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Dive into the research topics where Stefan L. Ameres is active.

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Featured researches published by Stefan L. Ameres.


Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology | 2013

Diversifying microRNA sequence and function

Stefan L. Ameres; Phillip D. Zamore

MicroRNAs (miRNAs) regulate the expression of most genes in animals, but we are only now beginning to understand how they are generated, assembled into functional complexes and destroyed. Various mechanisms have now been identified that regulate miRNA stability and that diversify miRNA sequences to create distinct isoforms. The production of different isoforms of individual miRNAs in specific cells and tissues may have broader implications for miRNA-mediated gene expression control. Rigorously testing the many discrepant models for how miRNAs function using quantitative biochemical measurements made in vivo and in vitro remains a major challenge for the future.


EMBO Reports | 2006

Cleavage of the siRNA passenger strand during RISC assembly in human cells

Philipp J.F. Leuschner; Stefan L. Ameres; Stephanie Kueng; Javier Martinez

A crucial step in the RNA interference (RNAi) pathway involves the assembly of RISC, the RNA‐induced silencing complex. RISC initially recognizes a double‐stranded short interfering RNA (siRNA), but only one strand is finally retained in the functional ribonucleoprotein complex. The non‐incorporated strand, or ‘passenger’ strand, is removed during the assembly process and most probably degraded thereafter. In this report, we show that the passenger strand is cleaved during the course of RISC assembly following the same rules established for the siRNA‐guided cleavage of a target RNA. Chemical modifications impairing the cleavage of the passenger strand also impair the cleavage of a target RNA in vitro as well as the silencing of a reporter gene in vivo, suggesting that passenger strand removal is facilitated by its cleavage during RISC assembly. Interestingly, target RNA cleavage can be rescued if an otherwise non‐cleavable passenger strand shows a nick at the scissile phosphodiester bond, which further indicates that the cleavage event per se is not essential.


Nature Biotechnology | 2008

The impact of target site accessibility on the design of effective siRNAs

Hakim Tafer; Stefan L. Ameres; Gregor Obernosterer; Christoph A. Gebeshuber; Renée Schroeder; Javier Martinez; Ivo L. Hofacker

Small-interfering RNAs (siRNAs) assemble into RISC, the RNA-induced silencing complex, which cleaves complementary mRNAs. Despite their fluctuating efficacy, siRNAs are widely used to assess gene function. Although this limitation could be ascribed, in part, to variations in the assembly and activation of RISC, downstream events in the RNA interference (RNAi) pathway, such as target site accessibility, have so far not been investigated extensively. In this study we present a comprehensive analysis of target RNA structure effects on RNAi by computing the accessibility of the target site for interaction with the siRNA. Based on our observations, we developed a novel siRNA design tool, RNAxs, by combining known siRNA functionality criteria with target site accessibility. We calibrated our method on two data sets comprising 573 siRNAs for 38 genes, and tested it on an independent set of 360 siRNAs targeting four additional genes. Overall, RNAxs proves to be a robust siRNA selection tool that substantially improves the prediction of highly efficient siRNAs.


Molecular Therapy | 2011

MicroRNA-regulated, Systemically Delivered rAAV9: A Step Closer to CNS-restricted Transgene Expression

Jun Xie; Qing Xie; Hongwei Zhang; Stefan L. Ameres; Jui-Hung Hung; Qin Su; Xin Mu; Seemin Seher Ahmed; Soyeon Park; Hiroki Kato; Chengjian Li; Christian Mueller; Craig C. Mello; Zhiping Weng; Terence R. Flotte; Phillip D. Zamore; Guangping Gao

Recombinant adeno-associated viruses (rAAVs) that can cross the blood–brain-barrier and achieve efficient and stable transvascular gene transfer to the central nervous system (CNS) hold significant promise for treating CNS disorders. However, following intravascular delivery, these vectors also target liver, heart, skeletal muscle, and other tissues, which may cause untoward effects. To circumvent this, we used tissue-specific, endogenous microRNAs (miRNAs) to repress rAAV expression outside the CNS, by engineering perfectly complementary miRNA-binding sites into the rAAV9 genome. This approach allowed simultaneous multi-tissue regulation and CNS-directed stable transgene expression without detectably perturbing the endogenous miRNA pathway. Regulation of rAAV expression by miRNA was primarily via site-specific cleavage of the transgene mRNA, generating specific 5′ and 3′ mRNA fragments. Our findings promise to facilitate the development of miRNA-regulated rAAV for CNS-targeted gene delivery and other applications.


The EMBO Journal | 2005

Inducible DNA-loop formation blocks transcriptional activation by an SV40 enhancer

Stefan L. Ameres; Lars Drueppel; Klaus Pfleiderer; Andreas Schmidt; Wolfgang Hillen; Christian Berens

It is well established that gene expression in eukaryotes is controlled by sequence‐dependent binding of trans‐acting proteins to regulatory elements like promoters, enhancers or silencers. A less well understood level of gene regulation is governed by the various structural and functional states of chromatin, which have been ascribed to changes in covalent modification of core histone proteins. And, much on how topological domains in the genome take part in establishing and maintaining distinct gene expression patterns is still unknown. Here we present a set of regulatory proteins that allow to reversibly alter the DNA structure in vivo and in vitro by adding low molecular weight effectors that control their oligomerization and DNA binding. Using this approach, we completely regulate the activity of an SV40 enhancer in HeLa cells by reversible loop formation to topologically separate it from the promoter. This result establishes a new mechanism for DNA‐structure‐dependent gene regulation in vivo and provides evidence supporting the structural model of insulator function.


Nature | 2016

Genetic and mechanistic diversity of piRNA 3'-end formation.

Rippei Hayashi; Jakob Schnabl; Dominik Handler; Fabio Mohn; Stefan L. Ameres; Julius Brennecke

Small regulatory RNAs guide Argonaute (Ago) proteins in a sequence-specific manner to their targets and therefore have important roles in eukaryotic gene silencing. Of the three small RNA classes, microRNAs and short interfering RNAs are processed from double-stranded precursors into defined 21- to 23-mers by Dicer, an endoribonuclease with intrinsic ruler function. PIWI-interacting RNAs (piRNAs)—the 22–30-nt-long guides for PIWI-clade Ago proteins that silence transposons in animal gonads—are generated independently of Dicer from single-stranded precursors. piRNA 5′ ends are defined either by Zucchini, the Drosophila homologue of mitoPLD—a mitochondria-anchored endonuclease, or by piRNA-guided target cleavage. Formation of piRNA 3′ ends is poorly understood. Here we report that two genetically and mechanistically distinct pathways generate piRNA 3′ ends in Drosophila. The initiating nucleases are either Zucchini or the PIWI-clade proteins Aubergine (Aub) or Ago3. While Zucchini-mediated cleavages directly define mature piRNA 3′ ends, Aub/Ago3-mediated cleavages liberate pre-piRNAs that require extensive resection by the 3′-to-5′ exoribonuclease Nibbler (Drosophila homologue of Mut-7). The relative activity of these two pathways dictates the extent to which piRNAs are directed to cytoplasmic or nuclear PIWI-clade proteins and thereby sets the balance between post-transcriptional and transcriptional silencing. Notably, loss of both Zucchini and Nibbler reveals a minimal, Argonaute-driven small RNA biogenesis pathway in which piRNA 5′ and 3′ ends are directly produced by closely spaced Aub/Ago3-mediated cleavage events. Our data reveal a coherent model for piRNA biogenesis, and should aid the mechanistic dissection of the processes that govern piRNA 3′-end formation.


Molecular Cell | 2015

Uridylation of RNA Hairpins by Tailor Confines the Emergence of MicroRNAs in Drosophila

Madalena M. Reimão-Pinto; Valentina Ignatova; Thomas R Burkard; Jui-Hung Hung; Raphael A Manzenreither; Ivica Sowemimo; Veronika A. Herzog; Brian Reichholf; Sara Fariña-Lopez; Stefan L. Ameres

Summary Uridylation of RNA species represents an emerging theme in post-transcriptional gene regulation. In the microRNA pathway, such modifications regulate small RNA biogenesis and stability in plants, worms, and mammals. Here, we report Tailor, an uridylyltransferase that is required for the majority of 3′ end modifications of microRNAs in Drosophila and predominantly targets precursor hairpins. Uridylation modulates the characteristic two-nucleotide 3′ overhang of microRNA hairpins, which regulates processing by Dicer-1 and destabilizes RNA hairpins. Tailor preferentially uridylates mirtron hairpins, thereby impeding the production of non-canonical microRNAs. Mirtron selectivity is explained by primary sequence specificity of Tailor, selecting substrates ending with a 3′ guanosine. In contrast to mirtrons, conserved Drosophila precursor microRNAs are significantly depleted in 3′ guanosine, thereby escaping regulatory uridylation. Our data support the hypothesis that evolutionary adaptation to Tailor-directed uridylation shapes the nucleotide composition of precursor microRNA 3′ ends. Hence, hairpin uridylation may serve as a barrier for the de novo creation of microRNAs in Drosophila.


The EMBO Journal | 2016

Molecular basis for cytoplasmic RNA surveillance by uridylation‐triggered decay in Drosophila

Madalena M. Reimão-Pinto; Raphael A Manzenreither; Thomas R Burkard; Pawel Sledz; Martin Jinek; Karl Mechtler; Stefan L. Ameres

The posttranscriptional addition of nucleotides to the 3′ end of RNA regulates the maturation, function, and stability of RNA species in all domains of life. Here, we show that in flies, 3′ terminal RNA uridylation triggers the processive, 3′‐to‐5′ exoribonucleolytic decay via the RNase II/R enzyme CG16940, a homolog of the human Perlman syndrome exoribonuclease Dis3l2. Together with the TUTase Tailor, dmDis3l2 forms the cytoplasmic, terminal RNA uridylation‐mediated processing (TRUMP) complex that functionally cooperates in the degradation of structured RNA. RNA immunoprecipitation and high‐throughput sequencing reveals a variety of TRUMP complex substrates, including abundant non‐coding RNA, such as 5S rRNA, tRNA, snRNA, snoRNA, and the essential RNase MRP. Based on genetic and biochemical evidence, we propose a key function of the TRUMP complex in the cytoplasmic quality control of RNA polymerase III transcripts. Together with high‐throughput biochemical characterization of dmDis3l2 and bacterial RNase R, our results imply a conserved molecular function of RNase II/R enzymes as “readers” of destabilizing posttranscriptional marks—uridylation in eukaryotes and adenylation in prokaryotes—that play important roles in RNA surveillance.


Nature Methods | 2017

Thiol-linked alkylation of RNA to assess expression dynamics

Veronika A. Herzog; Brian Reichholf; Tobias Neumann; Philipp Rescheneder; Pooja Bhat; Thomas R Burkard; Wiebke Wlotzka; Arndt von Haeseler; Johannes Zuber; Stefan L. Ameres

Gene expression profiling by high-throughput sequencing reveals qualitative and quantitative changes in RNA species at steady state but obscures the intracellular dynamics of RNA transcription, processing and decay. We developed thiol(SH)-linked alkylation for the metabolic sequencing of RNA (SLAM seq), an orthogonal-chemistry-based RNA sequencing technology that detects 4-thiouridine (s4U) incorporation in RNA species at single-nucleotide resolution. In combination with well-established metabolic RNA labeling protocols and coupled to standard, low-input, high-throughput RNA sequencing methods, SLAM seq enabled rapid access to RNA-polymerase-II-dependent gene expression dynamics in the context of total RNA. We validated the method in mouse embryonic stem cells by showing that the RNA-polymerase-II-dependent transcriptional output scaled with Oct4/Sox2/Nanog-defined enhancer activity, and we provide quantitative and mechanistic evidence for transcript-specific RNA turnover mediated by post-transcriptional gene regulatory pathways initiated by microRNAs and N6-methyladenosine. SLAM seq facilitates the dissection of fundamental mechanisms that control gene expression in an accessible, cost-effective and scalable manner.


Science | 2018

SLAM-seq defines direct gene-regulatory functions of the BRD4-MYC axis

Matthias Muhar; Anja Ebert; Tobias Neumann; Christian Umkehrer; Julian Jude; Corinna Wieshofer; Philipp Rescheneder; Jesse J. Lipp; Veronika A. Herzog; Brian Reichholf; David A. Cisneros; Thomas Hoffmann; Moritz F. Schlapansky; Pooja Bhat; Arndt von Haeseler; Thomas Kocher; Anna C. Obenauf; Johannes Popow; Stefan L. Ameres; Johannes Zuber

Profiling transcription—a SLAM dunk Identification of the direct target genes of transcription factors could shed light on how healthy cells become malignant. Muhar et al. applied a modified version of a transcript-mapping method called SLAM-seq to identify the target genes of two transcriptional regulators of major interest in cancer research (see the Perspective by Sabò and Amati). The MYC oncoprotein selectively activates transcription of just a few genes, primarily those involved in basic cell metabolism. In contrast, BRD4, a bromodomain-containing protein that is being targeted for cancer therapy, activates transcription of many genes. Science, this issue p. 800; see also p. 713 An mRNA mapping method identifies the direct gene targets of two transcriptional regulators implicated in cancer. Defining direct targets of transcription factors and regulatory pathways is key to understanding their roles in physiology and disease. We combined SLAM-seq [thiol(SH)–linked alkylation for the metabolic sequencing of RNA], a method for direct quantification of newly synthesized messenger RNAs (mRNAs), with pharmacological and chemical-genetic perturbation in order to define regulatory functions of two transcriptional hubs in cancer, BRD4 and MYC, and to interrogate direct responses to BET bromodomain inhibitors (BETis). We found that BRD4 acts as general coactivator of RNA polymerase II–dependent transcription, which is broadly repressed upon high-dose BETi treatment. At doses triggering selective effects in leukemia, BETis deregulate a small set of hypersensitive targets including MYC. In contrast to BRD4, MYC primarily acts as a selective transcriptional activator controlling metabolic processes such as ribosome biogenesis and de novo purine synthesis. Our study establishes a simple and scalable strategy to identify direct transcriptional targets of any gene or pathway.

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Veronika A. Herzog

Institute of Molecular Biotechnology

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Brian Reichholf

Institute of Molecular Biotechnology

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Jui-Hung Hung

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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Phillip D. Zamore

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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Zhiping Weng

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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Johannes Zuber

Research Institute of Molecular Pathology

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Thomas R Burkard

Institute of Molecular Biotechnology

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Tobias Neumann

Research Institute of Molecular Pathology

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Javier Martinez

Austrian Academy of Sciences

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