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Dive into the research topics where Ramona Pop is active.

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Featured researches published by Ramona Pop.


Nature Genetics | 2015

Targeted disruption of DNMT1, DNMT3A and DNMT3B in human embryonic stem cells

Jing Liao; Rahul Karnik; Hongcang Gu; Michael J. Ziller; Kendell Clement; Alexander M. Tsankov; Veronika Akopian; Casey A. Gifford; Julie Donaghey; Christina Galonska; Ramona Pop; Deepak Reyon; Shengdar Q. Tsai; William Mallard; J. Keith Joung; John L. Rinn; Andreas Gnirke; Alexander Meissner

DNA methylation is a key epigenetic modification involved in regulating gene expression and maintaining genomic integrity. Here we inactivated all three catalytically active DNA methyltransferases (DNMTs) in human embryonic stem cells (ESCs) using CRISPR/Cas9 genome editing to further investigate the roles and genomic targets of these enzymes. Disruption of DNMT3A or DNMT3B individually as well as of both enzymes in tandem results in viable, pluripotent cell lines with distinct effects on the DNA methylation landscape, as assessed by whole-genome bisulfite sequencing. Surprisingly, in contrast to findings in mouse, deletion of DNMT1 resulted in rapid cell death in human ESCs. To overcome this immediate lethality, we generated a doxycycline-responsive tTA-DNMT1* rescue line and readily obtained homozygous DNMT1-mutant lines. However, doxycycline-mediated repression of exogenous DNMT1* initiates rapid, global loss of DNA methylation, followed by extensive cell death. Our data provide a comprehensive characterization of DNMT-mutant ESCs, including single-base genome-wide maps of the targets of these enzymes.


Nature Biotechnology | 2015

A comparison of genetically matched cell lines reveals the equivalence of human iPSCs and ESCs.

Jiho Choi; Soohyun Lee; William Mallard; Kendell Clement; Guidantonio Malagoli Tagliazucchi; Hotae Lim; In Young Choi; Francesco Ferrari; Alexander M. Tsankov; Ramona Pop; Gabsang Lee; John L. Rinn; Alexander Meissner; Peter J. Park

The equivalence of human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs) and human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) remains controversial. Here we use genetically matched hESC and hiPSC lines to assess the contribution of cellular origin (hESC vs. hiPSC), the Sendai virus (SeV) reprogramming method and genetic background to transcriptional and DNA methylation patterns while controlling for cell line clonality and sex. We find that transcriptional and epigenetic variation originating from genetic background dominates over variation due to cellular origin or SeV infection. Moreover, the 49 differentially expressed genes we detect between genetically matched hESCs and hiPSCs neither predict functional outcome nor distinguish an independently derived, larger set of unmatched hESC and hiPSC lines. We conclude that hESCs and hiPSCs are molecularly and functionally equivalent and cannot be distinguished by a consistent gene expression signature. Our data further imply that genetic background variation is a major confounding factor for transcriptional and epigenetic comparisons of pluripotent cell lines, explaining some of the previously observed differences between genetically unmatched hESCs and hiPSCs.


Science | 2011

Global DNA Demethylation During Mouse Erythropoiesis in Vivo

Jeffrey R. Shearstone; Ramona Pop; Christoph Bock; Patrick Boyle; Alexander Meissner; Merav Socolovsky

Erythroblasts undergoing differentiation into red cells lose one-third of DNA methylation marks at nearly all genomic loci. In the mammalian genome, 5′-CpG-3′ dinucleotides are frequently methylated, correlating with transcriptional silencing. Genome-wide demethylation is thought to occur only twice during development, in primordial germ cells and in the pre-implantation embryo. These demethylation events are followed by de novo methylation, setting up a pattern inherited throughout development and modified only at tissue-specific loci. We studied DNA methylation in differentiating mouse erythroblasts in vivo by using genomic-scale reduced representation bisulfite sequencing (RRBS). Demethylation at the erythroid-specific β-globin locus was coincident with global DNA demethylation at most genomic elements. Global demethylation was continuous throughout differentiation and required rapid DNA replication. Hence, DNA demethylation can occur globally during somatic cell differentiation, providing an experimental model for its study in development and disease.


Nature | 2015

Dissecting neural differentiation regulatory networks through epigenetic footprinting

Michael J. Ziller; Reuven Edri; Yakey Yaffe; Julie Donaghey; Ramona Pop; William Mallard; Robbyn Issner; Casey A. Gifford; Alon Goren; Jeffrey Xing; Hongcang Gu; Davide Cacchiarelli; Alexander M. Tsankov; John L. Rinn; Tarjei S. Mikkelsen; Oliver Kohlbacher; Andreas Gnirke; Bradley E. Bernstein; Yechiel Elkabetz; Alexander Meissner

Models derived from human pluripotent stem cells that accurately recapitulate neural development in vitro and allow for the generation of specific neuronal subtypes are of major interest to the stem cell and biomedical community. Notch signalling, particularly through the Notch effector HES5, is a major pathway critical for the onset and maintenance of neural progenitor cells in the embryonic and adult nervous system. Here we report the transcriptional and epigenomic analysis of six consecutive neural progenitor cell stages derived from a HES5::eGFP reporter human embryonic stem cell line. Using this system, we aimed to model cell-fate decisions including specification, expansion and patterning during the ontogeny of cortical neural stem and progenitor cells. In order to dissect regulatory mechanisms that orchestrate the stage-specific differentiation process, we developed a computational framework to infer key regulators of each cell-state transition based on the progressive remodelling of the epigenetic landscape and then validated these through a pooled short hairpin RNA screen. We were also able to refine our previous observations on epigenetic priming at transcription factor binding sites and suggest here that they are mediated by combinations of core and stage-specific factors. Taken together, we demonstrate the utility of our system and outline a general framework, not limited to the context of the neural lineage, to dissect regulatory circuits of differentiation.


PLOS Biology | 2010

A Key Commitment Step in Erythropoiesis Is Synchronized with the Cell Cycle Clock through Mutual Inhibition between PU.1 and S-Phase Progression

Ramona Pop; Jeffrey R. Shearstone; Qichang Q. Shen; Ying Y. Liu; Kelly Hallstrom; Miroslav Koulnis; Joost Gribnau; Merav Socolovsky

During red blood cell development, differentiation and cell cycle progression are intimately and uniquely linked through interdependent mechanisms involving the erythroid transcriptional suppressor PU.1 and the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p57KIP2.


Nature Biotechnology | 2015

A qPCR ScoreCard quantifies the differentiation potential of human pluripotent stem cells.

Alexander M. Tsankov; Veronika Akopian; Ramona Pop; Sundari Chetty; Casey A. Gifford; Laurence Daheron; Nadejda M. Tsankova; Alexander Meissner

Research on human pluripotent stem cells has been hampered by the lack of a standardized, quantitative, scalable assay of pluripotency. We previously described an assay called ScoreCard that used gene expression signatures to quantify differentiation efficiency. Here we report an improved version of the assay based on qPCR that enables faster, more quantitative assessment of functional pluripotency. We provide an in-depth characterization of the revised signature panel (commercially available as the TaqMan hPSC Scorecard Assay) through embryoid body and directed differentiation experiments as well as a detailed comparison to the teratoma assay. We further show that the improved ScoreCard enables a wider range of applications, such as screening of small molecules, genetic perturbations and assessment of culture conditions. Our approach can be extended beyond stem cell applications to characterize and assess the utility of other cell types and lineages.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011

Developmental Control of Apoptosis by the Immunophilin Aryl Hydrocarbon Receptor-interacting Protein (AIP) Involves Mitochondrial Import of the Survivin Protein

Byoung Heon Kang; Fang Xia; Ramona Pop; Takehiko Dohi; Merav Socolovsky; Dario C. Altieri

Survivin is a multifunctional protein with essential roles in cell division and inhibition of apoptosis, but the molecular underpinnings of its cytoprotective properties are poorly understood. Here we show that homozygous deletion of the aryl hydrocarbon receptor-interacting protein (AIP), a survivin-associated immunophilin, causes embryonic lethality in mice by embryonic day 13.5–14, increased apoptosis of Ter119−/CD71− early erythropoietic progenitors, and loss of survivin expression in its cytosolic and mitochondrial compartments in vivo. In import assays using recombinant proteins, AIP directly mediated the import of survivin to mitochondria, thus enabling its anti-apoptotic function, whereas a survivin 1–141 mutant that does not bind AIP was not imported to mitochondria and failed to inhibit apoptosis. AIP-directed mitochondrial import of survivin did not affect cell division, was independent of the organelle transmembrane potential, did not require the chaperone Heat Shock Protein 90 (Hsp90), and was inhibited by cytosolic factor(s) present in normal cells. shRNA knockdown of the mitochondrial import receptor Tom20 abolished mitochondrial import of survivin and sensitized tumor cells to apoptosis, whereas silencing of Tom70 had no effect. Therefore, an AIP-Tom20 recognition contributes to cell survival in development and cancer by mediating the mitochondrial import of survivin.


Nature Genetics | 2018

Genetic determinants and epigenetic effects of pioneer-factor occupancy

Julie Donaghey; Sudhir Thakurela; Jocelyn Charlton; Jennifer S. Chen; Zachary D. Smith; Hongcang Gu; Ramona Pop; Kendell Clement; Elena K. Stamenova; Rahul Karnik; David R. Kelley; Casey A. Gifford; Davide Cacchiarelli; John L. Rinn; Andreas Gnirke; Michael J. Ziller; Alexander Meissner

Transcription factors (TFs) direct developmental transitions by binding to target DNA sequences, influencing gene expression and establishing complex gene-regultory networks. To systematically determine the molecular components that enable or constrain TF activity, we investigated the genomic occupancy of FOXA2, GATA4 and OCT4 in several cell types. Despite their classification as pioneer factors, all three TFs exhibit cell-type-specific binding, even when supraphysiologically and ectopically expressed. However, FOXA2 and GATA4 can be distinguished by low enrichment at loci that are highly occupied by these factors in alternative cell types. We find that expression of additional cofactors increases enrichment at a subset of these sites. Finally, FOXA2 occupancy and changes to DNA accessibility can occur in G1-arrested cells, but subsequent loss of DNA methylation requires DNA replication.Investigation of FOXA2, GATA4 and OCT4 binding across several cell types provides insights into the genetic determinants and epigenetic effects of pioneer-factor occupancy. The data suggest that FOXA2 samples most of its potential binding sites but is stabilized at only a subset of targets.


Scientific Reports | 2015

In vivo Monitoring of Transcriptional Dynamics After Lower-Limb Muscle Injury Enables Quantitative Classification of Healing

Carlos A. Aguilar; Anna Shcherbina; Darrell O. Ricke; Ramona Pop; Christopher T. Carrigan; Casey A. Gifford; Maria L. Urso; Melissa A. Kottke; Alexander Meissner

Traumatic lower-limb musculoskeletal injuries are pervasive amongst athletes and the military and typically an individual returns to activity prior to fully healing, increasing a predisposition for additional injuries and chronic pain. Monitoring healing progression after a musculoskeletal injury typically involves different types of imaging but these approaches suffer from several disadvantages. Isolating and profiling transcripts from the injured site would abrogate these shortcomings and provide enumerative insights into the regenerative potential of an individual’s muscle after injury. In this study, a traumatic injury was administered to a mouse model and healing progression was examined from 3 hours to 1 month using high-throughput RNA-Sequencing (RNA-Seq). Comprehensive dissection of the genome-wide datasets revealed the injured site to be a dynamic, heterogeneous environment composed of multiple cell types and thousands of genes undergoing significant expression changes in highly regulated networks. Four independent approaches were used to determine the set of genes, isoforms, and genetic pathways most characteristic of different time points post-injury and two novel approaches were developed to classify injured tissues at different time points. These results highlight the possibility to quantitatively track healing progression in situ via transcript profiling using high- throughput sequencing.


Stem cell reports | 2016

Transcriptional and Chromatin Dynamics of Muscle Regeneration after Severe Trauma

Carlos A. Aguilar; Ramona Pop; Anna Shcherbina; Alain Watts; Ronald W. Matheny; Davide Cacchiarelli; Woojin M. Han; Eunjung Shin; Shadi A. Nakhai; Young C. Jang; Christopher T. Carrigan; Casey A. Gifford; Melissa A. Kottke; Marcella Cesana; Jackson Lee; Maria L. Urso; Alexander Meissner

Summary Following injury, adult skeletal muscle undergoes a well-coordinated sequence of molecular and physiological events to promote repair and regeneration. However, a thorough understanding of the in vivo epigenomic and transcriptional mechanisms that control these reparative events is lacking. To address this, we monitored the in vivo dynamics of three histone modifications and coding and noncoding RNA expression throughout the regenerative process in a mouse model of traumatic muscle injury. We first illustrate how both coding and noncoding RNAs in tissues and sorted satellite cells are modified and regulated during various stages after trauma. Next, we use chromatin immunoprecipitation followed by sequencing to evaluate the chromatin state of cis-regulatory elements (promoters and enhancers) and view how these elements evolve and influence various muscle repair and regeneration transcriptional programs. These results provide a comprehensive view of the central factors that regulate muscle regeneration and underscore the multiple levels through which both transcriptional and epigenetic patterns are regulated to enact appropriate repair and regeneration.

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Merav Socolovsky

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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Jeffrey R. Shearstone

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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Daniel Hidalgo

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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