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Dive into the research topics where Oded Rechavi is active.

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Featured researches published by Oded Rechavi.


Cell | 2011

Transgenerational Inheritance of an Acquired Small RNA-Based Antiviral Response in C. elegans

Oded Rechavi; Gregory Minevich; Oliver Hobert

Induced expression of the Flock House virus in the soma of C. elegans results in the RNAi-dependent production of virus-derived, small-interfering RNAs (viRNAs), which in turn silence the viral genome. We show here that the viRNA-mediated viral silencing effect is transmitted in a non-Mendelian manner to many ensuing generations. We show that the viral silencing agents, viRNAs, are transgenerationally transmitted in a template-independent manner and work in trans to silence viral genomes present in animals that are deficient in producing their own viRNAs. These results provide evidence for the transgenerational inheritance of an acquired trait, induced by the exposure of animals to a specific, biologically relevant physiological challenge. The ability to inherit such extragenic information may provide adaptive benefits to an animal.


Cell | 2014

Starvation-Induced Transgenerational Inheritance of Small RNAs in C. elegans

Oded Rechavi; Leah Houri-Ze’evi; Wee Siong Sho Goh; Sze Yen Kerk; Gregory J. Hannon; Oliver Hobert

Evidence from animal studies and human famines suggests that starvation may affect the health of the progeny of famished individuals. However, it is not clear whether starvation affects only immediate offspring or has lasting effects; it is also unclear how such epigenetic information is inherited. Small RNA-induced gene silencing can persist over several generations via transgenerationally inherited small RNA molecules in C. elegans, but all known transgenerational silencing responses are directed against foreign DNA introduced into the organism. We found that starvation-induced developmental arrest, a natural and drastic environmental change, leads to the generation of small RNAs that are inherited through at least three consecutive generations. These small, endogenous, transgenerationally transmitted RNAs target genes with roles in nutrition. We defined genes that are essential for this multigenerational effect. Moreover, we show that the F3 offspring of starved animals show an increased lifespan, corroborating the notion of a transgenerational memory of past conditions.


Genes & Development | 2009

Cell contact-dependent acquisition of cellular and viral nonautonomously encoded small RNAs

Oded Rechavi; Yaniv Erlich; Hila Amram; Lena Flomenblit; Fedor V. Karginov; Itamar Goldstein; Gregory J. Hannon

In some organisms, small RNA pathways can act nonautonomously, with responses spreading from cell to cell. Dedicated intercellular RNA delivery pathways have not yet been characterized in mammals, although secretory compartments have been found to contain RNA. Here we show that, upon cell contact, T cells acquire from B cells small RNAs that can impact the expression of target genes in the recipient T cells. Synthetic microRNA (miRNA) mimetics, viral miRNAs expressed by infected B cells, and endogenous miRNAs could all be transferred into T cells. These mechanisms may allow small RNA-mediated communication between immune cells. The documented transfer of viral miRNAs raises the possible exploitation of these pathways for viral manipulation of the host immune response.


FEBS Letters | 2009

Intercellular exchange of proteins: The immune cell habit of sharing

Oded Rechavi; Itamar Goldstein

The recent recognition of new types of cell–cell communication pathways challenges classic theories of cell autonomy. Evidence of functional “proteome mixing” among interacting cells, particularly immune cells, supports the notion that no cell is an island, and that even these “unsplittable” units are actually non‐autonomous. We summarize various mechanisms of intercellular transfer of proteins—trans‐endocytosis, trogocytosis, exosomal transport, shuttle through nanotubes, and cell‐contact‐dependent intercellular transfer of intracellular proteins including oncogenic Ras. These phenomena suggest exciting new possibilities for proteome research, focusing on system‐level proteomics that characterize cell contents and functions in the context of intercellular protein transfer.


Cell | 2016

A Tunable Mechanism Determines the Duration of the Transgenerational Small RNA Inheritance in C. elegans.

Leah Houri-Ze’evi; Yael Korem; Hila Sheftel; Lior Faigenbloom; Itai Antoine Toker; Yael Dagan; Lama Awad; Luba Degani; Uri Alon; Oded Rechavi

In C. elegans, small RNAs enable transmission of epigenetic responses across multiple generations. While RNAi inheritance mechanisms that enable memorization of ancestral responses are being elucidated, the mechanisms that determine the duration of inherited silencing and the ability to forget the inherited epigenetic effects are not known. We now show that exposure to dsRNA activates a feedback loop whereby gene-specific RNAi responses dictate the transgenerational duration of RNAi responses mounted against unrelated genes, elicited separately in previous generations. RNA-sequencing analysis reveals that, aside from silencing of genes with complementary sequences, dsRNA-induced RNAi affects the production of heritable endogenous small RNAs, which regulate the expression of RNAi factors. Manipulating genes in this feedback pathway changes the duration of heritable silencing. Such active control of transgenerational effects could be adaptive, since ancestral responses would be detrimental if the environments of the progeny and the ancestors were different.


PLOS ONE | 2007

Intercellular Transfer of Oncogenic H-Ras at the Immunological Synapse

Oded Rechavi; Itamar Goldstein; Helly Vernitsky; Barak Rotblat

Immune cells establish dynamic adhesive cell–cell interactions at a specific contact region, termed the immunological synapse (IS). Intriguing features of the IS are the formation of regions of plasma membrane fusion and the intercellular exchange of membrane fragments between the conjugated cells. It is not known whether upon IS formation, intact intracellular proteins can transfer from target cells to lymphocytes to allow the transmission of signals across cell boundaries. Here we show by both FACS and confocal microscopy that human lymphocytes acquire from the cells they scan the inner-membrane protein H-Ras, a G-protein vital for common lymphocyte functions and a prominent participant in human cancer. The transfer was cell contact-dependent and occurred in the context of cell-conjugate formation. Moreover, the acquisition of oncogenic H-RasG12V by natural killer (NK) and T lymphocytes had important biological functions in the adopting lymphocytes: the transferred H-RasG12V induced ERK phosphorylation, increased interferon-γ and tumor necrosis factor-α secretion, enhanced lymphocyte proliferation, and augmented NK-mediated target cell killing. Our findings reveal a novel mode of cell-to-cell communication—allowing lymphocytes to extend the confines of their own proteome—which may moreover play an important role in natural tumor immunity.


Trends in Cell Biology | 2014

Guest list or black list: heritable small RNAs as immunogenic memories.

Oded Rechavi

Small RNA-mediated gene silencing plays a pivotal role in genome immunity by recognizing and eliminating viruses and transposons that may otherwise colonize the genome. However, individual genomic parasites are highly diverse and employ multiple immune-evasion techniques, making this silencing challenging. Here I review a new theory proposing that the integrity of the germline is maintained by transgenerationally transmitted RNA memories that record ancestral gene expression patterns and delineate self from foreign sequences. To maintain such recollection, two tactics are employed in parallel: black listing of invading nucleic acids and guest listing of endogenous genes. Studies in several organisms have shown that this memorization is used by the next generation of small RNAs to act as inherited vaccines that attack invading elements or as inherited licenses that permit the transcription of autogenous sequences.


Nature Methods | 2010

Trans-SILAC: sorting out the non-cell-autonomous proteome

Oded Rechavi; Matan Kalman; Yuan Fang; Helly Vernitsky; Jasmine Jacob-Hirsch; Leonard J. Foster; Itamar Goldstein

Non-cell-autonomous proteins are incorporated into cells that form tight contacts or are invaded by bacteria, but identifying the full repertoire of transferred proteins has been a challenge. Here we introduce a quantitative proteomics approach to sort out non-cell-autonomous proteins synthesized by other cells or intracellular pathogens. Our approach combines stable-isotope labeling of amino acids in cell culture (SILAC), high-purity cell sorting and bioinformatics analysis to identify the repertoire of relevant non-cell-autonomous proteins. This trans-SILAC method allowed us to discover many proteins transferred from human B to natural killer cells and to measure biosynthesis rates of Salmonella enterica proteins in infected human cells. Trans-SILAC should be a useful method to examine protein exchange between different cells of multicellular organisms or pathogen and host.


Current Biology | 2017

MET-2-Dependent H3K9 Methylation Suppresses Transgenerational Small RNA Inheritance

Itamar Lev; Uri Seroussi; Hila Gingold; Roberta Bril; Oded Rechavi

In C.xa0elegans, alterations to chromatin produce transgenerational effects, such as inherited increase in lifespan and gradual loss of fertility. Inheritance of histone modifications can be induced by double-stranded RNA-derived heritable small RNAs. Here, we show that the mortal germline phenotype, which is typical of met-2 mutants, defective in H3K9 methylation, depends on HRDE-1, an argonaute that carries small RNAs across generations, and is accompanied by accumulated transgenerational misexpression of heritable small RNAs. We discovered that MET-2 inhibits small RNA inheritance, and, as a consequence, induction of RNAi in met-2 mutants leads to permanent RNAi responses that do not terminate even after more than 30 generations. We found that potentiation of heritable RNAi in met-2 animals results from global hyperactivation of the small RNA inheritance machinery. Thus, changes in histone modifications can give rise to drastic transgenerational epigenetic effects, by controlling the overall potency of small RNA inheritance.


Current Biology | 2017

Principles of Transgenerational Small RNA Inheritance in Caenorhabditis elegans

Oded Rechavi; Itamar Lev

Examples of transgenerational inheritance of environmental responses are rapidly accumulating. In Caenorhabditis elegans nematodes, such heritable information transmits across generations in the form of RNA-dependent RNA polymerase-amplified small RNAs. Regulatory small RNAs enable sequence-specific gene regulation, and unlike chromatin modifications, can move between tissues, and escape from immediate germline reprogramming. In this review, we discuss the path that small RNAs take from the soma to the germline, and elaborate on the mechanisms that maintain or erase parental small RNA responses after a specific number of generations. We focus on the intricate interactions between heritable small RNAs and histone modifications, deposited on specific loci. A trace of heritable chromatin marks, in particular trimethylation of histone H3 lysine 9, is deposited on RNAi-targeted loci. However, how these modifications regulate RNAi or small RNA inheritance was until recently unclear. Integrating the very latest literature, we suggest that changes to histone marks may instigate transgenerational gene regulation indirectly, by affecting the biogenesis of heritable small RNAs. Inheritance of small RNAs could spread adaptive ancestral responses.

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Barak Rotblat

Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

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Hila Sheftel

Weizmann Institute of Science

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