Łukasz M. Boryń
Research Institute of Molecular Pathology
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Featured researches published by Łukasz M. Boryń.
Science | 2013
Cosmas D. Arnold; Daniel Gerlach; Christoph Stelzer; Łukasz M. Boryń; Martina Rath; Alexander Stark
The Regulatory Genome Multicellular organisms contain a variety of cell types that are morphologically and functionally distinct even though they typically contain the same genomic DNA. Differences stem from differential gene expression. Gene regulatory genomic regions (enhancers) are well studied, yet despite major efforts, such as Encode and modEncode, the number of enhancers in animal genomes and their genomic positions, cell-type specificity, and strengths are largely unknown. Arnold et al. (p. 1074, published online 17 January) report a method, termed STARR-seq, that measures the strength of enhancers genome-wide, giving insight into the organization of the regulatory genome. A map of thousands of Drosophila cell type–specific enhancers is revealed using a new method. Genomic enhancers are important regulators of gene expression, but their identification is a challenge, and methods depend on indirect measures of activity. We developed a method termed STARR-seq to directly and quantitatively assess enhancer activity for millions of candidates from arbitrary sources of DNA, which enables screens across entire genomes. When applied to the Drosophila genome, STARR-seq identifies thousands of cell type–specific enhancers across a broad continuum of strengths, links differential gene expression to differences in enhancer activity, and creates a genome-wide quantitative enhancer map. This map reveals the highly complex regulation of transcription, with several independent enhancers for both developmental regulators and ubiquitously expressed genes. STARR-seq can be used to identify and quantify enhancer activity in other eukaryotes, including humans.
Nature | 2015
Philipp Rathert; Mareike Roth; Tobias Neumann; Felix Muerdter; Jae-Seok Roe; Matthias Muhar; Sumit Deswal; Sabine Cerny-Reiterer; Barbara Peter; Julian Jude; Thomas Hoffmann; Łukasz M. Boryń; Elin Axelsson; Norbert Schweifer; Ulrike Tontsch-Grunt; Lukas E. Dow; Davide Gianni; Mark Pearson; Peter Valent; Alexander Stark; Norbert Kraut; Christopher R. Vakoc; Johannes Zuber
Following the discovery of BRD4 as a non-oncogene addiction target in acute myeloid leukaemia (AML), bromodomain and extra terminal protein (BET) inhibitors are being explored as a promising therapeutic avenue in numerous cancers. While clinical trials have reported single-agent activity in advanced haematological malignancies, mechanisms determining the response to BET inhibition remain poorly understood. To identify factors involved in primary and acquired BET resistance in leukaemia, here we perform a chromatin-focused RNAi screen in a sensitive MLL–AF9;NrasG12D-driven AML mouse model, and investigate dynamic transcriptional profiles in sensitive and resistant mouse and human leukaemias. Our screen shows that suppression of the PRC2 complex, contrary to effects in other contexts, promotes BET inhibitor resistance in AML. PRC2 suppression does not directly affect the regulation of Brd4-dependent transcripts, but facilitates the remodelling of regulatory pathways that restore the transcription of key targets such as Myc. Similarly, while BET inhibition triggers acute MYC repression in human leukaemias regardless of their sensitivity, resistant leukaemias are uniformly characterized by their ability to rapidly restore MYC transcription. This process involves the activation and recruitment of WNT signalling components, which compensate for the loss of BRD4 and drive resistance in various cancer models. Dynamic chromatin immunoprecipitation sequencing and self-transcribing active regulatory region sequencing of enhancer profiles reveal that BET-resistant states are characterized by remodelled regulatory landscapes, involving the activation of a focal MYC enhancer that recruits WNT machinery in response to BET inhibition. Together, our results identify and validate WNT signalling as a driver and candidate biomarker of primary and acquired BET resistance in leukaemia, and implicate the rewiring of transcriptional programs as an important mechanism promoting resistance to BET inhibitors and, potentially, other chromatin-targeted therapies.
Genomics | 2015
Felix Muerdter; Łukasz M. Boryń; Cosmas D. Arnold
Differential gene expression is the basis for cell type diversity in multicellular organisms and the driving force of development and differentiation. It is achieved by cell type-specific transcriptional enhancers, which are genomic DNA sequences that activate the transcription of their target genes. Their identification and characterization is fundamental to our understanding of gene regulation. Features that are associated with enhancer activity, such as regulatory factor binding or histone modifications can predict the location of enhancers. Nonetheless, enhancer activity can only be assessed by transcriptional reporter assays. Over the past years massively parallel reporter assays have been developed for large scale testing of enhancers. In this review we focus on the principles and applications of STARR-seq, a functional assay that quantifies enhancer strengths in complex candidate libraries and thus allows activity-based enhancer identification in entire genomes. We explain how STARR-seq works, discuss current uses and give an outlook to future applications.
Nature Methods | 2017
Felix Muerdter; Łukasz M. Boryń; Ashley R. Woodfin; Christoph Neumayr; Martina Rath; Muhammad A. Zabidi; Michaela Pagani; Vanja Haberle; Tomáš Kazmar; Rui R. Catarino; Katharina Schernhuber; Cosmas D. Arnold; Alexander Stark
The identification of transcriptional enhancers in the human genome is a prime goal in biology. Enhancers are typically predicted via chromatin marks, yet their function is primarily assessed with plasmid-based reporter assays. Here, we show that such assays are rendered unreliable by two previously reported phenomena relating to plasmid transfection into human cells: (i) the bacterial plasmid origin of replication (ORI) functions as a conflicting core promoter and (ii) a type I interferon (IFN-I) response is activated. These cause confounding false positives and negatives in luciferase assays and STARR-seq screens. We overcome both problems by employing the ORI as core promoter and by inhibiting two IFN-I-inducing kinases, enabling genome-wide STARR-seq screens in human cells. In HeLa-S3 cells, we uncover strong enhancers, IFN-I-induced enhancers, and enhancers endogenously silenced at the chromatin level. Our findings apply to all episomal enhancer activity assays in mammalian cells and are key to the characterization of human enhancers.
bioRxiv | 2017
Felix Muerdter; Łukasz M. Boryń; Ashley R. Woodfin; Christoph Neumayr; Martina Rath; Muhammad A. Zabidi; Michaela Pagani; Vanja Haberle; Tomáš Kazmar; Rui R. Catarino; Katharina Schernhuber; Cosmas D. Arnold; Alexander Stark
The identification of transcriptional enhancers in the human genome is a prime goal in biology. Enhancers are typically predicted via chromatin marks, yet their function is primarily assessed with plasmid-based reporter assays. Here, we show that two previous observations relating to plasmid-transfection into human cells render such assays unreliable: (1) the function of the bacterial plasmid origin-of-replication (ORI) as a conflicting core-promoter and (2) the activation of a type I interferon (IFN-I) response. These problems cause strongly confounding false-positives and -negatives in luciferase assays and genome-wide STARR-seq screens. We overcome both problems by directly employing the ORI as a core-promoter and by inhibiting two kinases central to IFN-I induction. This corrects luciferase assays and enables genome-wide STARR-seq screens in human cells. Comprehensive enhancer activity profiles in HeLa-S3 cells uncover strong enhancers, IFN-I-induced enhancers, and enhancers endogenously silenced at the chromatin level. Our findings apply to all episomal enhancer activity assays in mammalian cells, and are key to the characterization of human enhancers.
Genome Research | 2014
J. Omar Yáñez-Cuna; Cosmas D. Arnold; Gerald Stampfel; Łukasz M. Boryń; Daniel Gerlach; Martina Rath; Alexander Stark
Molecular Cell | 2014
Daria Shlyueva; Christoph Stelzer; Daniel Gerlach; J. Omar Yáñez-Cuna; Martina Rath; Łukasz M. Boryń; Cosmas D. Arnold; Alexander Stark
Protocol exchange | 2017
Felix Muerdter; Łukasz M. Boryń; Ashley R. Woodfin; Christoph Neumayr; Martina Rath; Muhammad A. Zabidi; Michaela Pagani; Vanja Haberle; Tomáš Kazmar; Rui R. Catarino; Katharina Schernhuber; Cosmas D. Arnold; Alexander Stark
Protocol exchange | 2017
Felix Muerdter; Łukasz M. Boryń; Ashley R. Woodfin; Christoph Neumayr; Martina Rath; Muhammad A. Zabidi; Michaela Pagani; Vanja Haberle; Tomáš Kazmar; Rui R. Catarino; Katharina Schernhuber; Cosmas D. Arnold; Alexander Stark
Protocol exchange | 2017
Felix Muerdter; Łukasz M. Boryń; Ashley R. Woodfin; Christoph Neumayr; Martina Rath; Muhammad A. Zabidi; Michaela Pagani; Vanja Haberle; Tomáš Kazmar; Rui R. Catarino; Katharina Schernhuber; Cosmas D. Arnold; Alexander Stark