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Dive into the research topics where Nir Friedman is active.

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Featured researches published by Nir Friedman.


Nature | 2006

Stochastic protein expression in individual cells at the single molecule level

Long Cai; Nir Friedman; X. Sunney Xie

In a living cell, gene expression—the transcription of DNA to messenger RNA followed by translation to protein—occurs stochastically, as a consequence of the low copy number of DNA and mRNA molecules involved. These stochastic events of protein production are difficult to observe directly with measurements on large ensembles of cells owing to lack of synchronization among cells. Measurements so far on single cells lack the sensitivity to resolve individual events of protein production. Here we demonstrate a microfluidic-based assay that allows real-time observation of the expression of β-galactosidase in living Escherichia coli cells with single molecule sensitivity. We observe that protein production occurs in bursts, with the number of molecules per burst following an exponential distribution. We show that the two key parameters of protein expression—the burst size and frequency—can be either determined directly from real-time monitoring of protein production or extracted from a measurement of the steady-state copy number distribution in a population of cells. Application of this assay to probe gene expression in individual budding yeast and mouse embryonic stem cells demonstrates its generality. Many important proteins are expressed at low levels, and are thus inaccessible by current genomic and proteomic techniques. This microfluidic single cell assay opens up possibilities for system-wide characterization of the expression of these low copy number proteins.


Nature Biotechnology | 2016

Wishbone identifies bifurcating developmental trajectories from single-cell data

Manu Setty; Michelle D. Tadmor; Shlomit Reich-Zeliger; Omer Angel; Tomer Meir Salame; Pooja Kathail; Kristy Choi; Sean C. Bendall; Nir Friedman; Dana Pe'er

Recent single-cell analysis technologies offer an unprecedented opportunity to elucidate developmental pathways. Here we present Wishbone, an algorithm for positioning single cells along bifurcating developmental trajectories with high resolution. Wishbone uses multi-dimensional single-cell data, such as mass cytometry or RNA-Seq data, as input and orders cells according to their developmental progression, and it pinpoints bifurcation points by labeling each cell as pre-bifurcation or as one of two post-bifurcation cell fates. Using 30-channel mass cytometry data, we show that Wishbone accurately recovers the known stages of T-cell development in the mouse thymus, including the bifurcation point. We also apply the algorithm to mouse myeloid differentiation and demonstrate its generalization to additional lineages. A comparison of Wishbone to diffusion maps, SCUBA and Monocle shows that it outperforms these methods both in the accuracy of ordering cells and in the correct identification of branch points.


PLOS Biology | 2005

Precise temporal modulation in the response of the SOS DNA repair network in individual bacteria.

Nir Friedman; Shuki Vardi; Michal Ronen; Uri Alon; Joel Stavans

The SOS genetic network is responsible for the repair/bypass of DNA damage in bacterial cells. While the initial stages of the response have been well characterized, less is known about the dynamics of the response after induction and its shutoff. To address this, we followed the response of the SOS network in living individual Escherichia coli cells. The promoter activity (PA) of SOS genes was monitored using fluorescent protein-promoter fusions, with high temporal resolution, after ultraviolet irradiation activation. We find a temporal pattern of discrete activity peaks masked in studies of cell populations. The number of peaks increases, while their amplitude reaches saturation, as the damage level is increased. Peak timing is highly precise from cell to cell and is independent of the stage in the cell cycle at the time of damage. Evidence is presented for the involvement of the umuDC operon in maintaining the pattern of PA and its temporal precision, providing further evidence for the role UmuD cleavage plays in effecting a timed pause during the SOS response, as previously proposed. The modulations in PA we observe share many features in common with the oscillatory behavior recently observed in a mammalian DNA damage response. Our results, which reveal a hitherto unknown modulation of the SOS response, underscore the importance of carrying out dynamic measurements at the level of individual living cells in order to unravel how a natural genetic network operates at the systems level.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

CNS-specific immunity at the choroid plexus shifts toward destructive Th2 inflammation in brain aging

Kuti Baruch; Noga Ron-Harel; Hilah Gal; Aleksandra Deczkowska; Eric Shifrut; Wilfred Ndifon; Nataly Mirlas-Neisberg; Michal Cardon; Ilan Vaknin; Liora Cahalon; Tamara Berkutzki; Mark P. Mattson; Fernando Gomez-Pinilla; Nir Friedman; Michal Schwartz

The adaptive arm of the immune system has been suggested as an important factor in brain function. However, given the fact that interactions of neurons or glial cells with T lymphocytes rarely occur within the healthy CNS parenchyma, the underlying mechanism is still a mystery. Here we found that at the interface between the brain and blood circulation, the epithelial layers of the choroid plexus (CP) are constitutively populated with CD4+ effector memory cells with a T-cell receptor repertoire specific to CNS antigens. With age, whereas CNS specificity in this compartment was largely maintained, the cytokine balance shifted in favor of the T helper type 2 (Th2) response; the Th2-derived cytokine IL-4 was elevated in the CP of old mice, relative to IFN-γ, which decreased. We found this local cytokine shift to critically affect the CP epithelium, triggering it to produce the chemokine CCL11 shown to be associated with cognitive dysfunction. Partial restoration of cognitive ability in aged mice, by lymphopenia-induced homeostasis-driven proliferation of memory T cells, was correlated with restoration of the IL-4:IFN-γ ratio at the CP and modulated the expression of plasticity-related genes at the hippocampus. Our data indicate that the cytokine milieu at the CP epithelium is affected by peripheral immunosenescence, with detrimental consequences to the aged brain. Amenable to immunomodulation, this interface is a unique target for arresting age-related cognitive decline.


Nature | 2014

Dynamic and static maintenance of epigenetic memory in pluripotent and somatic cells

Zohar Shipony; Zohar Mukamel; Netta Mendelson Cohen; Gilad Landan; Elad Chomsky; Shlomit Reich Zeliger; Yael Fried; Elena Ainbinder; Nir Friedman; Amos Tanay

Stable maintenance of gene regulatory programs is essential for normal function in multicellular organisms. Epigenetic mechanisms, and DNA methylation in particular, are hypothesized to facilitate such maintenance by creating cellular memory that can be written during embryonic development and then guide cell-type-specific gene expression. Here we develop new methods for quantitative inference of DNA methylation turnover rates, and show that human embryonic stem cells preserve their epigenetic state by balancing antagonistic processes that add and remove methylation marks rather than by copying epigenetic information from mother to daughter cells. In contrast, somatic cells transmit considerable epigenetic information to progenies. Paradoxically, the persistence of the somatic epigenome makes it more vulnerable to noise, since random epimutations can accumulate to massively perturb the epigenomic ground state. The rate of epigenetic perturbation depends on the genomic context, and, in particular, DNA methylation loss is coupled to late DNA replication dynamics. Epigenetic perturbation is not observed in the pluripotent state, because the rapid turnover-based equilibrium continuously reinforces the canonical state. This dynamic epigenetic equilibrium also explains how the epigenome can be reprogrammed quickly and to near perfection after induced pluripotency.


Optics Letters | 2001

Acousto-optic lens with very fast focus scanning

Ariel Kaplan; Nir Friedman; Nir Davidson

We propose and experimentally demonstrate an acousto-optic cylindrical lens with a very fast (400-kHz) focal scanning. The lens is realized by use of two adjacent acousto-optic scanners with counterpropagating acoustic waves that have the same frequency modulation but a pi phase difference. This scheme completely suppresses the lateral scan but adds the linear chirp of the two waves and thus functions as a fast focal-scan lens. We also demonstrate the use of this scanning lens in a very fast confocal profilometer.


PLOS Biology | 2013

Mapping Differentiation under Mixed Culture Conditions Reveals a Tunable Continuum of T Cell Fates

Yaron E. Antebi; Shlomit Reich-Zeliger; Yuval Hart; Avi Mayo; Inbal Eizenberg; Jacob Rimer; Prabhakar Putheti; Dana Pe'er; Nir Friedman

An experimental and theoretical study of T cell differentiation in response to mixed-input conditions reveals that cells can tune between Th1 and Th2 states through a continuum of mixed phenotypes.


Journal of Neuroimmunology | 2010

Glatiramer acetate reduces Th-17 inflammation and induces regulatory T-cells in the CNS of mice with relapsing-remitting or chronic EAE.

Rina Aharoni; Raya Eilam; Ariel Stock; Anya Vainshtein; Elias Shezen; Hilah Gal; Nir Friedman; Ruth Arnon

The aim of this study was to identify cell populations relevant to pathogenesis and repair within the injured CNS in mice that recovered from experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE). We demonstrate that in two EAE models, with either relapsing-remitting or chronic course, T-cells and resident activated microglia manifested extensive IL-17 expression, with apparent localization within regions of myelin loss. In mice treated with glatiramer acetate (GA, Copaxone), even when treatment started after disease exacerbation, CNS inflammation and Th-17 occurrence were drastically reduced, with parallel elevation in T-regulatory cells, indicating the immunomodulatory therapeutic consequences of GA treatment in situ.


Genome Research | 2014

T-cell receptor repertoires share a restricted set of public and abundant CDR3 sequences that are associated with self-related immunity

Asaf Madi; Eric Shifrut; Shlomit Reich-Zeliger; Hilah Gal; Katharine Best; Wilfred Ndifon; Benjamin M. Chain; Irun R. Cohen; Nir Friedman

The T-cell receptor (TCR) repertoire is formed by random recombinations of genomic precursor elements; the resulting combinatorial diversity renders unlikely extensive TCR sharing between individuals. Here, we studied CDR3β amino acid sequence sharing in a repertoire-wide manner, using high-throughput TCR-seq in 28 healthy mice. We uncovered hundreds of public sequences shared by most mice. Public CDR3 sequences, relative to private sequences, are two orders of magnitude more abundant on average, express restricted V/J segments, and feature high convergent nucleic acid recombination. Functionally, public sequences are enriched for MHC-diverse CDR3 sequences that were previously associated with autoimmune, allograft, and tumor-related reactions, but not with anti-pathogen-related reactions. Public CDR3 sequences are shared between mice of different MHC haplotypes, but are associated with different, MHC-dependent, V genes. Thus, despite their random generation process, TCR repertoires express a degree of uniformity in their post-genomic organization. These results, together with numerical simulations of TCR genomic rearrangements, suggest that biases and convergence in TCR recombination combine with ongoing selection to generate a restricted subset of self-associated, public CDR3 TCR sequences, and invite reexamination of the basic mechanisms of T-cell repertoire formation.


Molecular Cell | 2013

Dynamic Response Diversity of NFAT Isoforms in Individual Living Cells

Nissan Yissachar; Tali Sharar Fischler; Ariel Cohen; Shlomit Reich-Zeliger; Dor Russ; Eric Shifrut; Ziv Porat; Nir Friedman

Processing of external information by mammalian cells often involves seemingly redundant isoforms of signaling molecules and transcription factors. Understanding the functional relevance of coexpressed isoforms that respond to the same signal and control a shared set of genes is still limited. Here we show, using imaging of individual living mammalian cells, that the closely related transcription factors NFAT1 and NFAT4 possess distinct nuclear localization dynamics in response to cell stimulation. NFAT4 shows a fast response, with rapid stochastic bursts of nuclear localization. Burst frequency grows with signal level, while response amplitude is fixed. In contrast, NFAT1 has a slow, continuous response, and its amplitude increases with signal level. These diverse dynamical features observed for single cells are translated into different impulse response strategies at the cell population level. We suggest that dynamic response diversity of seemingly redundant genes can provide cells with enhanced capabilities of temporal information processing.

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Nir Davidson

Weizmann Institute of Science

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Shlomit Reich-Zeliger

Weizmann Institute of Science

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Ariel Kaplan

Technion – Israel Institute of Technology

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Eric Shifrut

Weizmann Institute of Science

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L. Khaykovich

Weizmann Institute of Science

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Roee Ozeri

Weizmann Institute of Science

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Irina Zaretsky

Weizmann Institute of Science

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Yaron E. Antebi

Weizmann Institute of Science

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Hilah Gal

Weizmann Institute of Science

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