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Dive into the research topics where Qian Bian is active.

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Featured researches published by Qian Bian.


Nature | 2015

Condensin-driven remodelling of X chromosome topology during dosage compensation

Emily Crane; Qian Bian; Rachel Patton McCord; Bryan R. Lajoie; Bayly S. Wheeler; Edward J. Ralston; Satoru Uzawa; Job Dekker; Barbara J Meyer

The three-dimensional organization of a genome plays a critical role in regulating gene expression, yet little is known about the machinery and mechanisms that determine higher-order chromosome structure. Here we perform genome-wide chromosome conformation capture analysis, fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH), and RNA-seq to obtain comprehensive three-dimensional (3D) maps of the Caenorhabditis elegans genome and to dissect X chromosome dosage compensation, which balances gene expression between XX hermaphrodites and XO males. The dosage compensation complex (DCC), a condensin complex, binds to both hermaphrodite X chromosomes via sequence-specific recruitment elements on X (rex sites) to reduce chromosome-wide gene expression by half. Most DCC condensin subunits also act in other condensin complexes to control the compaction and resolution of all mitotic and meiotic chromosomes. By comparing chromosome structure in wild-type and DCC-defective embryos, we show that the DCC remodels hermaphrodite X chromosomes into a sex-specific spatial conformation distinct from autosomes. Dosage-compensated X chromosomes consist of self-interacting domains (∼1 Mb) resembling mammalian topologically associating domains (TADs). TADs on X chromosomes have stronger boundaries and more regular spacing than on autosomes. Many TAD boundaries on X chromosomes coincide with the highest-affinity rex sites and become diminished or lost in DCC-defective mutants, thereby converting the topology of X to a conformation resembling autosomes. rex sites engage in DCC-dependent long-range interactions, with the most frequent interactions occurring between rex sites at DCC-dependent TAD boundaries. These results imply that the DCC reshapes the topology of X chromosomes by forming new TAD boundaries and reinforcing weak boundaries through interactions between its highest-affinity binding sites. As this model predicts, deletion of an endogenous rex site at a DCC-dependent TAD boundary using CRISPR/Cas9 greatly diminished the boundary. Thus, the DCC imposes a distinct higher-order structure onto X chromosomes while regulating gene expression chromosome-wide.


Genetics | 2013

Precise and Heritable Genome Editing in Evolutionarily Diverse Nematodes Using TALENs and CRISPR/Cas9 to Engineer Insertions and Deletions

Te-Wen Lo; Catherine S. Pickle; Steven Lin; Edward J. Ralston; Mark Gurling; Caitlin M. Schartner; Qian Bian; Jennifer A. Doudna; Barbara J Meyer

Exploitation of custom-designed nucleases to induce DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) at genomic locations of choice has transformed our ability to edit genomes, regardless of their complexity. DSBs can trigger either error-prone repair pathways that induce random mutations at the break sites or precise homology-directed repair pathways that generate specific insertions or deletions guided by exogenously supplied DNA. Prior editing strategies using site-specific nucleases to modify the Caenorhabditis elegans genome achieved only the heritable disruption of endogenous loci through random mutagenesis by error-prone repair. Here we report highly effective strategies using TALE nucleases and RNA-guided CRISPR/Cas9 nucleases to induce error-prone repair and homology-directed repair to create heritable, precise insertion, deletion, or substitution of specific DNA sequences at targeted endogenous loci. Our robust strategies are effective across nematode species diverged by 300 million years, including necromenic nematodes (Pristionchus pacificus), male/female species (Caenorhabditis species 9), and hermaphroditic species (C. elegans). Thus, genome-editing tools now exist to transform nonmodel nematode species into genetically tractable model organisms. We demonstrate the utility of our broadly applicable genome-editing strategies by creating reagents generally useful to the nematode community and reagents specifically designed to explore the mechanism and evolution of X chromosome dosage compensation. By developing an efficient pipeline involving germline injection of nuclease mRNAs and single-stranded DNA templates, we engineered precise, heritable nucleotide changes both close to and far from DSBs to gain or lose genetic function, to tag proteins made from endogenous genes, and to excise entire loci through targeted FLP-FRT recombination.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2013

β-Globin cis-elements determine differential nuclear targeting through epigenetic modifications

Qian Bian; Nimish Khanna; Jurgis Alvikas; Andrew S. Belmont

Multiple cis-elements surrounding the β-globin gene locus combine to target this locus to the nuclear periphery through at least two different epigenetic marks.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2010

Dynamic plasticity of large-scale chromatin structure revealed by self-assembly of engineered chromosome regions

Paul Sinclair; Qian Bian; Matt Plutz; Edith Heard; Andrew S. Belmont

Folding of gene loci organized in tandem arrays reveals variation of chromatin structure as a function of cell differentiation.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2010

BAC TG-EMBED: one-step method for high-level, copy-number-dependent, position-independent transgene expression

Qian Bian; Andrew S. Belmont

Chromosome position effects combined with transgene silencing of multi-copy plasmid insertions lead to highly variable and usually quite low expression levels of mini-genes integrated into mammalian chromosomes. Together, these effects greatly complicate obtaining high-level expression of therapeutic proteins in mammalian cells or reproducible expression of individual or multiple transgenes. Here, we report a simple, one-step procedure for obtaining high-level, reproducible mini-gene expression in mammalian cells. By inserting mini-genes at different locations within a BAC containing the DHFR housekeeping gene locus, we obtain copy-number-dependent, position-independent expression with chromosomal insertions of one to several hundred BAC copies. These multi-copy DHFR BAC insertions adopt similar large-scale chromatin conformations independent of their chromosome integration site, including insertions within centromeric heterochromatin. Prevention of chromosome position effects, therefore, may be the result of embedding the mini-gene within the BAC-specific large-scale chromatin structure. The expression of reporter mini-genes can be stably maintained during continuous, long-term culture in the presence of drug selection. Finally, we show that this method is extendable to reproducible, high-level expression of multiple mini-genes, providing improved expression of both single and multiple transgenes.


Cold Spring Harbor Symposia on Quantitative Biology | 2010

Insights into interphase large-scale chromatin structure from analysis of engineered chromosome regions

Andrew S. Belmont; Yan Hu; Paul Sinclair; Wei Wu; Qian Bian; Igor Kireev

How chromatin folds into mitotic and interphase chromosomes has remained a difficult question for many years. We have used three generations of engineered chromosome regions as a means of visualizing specific chromosome regions in live cells and cells fixed under conditions that preserve large-scale chromatin structure. Our results confirm the existence of large-scale chromatin domains and fibers formed by the folding of 10-nm and 30-nm chromatin fibers into larger, spatially distinct domains. Transcription at levels within severalfold of the levels measured for endogenous loci occur within these large-scale chromatin structures on a condensed template linearly compacted several hundred fold to 1000-fold relative to B-form DNA. However, transcriptional induction is accompanied by a severalfold decondensation of this large-scale chromatin structure that propagates hundreds of kilobases beyond the induced gene. Examination of engineered chromosome regions in mouse embryonic stem cells (ESCs) and differentiated cells suggests a surprising degree of plasticity in this large-scale chromatin structure, allowing long-range DNA interactions within the context of large-scale chromatin fibers. Recapitulation of gene-specific differences in large-scale chromatin conformation and nuclear positioning using these engineered chromosome regions will facilitate identification of cis and trans determinants of interphase chromosome architecture.


eLife | 2016

Chromosome-wide mechanisms to decouple gene expression from gene dose during sex-chromosome evolution

Bayly S. Wheeler; Erika Anderson; Christian Frøkjær-Jensen; Qian Bian; Erik M. Jorgensen; Barbara J Meyer

Changes in chromosome number impair fitness by disrupting the balance of gene expression. Here we analyze mechanisms to compensate for changes in gene dose that accompanied the evolution of sex chromosomes from autosomes. Using single-copy transgenes integrated throughout the Caenorhabditis elegans genome, we show that expression of all X-linked transgenes is balanced between XX hermaphrodites and XO males. However, proximity of a dosage compensation complex (DCC) binding site (rex site) is neither necessary to repress X-linked transgenes nor sufficient to repress transgenes on autosomes. Thus, X is broadly permissive for dosage compensation, and the DCC acts via a chromosome-wide mechanism to balance transcription between sexes. In contrast, no analogous X-chromosome-wide mechanism balances transcription between X and autosomes: expression of compensated hermaphrodite X-linked transgenes is half that of autosomal transgenes. Furthermore, our results argue against an X-chromosome dosage compensation model contingent upon rex-directed positioning of X relative to the nuclear periphery. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.17365.001


Cold Spring Harbor Symposia on Quantitative Biology | 2017

Dynamic Control of Chromosome Topology and Gene Expression by a Chromatin Modification

Qian Bian; Erika Anderson; Katjuša Brejc; Barbara J Meyer

The function of chromatin modification in establishing higher-order chromosome structure during gene regulation has been elusive. We dissected the machinery and mechanism underlying the enrichment of histone modification H4K20me1 on hermaphrodite X chromosomes during Caenorhabditis elegans dosage compensation and discovered a key role for H4K20me1 in regulating X-chromosome topology and chromosome-wide gene expression. Structural and functional analysis of the dosage compensation complex (DCC) subunit DPY-21 revealed a novel Jumonji C demethylase subfamily that converts H4K20me2 to H4K20me1 in worms and mammals. Inactivation of demethylase activity in vivo by genome editing eliminated H4K20me1 enrichment on X chromosomes of somatic cells, increased X-linked gene expression, reduced X-chromosome compaction, and disrupted X-chromosome conformation by diminishing the formation of topologically associated domains. H4K20me1 is also enriched on the inactive X of female mice, making our studies directly relevant to mammalian development. Unexpectedly, DPY-21 also associates specifically with autosomes of nematode germ cells in a DCC-independent manner to enrich H4K20me1 and trigger chromosome compaction. Thus, DPY-21 is an adaptable chromatin regulator. Its H4K20me2 demethylase activity can be harnessed during development for distinct biological functions by targeting it to diverse genomic locations through different mechanisms. In both somatic cells and germ cells, H4K20me1 enrichment modulates three-dimensional chromosome architecture, demonstrating the direct link between chromatin modification and higher-order chromosome structure.


Cell | 2016

Mitochondrial Stress Induces Chromatin Reorganization to Promote Longevity and UPRmt

Ye Tian; Gilberto Garcia; Qian Bian; Kristan K. Steffen; Larry Joe; Suzanne Wolff; Barbara J Meyer; Andrew Dillin


Current Opinion in Cell Biology | 2012

Revisiting Higher-order and Large-scale Chromatin Organization

Qian Bian; Andrew S. Belmont

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Erika Anderson

University of California

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Katjuša Brejc

University of California

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Satoru Uzawa

University of California

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Andrew Dillin

University of California

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Bryan R. Lajoie

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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