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Dive into the research topics where M. Azim Surani is active.

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Featured researches published by M. Azim Surani.


Mechanisms of Development | 2002

Epigenetic reprogramming in mouse primordial germ cells

Petra Hajkova; Sylvia Erhardt; Natasha Lane; Thomas Haaf; Osman El-Maarri; Wolf Reik; Jörn Walter; M. Azim Surani

Genome-wide epigenetic reprogramming in mammalian germ cells, zygote and early embryos, plays a crucial role in regulating genome functions at critical stages of development. We show here that mouse primordial germ cells (PGCs) exhibit dynamic changes in epigenetic modifications between days 10.5 and 12.5 post coitum (dpc). First, contrary to previous suggestions, we show that PGCs do indeed acquire genome-wide de novo methylation during early development and migration into the genital ridge. However, following their entry into the genital ridge, there is rapid erasure of DNA methylation of regions within imprinted and non-imprinted loci. For most genes, the erasure commences simultaneously in PGCs in both male and female embryos, which is completed within 1 day of development. Based on the kinetics of this process, we suggest that this is an active demethylation process initiated upon the entry of PGCs into the gonadal anlagen. The timing of reprogramming in PGCs is crucial since it ensures that germ cells of both sexes acquire an equivalent epigenetic state prior to the differentiation of the definitive male and female germ cells in which new parental imprints are established subsequently. Some repetitive elements, however, show incomplete erasure, which may be essential for chromosome stability and for preventing activation of transposons to reduce the risk of germline mutations. Aberrant epigenetic reprogramming in the germ line would cause the inheritance of epimutations that may have consequences for human diseases as suggested by studies on mouse models.


Nature Methods | 2009

mRNA-Seq whole-transcriptome analysis of a single cell.

Fuchou Tang; Catalin Barbacioru; Yangzhou Wang; Ellen Nordman; Clarence Lee; Nanlan Xu; Xiaohui Wang; John Bodeau; Brian B. Tuch; Asim Siddiqui; Kaiqin Lao; M. Azim Surani

Next-generation sequencing technology is a powerful tool for transcriptome analysis. However, under certain conditions, only a small amount of material is available, which requires more sensitive techniques that can preferably be used at the single-cell level. Here we describe a single-cell digital gene expression profiling assay. Using our mRNA-Seq assay with only a single mouse blastomere, we detected the expression of 75% (5,270) more genes than microarray techniques and identified 1,753 previously unknown splice junctions called by at least 5 reads. Moreover, 8–19% of the genes with multiple known transcript isoforms expressed at least two isoforms in the same blastomere or oocyte, which unambiguously demonstrated the complexity of the transcript variants at whole-genome scale in individual cells. Finally, for Dicer1−/− and Ago2−/− (Eif2c2−/−) oocytes, we found that 1,696 and 1,553 genes, respectively, were abnormally upregulated compared to wild-type controls, with 619 genes in common.


Nature | 2005

Blimp1 is a critical determinant of the germ cell lineage in mice

Yasuhide Ohinata; Bernhard Payer; Dónal O'Carroll; Katia Ancelin; Yukiko Ono; Mitsue Sano; Sheila C. Barton; Tetyana V. Obukhanych; Michel C. Nussenzweig; Alexander Tarakhovsky; Mitinori Saitou; M. Azim Surani

Germ cell fate in mice is induced in pluripotent epiblast cells in response to signals from extraembryonic tissues. The specification of approximately 40 founder primordial germ cells and their segregation from somatic neighbours are important events in early development. We have proposed that a critical event during this specification includes repression of a somatic programme that is adopted by neighbouring cells. Here we show that Blimp1 (also known as Prdm1), a known transcriptional repressor, has a critical role in the foundation of the mouse germ cell lineage, as its disruption causes a block early in the process of primordial germ cell formation. Blimp1-deficient mutant embryos form a tight cluster of about 20 primordial germ cell-like cells, which fail to show the characteristic migration, proliferation and consistent repression of homeobox genes that normally accompany specification of primordial germ cells. Furthermore, our genetic lineage-tracing experiments indicate that the Blimp1-positive cells originating from the proximal posterior epiblast cells are indeed the lineage-restricted primordial germ cell precursors.


Cell | 2007

Genetic and Epigenetic Regulators of Pluripotency

M. Azim Surani; Katsuhiko Hayashi; Petra Hajkova

Genetic and epigenetic mechanisms regulate the transition from the totipotent zygote to pluripotent primitive ectoderm cells in the inner cell mass of mouse blastocysts. These pluripotent cells can be propagated indefinitely in vitro, underpinned by a unique epigenetic state. Following implantation of the blastocyst, diverse epigenetic modifiers control differentiation of pluripotent epiblast cells into somatic cells, while specification of germ cells requires repression of the somatic program. Regenerating totipotency during development of germ cells entails re-expression of pluripotency-specific genes and extensive erasure of epigenetic modifications. Increasing knowledge of key underlying mechanisms heightens prospects for creating pluripotent cells directly from adult somatic cells.


Nature | 2008

Chromatin dynamics during epigenetic reprogramming in the mouse germ line

Petra Hajkova; Katia Ancelin; Tanja Waldmann; Nicolas Lacoste; Ulrike C. Lange; Francesca Cesari; Caroline Lee; Geneviève Almouzni; Robert Schneider; M. Azim Surani

A unique feature of the germ cell lineage is the generation of totipotency. A critical event in this context is DNA demethylation and the erasure of parental imprints in mouse primordial germ cells (PGCs) on embryonic day 11.5 (E11.5) after they enter into the developing gonads. Little is yet known about the mechanism involved, except that it is apparently an active process. We have examined the associated changes in the chromatin to gain further insights into this reprogramming event. Here we show that the chromatin changes occur in two steps. The first changes in nascent PGCs at E8.5 establish a distinctive chromatin signature that is reminiscent of pluripotency. Next, when PGCs are residing in the gonads, major changes occur in nuclear architecture accompanied by an extensive erasure of several histone modifications and exchange of histone variants. Furthermore, the histone chaperones HIRA and NAP-1 (NAP111), which are implicated in histone exchange, accumulate in PGC nuclei undergoing reprogramming. We therefore suggest that the mechanism of histone replacement is critical for these chromatin rearrangements to occur. The marked chromatin changes are intimately linked with genome-wide DNA demethylation. On the basis of the timing of the observed events, we propose that if DNA demethylation entails a DNA repair-based mechanism, the evident histone replacement would represent a repair-induced response event rather than being a prerequisite.


Nature Genetics | 1998

Abnormal maternal behaviour and growth retardation associated with loss of the imprinted gene Mest

Louis Lefebvre; Stéphane Viville; Sheila C. Barton; Fumitoshi Ishino; Eric B. Keverne; M. Azim Surani

Mest (also known as Peg1), an imprinted gene expressed only from the paternal allele during development, was disrupted by gene targeting in embryonic stem (ES) cells. The targeted mutation is imprinted and reversibly silenced by passage through the female germ line. Paternal transmission activates the targeted allele and causes embryonic growth retardation associated with reduced postnatal survival rates in mutant progeny. More significantly, Mest-deficient females show abnormal maternal behaviour and impaired placentophagia, a distinctive mammalian behaviour. Our results provide evidence for the involvement of an imprinted gene in the control of adult behaviour.


Cell Stem Cell | 2008

Dynamic Equilibrium and Heterogeneity of Mouse Pluripotent Stem Cells with Distinct Functional and Epigenetic States

Katsuhiko Hayashi; Susana M. Chuva de Sousa Lopes; Fuchou Tang; M. Azim Surani

Embryonic stem cells (ESCs) are apparently homogeneous self-renewing cells, but we observed heterogeneous expression of Stella in ESCs, which is a marker of pluripotency and germ cells. Here we show that, whereas Stella-positive ESCs were like the inner cell mass (ICM), Stella-negative cells were like the epiblast cells. These states were interchangeable, which reflects the metastability and plasticity of ESCs. The established equilibrium was skewed reversibly in the absence of signals from feeder cells, which caused a marked shift toward an epiblast-like state, while trichostatin A, an inhibitor of histone deactelylase, restored Stella-positive population. The two populations also showed different histone modifications and striking functional differences, as judged by their potential for differentiation. The Stella-negative ESCs were more like the postimplantation epiblast-derived stem cells (EpiSCs), albeit the stella locus was repressed by DNA methylation in the latter, which signifies a robust epigenetic boundary between ESCs and EpiSCs.


Nature | 2000

Eomesodermin is required for mouse trophoblast development and mesoderm formation.

Andreas Russ; Sigrid Wattler; William H. Colledge; Samuel Aparicio; Mark B. L. Carlton; Jonathan J.H. Pearce; Sheila C. Barton; M. Azim Surani; Kenneth Ryan; Michael Nehls; Valerie Wilson; Martin J. Evans

The earliest cell fate decision in the mammalian embryo separates the extra-embryonic trophoblast lineage, which forms the fetal portion of the placenta, from the embryonic cell lineages. The body plan of the embryo proper is established only later at gastrulation, when the pluripotent epiblast gives rise to the germ layers ectoderm, mesoderm and endoderm. Here we show that the T-box gene Eomesodermin performs essential functions in both trophoblast development and gastrulation. Mouse embryos lacking Eomesodermin arrest at the blastocyst stage. Mutant trophoectoderm does not differentiate into trophoblast, indicating that Eomesodermin may be required for the development of trophoblast stem cells. In the embryo proper, Eomesodermin is essential for mesoderm formation. Although the specification of the anterior–posterior axis and the initial response to mesoderm-inducing signals is intact in mutant epiblasts, the prospective mesodermal cells are not recruited into the primitive streak. Our results indicate that Eomesodermin defines a conserved molecular pathway controlling the morphogenetic movements of germ layer formation and has acquired a new function in mammals in the differentiation of trophoblast.


The EMBO Journal | 1997

Embryonic germ cells induce epigenetic reprogramming of somatic nucleus in hybrid cells

Masako Tada; Takashi Tada; Louis Lefebvre; Sheila C. Barton; M. Azim Surani

Genomic reprogramming of primordial germ cells (PGCs), which includes genome‐wide demethylation, prevents aberrant epigenetic modifications from being transmitted to subsequent generations. This process also ensures that homologous chromosomes first acquire an identical epigenetic status before an appropriate switch in the imprintable loci in the female and male germ lines. Embryonic germ (EG) cells have a similar epigenotype to PGCs from which they are derived. We used EG cells to investigate the mechanism of epigenetic modifications in the germ line by analysing the effects on a somatic nucleus in the EG‐thymic lymphocyte hybrid cells. There were striking changes in methylation of the somatic nucleus, resulting in demethylation of several imprinted and non‐imprinted genes. These epigenetic modifications were heritable and affected gene expression as judged by re‐activation of the silent maternal allele of Peg1/Mest imprinted gene in the somatic nucleus. This remarkable change in the epigenotype of the somatic nucleus is consistent with the observed pluripotency of the EG‐somatic hybrid cells as they differentiated into a variety of tissues in chimeric embryos. The epigenetic modifications observed in EG‐somatic cell hybrids in vitro are comparable to the reprogramming events that occur during germ cell development.


Science | 2010

Genome-Wide Reprogramming in the Mouse Germ Line Entails the Base Excision Repair Pathway

Petra Hajkova; Sean J. Jeffries; Caroline G. Lee; Nigel Miller; M. Azim Surani

Erasing Markers Epigenetic reprogramming of the mammalian genome, which involves the removal and replacement of the various regulatory epigenetic marks such as DNA methylation, occurs during germ cell differentiation and during early zygotic development. This process is also critical during the experimental generation of stem cells, but the factors and pathways that control epigenetic reprogramming are not well understood. Hajkova et al. (p. 78) investigated the erasure of DNA methylation during germ cell differentiation and during early zygotic development in the developing mouse and found that factors involved in the base excision repair (BER) pathway, which helps repair damaged DNA, were involved. Furthermore, inhibitors of BER resulted in the retention of DNA methylation in the zygote. Removing epigenetic marks early in mammalian development involves a DNA damage repair pathway. Genome-wide active DNA demethylation in primordial germ cells (PGCs), which reprograms the epigenome for totipotency, is linked to changes in nuclear architecture, loss of histone modifications, and widespread histone replacement. Here, we show that DNA demethylation in the mouse PGCs is mechanistically linked to the appearance of single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) breaks and the activation of the base excision repair (BER) pathway, as is the case in the zygote where the paternal pronucleus undergoes active DNA demethylation shortly after fertilization. Whereas BER might be triggered by deamination of a methylcytosine (5mC), cumulative evidence indicates other mechanisms in germ cells. We demonstrate that DNA repair through BER represents a core component of genome-wide DNA demethylation in vivo and provides a mechanistic link to the extensive chromatin remodeling in developing PGCs.

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Caroline Lee

University of Cambridge

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Naoko Irie

University of Cambridge

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Siqin Bao

Inner Mongolia University

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