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Dive into the research topics where Robbyn Issner is active.

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Featured researches published by Robbyn Issner.


Nature | 2011

Mapping and analysis of chromatin state dynamics in nine human cell types

Jason Ernst; Pouya Kheradpour; Tarjei S. Mikkelsen; Noam Shoresh; Lucas D. Ward; Charles B. Epstein; Xiaolan Zhang; Lili Wang; Robbyn Issner; Michael J. Coyne; Manching Ku; Timothy Durham; Manolis Kellis; Bradley E. Bernstein

Chromatin profiling has emerged as a powerful means of genome annotation and detection of regulatory activity. The approach is especially well suited to the characterization of non-coding portions of the genome, which critically contribute to cellular phenotypes yet remain largely uncharted. Here we map nine chromatin marks across nine cell types to systematically characterize regulatory elements, their cell-type specificities and their functional interactions. Focusing on cell-type-specific patterns of promoters and enhancers, we define multicell activity profiles for chromatin state, gene expression, regulatory motif enrichment and regulator expression. We use correlations between these profiles to link enhancers to putative target genes, and predict the cell-type-specific activators and repressors that modulate them. The resulting annotations and regulatory predictions have implications for the interpretation of genome-wide association studies. Top-scoring disease single nucleotide polymorphisms are frequently positioned within enhancer elements specifically active in relevant cell types, and in some cases affect a motif instance for a predicted regulator, thus suggesting a mechanism for the association. Our study presents a general framework for deciphering cis-regulatory connections and their roles in disease.


Cell | 2013

Transcriptional and epigenetic dynamics during specification of human embryonic stem cells.

Casey A. Gifford; Michael J. Ziller; Hongcang Gu; Cole Trapnell; Julie Donaghey; Alexander M. Tsankov; Alex K. Shalek; David R. Kelley; Alexander A. Shishkin; Robbyn Issner; Xiaolan Zhang; Michael J. Coyne; Jennifer L. Fostel; Laurie Holmes; Jim Meldrim; Mitchell Guttman; Charles B. Epstein; Hongkun Park; Oliver Kohlbacher; John L. Rinn; Andreas Gnirke; Eric S. Lander; Bradley E. Bernstein; Alexander Meissner

Differentiation of human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) provides a unique opportunity to study the regulatory mechanisms that facilitate cellular transitions in a human context. To that end, we performed comprehensive transcriptional and epigenetic profiling of populations derived through directed differentiation of hESCs representing each of the three embryonic germ layers. Integration of whole-genome bisulfite sequencing, chromatin immunoprecipitation sequencing, and RNA sequencing reveals unique events associated with specification toward each lineage. Lineage-specific dynamic alterations in DNA methylation and H3K4me1 are evident at putative distal regulatory elements that are frequently bound by pluripotency factors in the undifferentiated hESCs. In addition, we identified germ-layer-specific H3K27me3 enrichment at sites exhibiting high DNA methylation in the undifferentiated state. A better understanding of these initial specification events will facilitate identification of deficiencies in current approaches, leading to more faithful differentiation strategies as well as providing insights into the rewiring of human regulatory programs during cellular transitions.


Cell | 2011

Combinatorial patterning of chromatin regulators uncovered by genome-wide location analysis in human cells.

Oren Ram; Alon Goren; Ido Amit; Noam Shoresh; Nir Yosef; Jason Ernst; Manolis Kellis; Melissa Gymrek; Robbyn Issner; Michael J. Coyne; Timothy Durham; Xiaolan Zhang; Julie Donaghey; Charles B. Epstein; Aviv Regev; Bradley E. Bernstein

Hundreds of chromatin regulators (CRs) control chromatin structure and function by catalyzing and binding histone modifications, yet the rules governing these key processes remain obscure. Here, we present a systematic approach to infer CR function. We developed ChIP-string, a meso-scale assay that combines chromatin immunoprecipitation with a signature readout of 487 representative loci. We applied ChIP-string to screen 145 antibodies, thereby identifying effective reagents, which we used to map the genome-wide binding of 29 CRs in two cell types. We found that specific combinations of CRs colocalize in characteristic patterns at distinct chromatin environments, at genes of coherent functions, and at distal regulatory elements. When comparing between cell types, CRs redistribute to different loci but maintain their modular and combinatorial associations. Our work provides a multiplex method that substantially enhances the ability to monitor CR binding, presents a large resource of CR maps, and reveals common principles for combinatorial CR function.


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.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2014

Impact of sequencing depth in ChIP-seq experiments

Youngsook L. Jung; Lovelace J. Luquette; Joshua W. K. Ho; Francesco Ferrari; Michael Y. Tolstorukov; Aki Minoda; Robbyn Issner; Charles B. Epstein; Gary H. Karpen; Mitzi I. Kuroda; Peter J. Park

In a chromatin immunoprecipitation followed by high-throughput sequencing (ChIP-seq) experiment, an important consideration in experimental design is the minimum number of sequenced reads required to obtain statistically significant results. We present an extensive evaluation of the impact of sequencing depth on identification of enriched regions for key histone modifications (H3K4me3, H3K36me3, H3K27me3 and H3K9me2/me3) using deep-sequenced datasets in human and fly. We propose to define sufficient sequencing depth as the number of reads at which detected enrichment regions increase <1% for an additional million reads. Although the required depth depends on the nature of the mark and the state of the cell in each experiment, we observe that sufficient depth is often reached at <20 million reads for fly. For human, there are no clear saturation points for the examined datasets, but our analysis suggests 40–50 million reads as a practical minimum for most marks. We also devise a mathematical model to estimate the sufficient depth and total genomic coverage of a mark. Lastly, we find that the five algorithms tested do not agree well for broad enrichment profiles, especially at lower depths. Our findings suggest that sufficient sequencing depth and an appropriate peak-calling algorithm are essential for ensuring robustness of conclusions derived from ChIP-seq data.


Cell | 2017

A Genetic Variant Associated with Five Vascular Diseases Is a Distal Regulator of Endothelin-1 Gene Expression

Rajat M. Gupta; Joseph Hadaya; Aditi Trehan; Seyedeh M. Zekavat; Carolina Roselli; Derek Klarin; Connor A. Emdin; Catharina Re Hilvering; Valerio Bianchi; Christian Mueller; Amit Khera; Russell J.H. Ryan; Jesse M. Engreitz; Robbyn Issner; Noam Shoresh; Charles B. Epstein; Wouter de Laat; Jonathan D. Brown; Renate B. Schnabel; Bradley E. Bernstein; Sekar Kathiresan


BMC Genomics | 2013

Genome-wide Map of Quantified Epigenetic Changes during In vitro Chondrogenic Differentiation of Primary Human Mesenchymal Stem Cells

Sarah R. Herlofsen; Jan Christian Bryne; Torill Høiby; Wang L; Robbyn Issner; Xiaolan Zhang; Michael J. Coyne; Patrick Boyle; Hongcang Gu; Leonardo A. Meza-Zepeda; Philippe Collas; Tarjei S. Mikkelsen; Jan E. Brinchmann


Nature Cell Biology | 2014

Identification of nuclear hormone receptor pathways causing insulin resistance by transcriptional and epigenomic analysis

Sona Kang; Linus T.-Y. Tsai; Yiming Zhou; Adam G. Evertts; Su Xu; Michael J. Griffin; Robbyn Issner; Holly Whitton; Benjamin A. Garcia; Charles B. Epstein; Tarjei S. Mikkelsen; Evan D. Rosen


Cancer Discovery | 2015

Detection of Enhancer-Associated Rearrangements Reveals Mechanisms of Oncogene Dysregulation in B-cell Lymphoma

Russell J.H. Ryan; Yotam Drier; Holly Whitton; M. Joel Cotton; Jasleen Kaur; Robbyn Issner; Shawn M. Gillespie; Charles B. Epstein; Valentina Nardi; Aliyah R. Sohani; Ephraim P. Hochberg; Bradley E. Bernstein


Archive | 2015

Detection of Enhancer-Associated Rearrangements Reveals Mechanisms of Oncogene Dysregulation in B- cell Lymphoma Authors and affiliations:

Yotam Drier; Holly Whitton; M. Joel Cotton; Jasleen Kaur; Robbyn Issner; Shawn M. Gillespie; Charles B. Epstein; Valentina Nardi; Aliyah R. Sohani; Ephraim P. Hochberg; Bradley E. Bernstein

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Jason Ernst

University of California

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Manolis Kellis

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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