wnt pathways. Thus, Msgn1 is a central component of a transcriptional cascade that translates a spatial Wnt3a gradient into a temporal pattern of clock gene expression.
Developmental Dynamics | 2009
Emma R. Andersson; Lenka Bryjova; Kristin K. Biris; Terry P. Yamaguchi; Ernest Arenas; Vítězslav Bryja
Lrp6 is generally described as a receptor required for signal transduction in the Wnt/β‐catenin pathway. Wnt5a, however, is a Wnt ligand that usually does not activate Wnt/β‐catenin but rather activates noncanonical Wnt signaling. We have previously shown that Lrp6 can inhibit noncanonical Wnt5a/Wnt11 signaling and that Lrp5/6 loss‐of‐function produces noncanonical gain‐of function defects, which can be rescued by loss of Wnt5a. Here, we describe other phenotypes found in Wnt5a/Lrp6 compound mutant mice, including a worsening of individual Wnt5a or Lrp6 loss of function phenotypes. Lrp6 haploinsufficiency in a Wnt5a−/− background caused spina bifida and exacerbated posterior truncation. Wnt5a−/−Lrp6−/− embryos displayed presomitic mesoderm morphogenesis, somitogenesis, and neurogenesis defects, which are much more severe than in either of the single mutants. Interestingly these results reveal a further level of complexity in processes in which Wnt5a and LRP6 cooperate, or oppose each other, during mouse development. Developmental Dynamics 239:237–245, 2010. Published 2009 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.
Developmental Dynamics | 2007
Kristin K. Biris; William C. Dunty; Terry P. Yamaguchi
Somites are blocks of mesoderm that form when segment boundaries are periodically generated in the anterior presomitic mesoderm (PSM). Periodicity is thought to be driven by an oscillating Notch‐centered segmentation clock, whereas boundaries are spatially positioned by the secreted signaling molecules Wnt3a and Fgf8. We identified the putative transcriptional corepressor Ripply2 as a differentially expressed gene in wild‐type and Wnt3a−/− embryos. Here, we show that Ripply2 is expressed in the anterior PSM and that it indeed lies downstream of Wnt3a. Dynamic Ripply2 expression in prospective somites S0 and S‐I overlaps with the rostral expression of cycling genes in the Notch pathway, suggesting that Ripply2 may be controlled by the segmentation clock. Continued expression of Ripply2 in embryos lacking Hes7, a molecular oscillator in the Notch clock, indicates that Hes7 is not a major regulator of Ripply2. Our data are consistent with Ripply2 functioning as a segment boundary determination gene during mammalian embryogenesis. Developmental Dynamics 236:3167–3172, 2007. Published 2007 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.
Methods of Molecular Biology | 2014
Kristin K. Biris; Terry P. Yamaguchi
RNA in situ hybridization is a powerful technique used to identify the spatial localization of a specific RNA in a tissue section or whole tissue. In this protocol, we describe a reliable method for two-color in situ hybridization that can be used to accurately assess the expression of multiple genes with contrasting or overlapping expression patterns in whole mouse embryos.
PLOS Pathogens | 2018
Sakaorat Lertjuthaporn; Claudia Cicala; Donald Van Ryk; Matthew Liu; Jason Yolitz; Danlan Wei; Fatima Nawaz; Allison Doyle; Brooke Horowitch; Chung Park; Shan Lu; Yang Lou; Shixia Wang; Ruimin Pan; Xunqing Jiang; Francois Villinger; Siddappa N. Byrareddy; Philip J. Santangelo; Lynn Morris; Constantinos Kurt Wibmer; Kristin K. Biris; Rosemarie D. Mason; Jason Gorman; Joseph Hiatt; Elena Martinelli; Mario Roederer; Dai Fujikawa; Giacomo Gorini; Genoveffa Franchini; Anush Arakelyan
The GI tract is preferentially targeted during acute/early HIV-1 infection. Consequent damage to the gut plays a central role in HIV pathogenesis. The basis for preferential targeting of gut tissues is not well defined. Recombinant proteins and synthetic peptides derived from HIV and SIV gp120 bind directly to integrin α4β7, a gut-homing receptor. Using both cell-surface expressed α4β7 and a soluble α4β7 heterodimer we demonstrate that its specific affinity for gp120 is similar to its affinity for MAdCAM (its natural ligand). The gp120 V2 domain preferentially engages extended forms of α4β7 in a cation -sensitive manner and is inhibited by soluble MAdCAM. Thus, V2 mimics MAdCAM in the way that it binds to α4β7, providing HIV a potential mechanism to discriminate between functionally distinct subsets of lymphocytes, including those with gut-homing potential. Furthermore, α4β7 antagonists developed for the treatment of inflammatory bowel diseases, block V2 binding to α4β7. A 15-amino acid V2 -derived peptide is sufficient to mediate binding to α4β7. It includes the canonical LDV/I α4β7 binding site, a cryptic epitope that lies 7–9 amino acids amino terminal to the LDV/I, and residues K169 and I181. These two residues were identified in a sieve analysis of the RV144 vaccine trial as sites of vaccine -mediated immune pressure. HIV and SIV V2 mAbs elicited by both vaccination and infection that recognize this peptide block V2-α4β7 interactions. These mAbs recognize conformations absent from the β- barrel presented in a stabilized HIV SOSIP gp120/41 trimer. The mimicry of MAdCAM-α4β7 interactions by V2 may influence early events in HIV infection, particularly the rapid seeding of gut tissues, and supports the view that HIV replication in gut tissue is a central feature of HIV pathogenesis.
Gene Expression Patterns | 2004
Masa-aki Nakaya; Raymond Habas; Kristin K. Biris; William C. Dunty; Yoichi Kato; Xi He; Terry P. Yamaguchi
Developmental Biology | 2011
Ravindra B. Chalamalasetty; William C. Dunty; Kristin K. Biris; Arica Beisaw; Lionel Feigenbaum; Jeong Kyo Yoon; Michael Kyba; Terry P. Yamaguchi