Shimako Kawauchi
University of California, Irvine
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Featured researches published by Shimako Kawauchi.
Nature Genetics | 2004
Ian D. Krantz; Jennifer McCallum; Cheryl DeScipio; Maninder Kaur; Lynette Gillis; Dinah Yaeger; Lori Jukofsky; Nora Wasserman; Armand Bottani; Colleen A. Morris; Małgorzata J.M. Nowaczyk; Helga V. Toriello; Michael J. Bamshad; John C. Carey; Eric Rappaport; Shimako Kawauchi; Arthur D. Lander; Anne L. Calof; Hui Hua Li; Marcella Devoto; Laird G. Jackson
Cornelia de Lange syndrome (CdLS; OMIM 122470) is a dominantly inherited multisystem developmental disorder characterized by growth and cognitive retardation; abnormalities of the upper limbs; gastroesophageal dysfunction; cardiac, ophthalmologic and genitourinary anomalies; hirsutism; and characteristic facial features. Genital anomalies, pyloric stenosis, congenital diaphragmatic hernias, cardiac septal defects, hearing loss and autistic and self-injurious tendencies also frequently occur. Prevalence is estimated to be as high as 1 in 10,000 (ref. 4). We carried out genome-wide linkage exclusion analysis in 12 families with CdLS and identified four candidate regions, of which chromosome 5p13.1 gave the highest multipoint lod score of 2.7. This information, together with the previous identification of a child with CdLS with a de novo t(5;13)(p13.1;q12.1) translocation, allowed delineation of a 1.1-Mb critical region on chromosome 5 for the gene mutated in CdLS. We identified mutations in one gene in this region, which we named NIPBL, in four sporadic and two familial cases of CdLS. We characterized the genomic structure of NIPBL and found that it is widely expressed in fetal and adult tissues. The fly homolog of NIPBL, Nipped-B, facilitates enhancer-promoter communication and regulates Notch signaling and other developmental pathways in Drosophila melanogaster.
PLOS Genetics | 2009
Shimako Kawauchi; Anne L. Calof; Rosaysela Santos; Martha E. Lopez-Burks; Clint M. Young; Michelle P. Hoang; Abigail Chua; Taotao Lao; Mark S. Lechner; Jeremy A. Daniel; André Nussenzweig; Leonard M. Kitzes; Kyoko Yokomori; Benedikt Hallgrímsson; Arthur D. Lander
Cornelia de Lange Syndrome (CdLS) is a multi-organ system birth defects disorder linked, in at least half of cases, to heterozygous mutations in the NIPBL gene. In animals and fungi, orthologs of NIPBL regulate cohesin, a complex of proteins that is essential for chromosome cohesion and is also implicated in DNA repair and transcriptional regulation. Mice heterozygous for a gene-trap mutation in Nipbl were produced and exhibited defects characteristic of CdLS, including small size, craniofacial anomalies, microbrachycephaly, heart defects, hearing abnormalities, delayed bone maturation, reduced body fat, behavioral disturbances, and high mortality (75–80%) during the first weeks of life. These phenotypes arose despite a decrease in Nipbl transcript levels of only ∼30%, implying extreme sensitivity of development to small changes in Nipbl activity. Gene expression profiling demonstrated that Nipbl deficiency leads to modest but significant transcriptional dysregulation of many genes. Expression changes at the protocadherin beta (Pcdhb) locus, as well as at other loci, support the view that NIPBL influences long-range chromosomal regulatory interactions. In addition, evidence is presented that reduced expression of genes involved in adipogenic differentiation may underlie the low amounts of body fat observed both in Nipbl+/− mice and in individuals with CdLS.
Development | 2005
Shimako Kawauchi; Jianyong Shou; Rosaysela Santos; Jean M. Hébert; Susan K. McConnell; Ivor Mason; Anne L. Calof
In vertebrate olfactory epithelium (OE), neurogenesis proceeds continuously, suggesting that endogenous signals support survival and proliferation of stem and progenitor cells. We used a genetic approach to test the hypothesis that Fgf8 plays such a role in developing OE. In young embryos, Fgf8 RNA is expressed in the rim of the invaginating nasal pit (NP), in a small domain of cells that overlaps partially with that of putative OE neural stem cells later in gestation. In mutant mice in which the Fgf8 gene is inactivated in anterior neural structures, FGF-mediated signaling is strongly downregulated in both OE proper and underlying mesenchyme by day 10 of gestation. Mutants survive gestation but die at birth, lacking OE, vomeronasal organ (VNO), nasal cavity, forebrain, lower jaw, eyelids and pinnae. Analysis of mutants indicates that although initial NP formation is grossly normal, cells in the Fgf8-expressing domain undergo high levels of apoptosis, resulting in cessation of nasal cavity invagination and loss of virtually all OE neuronal cell types. These findings demonstrate that Fgf8 is crucial for proper development of the OE, nasal cavity and VNO, as well as maintenance of OE neurogenesis during prenatal development. The data suggest a model in which Fgf8 expression defines an anterior morphogenetic center, which is required not only for the sustenance and continued production of primary olfactory (OE and VNO) neural stem and progenitor cells, but also for proper morphogenesis of the entire nasal cavity.
Developmental Neuroscience | 2004
Shimako Kawauchi; Crestina L. Beites; Candice E. Crocker; Hsiao-Huei Wu; Alexandre Bonnin; Richard C. Murray; Anne L. Calof
To understand how signaling molecules regulate the generation of neurons from proliferating stem cells and neuronal progenitors in the developing and regenerating nervous system, we have studied neurogenesis in a model neurogenic epithelium, the olfactory epithelium (OE) of the mouse. Our studies have employed a candidate approach to test signaling molecules of potential importance in regulating neurogenesis and have utilized methods that include tissue culture, in situ hybridization and mouse genetics. Using these approaches, we have identified three distinct stages of stem and transit amplifying progenitor cells in the differentiation pathway of olfactory receptor neurons (ORNs) and have identified mechanisms by which the development of each of these progenitor cell types is regulated by signals produced both within the OE itself and by its underlying stroma. Our results indicate that regulation of olfactory neurogenesis is critically dependent on multiple signaling molecules from two different polypeptide growth factor superfamilies, the fibroblast growth factors and the transforming growth factor β (TGF-β) group. In addition, they indicate that these signaling molecules interact in at least two important ways: first, opposing signals converge on cells at specific developmental stages in the ORN pathway to regulate proliferation and differentiation; and second, these signaling molecules – particularly the TGF-βs and their antagonists – play key roles in feedback loops that regulate the size of progenitor cell pools and thereby neuron number, during development and regeneration.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011
Richard Chien; Weihua Zeng; Shimako Kawauchi; Michael Bender; Rosaysela Santos; Heather C. Gregson; John A. Schmiesing; Daniel A. Newkirk; Xiangduo Kong; Alexander R. Ball; Anne L. Calof; Arthur D. Lander; Mark Groudine; Kyoko Yokomori
The β-globin locus undergoes dynamic chromatin interaction changes in differentiating erythroid cells that are thought to be important for proper globin gene expression. However, the underlying mechanisms are unclear. The CCCTC-binding factor, CTCF, binds to the insulator elements at the 5′ and 3′ boundaries of the locus, but these sites were shown to be dispensable for globin gene activation. We found that, upon induction of differentiation, cohesin and the cohesin loading factor Nipped-B-like (Nipbl) bind to the locus control region (LCR) at the CTCF insulator and distal enhancer regions as well as at the specific target globin gene that undergoes activation upon differentiation. Nipbl-dependent cohesin binding is critical for long-range chromatin interactions, both between the CTCF insulator elements and between the LCR distal enhancer and the target gene. We show that the latter interaction is important for globin gene expression in vivo and in vitro. Furthermore, the results indicate that such cohesin-mediated chromatin interactions associated with gene regulation are sensitive to the partial reduction of Nipbl caused by heterozygous mutation. This provides the first direct evidence that Nipbl haploinsufficiency affects cohesin-mediated chromatin interactions and gene expression. Our results reveal that dynamic Nipbl/cohesin binding is critical for developmental chromatin organization and the gene activation function of the LCR in mammalian cells.
Development | 2009
Shimako Kawauchi; Joon Ha Kim; Rosaysela Santos; Hsiao-Huei Wu; Arthur D. Lander; Anne L. Calof
Foxg1, a winged-helix transcription factor, promotes the development of anterior neural structures; in mice lacking Foxg1, development of the cerebral hemispheres and olfactory epithelium (OE) is severely reduced. It has been suggested that Foxg1 acts by positively regulating the expression of growth factors, such as Fgf8, which support neurogenesis. However, Foxg1 also binds Smad transcriptional complexes, allowing it to negatively regulate the effects of TGFβ family ligands. Here, we provide evidence that this latter effect explains much of the ability of Foxg1 to drive neurogenesis in the OE. We show that Foxg1 is expressed in developing OE at the same time as the gene encoding growth differentiation factor 11 (Gdf11), a TGFβ family member that mediates negative-feedback control of OE neurogenesis. Mutations in Gdf11 rescue, to a considerable degree, the major defects in Foxg1-/- OE, including the early, severe loss of neural precursors and olfactory receptor neurons, and the subsequent collapse of both neurogenesis and nasal cavity formation. Rescue is gene-dosage dependent, with loss of even one allele of Gdf11 restoring substantial neurogenesis. Notably, we find no evidence for a disruption of Fgf8 expression in Foxg1-/- OE. However, we do observe both a failure of expression of follistatin (Fst), which encodes a secreted Gdf11 antagonist normally expressed in and around OE, and an increase in the expression of Gdf11 itself within the remaining OE in these mutants. Fst expression is rescued in Foxg1-/-;Gdf11-/- and Foxg1-/-;Gdf11+/- mice. These data suggest that the influence of Foxg1 on Gdf11-mediated negative feedback of neurogenesis may be both direct and indirect. In addition, defects in development of the cerebral hemispheres in Foxg1-/- mice are not rescued by mutations in Gdf11, nor is Gdf11 expressed at high levels within these structures. Thus, the pro-neurogenic effects of Foxg1 are likely to be mediated through different signaling pathways in different parts of the nervous system.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2013
Silvia Remeseiro; Ana Cuadrado; Shimako Kawauchi; Anne L. Calof; Arthur D. Lander; Ana Losada
Cornelia de Lange Syndrome (CdLS) is a genetic disorder linked to mutations in cohesin and its regulators. To date, it is unclear which function of cohesin is more relevant to the pathology of the syndrome. A mouse heterozygous for the gene encoding the cohesin loader Nipbl recapitulates many features of CdLS. We have carefully examined Nipbl deficient cells and here report that they have robust cohesion all along the chromosome. DNA replication, DNA repair and chromosome segregation are carried out efficiently in these cells. While bulk cohesin loading is unperturbed, binding to certain promoters such as the Protocadherin genes in brain is notably affected and alters gene expression. These results provide further support for the idea that developmental defects in CdLS are caused by deregulated transcription and not by malfunction of cohesion-related processes.
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 2009
Shimako Kawauchi; Rosaysela Santos; Joon Ha Kim; Piper L. W. Hollenbeck; Richard C. Murray; Anne L. Calof
The olfactory epithelium (OE) of the mouse is an excellent model system for studying principles of neural stem cell biology because of its well‐defined neuronal lineage and its ability to regenerate throughout life. To approach the molecular mechanisms of stem cell regulation in the OE, we have focused on Foxg1, also known as brain factor 1, which is a member of the Forkhead transcription factor family. Foxg1−/− mice show major defects in the OE at birth, suggesting that Foxg1 plays an important role in OE development. We find that Foxg1 is expressed in cells within the basal compartment of the OE, the location where OE stem and progenitor cells are known to reside. Since FoxG1 is known to regulate proliferation of neuronal progenitor cells during telencephalon development, we performed bromodeoxyuridine pulse–chase labeling of Sox2‐expressing neural stem cells during primary OE neurogenesis. We found the percentage of Sox2‐expressing cells that retained bromodeoxyuridine was twice as high in Foxg1−/− OE cells as in the wild type, suggesting that these cells are delayed and/or halted in their development in the absence of Foxg1. Our findings suggest that the proliferation and/or subsequent differentiation of Sox2‐expressing neural stem cells in the OE is regulated by Foxg1.
American Journal of Medical Genetics Part C-seminars in Medical Genetics | 2016
Shimako Kawauchi; Rosaysela Santos; Akihiko Muto; Martha E. Lopez-Burks; Thomas F. Schilling; Arthur D. Lander; Anne L. Calof
Cornelia de Lange Syndrome (CdLS) is a multisystem birth defects disorder that affects every tissue and organ system in the body. Understanding the factors that contribute to the origins, prevalence, and severity of these developmental defects provides the most direct approach for developing screens and potential treatments for individuals with CdLS. Since the majority of cases of CdLS are caused by haploinsufficiency for NIPBL (Nipped‐B‐like, which encodes a cohesin‐associated protein), we have developed mouse and zebrafish models of CdLS by using molecular genetic tools to create Nipbl‐deficient mice and zebrafish (Nipbl+/− mice, zebrafish nipbl morphants). Studies of these vertebrate animal models have yielded novel insights into the developmental etiology and genes/gene pathways that contribute to CdLS‐associated birth defects, particularly defects of the gut, heart, craniofacial structures, nervous system, and limbs. Studies of these mouse and zebrafish CdLS models have helped clarify how deficiency for NIPBL, a protein that associates with cohesin and other transcriptional regulators in the nucleus, affects processes important to the emergence of the structural and physiological birth defects observed in CdLS: NIPBL exerts chromosome position‐specific effects on gene expression; it influences long‐range interactions between different regulatory elements of genes; and it regulates combinatorial and synergistic actions of genes in developing tissues. Our current understanding is that CdLS should be considered as not only a cohesinopathy, but also a “transcriptomopathy,” that is, a disease whose underlying etiology is the global dysregulation of gene expression throughout the organism.
PLOS Biology | 2016
Rosaysela Santos; Shimako Kawauchi; Russell E. Jacobs; Martha E. Lopez-Burks; Hojae Choi; Jamie Wikenheiser; Benedikt Hallgrímsson; Heather A. Jamniczky; Scott E. Fraser; Arthur D. Lander; Anne L. Calof
Elucidating the causes of congenital heart defects is made difficult by the complex morphogenesis of the mammalian heart, which takes place early in development, involves contributions from multiple germ layers, and is controlled by many genes. Here, we use a conditional/invertible genetic strategy to identify the cell lineage(s) responsible for the development of heart defects in a Nipbl-deficient mouse model of Cornelia de Lange Syndrome, in which global yet subtle transcriptional dysregulation leads to development of atrial septal defects (ASDs) at high frequency. Using an approach that allows for recombinase-mediated creation or rescue of Nipbl deficiency in different lineages, we uncover complex interactions between the cardiac mesoderm, endoderm, and the rest of the embryo, whereby the risk conferred by genetic abnormality in any one lineage is modified, in a surprisingly non-additive way, by the status of others. We argue that these results are best understood in the context of a model in which the risk of heart defects is associated with the adequacy of early progenitor cell populations relative to the sizes of the structures they must eventually form.