Simon Haas
German Cancer Research Center
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Simon Haas.
Cell | 2015
Franziska Paul; Ya’ara Arkin; Amir Giladi; Diego Jaitin; Ephraim Kenigsberg; Hadas Keren-Shaul; Deborah R. Winter; David Lara-Astiaso; Meital Gury; Assaf Weiner; Eyal David; Nadav Cohen; Felicia Kathrine Bratt Lauridsen; Simon Haas; Andreas Schlitzer; Alexander Mildner; Florent Ginhoux; Steffen Jung; Andreas Trumpp; Bo T. Porse; Amos Tanay; Ido Amit
Within the bone marrow, stem cells differentiate and give rise to diverse blood cell types and functions. Currently, hematopoietic progenitors are defined using surface markers combined with functional assays that are not directly linked with in vivo differentiation potential or gene regulatory mechanisms. Here, we comprehensively map myeloid progenitor subpopulations by transcriptional sorting of single cells from the bone marrow. We describe multiple progenitor subgroups, showing unexpected transcriptional priming toward seven differentiation fates but no progenitors with a mixed state. Transcriptional differentiation is correlated with combinations of known and previously undefined transcription factors, suggesting that the process is tightly regulated. Histone maps and knockout assays are consistent with early transcriptional priming, while traditional transplantation experiments suggest that in vivo priming may still allow for plasticity given strong perturbations. These data establish a reference model and general framework for studying hematopoiesis at single-cell resolution.
Cell Stem Cell | 2014
Nina Cabezas-Wallscheid; Daniel Klimmeck; Jenny Hansson; Daniel B. Lipka; Alejandro Reyes; Qi Wang; Dieter Weichenhan; Amelie Lier; Lisa von Paleske; Simon Renders; Peer Wünsche; Petra Zeisberger; David Brocks; Lei Gu; Carl Herrmann; Simon Haas; Marieke Essers; Benedikt Brors; Roland Eils; Wolfgang Huber; Michael D. Milsom; Christoph Plass; Jeroen Krijgsveld; Andreas Trumpp
In this study, we present integrated quantitative proteome, transcriptome, and methylome analyses of hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) and four multipotent progenitor (MPP) populations. From the characterization of more than 6,000 proteins, 27,000 transcripts, and 15,000 differentially methylated regions (DMRs), we identified coordinated changes associated with early differentiation steps. DMRs show continuous gain or loss of methylation during differentiation, and the overall change in DNA methylation correlates inversely with gene expression at key loci. Our data reveal the differential expression landscape of 493 transcription factors and 682 lncRNAs and highlight specific expression clusters operating in HSCs. We also found an unexpectedly dynamic pattern of transcript isoform regulation, suggesting a critical regulatory role during HSC differentiation, and a cell cycle/DNA repair signature associated with multipotency in MPP2 cells. This study provides a comprehensive genome-wide resource for the functional exploration of molecular, cellular, and epigenetic regulation at the top of the hematopoietic hierarchy.
Cell Stem Cell | 2015
Simon Haas; Jenny Hansson; Daniel Klimmeck; Dirk Loeffler; Lars Velten; Hannah Uckelmann; Stephan Wurzer; Áine M. Prendergast; Alexandra Schnell; Klaus Hexel; Rachel Santarella-Mellwig; Sandra Blaszkiewicz; Andrea Kuck; Hartmut Geiger; Michael D. Milsom; Lars M. Steinmetz; Timm Schroeder; Andreas Trumpp; Jeroen Krijgsveld; Marieke Essers
Infections are associated with extensive platelet consumption, representing a high risk for health. However, the mechanism coordinating the rapid regeneration of the platelet pool during such stress conditions remains unclear. Here, we report that the phenotypic hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) compartment contains stem-like megakaryocyte-committed progenitors (SL-MkPs), a cell population that shares many features with multipotent HSCs and serves as a lineage-restricted emergency pool for inflammatory insults. During homeostasis, SL-MkPs are maintained in a primed but quiescent state, thus contributing little to steady-state megakaryopoiesis. Even though lineage-specific megakaryocyte transcripts are expressed, protein synthesis is suppressed. In response to acute inflammation, SL-MkPs become activated, resulting in megakaryocyte protein production from pre-existing transcripts and a maturation of SL-MkPs and other megakaryocyte progenitors. This results in an efficient replenishment of platelets that are lost during inflammatory insult. Thus, our study reveals an emergency machinery that counteracts life-threatening platelet depletions during acute inflammation.
Nature Cell Biology | 2017
Lars Velten; Simon Haas; Simon Raffel; Sandra Blaszkiewicz; Saiful Islam; Bianca P. Hennig; Christoph Hirche; Christoph Lutz; Eike C. Buss; Daniel Nowak; Tobias Boch; Wolf K. Hofmann; Anthony D. Ho; Wolfgang Huber; Andreas Trumpp; Marieke Essers; Lars M. Steinmetz
Blood formation is believed to occur through stepwise progression of haematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) following a tree-like hierarchy of oligo-, bi- and unipotent progenitors. However, this model is based on the analysis of predefined flow-sorted cell populations. Here we integrated flow cytometric, transcriptomic and functional data at single-cell resolution to quantitatively map early differentiation of human HSCs towards lineage commitment. During homeostasis, individual HSCs gradually acquire lineage biases along multiple directions without passing through discrete hierarchically organized progenitor populations. Instead, unilineage-restricted cells emerge directly from a ‘continuum of low-primed undifferentiated haematopoietic stem and progenitor cells’ (CLOUD-HSPCs). Distinct gene expression modules operate in a combinatorial manner to control stemness, early lineage priming and the subsequent progression into all major branches of haematopoiesis. These data reveal a continuous landscape of human steady-state haematopoiesis downstream of HSCs and provide a basis for the understanding of haematopoietic malignancies.
Cell | 2016
Roberta Scognamiglio; Nina Cabezas-Wallscheid; Marc Thier; Sandro Altamura; Alejandro Reyes; Áine M. Prendergast; Daniel Baumgärtner; Larissa S. Carnevalli; Ann Atzberger; Simon Haas; Lisa von Paleske; Thorsten Boroviak; Philipp Wörsdörfer; Marieke Essers; Ulrich Kloz; Robert N. Eisenman; Frank Edenhofer; Paul Bertone; Wolfgang Huber; Franciscus van der Hoeven; Austin Smith; Andreas Trumpp
Summary Mouse embryonic stem cells (ESCs) are maintained in a naive ground state of pluripotency in the presence of MEK and GSK3 inhibitors. Here, we show that ground-state ESCs express low Myc levels. Deletion of both c-myc and N-myc (dKO) or pharmacological inhibition of Myc activity strongly decreases transcription, splicing, and protein synthesis, leading to proliferation arrest. This process is reversible and occurs without affecting pluripotency, suggesting that Myc-depleted stem cells enter a state of dormancy similar to embryonic diapause. Indeed, c-Myc is depleted in diapaused blastocysts, and the differential expression signatures of dKO ESCs and diapaused epiblasts are remarkably similar. Following Myc inhibition, pre-implantation blastocysts enter biosynthetic dormancy but can progress through their normal developmental program after transfer into pseudo-pregnant recipients. Our study shows that Myc controls the biosynthetic machinery of stem cells without affecting their potency, thus regulating their entry and exit from the dormant state.
Nucleic Acids Research | 2012
Patrick Ketzer; Simon Haas; Sarah Engelhardt; Jörg S. Hartig; Dirk M. Nettelbeck
Therapeutic gene transfer by replication-defective viral vectors or, for cancer treatment, by replication-competent oncolytic viruses shows high promise for treatment of major diseases. To ensure safety, timing or dosing in patients, external control of therapeutic gene expression is desirable or even required. In this study, we explored the potential of artificial aptazymes, ligand-dependent self-cleaving ribozymes, as an innovative tool for regulation of therapeutic gene expression. Importantly, aptazymes act on RNA intrinsically, independent of regulatory protein–nucleic acid interactions and stoichiometry, are non-immunogenic and of small size. These are key advantages compared with the widely used inducible promoters, which were also reported to lose regulation at high copy numbers, e.g. after replication of oncolytic viruses. We characterized aptazymes in therapeutic gene transfer utilizing adenovectors (AdVs), adeno-associated vectors (AAVs) and oncolytic adenoviruses (OAds), which are all in advanced clinical testing. Our results show similar aptazyme-mediated regulation of gene expression by plasmids, AdVs, AAVs and OAds. Insertion into the 5′-, 3′- or both untranslated regions of several transgenes resulted in ligand-responsive gene expression. Notably, aptazyme regulation was retained during OAd replication and spread. In conclusion, our study demonstrates the fidelity of aptazymes in viral vectors and oncolytic viruses and highlights the potency of riboswitches for medical applications.
Nature Genetics | 2017
David Brocks; Christopher R. Schmidt; Michael Daskalakis; Hyo Sik Jang; Nakul M. Shah; Daofeng Li; Jing Li; Bo Zhang; Yiran Hou; Sara Laudato; Daniel B. Lipka; Johanna Schott; Holger Bierhoff; Yassen Assenov; Monika Helf; Alzbeta Ressnerova; Saiful Islam; Anders M. Lindroth; Simon Haas; Marieke Essers; Charles D. Imbusch; Benedikt Brors; Ina Oehme; Olaf Witt; Michael Lübbert; Jan-Philipp Mallm; Karsten Rippe; Rainer Will; Dieter Weichenhan; Georg Stoecklin
Several mechanisms of action have been proposed for DNA methyltransferase and histone deacetylase inhibitors (DNMTi and HDACi), primarily based on candidate-gene approaches. However, less is known about their genome-wide transcriptional and epigenomic consequences. By mapping global transcription start site (TSS) and chromatin dynamics, we observed the cryptic transcription of thousands of treatment-induced non-annotated TSSs (TINATs) following DNMTi and HDACi treatment. The resulting transcripts frequently splice into protein-coding exons and encode truncated or chimeric ORFs translated into products with predicted abnormal or immunogenic functions. TINAT transcription after DNMTi treatment coincided with DNA hypomethylation and gain of classical promoter histone marks, while HDACi specifically induced a subset of TINATs in association with H2AK9ac, H3K14ac, and H3K23ac. Despite this mechanistic difference, both inhibitors convergently induced transcription from identical sites, as we found TINATs to be encoded in solitary long terminal repeats of the ERV9/LTR12 family, which are epigenetically repressed in virtually all normal cells.
Cell Cycle | 2014
Daniel B. Lipka; Qi Wang; Nina Cabezas-Wallscheid; Daniel Klimmeck; Dieter Weichenhan; Carl Herrmann; Amelie Lier; David Brocks; Lisa von Paleske; Simon Renders; Peer Wünsche; Petra Zeisberger; Lei Gu; Simon Haas; Marieke Essers; Benedikt Brors; Roland Eils; Andreas Trumpp; Michael D. Milsom; Christoph Plass
Epigenetic alterations during cellular differentiation are a key molecular mechanism which both instructs and reinforces the process of lineage commitment. Within the haematopoietic system, progressive changes in the DNA methylome of haematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) are essential for the effective production of mature blood cells. Inhibition or loss of function of the cellular DNA methylation machinery has been shown to lead to a severe perturbation in blood production and is also an important driver of malignant transformation. HSCs constitute a very rare cell population in the bone marrow, capable of life-long self-renewal and multi-lineage differentiation. The low abundance of HSCs has been a major technological barrier to the global analysis of the CpG methylation status within both HSCs and their immediate progeny, the multipotent progenitors (MPPs). Within this Extra View article, we review the current understanding of how the DNA methylome regulates normal and malignant hematopoiesis. We also discuss the current methodologies that are available for interrogating the DNA methylation status of HSCs and MPPs and describe a new data set that was generated using tagmentation-based whole genome bisulfite sequencing (TWGBS) in order to comprehensively map methylated cytosines using the limited amount of genomic DNA that can be harvested from rare cell populations. Extended analysis of this data set clearly demonstrates the added value of genome-wide sequencing of methylated cytosines and identifies novel important cis-acting regulatory regions that are dynamically remodeled during the first steps of haematopoietic differentiation.
Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2016
Hannah Uckelmann; Sandra Blaszkiewicz; Claudia M. Nicolae; Simon Haas; Alexandra Schnell; Stephan Wurzer; Raimund Wagener; Attila Aszodi; Marieke Essers
Essers et al. find that the extracellular matrix adaptor protein Matrilin-4 confers a resistance to stress stimuli in hematopoietic stem cells.
Cell Reports | 2017
Christoph Hirche; Theresa Frenz; Simon Haas; Marius Döring; Katharina Borst; Pia Tegtmeyer; Ilija Brizić; Stefan Jordan; Kirsten A. Keyser; Chintan Chhatbar; Eline Pronk; Shuiping Lin; Martin Messerle; Stipan Jonjić; Christine S. Falk; Andreas Trumpp; Marieke Essers; Ulrich Kalinke
Quiescent long-term hematopoietic stem cells (LT-HSCs) are efficiently activated by type I interferon (IFN-I). However, this effect remains poorly investigated in the context of IFN-I-inducing virus infections. Here we report that both vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) and murine cytomegalovirus (MCMV) infection induce LT-HSC activation that substantially differs from the effects triggered upon injection of synthetic IFN-I-inducing agents. In both infections, inflammatory responses had to exceed local thresholds within the bone marrow to confer LT-HSC cell cycle entry, and IFN-I receptor triggering was not critical for this activation. After resolution of acute MCMV infection, LT-HSCs returned to phenotypic quiescence. However, non-acute MCMV infection induced a sustained inflammatory milieu within the bone marrow that was associated with long-lasting impairment of LT-HSC function. In conclusion, our results show that systemic virus infections fundamentally affect LT-HSCs and that also non-acute inflammatory stimuli in bone marrow donors can affect the reconstitution potential of bone marrow transplants.