Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Maxim Pimkin is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Maxim Pimkin.


Genome Research | 2011

Dynamics of the epigenetic landscape during erythroid differentiation after GATA1 restoration

Weisheng Wu; Yong Cheng; Cheryl A. Keller; Jason Ernst; Swathi Ashok Kumar; Tejaswini Mishra; Christapher S. Morrissey; Christine M. Dorman; Kuan-Bei Chen; Daniela I. Drautz; Belinda Giardine; Yoichiro Shibata; Lingyun Song; Maxim Pimkin; Gregory E. Crawford; Terrence S. Furey; Manolis Kellis; Webb Miller; James Taylor; Stephan C. Schuster; Yu Zhang; Francesca Chiaromonte; Gerd A. Blobel; Mitchell J. Weiss; Ross C. Hardison

Interplays among lineage-specific nuclear proteins, chromatin modifying enzymes, and the basal transcription machinery govern cellular differentiation, but their dynamics of action and coordination with transcriptional control are not fully understood. Alterations in chromatin structure appear to establish a permissive state for gene activation at some loci, but they play an integral role in activation at other loci. To determine the predominant roles of chromatin states and factor occupancy in directing gene regulation during differentiation, we mapped chromatin accessibility, histone modifications, and nuclear factor occupancy genome-wide during mouse erythroid differentiation dependent on the master regulatory transcription factor GATA1. Notably, despite extensive changes in gene expression, the chromatin state profiles (proportions of a gene in a chromatin state dominated by activating or repressive histone modifications) and accessibility remain largely unchanged during GATA1-induced erythroid differentiation. In contrast, gene induction and repression are strongly associated with changes in patterns of transcription factor occupancy. Our results indicate that during erythroid differentiation, the broad features of chromatin states are established at the stage of lineage commitment, largely independently of GATA1. These determine permissiveness for expression, with subsequent induction or repression mediated by distinctive combinations of transcription factors.


Blood | 2014

Lineage and species-specific long noncoding RNAs during erythro-megakaryocytic development

Vikram R Paralkar; Tejaswini Mishra; Jing Luan; Yu Yao; Andrew V. Kossenkov; Stacie M. Anderson; Margaret Dunagin; Maxim Pimkin; Meghneel Gore; Diana Sun; Neeraja Konuthula; Arjun Raj; Xiuli An; Narla Mohandas; David M. Bodine; Ross C. Hardison; Mitchell J. Weiss

Mammals express thousands of long noncoding (lnc) RNAs, a few of which are known to function in tissue development. However, the entire repertoire of lncRNAs in most tissues and species is not defined. Indeed, most lncRNAs are not conserved, raising questions about function. We used RNA sequencing to identify 1109 polyadenylated lncRNAs expressed in erythroblasts, megakaryocytes, and megakaryocyte-erythroid precursors of mice, and 594 in erythroblasts of humans. More than half of these lncRNAs were unannotated, emphasizing the opportunity for new discovery through studies of specialized cell types. Analysis of the mouse erythro-megakaryocytic polyadenylated lncRNA transcriptome indicates that ~75% arise from promoters and 25% from enhancers, many of which are regulated by key transcription factors including GATA1 and TAL1. Erythroid lncRNA expression is largely conserved among 8 different mouse strains, yet only 15% of mouse lncRNAs are expressed in humans and vice versa, reflecting dramatic species-specificity. RNA interference assays of 21 abundant erythroid-specific murine lncRNAs in primary mouse erythroid precursors identified 7 whose knockdown inhibited terminal erythroid maturation. At least 6 of these 7 functional lncRNAs have no detectable expression in human erythroblasts, suggesting that lack of conservation between mammalian species does not predict lack of function.


Molecular Microbiology | 2008

The CBS subdomain of inosine 5’-monophosphate dehydrogenase regulates purine nucleotide turnover

Maxim Pimkin; George D. Markham

Inosine 5′‐monophosphate dehydrogenase (IMPDH) catalyses the rate‐limiting step in guanine nucleotide biosynthesis. IMPDH has an evolutionary conserved CBS subdomain of unknown function. The subdomain can be deleted without impairing the in vitro IMPDH catalytic activity and is the site for mutations associated with human retinitis pigmentosa. A guanine‐prototrophic Escherichia coli strain, MP101, was constructed with the subdomain sequence deleted from the chromosomal gene for IMPDH. The ATP content was substantially elevated in MP101 whereas the GTP content was slighty reduced. The activities of IMPDH, adenylosuccinate synthetase and GMP reductase were two to threefold lower in MP101 crude extracts compared with the BW25113 wild‐type strain. Guanine induced a threefold reduction in the MP101 ATP pool and a fourfold increase in the GTP pool within 10 min of addition to growing cells; this response does not result from the reduced IMPDH activity or starvation for guanylates. In vivo kinetic analysis using 14‐C tracers and 33‐P pulse‐chasing revealed mutation‐associated changes in purine nucleotide fluxes and turnover rates. We conclude that the CBS subdomain of IMPDH may coordinate the activities of the enzymes of purine nucleotide metabolism and is essential for maintaining the normal ATP and GTP pool sizes in E. coli.


Genome Research | 2014

Divergent functions of hematopoietic transcription factors in lineage priming and differentiation during erythro-megakaryopoiesis

Maxim Pimkin; Andrew V. Kossenkov; Tejaswini Mishra; Christapher S. Morrissey; Weisheng Wu; Cheryl A. Keller; Gerd A. Blobel; Dongwon Lee; Michael Beer; Ross C. Hardison; Mitchell J. Weiss

Combinatorial actions of relatively few transcription factors control hematopoietic differentiation. To investigate this process in erythro-megakaryopoiesis, we correlated the genome-wide chromatin occupancy signatures of four master hematopoietic transcription factors (GATA1, GATA2, TAL1, and FLI1) and three diagnostic histone modification marks with the gene expression changes that occur during development of primary cultured megakaryocytes (MEG) and primary erythroblasts (ERY) from murine fetal liver hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells. We identified a robust, genome-wide mechanism of MEG-specific lineage priming by a previously described stem/progenitor cell-expressed transcription factor heptad (GATA2, LYL1, TAL1, FLI1, ERG, RUNX1, LMO2) binding to MEG-associated cis-regulatory modules (CRMs) in multipotential progenitors. This is followed by genome-wide GATA factor switching that mediates further induction of MEG-specific genes following lineage commitment. Interaction between GATA and ETS factors appears to be a key determinant of these processes. In contrast, ERY-specific lineage priming is biased toward GATA2-independent mechanisms. In addition to its role in MEG lineage priming, GATA2 plays an extensive role in late megakaryopoiesis as a transcriptional repressor at loci defined by a specific DNA signature. Our findings reveal important new insights into how ERY and MEG lineages arise from a common bipotential progenitor via overlapping and divergent functions of shared hematopoietic transcription factors.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009

A Regulatory Role of the Bateman Domain of IMP Dehydrogenase in Adenylate Nucleotide Biosynthesis

Maxim Pimkin; Julia Pimkina; George D. Markham

The Bateman domain (CBS subdomain) of IMP dehydrogenase (IMPDH), a rate-limiting enzyme of the de novo GMP biosynthesis, is evolutionarily conserved but has no established function. Deletion of the Bateman domain has no effect on the in vitro IMPDH activity. We report that in vivo deletion of the Bateman domain of IMPDH in Escherichia coli (guaBΔCBS) sensitizes the bacterium to growth arrest by adenosine and inosine. These nucleosides exert their growth inhibitory effect via a dramatic increase in the intracellular adenylate nucleotide pool, which results in the enhanced allosteric inhibition of PRPP synthetase and consequently a PRPP deficit. The ensuing starvation for pyrimidine nucleotides culminates in growth arrest. Thus, deletion of the Bateman domain of IMPDH derepresses the synthesis of AMP from IMP. The growth inhibitory effect of inosine can be rescued by second-site suppressor mutations in the genes responsible for the conversion of inosine to AMP (gsk, purA, and purB) as well as by the prsA1 allele, which encodes a PRPP synthetase that is insensitive to allosteric inhibition by adenylate nucleotides. Importantly, the guaBΔCBS phenotype can be complemented in trans by a mutant guaB allele, which encodes a catalytically disabled IMPDHC305A protein containing an intact Bateman domain. We conclude that the Bateman domain of IMPDH is a negative trans-regulator of adenylate nucleotide synthesis, and that this role is independent of the catalytic function of IMPDH in the de novo GMP biosynthesis.


Genome Research | 2014

Dynamic shifts in occupancy by TAL1 are guided by GATA factors and drive large-scale reprogramming of gene expression during hematopoiesis

Weisheng Wu; Christapher S. Morrissey; Cheryl A. Keller; Tejaswini Mishra; Maxim Pimkin; Gerd A. Blobel; Mitchell J. Weiss; Ross C. Hardison

We used mouse ENCODE data along with complementary data from other laboratories to study the dynamics of occupancy and the role in gene regulation of the transcription factor TAL1, a critical regulator of hematopoiesis, at multiple stages of hematopoietic differentiation. We combined ChIP-seq and RNA-seq data in six mouse cell types representing a progression from multilineage precursors to differentiated erythroblasts and megakaryocytes. We found that sites of occupancy shift dramatically during commitment to the erythroid lineage, vary further during terminal maturation, and are strongly associated with changes in gene expression. In multilineage progenitors, the likely target genes are enriched for hematopoietic growth and functions associated with the mature cells of specific daughter lineages (such as megakaryocytes). In contrast, target genes in erythroblasts are specifically enriched for red cell functions. Furthermore, shifts in TAL1 occupancy during erythroid differentiation are associated with gene repression (dissociation) and induction (co-occupancy with GATA1). Based on both enrichment for transcription factor binding site motifs and co-occupancy determined by ChIP-seq, recruitment by GATA transcription factors appears to be a stronger determinant of TAL1 binding to chromatin than the canonical E-box binding site motif. Studies of additional proteins lead to the model that TAL1 regulates expression after being directed to a distinct subset of genomic binding sites in each cell type via its association with different complexes containing master regulators such as GATA2, ERG, and RUNX1 in multilineage cells and the lineage-specific master regulator GATA1 in erythroblasts.


BMC Biotechnology | 2007

Recombinant nucleases CEL I from celery and SP I from spinach for mutation detection

Maxim Pimkin; Elena Caretti; Adrian Canutescu; Jeffrey B Yeung; Heather Cohn; Yibai Chen; Catherine A. Oleykowski; Alfonso Bellacosa; Anthony T. Yeung

BackgroundThe detection of unknown mutations is important in research and medicine. For this purpose, a mismatch-specific endonuclease CEL I from celery has been established as a useful tool in high throughput projects. Previously, CEL I-like activities were described only in a variety of plants and could not be expressed in an active form in bacteria.ResultsWe describe expression of active recombinant plant mismatch endonucleases and modification of their activities. We also report the cloning of a CEL I ortholog from Spinacia oleracea (spinach) which we termed SP I nuclease. Active CEL I and SP I nucleases were expressed as C-terminal hexahistidine fusions and affinity purified from the cell culture media. Both recombinant enzymes were active in mutation detection in BRCA1 gene of patient-derived DNA. Native SP nuclease purified from spinach is unable to incise at single-nucleotide substitutions and loops containing a guanine nucleotide, but the recombinant SP I nuclease can cut at these sites.ConclusionThe insect cell-expressed CEL I orthologs may not be identical to their native counterparts purified from plant tissues. The present expression system should facilitate further development of CEL I-based mutation detection technologies.


Blood | 2013

The calcineurin-NFAT pathway negatively regulates megakaryopoiesis.

Alexander Zaslavsky; Stella T. Chou; Keri Schadler; Allyson Lieberman; Maxim Pimkin; Yeo Jung Kim; Kwan-Hyuck Baek; William C. Aird; Mitchell J. Weiss; Sandra Ryeom


Advances in Enzymology and Related Areas of Molecular Biology | 2009

Inosine 5′-Monophosphate Dehydrogenase

Maxim Pimkin; George D. Markham


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2006

Characterization of a periplasmic S1-like nuclease coded by the Mesorhizobium loti symbiosis island.

Maxim Pimkin; C. Glenn Miller; Lauryn Blakesley; Catherine A. Oleykowski; Nagendra S. Kodali; Anthony T. Yeung

Collaboration


Dive into the Maxim Pimkin's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Mitchell J. Weiss

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ross C. Hardison

Pennsylvania State University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Tejaswini Mishra

Pennsylvania State University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Cheryl A. Keller

Pennsylvania State University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Gerd A. Blobel

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Weisheng Wu

Pennsylvania State University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge