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Dive into the research topics where Seana C. Catherman is active.

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Featured researches published by Seana C. Catherman.


Cell Reports | 2015

Distinct Sources of Hematopoietic Progenitors Emerge before HSCs and Provide Functional Blood Cells in the Mammalian Embryo

Kathleen E. McGrath; Jenna M. Frame; Katherine H. Fegan; James R. Bowen; Simon J. Conway; Seana C. Catherman; Paul D. Kingsley; Anne D. Koniski; James Palis

Hematopoietic potential arises in mammalian embryos before adult-repopulating hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs). At embryonic day 9.5 (E9.5), we show the first murine definitive erythro-myeloid progenitors (EMPs) have an immunophenotype distinct from primitive hematopoietic progenitors, maturing megakaryocytes and macrophages, and rare B cell potential. EMPs emerge in the yolk sac with erythroid and broad myeloid, but not lymphoid, potential. EMPs migrate to the fetal liver and rapidly differentiate, including production of circulating neutrophils by E11.5. Although the surface markers, transcription factors, and lineage potential associated with EMPs overlap with those found in adult definitive hematopoiesis, they are present in unique combinations or proportions that result in a specialized definitive embryonic progenitor. Furthermore, we find that embryonic stem cell (ESC)-derived hematopoiesis recapitulates early yolk sac hematopoiesis, including primitive, EMP, and rare B cell potential. EMPs do not have long-term potential when transplanted in immunocompromised adults, but they can provide transient adult-like RBC reconstitution.


PLOS Genetics | 2015

A Systems Approach Identifies Essential FOXO3 Functions at Key Steps of Terminal Erythropoiesis

Raymond Liang; Genís Campreciós; Yan Kou; Kathleen E. McGrath; Roberta B. Nowak; Seana C. Catherman; Carolina L. Bigarella; Pauline Rimmele; Xin Zhang; Merlin Nithya Gnanapragasam; James J. Bieker; Dmitri Papatsenko; Avi Ma’ayan; Emery H. Bresnick; Velia M. Fowler; James Palis; Saghi Ghaffari

Circulating red blood cells (RBCs) are essential for tissue oxygenation and homeostasis. Defective terminal erythropoiesis contributes to decreased generation of RBCs in many disorders. Specifically, ineffective nuclear expulsion (enucleation) during terminal maturation is an obstacle to therapeutic RBC production in vitro. To obtain mechanistic insights into terminal erythropoiesis we focused on FOXO3, a transcription factor implicated in erythroid disorders. Using an integrated computational and experimental systems biology approach, we show that FOXO3 is essential for the correct temporal gene expression during terminal erythropoiesis. We demonstrate that the FOXO3-dependent genetic network has critical physiological functions at key steps of terminal erythropoiesis including enucleation and mitochondrial clearance processes. FOXO3 loss deregulated transcription of genes implicated in cell polarity, nucleosome assembly and DNA packaging-related processes and compromised erythroid enucleation. Using high-resolution confocal microscopy and imaging flow cytometry we show that cell polarization is impaired leading to multilobulated Foxo3 -/- erythroblasts defective in nuclear expulsion. Ectopic FOXO3 expression rescued Foxo3 -/- erythroblast enucleation-related gene transcription, enucleation defects and terminal maturation. Remarkably, FOXO3 ectopic expression increased wild type erythroblast maturation and enucleation suggesting that enhancing FOXO3 activity may improve RBCs production. Altogether these studies uncover FOXO3 as a novel regulator of erythroblast enucleation and terminal maturation suggesting FOXO3 modulation might be therapeutic in disorders with defective erythroid maturation.


Blood | 2016

EKLF/KLF1-regulated cell cycle exit is essential for erythroblast enucleation

Merlin Nithya Gnanapragasam; Kathleen E. McGrath; Seana C. Catherman; Li Xue; James Palis; James J. Bieker

The mechanisms regulating the sequential steps of terminal erythroid differentiation remain largely undefined, yet are relevant to human anemias that are characterized by ineffective red cell production. Erythroid Krüppel-like Factor (EKLF/KLF1) is a master transcriptional regulator of erythropoiesis that is mutated in a subset of these anemias. Although EKLFs function during early erythropoiesis is well studied, its role during terminal differentiation has been difficult to functionally investigate due to the impaired expression of relevant cell surface markers in Eklf(-/-) erythroid cells. We have circumvented this problem by an innovative use of imaging flow cytometry to investigate the role of EKLF in vivo and have performed functional studies using an ex vivo culture system that enriches for terminally differentiating cells. We precisely define a previously undescribed block during late terminal differentiation at the orthochromatic erythroblast stage for Eklf(-/-) cells that proceed beyond the initial stall at the progenitor stage. These cells efficiently decrease cell size, condense their nucleus, and undergo nuclear polarization; however, they display a near absence of enucleation. These late-stage Eklf(-/-) cells continue to cycle due to low-level expression of p18 and p27, a new direct target of EKLF. Surprisingly, both cell cycle and enucleation deficits are rescued by epistatic reintroduction of either of these 2 EKLF target cell cycle inhibitors. We conclude that the cell cycle as regulated by EKLF during late stages of differentiation is inherently critical for enucleation of erythroid precursors, thereby demonstrating a direct functional relationship between cell cycle exit and nuclear expulsion.


PLOS ONE | 2014

An ribonuclease T2 family protein modulates Acinetobacter baumannii abiotic surface colonization.

Anna C. Jacobs; Catlyn Blanchard; Seana C. Catherman; Paul M. Dunman; Yoshihiko Murata

Acinetobacter baumannii is an emerging bacterial pathogen of considerable medical concern. The organisms transmission and ability to cause disease has been associated with its propensity to colonize and form biofilms on abiotic surfaces in health care settings. To better understand the genetic determinants that affect biomaterial attachment, we performed a transposon mutagenesis analysis of abiotic surface-colonization using A. baumannii strain 98-37-09. Disruption of an RNase T2 family gene was found to limit the organisms ability to colonize polystyrene, polypropylene, glass, and stainless steel surfaces. DNA microarray analyses revealed that in comparison to wild type and complemented cells, the RNase T2 family mutant exhibited reduced expression of 29 genes, 15 of which are predicted to be associated with bacterial attachment and surface-associated motility. Motility assays confirmed that RNase T2 mutant displays a severe motility defect. Taken together, our results indicate that the RNase T2 family protein identified in this study is a positive regulator of A. baumanniis ability to colonize inanimate surfaces and motility. Moreover, the enzyme may be an effective target for the intervention of biomaterial colonization, and consequently limit the organisms transmission within the hospital setting.


Methods | 2017

Delineating stages of erythropoiesis using imaging flow cytometry.

Kathleen E. McGrath; Seana C. Catherman; James Palis

Adult humans need to make 2.5million red blood cells (RBCs) every second to maintain a steady state level of 25trillion circulating RBCs. Understanding normal erythropoiesis as well as diseases that afflict the erythron, such as genetic anemias, hyperproliferative disorders, and myelodysplastic syndromes, requires a robust method to delineate erythropoietic intermediates. In order to apply the power of flow cytometry to these studies, challenges of limited immunophenotypic markers, incorporation of significant changes in morphology, and maturational changes that occur along a continuum need to be met. Imaging flow cytometry (IFC) provides a solution to address these challenges. Integration of changes in immunophenotype, loss of RNA (ribosomes), and enucleation, with morphological characteristics of cell and nuclear size, can be used to delineate erythroblasts that correlate with classical histological classifications. A protocol is described that demonstrates the basic approaches of staining panel selection, mask generation and selection of features to best sequentially refine erythroid intermediates and remove contaminating cells with overlapping immunophenotype. Ultimately erythroid cells in the murine bone marrow are divided into seven sub-populations using IFC including four erythroblasts (pro-, basophilic, polychromatophilic and orthochromatic), the pyrenocyte, which contains the eliminated nucleus, the enucleated reticulocyte and the mature RBC.


Blood | 2014

P-Selectin Expression and Platelet Function Are Developmentally Regulated

Massiel Stolla; Kathryn Leyens; Seana C. Catherman; Kathleen E. McGrath; James Palis


PMC | 2015

Distinct sources of hematopoietic progenitors emerge before HSCs and provide functional blood cells in the mammalian embryo

Kathleen E. McGrath; Jenna M. Frame; Katherine H. Fegan; James R. Bowen; Simon J. Conway; Seana C. Catherman; Paul D. Kingsley; Anne D. Koniski; James Palis


Blood | 2015

Definitive Erythro-Myeloid Progenitors (EMPs) Emerge in the Myb-/- Embryo and Retain the Capacity to Differentiate into Macrophages

Jenna M. Frame; Katherine H. Fegan; Seana C. Catherman; Joanna Tober; Anne D. Koniski; Kathleen E. McGrath; James Palis


Blood | 2015

Prostaglandin E2 Promotes the Sequential Recovery of Bone Marrow Vasculature and the Megakaryocyte Lineage Following Radiation Injury

Lisa M. Niswander; Anne D. Koniski; Andrew Seraichick; Seana C. Catherman; Katherine H. Fegan; Paul D. Kingsley; Laura M. Calvi; James Palis


Experimental Hematology | 2014

Emergence of the neutrophil lineage in the mammalian embryo

Kathleen E. McGrath; Katherine H. Fegan; Seana C. Catherman; James Palis

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James Palis

University of Rochester Medical Center

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Kathleen E. McGrath

University of Rochester Medical Center

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Katherine H. Fegan

University of Rochester Medical Center

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Anne D. Koniski

University of Rochester Medical Center

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Jenna M. Frame

University of Rochester Medical Center

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Paul D. Kingsley

University of Rochester Medical Center

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James J. Bieker

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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James R. Bowen

University of Rochester Medical Center

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Merlin Nithya Gnanapragasam

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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