Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Larysa Pevny is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Larysa Pevny.


Neuron | 2003

SOX2 Functions to Maintain Neural Progenitor Identity

Victoria Graham; Jane Khudyakov; Pamela Ellis; Larysa Pevny

Neural progenitors of the vertebrate CNS are defined by generic cellular characteristics, including their pseudoepithelial morphology and their ability to divide and differentiate. SOXB1 transcription factors, including the three closely related genes Sox1, Sox2, and Sox3, universally mark neural progenitor and stem cells throughout the vertebrate CNS. We show here that constitutive expression of SOX2 inhibits neuronal differentiation and results in the maintenance of progenitor characteristics. Conversely, inhibition of SOX2 signaling results in the delamination of neural progenitor cells from the ventricular zone and exit from cell cycle, which is associated with a loss of progenitor markers and the onset of early neuronal differentiation markers. The phenotype elicited by inhibition of SOX2 signaling can be rescued by coexpression of SOX1, providing evidence for redundant SOXB1 function in CNS progenitors. Taken together, these data indicate that SOXB1 signaling is both necessary and sufficient to maintain panneural properties of neural progenitor cells.


Current Biology | 1998

Generation of purified neural precursors from embryonic stem cells by lineage selection

Meng Li; Larysa Pevny; Robin Lovell-Badge; Austin Smith

Mouse embryonic stem (ES) cells are non-transformed cell lines derived directly from the pluripotent founder tissue in the mouse embryo, the epiblast [1-3]. Aggregation of ES cells triggers the generation of a diverse array of cell types, including neuronal cells [4-7]. This capacity for multilineage differentiation is retained during genetic manipulation and clonal expansion [8]. In principle, therefore, ES cells provide an attractive system for the molecular and genetic dissection of developmental pathways in vitro. They are also a potential source of cells for transplantation studies. These prospects have been frustrated, however, by the disorganised and heterogeneous nature of development in culture. We have therefore developed a strategy for genetic selection of lineage-restricted precursors from differentiating populations. Here, we report that application of such lineage selection enables efficient purification of neuroepithelial progenitor cells that subsequently differentiate efficiently into neuronal networks in the absence of other cell types.


Developmental Neuroscience | 2004

SOX2, a persistent marker for multipotential neural stem cells derived from embryonic stem cells, the embryo or the adult.

Pam Ellis; B. Matthew Fagan; Scott T. Magness; Scott R. Hutton; Olena Taranova; Shigemi Hayashi; Andrew P. McMahon; Mahendra S. Rao; Larysa Pevny

Multipotent neural stem cells are present throughout the development of the central nervous system (CNS), persist into adulthood in defined locations and can be derived from more primitive embryonic stem cells. We show that SOX2, an HMG box transcription factor, is expressed in multipotent neural stem cells at all stages of mouse ontogeny. We have generated transgenic mice expressing enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP) under the control of the endogenous locus-regulatory regions of the Sox2 gene to prospectively identify neural stem/progenitor cells in vivo and in vitro. Fluorescent cells coexpress SOX2 protein, and EGFP fluorescence is detected in proliferating neural progenitor cells of the entire anterior-posterior axis of the CNS from neural plate stages to adulthood. SOX2-EGFP cells can form neurospheres that can be passaged repeatedly and can differentiate into neurons, astrocytes and oligodendrocytes. Moreover, prospective clonal analysis of SOX2- EGFP-positive cells shows that all neurospheres, whether isolated from the embryonic CNS or the adult CNS, express SOX2-EGFP. In contrast, the pattern of SOX2-EGFP expression using randomly integrated Sox2 promoter/reporter construct differs, and neurospheres are heterogeneous for EGFP expression. These studies demonstrate that SOX2 may meet the requirements of a universal neural stem cell marker and provides a means to identify cells which fulfill the basic criteria of a stem cell: self-renewal and multipotent differentiation.


Current Opinion in Genetics & Development | 1997

Sox genes find their feet

Larysa Pevny; Robin Lovell-Badge

The identification of the mammalian testis-determining factor, SRY, led to the description of a new class of genes encoding transcription factors, the SOX gene family. SOX proteins display properties of both classical transcription factors and architectural components of chromatin. The dynamic and diverse patterns of expression of SOX genes and analysis of mutations in humans, mice and Drosophila suggest that SOX factors play key roles in decisions of cell fate during diverse developmental processes.


Mechanisms of Development | 2002

Efficient gene modulation in mouse epiblast using a Sox2Cre transgenic mouse strain

Shigemi Hayashi; Paula Lewis; Larysa Pevny; Andrew P. McMahon

We have generated a transgenic line that expresses the Cre gene product under the regulation of a 12.5 kb upstream regulatory sequence from the Sox2 gene. Using a R26R reporter line, we show that this transgenic line induces recombination in all epiblast cells by embryonic day (E) 6.5 but little or no activity in other extraembryonic cell types at this time. When crossed to a conditional allele of the Sonic hedgehog gene (Shhc), all Sox2Cre;Shhn/Shhc embryos displayed a phenotype indistinguishable from that of the Shh null mutant. Sox2Cre functioned more efficiently in epiblast-mediated recombination than the Mox2Cre (MORE) transgenic line, which has also been shown to drive Cre-mediated recombination exclusively in the embryonic component of the early mouse embryo. Although most MORE; shhh/shhc embryos have a shh hull phenotype, 33% displayed a milder skeletal phenotype, most likely result of incomplete recombination at egg cylinder stages. In agreement with these findings, Sox2Cre was active earlier and Sox2Cre-mediated recombination was more advanced than MORE-mediated recombination at early gastrulation stages. The Sox2Cre line is likely to be more effective in generating complete, epiblast-specific removal of gene activity, and the mosaic activity of the MORE line will be helpful in generating partial loss-of-function phenotypes in the embryo-proper.


Development | 2007

Multiple dose-dependent roles for Sox2 in the patterning and differentiation of anterior foregut endoderm

Jianwen Que; Tadashi Okubo; James R. Goldenring; Ki-Taek Nam; Reiko Kurotani; Edward E. Morrisey; Olena Taranova; Larysa Pevny; Brigid L.M. Hogan

Sox2 is expressed in developing foregut endoderm, with highest levels in the future esophagus and anterior stomach. By contrast, Nkx2.1 (Titf1) is expressed ventrally, in the future trachea. In humans, heterozygosity for SOX2 is associated with anopthalmia-esophageal-genital syndrome (OMIM 600992), a condition including esophageal atresia (EA) and tracheoesophageal fistula (TEF), in which the trachea and esophagus fail to separate. Mouse embryos heterozygous for the null allele, Sox2EGFP, appear normal. However, further reductions in Sox2, using Sox2LP and Sox2COND hypomorphic alleles, result in multiple abnormalities. Approximately 60% of Sox2EGFP/COND embryos have EA with distal TEF in which Sox2 is undetectable by immunohistochemistry or western blot. The mutant esophagus morphologically resembles the trachea, with ectopic expression of Nkx2.1, a columnar, ciliated epithelium, and very few p63+ basal cells. By contrast, the abnormal foregut of Nkx2.1-null embryos expresses elevated Sox2 and p63, suggesting reciprocal regulation of Sox2 and Nkx2.1 during early dorsal/ventral foregut patterning. Organ culture experiments further suggest that FGF signaling from the ventral mesenchyme regulates Sox2 expression in the endoderm. In the 40% Sox2EGFP/COND embryos in which Sox2 levels are ∼18% of wild type there is no TEF. However, the esophagus is still abnormal, with luminal mucus-producing cells, fewer p63+ cells, and ectopic expression of genes normally expressed in glandular stomach and intestine. In all hypomorphic embryos the forestomach has an abnormal phenotype, with reduced keratinization, ectopic mucus cells and columnar epithelium. These findings suggest that Sox2 plays a second role in establishing the boundary between the keratinized, squamous esophagus/forestomach and glandular hindstomach.


Current Opinion in Neurobiology | 2005

SOX genes and neural progenitor identity.

Larysa Pevny; Marysia Placzek

Resident among the highly structured adult nervous system, a few cells, referred to as neural progenitors or stem cells, maintain the ability to self-renew or differentiate. From the time of their specification during neural induction and throughout the building of the nervous system, neural progenitor cells preserve their broad developmental potential and replicative capacity to be able to produce the vast array of neuronal and glial cell types of the mature nervous system as, and when, required. Recently, considerable attention has been focused on identifying the molecular mechanisms responsible for maintaining neural progenitor or stem cell fate throughout ontogeny. The expression of a subset of SOX transcription factors is initiated concomitant with the acquisition of neural progenitor identity and is then maintained in the entire progenitor population of the developing and adult nervous system. Strikingly, studies in the central and peripheral nervous system of chick and mouse have revealed that SOX factors are key regulators of neural progenitor identity, promoting self-renewal in a context-dependent manner by sustaining the undifferentiated state of progenitor cells and maintaining their ability to either proliferate or differentiate.


Cell Stem Cell | 2009

SKPs derive from hair follicle precursors and exhibit properties of adult dermal stem cells.

Jeffrey Biernaskie; Maryline Paris; Olena Morozova; B. Matthew Fagan; Marco A. Marra; Larysa Pevny; Freda D. Miller

Despite the remarkable regenerative capacity of mammalian skin, an adult dermal stem cell has not yet been identified. Here, we investigated whether skin-derived precursors (SKPs) might fulfill such a role. We show that SKPs derive from Sox2(+) hair follicle dermal cells and that these two cell populations are similar with regard to their transcriptome and functional properties. Both clonal SKPs and endogenous Sox2(+) cells induce hair morphogenesis, differentiate into dermal cell types, and home to a hair follicle niche upon transplantation. Moreover, hair follicle-derived SKPs self-renew, maintain their multipotency, and serially reconstitute hair follicles. Finally, grafting experiments show that follicle-associated dermal cells move out of their niche to contribute cells for dermal maintenance and wound-healing. Thus, SKPs derive from Sox2(+) follicle-associated dermal precursors and display functional properties predicted of a dermal stem cell, contributing to dermal maintenance, wound-healing, and hair follicle morphogenesis.


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

Sox2 signaling in prosensory domain specification and subsequent hair cell differentiation in the developing cochlea

Alain Dabdoub; Chandrakala Puligilla; Jennifer M. Jones; Bernd Fritzsch; Kathryn S. E. Cheah; Larysa Pevny; Matthew W. Kelley

Sox2 is a high-mobility transcription factor that is one of the earliest markers of developing inner ear prosensory domains. In humans, mutations in SOX2 cause sensorineural hearing loss and a loss of function study in mice showed that Sox2 is required for prosensory formation in the cochlea. However, the specific roles of Sox2 have not been determined. Here we illustrate a dynamic role of Sox2 as an early permissive factor in prosensory domain formation followed by a mutually antagonistic relationship with Atoh1, a bHLH protein necessary for hair cell development. We demonstrate that decreased levels of Sox2 result in precocious hair cell differentiation and an over production of inner hair cells and that these effects are likely mediated through an antagonistic interaction between Sox2 and the bHLH molecule Atoh1. Using gain- and loss-of-function experiments we provide evidence for the molecular pathway responsible for the formation of the cochlear prosensory domain. Sox2 expression is promoted by Notch signaling and Prox1, a homeobox transcription factor, is a downstream target of Sox2. These results demonstrate crucial and diverse roles for Sox2 in the development, specification, and maintenance of sensory cells within the cochlea.


The International Journal of Biochemistry & Cell Biology | 2010

Sox2 roles in neural stem cells

Larysa Pevny; Silvia K. Nicolis

Throughout vertebrate evolution, Sox2 marks the developing nervous system from its earliest developmental stages and, therein, the most undifferentiated precursor cells, including stem cells. Recent gene targeting studies investigated the function of Sox2 in two neuronal systems: the developing eye and brain. These studies uncovered a requirement for Sox2 in the maintenance of neural stem cells, as well as a downstream role in the differentiation of specific neuron sub-types. In both systems, Sox2 action is markedly dose-dependent, and downstream-target gene studies are beginning to reveal the mechanisms of Sox2 function.

Collaboration


Dive into the Larysa Pevny's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

B. Matthew Fagan

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Mahendra S. Rao

National Institutes of Health

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Scott R. Hutton

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Danielle Matsushima

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Olena Taranova

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Silvia K. Nicolis

University of Milano-Bicocca

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Andrew P. McMahon

University of Southern California

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge