Scot A. Wolfe
University of Massachusetts Medical School
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Featured researches published by Scot A. Wolfe.
Nature Biotechnology | 2008
Xiangdong Meng; Marcus Blaine Noyes; Lihua Julie Zhu; Nathan D. Lawson; Scot A. Wolfe
Direct genomic manipulation at a specific locus is still not feasible in most vertebrate model organisms. In vertebrate cell lines, genomic lesions at a specific site have been introduced using zinc-finger nucleases (ZFNs). Here we adapt this technology to create targeted mutations in the zebrafish germ line. ZFNs were engineered that recognize sequences in the zebrafish ortholog of the vascular endothelial growth factor-2 receptor, kdr (also known as kdra). Co-injection of mRNAs encoding these ZFNs into one-cell-stage zebrafish embryos led to mutagenic lesions at the target site that were transmitted through the germ line with high frequency. The use of engineered ZFNs to introduce heritable mutations into a genome obviates the need for embryonic stem cell lines and should be applicable to most animal species for which early-stage embryos are easily accessible.
Science | 2010
Daniel Cifuentes; Huiling Xue; David W. Taylor; Heather Patnode; Yuichiro Mishima; Sihem Cheloufi; Enbo Ma; Shrikant Mane; Gregory J. Hannon; Nathan D. Lawson; Scot A. Wolfe; Antonio J. Giraldez
No Dicer for Me MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are small noncoding RNAs found in most eukaryotes. Most are processed from primary transcripts in the nucleus by the microprocessor enzyme complex, which includes the nuclease Drosha, with a small number being generated by the messenger RNA splicing machinery. All pre-miRNAs are then exported into the cytoplasm where they are cleaved further by a second nuclease, Dicer, into the mature, functional miRNA. Cifuentes et al. (p. 1694, published online 6 May), now show that in a Dicer mutant fish at least one miRNA, miR-451, is still formed from pre-miR-451. The processing of pre-miR-451 requires the slicing activity of another protein in the miRNA pathway, Argonaute2. The unusual secondary structure of the pre-miR-451 determines its noncanonical processing pathway, which suggests that other miRNAs might also be processed in this way. The unusual secondary structure of a precursor microRNA determines its noncanonical processing. Dicer is a central enzyme in microRNA (miRNA) processing. We identified a Dicer-independent miRNA biogenesis pathway that uses Argonaute2 (Ago2) slicer catalytic activity. In contrast to other miRNAs, miR-451 levels were refractory to dicer loss of function but were reduced in MZago2 (maternal-zygotic) mutants. We found that pre-miR-451 processing requires Ago2 catalytic activity in vivo. MZago2 mutants showed delayed erythropoiesis that could be rescued by wild-type Ago2 or miR-451-duplex but not by catalytically dead Ago2. Changing the secondary structure of Dicer-dependent miRNAs to mimic that of pre-miR-451 restored miRNA function and rescued developmental defects in MZdicer mutants, indicating that the pre-miRNA secondary structure determines the processing pathway in vivo. We propose that Ago2-mediated cleavage of pre-miRNAs, followed by uridylation and trimming, generates functional miRNAs independently of Dicer.
Developmental Cell | 2015
Fatma O. Kok; Masahiro Shin; Chih-Wen Ni; Ankit Gupta; Ann S. Grosse; Andreas van Impel; Bettina C. Kirchmaier; Josi Peterson-Maduro; George Kourkoulis; Ira Male; Dana F. DeSantis; Sarah Sheppard-Tindell; Lwaki Ebarasi; Christer Betsholtz; Stefan Schulte-Merker; Scot A. Wolfe; Nathan D. Lawson
The widespread availability of programmable site-specific nucleases now enables targeted gene disruption in the zebrafish. In this study, we applied site-specific nucleases to generate zebrafish lines bearing individual mutations in more than 20 genes. We found that mutations in only a small proportion of genes caused defects in embryogenesis. Moreover, mutants for ten different genes failed to recapitulate published Morpholino-induced phenotypes (morphants). The absence of phenotypes in mutant embryos was not likely due to maternal effects or failure to eliminate gene function. Consistently, a comparison of published morphant defects with the Sanger Zebrafish Mutation Project revealed that approximately 80% of morphant phenotypes were not observed in mutant embryos, similar to our mutant collection. Based on these results, we suggest that mutant phenotypes become the standard metric to define gene function in zebrafish, after which Morpholinos that recapitulate respective phenotypes could be reliably applied for ancillary analyses.
Cell | 2008
Marcus Blaine Noyes; Atsuya Wakabayashi; Gary D. Stormo; Michael H. Brodsky; Scot A. Wolfe
We describe the comprehensive characterization of homeodomain DNA-binding specificities from a metazoan genome. The analysis of all 84 independent homeodomains from D. melanogaster reveals the breadth of DNA sequences that can be specified by this recognition motif. The majority of these factors can be organized into 11 different specificity groups, where the preferred recognition sequence between these groups can differ at up to four of the six core recognition positions. Analysis of the recognition motifs within these groups led to a catalog of common specificity determinants that may cooperate or compete to define the binding site preference. With these recognition principles, a homeodomain can be reengineered to create factors where its specificity is altered at the majority of recognition positions. This resource also allows prediction of homeodomain specificities from other organisms, which is demonstrated by the prediction and analysis of human homeodomain specificities.
Nature Biotechnology | 2016
Hao Yin; Chun-Qing Song; Joseph R. Dorkin; Lihua Julie Zhu; Yingxiang Li; Qiongqiong Wu; Angela I. Park; Junghoon Yang; Sneha Suresh; Aizhan Bizhanova; Ankit Gupta; Mehmet Fatih Bolukbasi; Stephen Walsh; Roman L. Bogorad; Guangping Gao; Zhiping Weng; Yizhou Dong; Victor Koteliansky; Scot A. Wolfe; Robert Langer; Wen Xue; Daniel G. Anderson
The combination of Cas9, guide RNA and repair template DNA can induce precise gene editing and the correction of genetic diseases in adult mammals. However, clinical implementation of this technology requires safe and effective delivery of all of these components into the nuclei of the target tissue. Here, we combine lipid nanoparticle–mediated delivery of Cas9 mRNA with adeno-associated viruses encoding a sgRNA and a repair template to induce repair of a disease gene in adult animals. We applied our delivery strategy to a mouse model of human hereditary tyrosinemia and show that the treatment generated fumarylacetoacetate hydrolase (Fah)-positive hepatocytes by correcting the causative Fah-splicing mutation. Treatment rescued disease symptoms such as weight loss and liver damage. The efficiency of correction was >6% of hepatocytes after a single application, suggesting potential utility of Cas9-based therapeutic genome editing for a range of diseases.
Nucleic Acids Research | 2008
Marcus Blaine Noyes; Xiangdong Meng; Atsuya Wakabayashi; Saurabh Sinha; Michael H. Brodsky; Scot A. Wolfe
Specificity data for groups of transcription factors (TFs) in a common regulatory network can be used to computationally identify the location of cis-regulatory modules in a genome. The primary limitation for this type of analysis is the paucity of specificity data that is available for the majority of TFs. We describe an omega-based bacterial one-hybrid system that provides a rapid method for characterizing DNA-binding specificities on a genome-wide scale. Using this system, 35 members of the Drosophila melanogaster segmentation network have been characterized, including representative members of all of the major classes of DNA-binding domains. A suite of web-based tools was created that uses this binding site dataset and phylogenetic comparisons to identify cis-regulatory modules throughout the fly genome. These tools allow specificities for any combination of factors to be used to perform rapid local or genome-wide searches for cis-regulatory modules. The utility of these factor specificities and tools is demonstrated on the well-characterized segmentation network. By incorporating specificity data on an additional 66 factors that we have characterized, our tools utilize ∼14% of the predicted factors within the fly genome and provide an important new community resource for the identification of cis-regulatory modules.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015
Hanhui Ma; Ardalan Naseri; Pablo Reyes-Gutierrez; Scot A. Wolfe; Shaojie Zhang; Thoru Pederson
Significance The detection of specific genes in fixed cells was first accomplished in 1969 by Gall and Pardue. The development of analogous methods applicable to living cells is now at hand. At the forefront of this advance (2013–2014), we and other investigators have used transcription activator-like effectors (TALEs) conjugated with fluorescent proteins to tag genomic loci in live cells. More recently, the CRISPR/Cas9 system has provided a more flexible approach to targeting specific loci. In this paper, we describe the labeling of human genomic loci in live cells with three orthogonal CRISPR/Cas9 components, allowing multicolor detection of genomic loci with high spatial resolution, which provides an avenue for barcoding elements of the human genome in the living state. The intranuclear location of genomic loci and the dynamics of these loci are important parameters for understanding the spatial and temporal regulation of gene expression. Recently it has proven possible to visualize endogenous genomic loci in live cells by the use of transcription activator-like effectors (TALEs), as well as modified versions of the bacterial immunity clustered regularly interspersed short palindromic repeat (CRISPR)/CRISPR-associated protein 9 (Cas9) system. Here we report the design of multicolor versions of CRISPR using catalytically inactive Cas9 endonuclease (dCas9) from three bacterial orthologs. Each pair of dCas9-fluorescent proteins and cognate single-guide RNAs (sgRNAs) efficiently labeled several target loci in live human cells. Using pairs of differently colored dCas9-sgRNAs, it was possible to determine the intranuclear distance between loci on different chromosomes. In addition, the fluorescence spatial resolution between two loci on the same chromosome could be determined and related to the linear distance between them on the chromosome’s physical map, thereby permitting assessment of the DNA compaction of such regions in a live cell.
Nature Biotechnology | 2005
Xiangdong Meng; Michael H. Brodsky; Scot A. Wolfe
The DNA-binding specificities of transcription factors can be used to computationally predict cis-regulatory modules (CRMs) that regulate gene expression. However, the absence of specificity data for the majority of transcription factors limits the widespread implementation of this approach. We have developed a bacterial one-hybrid system that provides a simple and rapid method to determine the DNA-binding specificity of a transcription factor. Using this technology, we successfully determined the DNA-binding specificity of seven previously characterized transcription factors and one novel transcription factor, the Drosophila melanogaster factor Odd-skipped. Regulatory targets of Odd-skipped were successfully predicted using this information, demonstrating that the data produced by the bacterial one-hybrid system are relevant to in vivo function.
Development | 2014
Nicola A. Kearns; Ryan M. J. Genga; Metewo Selase Enuameh; Manuel Garber; Scot A. Wolfe; René Maehr
The identification of the trans-acting factors and cis-regulatory modules that are involved in human pluripotent stem cell (hPSC) maintenance and differentiation is necessary to dissect the operating regulatory networks in these processes and thereby identify nodes where signal input will direct desired cell fate decisions in vitro or in vivo. To deconvolute these networks, we established a method to influence the differentiation state of hPSCs with a CRISPR-associated catalytically inactive dCas9 fused to an effector domain. In human embryonic stem cells, we find that the dCas9 effectors can exert positive or negative regulation on the expression of developmentally relevant genes, which can influence cell differentiation status when impinging on a key node in the regulatory network that governs the cell state. This system provides a platform for the interrogation of the underlying regulators governing specific differentiation decisions, which can then be employed to direct cellular differentiation down desired pathways.
Nucleic Acids Research | 2011
Lihua Julie Zhu; Majid Kazemian; Christopher J. Hull; Metewo Selase Enuameh; Matthew D. Basciotta; Jessie A. Brasefield; Cong Zhu; Yuna Asriyan; David S. Lapointe; Saurabh Sinha; Scot A. Wolfe; Michael H. Brodsky
FlyFactorSurvey (http://pgfe.umassmed.edu/TFDBS/) is a database of DNA binding specificities for Drosophila transcription factors (TFs) primarily determined using the bacterial one-hybrid system. The database provides community access to over 400 recognition motifs and position weight matrices for over 200 TFs, including many unpublished motifs. Search tools and flat file downloads are provided to retrieve binding site information (as sequences, matrices and sequence logos) for individual TFs, groups of TFs or for all TFs with characterized binding specificities. Linked analysis tools allow users to identify motifs within our database that share similarity to a query matrix or to view the distribution of occurrences of an individual motif throughout the Drosophila genome. Together, this database and its associated tools provide computational and experimental biologists with resources to predict interactions between Drosophila TFs and target cis-regulatory sequences.