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Dive into the research topics where Olivia Corradin is active.

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Featured researches published by Olivia Corradin.


Science | 2012

Epigenomic Enhancer Profiling Defines a Signature of Colon Cancer

Batool Akhtar-Zaidi; Richard Cowper-Sal·lari; Olivia Corradin; Alina Saiakhova; Cynthia F. Bartels; Dheepa Balasubramanian; Lois Myeroff; James Lutterbaugh; Awad Jarrar; Matthew F. Kalady; Joseph Willis; Jason H. Moore; Paul J. Tesar; Thomas LaFramboise; Sanford D. Markowitz; Mathieu Lupien; Peter C. Scacheri

Colorectal Cancer Signature The mutations and genome aberrations that characterize cancer result in often dramatically altered gene and protein expression patterns. It is these altered expression patterns that directly and indirectly drive progression of the disease. In human primary colorectal cancer cells, Akhtar-Zaidi et al. (p. 736, published online 12 April) analyzed the pattern of epigenetically modified chromatin at “enhancer” sequences that are known to be critical in the control of gene expression. An epigenetic enhancer signature was defined that was specifically associated with colorectal cancer cells. Methylation tags at long-distance gene regulatory elements provide a signature specific to cancer cells. Cancer is characterized by gene expression aberrations. Studies have largely focused on coding sequences and promoters, even though distal regulatory elements play a central role in controlling transcription patterns. We used the histone mark H3K4me1 to analyze gain and loss of enhancer activity genome-wide in primary colon cancer lines relative to normal colon crypts. We identified thousands of variant enhancer loci (VELs) that comprise a signature that is robustly predictive of the in vivo colon cancer transcriptome. Furthermore, VELs are enriched in haplotype blocks containing colon cancer genetic risk variants, implicating these genomic regions in colon cancer pathogenesis. We propose that reproducible changes in the epigenome at enhancer elements drive a specific transcriptional program to promote colon carcinogenesis.


Cell Stem Cell | 2014

Epigenomic Comparison Reveals Activation of “Seed” Enhancers during Transition from Naive to Primed Pluripotency

Daniel C. Factor; Olivia Corradin; Gabriel E. Zentner; Alina Saiakhova; Lingyun Song; Josh G. Chenoweth; Ronald D. G. McKay; Gregory E. Crawford; Peter C. Scacheri; Paul J. Tesar

Naive mouse embryonic stem cells (mESCs) and primed epiblast stem cells (mEpiSCs) represent successive snapshots of pluripotency during embryogenesis. Using transcriptomic and epigenomic mapping we show that a small fraction of transcripts are differentially expressed between mESCs and mEpiSCs and that these genes show expected changes in chromatin at their promoters and enhancers. Unexpectedly, the cis-regulatory circuitry of genes that are expressed at identical levels between these cell states also differs dramatically. In mESCs, these genes are associated with dominant proximal enhancers and dormant distal enhancers, which we term seed enhancers. In mEpiSCs, the naive-dominant enhancers are lost, and the seed enhancers take up primary transcriptional control. Seed enhancers have increased sequence conservation and show preferential usage in downstream somatic tissues, often expanding into super enhancers. We propose that seed enhancers ensure proper enhancer utilization and transcriptional fidelity as mammalian cells transition from naive pluripotency to a somatic regulatory program.


Nature Communications | 2011

ZNF143 provides sequence specificity to secure chromatin interactions at gene promoters

Swneke D. Bailey; Xiaoyang Zhang; Kinjal Desai; Malika Aid; Olivia Corradin; Richard Cowper-Sal·lari; Batool Akhtar-Zaidi; Peter C. Scacheri; Benjamin Haibe-Kains; Mathieu Lupien

Chromatin interactions connect distal regulatory elements to target gene promoters guiding stimulus- and lineage-specific transcription. Few factors securing chromatin interactions have so far been identified. Here, by integrating chromatin interaction maps with the large collection of transcription factor-binding profiles provided by the ENCODE project, we demonstrate that the zinc-finger protein ZNF143 preferentially occupies anchors of chromatin interactions connecting promoters with distal regulatory elements. It binds directly to promoters and associates with lineage-specific chromatin interactions and gene expression. Silencing ZNF143 or modulating its DNA-binding affinity using single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) as a surrogate of site-directed mutagenesis reveals the sequence dependency of chromatin interactions at gene promoters. We also find that chromatin interactions alone do not regulate gene expression. Together, our results identify ZNF143 as a novel chromatin-looping factor that contributes to the architectural foundation of the genome by providing sequence specificity at promoters connected with distal regulatory elements. Chromatin interactions can connect distal regulatory elements to promoters via protein factors, but few such factors have been identified. Here, the authors show that zinc-finger protein ZNF143 is a sequence-specific chromatin-looping factor that connects promoters with distal regulatory elements.


Genome Medicine | 2014

Enhancer variants: evaluating functions in common disease

Olivia Corradin; Peter C. Scacheri

Gene enhancer elements are noncoding segments of DNA that play a central role in regulating transcriptional programs that control development, cell identity, and evolutionary processes. Recent studies have shown that noncoding single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) that have been associated with risk for numerous common diseases through genome-wide association studies frequently lie in cell-type-specific enhancer elements. These enhancer variants probably influence transcriptional output, thereby offering a mechanistic basis to explain their association with risk for many common diseases. This review focuses on the identification and interpretation of disease-susceptibility variants that influence enhancer function. We discuss strategies for prioritizing the study of functional enhancer SNPs over those likely to be benign, review experimental and computational approaches to identifying the gene targets of enhancer variants, and highlight efforts to quantify the impact of enhancer variants on target transcript levels and cellular phenotypes. These studies are beginning to provide insights into the mechanistic basis of many common diseases, as well as into how we might translate this knowledge for improved disease diagnosis, prevention and treatments. Finally, we highlight five major challenges often associated with interpreting enhancer variants, and discuss recent technical advances that may help to surmount these challenges.


Cell Cycle | 2015

Long ncRNA expression associates with tissue-specific enhancers.

Dubravka Vučićević; Olivia Corradin; Evgenia Ntini; Peter C. Scacheri; Ulf Andersson Ørom

Long non-coding RNAs (ncRNA) have recently been demonstrated to be expressed from a subset of enhancers and to be required for the distant regulation of gene expression. Several approaches to predict enhancers have been developed based on various chromatin marks and occupancy of enhancer-binding proteins. Despite the rapid advances in the field, no consensus how to define tissue specific enhancers yet exists. Here, we identify 2,695 long ncRNAs annotated by ENCODE (corresponding to 28% of all ENCODE annotated long ncRNAs) that overlap tissue-specific enhancers. We use a recently developed algorithm to predict tissue-specific enhancers, PreSTIGE, that is based on the H3K4me1 mark and tissue specific expression of mRNAs. The expression of the long ncRNAs overlapping enhancers is significantly higher when the enhancer is predicted as active in a specific cell line, suggesting a general interdependency of active enhancers and expression of long ncRNAs. This dependency is not identified using previous enhancer prediction algorithms that do not account for expression of their downstream targets. The predicted enhancers that overlap annotated long ncRNAs generally have a lower ratio of H3K4me1 to H3K4me3, suggesting that enhancers expressing long ncRNAs might be associated with specific epigenetic marks. In conclusion, we demonstrate the tissue-specific predictive power of PreSTIGE and provide evidence for thousands of long ncRNAs that are expressed from active tissue-specific enhancers, suggesting a particularly important functional relationship between long ncRNAs and enhancer activity in determining tissue-specific gene expression.


Nature Communications | 2017

Hotspots of aberrant enhancer activity punctuate the colorectal cancer epigenome

Andrea Cohen; Alina Saiakhova; Olivia Corradin; Jennifer M. Luppino; Katreya Lovrenert; Cynthia F. Bartels; James J. Morrow; Stephen C. Mack; Gursimran Dhillon; Lydia Beard; Lois Myeroff; Matthew F. Kalady; Joseph Willis; James E. Bradner; Ruth A. Keri; Nathan A. Berger; Shondra M. Pruett-Miller; Sanford D. Markowitz; Peter C. Scacheri

In addition to mutations in genes, aberrant enhancer element activity at non-coding regions of the genome is a key driver of tumorigenesis. Here, we perform epigenomic enhancer profiling of a cohort of more than forty genetically diverse human colorectal cancer (CRC) specimens. Using normal colonic crypt epithelium as a comparator, we identify enhancers with recurrently gained or lost activity across CRC specimens. Of the enhancers highly recurrently activated in CRC, most are constituents of super enhancers, are occupied by AP-1 and cohesin complex members, and originate from primed chromatin. Many activate known oncogenes, and CRC growth can be mitigated through pharmacologic inhibition or genome editing of these loci. Nearly half of all GWAS CRC risk loci co-localize to recurrently activated enhancers. These findings indicate that the CRC epigenome is defined by highly recurrent epigenetic alterations at enhancers which activate a common, aberrant transcriptional programme critical for CRC growth and survival.


Nature Communications | 2018

Rapid functional genetics of the oligodendrocyte lineage using pluripotent stem cells

Angela M. Lager; Olivia Corradin; Jared M. Cregg; Matthew S. Elitt; H. Elizabeth Shick; Benjamin L. L. Clayton; Kevin C. Allan; Hannah E. Olsen; Mayur Madhavan; Paul J. Tesar

Oligodendrocyte dysfunction underlies many neurological disorders, but rapid assessment of mutation-specific effects in these cells has been impractical. To enable functional genetics in oligodendrocytes, here we report a highly efficient method for generating oligodendrocytes and their progenitors from mouse embryonic and induced pluripotent stem cells, independent of mouse strain or mutational status. We demonstrate that this approach, when combined with genome engineering, provides a powerful platform for the expeditious study of genotype–phenotype relationships in oligodendrocytes.The isolation and propagation of oligodendroglial cells from postnatal animals can be impractical for functional genetic studies. This study highlights the potential of a new approach to rapidly generate oligodendrocytes and their progenitors from mouse embryonic and induced pluripotent stem cells, independent of mouse strain or mutational status.


Nature Communications | 2018

Publisher Correction: ZNF143 provides sequence specificity to secure chromatin interactions at gene promoters

Swneke D. Bailey; Xiaoyang Zhang; Kinjal Desai; Malika Aid; Olivia Corradin; Richard Cowper-Sal·lari; Batool Akhtar-Zaidi; Peter C. Scacheri; Benjamin Haibe-Kains; Mathieu Lupien

This corrects the article DOI: 10.1038/ncomms7186.


Genome Research | 2014

Combinatorial effects of multiple enhancer variants in linkage disequilibrium dictate levels of gene expression to confer susceptibility to common traits

Olivia Corradin; Alina Saiakhova; Batool Akhtar-Zaidi; Lois Myeroff; Joseph Willis; Richard Cowper-Sal·lari; Mathieu Lupien; Sanford D. Markowitz; Peter C. Scacheri


Nature Genetics | 2016

Modeling disease risk through analysis of physical interactions between genetic variants within chromatin regulatory circuitry

Olivia Corradin; Andrea Cohen; Jennifer M. Luppino; Ian Bayles; Fredrick R. Schumacher; Peter C. Scacheri

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Peter C. Scacheri

Case Western Reserve University

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Alina Saiakhova

Case Western Reserve University

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Batool Akhtar-Zaidi

Case Western Reserve University

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Joseph Willis

Case Western Reserve University

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Lois Myeroff

Case Western Reserve University

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Paul J. Tesar

Case Western Reserve University

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Sanford D. Markowitz

Case Western Reserve University

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Mathieu Lupien

Princess Margaret Cancer Centre

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Andrea Cohen

Case Western Reserve University

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