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Dive into the research topics where Su-Yi Tsai is active.

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Featured researches published by Su-Yi Tsai.


Stem Cells | 2009

Oct4 and Klf4 Reprogram Dermal Papilla Cells Into Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells

Su-Yi Tsai; Carlos Clavel; Soo Jung Kim; Yen-Sin Ang; Laura Grisanti; Dung Fang Lee; Kevin Kelley; Michael Rendl

Direct reprogramming of somatic cells into induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells by only four transcription factors (Oct4, Sox2, Klf4, and c‐Myc) has great potential for tissue‐specific regenerative therapies, eliminating the ethical issues surrounding the use of embryonic stem cells and the rejection problems of using non‐autologous cells. The reprogramming efficiency generally is very low, however, and the problems surrounding the introduction of viral genetic material are only partially investigated. Recent efforts to reduce the number of virally expressed transcription factors succeeded at reprogramming neural stem cells into iPS cells by overexpressing Oct4 alone. However, the relative inaccessibility and difficulty of obtaining neural cells in humans remains to be resolved. Here we report that dermal papilla (DP) cells, which are specialized skin fibroblasts thought to instruct hair follicle stem cells, endogenously express high levels of Sox2 and c‐Myc, and that these cells can be reprogrammed into iPS cells with only Oct4 and Klf4. Moreover, we show that DP cells are reprogrammed more efficiently than skin and embryonic fibroblasts. iPS cells derived from DP cells expressed pluripotency genes and differentiated into cells from all germ layers in vitro and widely contributed to chimeric mice in vivo, including the germline. Our work establishes DP cells as an easily accessible source to generate iPS cells with efficiency and with less genetic material. This opens up the possibility of streamlined generation of skin‐derived, patient‐specific pluripotent stem cells and of ultimately replacing the remaining two factors with small molecules for safe generation of transplantable cells. STEM CELLS 2010;28:221–228


Stem Cells | 2011

Single Transcription Factor Reprogramming of Hair Follicle Dermal Papilla Cells to Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells

Su-Yi Tsai; Britta Am Bouwman; Yen Sin Ang; Soo Jeong Kim; Dung Fang Lee; Ihor R. Lemischka; Michael Rendl

Reprogramming patient‐specific somatic cells into induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells has great potential to develop feasible regenerative therapies. However, several issues need to be resolved such as ease, efficiency, and safety of generation of iPS cells. Many different cell types have been reprogrammed, most conveniently even peripheral blood mononuclear cells. However, they typically require the enforced expression of several transcription factors, posing mutagenesis risks as exogenous genetic material. To reduce this risk, iPS cells were previously generated with Oct4 alone from rather inaccessible neural stem cells that endogenously express the remaining reprogramming factors and very recently from fibroblasts with Oct4 alone in combination with additional small molecules. Here, we exploit that dermal papilla (DP) cells from hair follicles in the skin express all but one reprogramming factors to show that these accessible cells can be reprogrammed into iPS cells with the single transcription factor Oct4 and without further manipulation. Reprogramming was already achieved after 3 weeks and with efficiencies similar to other cell types reprogrammed with four factors. Dermal papilla‐derived iPS cells are comparable to embryonic stem cells with respect to morphology, gene expression, and pluripotency. We conclude that DP cells may represent a preferred cell type for reprogramming accessible cells with less manipulation and for ultimately establishing safe conditions in the future by replacing Oct4 with small molecules. STEM CELLS 2011;29:964–971


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

Mpv17l protects against mitochondrial oxidative stress and apoptosis by activation of Omi/HtrA2 protease

Stefanie Krick; Shaolin Shi; Wenjun Ju; Christian Faul; Su-Yi Tsai; Peter Mundel; Erwin P. Bottinger

Cellular localization determines whether the serine protease HtrA2 exerts pro- or antiapoptotic functions. In contrast to the well-characterized proapoptotic function of cytosolic HtrA2, mechanisms underlying the mitochondrial protective role are poorly understood. Mpv17l is a transmembrane protein previously implicated in peroxisomal reactive oxygen species metabolism and a close homolog of the inner mitochondrial membrane protein Mpv17. Here we demonstrate a previously undescribed direct interaction between Mpv17l and HtrA2 in mitochondria. The interaction is mediated by a PDZ domain and induces protease activation of HtrA2. HtrA2 inhibits mitochondrial superoxide generation, stabilizes mitochondrial membrane potential, and prevents apoptosis at baseline and in response to extracellular inducers of mitochondrial stress. The physiological role of Mpv17l is underscored by the finding that oxidative stress-induced downregulation of Mpv17l is a consistent feature in renal injury models. Our findings identify Mpv17l as a unique interacting protein and regulator of HtrA2 protease mediating antioxidant and antiapoptotic function in mitochondria.


The Journal of Physiology | 2003

Hypoxic preconditioning enhances renal superoxide dismutase levels in rats

Chau-Fong Chen; Su-Yi Tsai; Ming-Chieh Ma; Ming-Shiou Wu

Renal ischaemia releases reactive oxygen species (ROS) in the kidneys. We hypothesized that the kidneys are more resistant to the insult of ROS in chronically hypoxic rats. We thus compared rats kept at sea level (SL) and those that had been adapted to hypoxia (hypoxia adapted, HA) by exposure to an altitude of 5500 m in an altitude chamber for 15 h day−1 for 4 weeks. Xanthine (X, 0.75 mg kg−1) and xanthine oxidase (XO, 24.8 mU kg−1) were injected intrarenally. A lucigenin‐enhanced chemiluminescence method was employed to detect the amount of free radicals in renal venous blood samples and on the kidney surface. In the renal venous blood samples, 26.05 (± 4.36) × 104 and 10.98 (± 1.79) × 104 counts were detected in the SL and HA rats, respectively, after X‐XO treatment; these figures were significantly different. On the kidney surface of the SL rats, the free radical count amounted to 12.77 (± 1.64) × 104, while that in the HA rats was 8.47 (± 0.42) × 104; these figures were also significantly different. There was a significant increase in urine volume and urinary excretion of Na+, K+ and protein after X‐XO administration in both groups of rats. However, the effect was greater for the SL rats than for the HA rats. The lipid peroxidation of the kidneys was not significantly different in the two groups of rats. Finally, we found that the activity of superoxide dismutase (SOD) and SOD mRNA were higher in the renal tissue of HA rats. We conclude that the renal response to free radicals is attenuated after chronic hypoxia in rats, and that SOD might play an important role in protecting HA rats from oxidative stress.


Developmental Biology | 2014

Wnt/β-catenin signaling in dermal condensates is required for hair follicle formation

Su-Yi Tsai; Rachel Sennett; Amélie Rezza; Carlos Clavel; Laura Grisanti; Roland Zemla; Sara Najam; Michael Rendl

Broad dermal Wnt signaling is required for patterned induction of hair follicle placodes and subsequent Wnt signaling in placode stem cells is essential for induction of dermal condensates, cell clusters of precursors for the hair follicle dermal papilla (DP). Progression of hair follicle formation then requires coordinated signal exchange between dermal condensates and placode stem cells. However, it remains unknown whether continued Wnt signaling in DP precursor cells plays a role in this process, largely due to the long-standing inability to specifically target dermal condensates for gene ablation. Here we use the Tbx18(Cre) knockin mouse line to ablate the Wnt-responsive transcription factor β-catenin specifically in these cells at E14.5 during the first wave of guard hair follicle formation. In the absence of β-catenin, canonical Wnt signaling is effectively abolished in these cells. Sox2(+) dermal condensates initiate normally; however by E16.5 guard hair follicle numbers are strongly reduced and by E18.5 most whiskers and guard hair follicles are absent, suggesting that active Wnt signaling in dermal condensates is important for hair follicle formation to proceed after induction. To explore the molecular mechanisms by which Wnt signaling in dermal condensates regulates hair follicle formation, we analyze genome-wide the gene expression changes in embryonic β-catenin null DP precursor cells. We find altered expression of several signaling pathway genes, including Fgfs and Activin, both previously implicated in hair follicle formation. In summary, these data reveal a functional role of Wnt signaling in DP precursors for embryonic hair follicle formation and identify Fgf and Activin signaling as potential effectors of Wnt signaling-regulated events.


Development | 2013

GATA factors efficiently direct cardiac fate from embryonic stem cells

Harma K. Turbendian; Miriam Gordillo; Su-Yi Tsai; Jia Lu; Guoxin Kang; Ting-Chun Liu; Alice Tang; Susanna Liu; Glenn I. Fishman; Todd Evans

The GATA4 transcription factor is implicated in promoting cardiogenesis in combination with other factors, including TBX5, MEF2C and BAF60C. However, when expressed in embryonic stem cells (ESCs), GATA4 was shown to promote endoderm, not cardiac mesoderm. The capacity of related GATA factors to promote cardiogenesis is untested. We found that expression of the highly related gene, Gata5, very efficiently promotes cardiomyocyte fate from murine ESCs. Gata5 directs development of beating sheets of cells that express cardiac troponin T and show a full range of action potential morphologies that are responsive to pharmacological stimulation. We discovered that by removing serum from the culture conditions, GATA4 and GATA6 are each also able to efficiently promote cardiogenesis in ESC derivatives, with some distinctions. Thus, GATA factors can function in ESC derivatives upstream of other cardiac transcription factors to direct the efficient generation of cardiomyocytes.


Journal of Investigative Dermatology | 2013

Tbx18 Targets Dermal Condensates for Labeling, Isolation, and Gene Ablation during Embryonic Hair Follicle Formation

Laura Grisanti; Carlos Clavel; Xiaoqiang Cai; Amélie Rezza; Su-Yi Tsai; Rachel Sennett; Melanie Mumau; Chen-Leng Cai; Michael Rendl

How cell fate decisions of stem and progenitor cells are regulated by their microenvironment or niche is a central question in stem cell and regenerative biology. While functional analysis of hair follicle epithelial stem cells by gene targeting is well-established, the molecular and genetic characterization of the dermal counterpart during embryonic morphogenesis has been lacking due to the absence of cell type-specific drivers. Here we report that T-box transcription factor Tbx18 specifically marks dermal papilla (DP) precursor cells during embryonic hair follicle morphogenesis. With Tbx18LacZ, Tbx18H2BGFP and Tbx18Cre knock-in mouse models we demonstrate LacZ/GFP expression and Cre activity in dermal condensates of nascent first-wave hair follicles at E14.5. Since Tbx18 expression becomes more widespread throughout the dermis at later developmental stages, we utilize tamoxifen-inducible Cre expressing mice, Tbx18MerCreMer, to exclusively target DP precursor cells and their progeny. Finally, we ablate Tbx18 in full knockout mice, but find no perturbations in hair follicle formation, suggesting that Tbx18 is dispensable for normal DP function. In summary, our study establishes Tbx18 as a genetic driver to target embryonic DP precursors for labeling, isolation and gene ablation that will greatly enhance investigations into their molecular functions during hair follicle morphogenesis.


American Journal of Physiology-renal Physiology | 2014

Mpv17 in mitochondria protects podocytes against mitochondrial dysfunction and apoptosis in vivo and in vitro.

Gabriella Casalena; Stefanie Krick; Ilse Daehn; Liping Yu; Wenjun Ju; Shaolin Shi; Su-Yi Tsai; Maja T. Lindenmeyer; Clemens D. Cohen; Detlef Schlöndorff; Erwin P. Bottinger

Mitochondrial dysfunction is increasingly recognized as contributing to glomerular diseases, including those secondary to mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) mutations and deletions. Mitochondria maintain cellular redox and energy homeostasis and are a major source of intracellular reactive oxygen species (ROS) production. Mitochondrial ROS accumulation may contribute to stress-induced mitochondrial dysfunction and apoptosis and thereby to glomerulosclerosis. In mice, deletion of the gene encoding Mpv17 is associated with glomerulosclerosis, but the underlying mechanism remains poorly defined. Here we report that Mpv17 localizes to mitochondria of podocytes and its expression is reduced in several glomerular injury models and in human focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS) but not in minimal change disease. Using models of mild or severe nephrotoxic serum nephritis (NTSN) in Mpv17(+/+) wild-type (WT) and Mpv17(-/-) knockout mice, we found that Mpv17 deficiency resulted in increased proteinuria (mild NTSN) and renal insufficiency (severe NTSN) compared with WT. These lesions were associated with increased mitochondrial ROS generation and mitochondrial injury such as oxidative DNA damage. In vitro, podocytes with loss of Mpv17 function were characterized by increased susceptibility to apoptosis and ROS injury including decreased mitochondrial function, loss of mtDNA content, and change in mitochondrial configuration. In summary, the inner mitochondrial membrane protein Mpv17 in podocytes is essential for the maintenance of mitochondrial homeostasis and protects podocytes against oxidative stress-induced injury both in vitro and in vivo.


Stem cell reports | 2015

Efficient Generation of Cardiac Purkinje Cells from ESCs by Activating cAMP Signaling

Su-Yi Tsai; Karen Maass; Jia Lu; Glenn I. Fishman; Shuibing Chen; Todd Evans

Summary Dysfunction of the specialized cardiac conduction system (CCS) is associated with life-threatening arrhythmias. Strategies to derive CCS cells, including rare Purkinje cells (PCs), would facilitate models for mechanistic studies and drug discovery and also provide new cellular materials for regenerative therapies. A high-throughput chemical screen using CCS:lacz and Contactin2:egfp (Cntn2:egfp) reporter embryonic stem cell (ESC) lines was used to discover a small molecule, sodium nitroprusside (SN), that efficiently promotes the generation of cardiac cells that express gene profiles and generate action potentials of PC-like cells. Imaging and mechanistic studies suggest that SN promotes the generation of PCs from cardiac progenitors initially expressing cardiac myosin heavy chain and that it does so by activating cyclic AMP signaling. These findings provide a strategy to derive scalable PCs, along with insight into the ontogeny of CCS development.


Stem Cells Translational Medicine | 2016

Modeling Cystic Fibrosis Using Pluripotent Stem Cell-Derived Human Pancreatic Ductal Epithelial Cells

Senem Simsek; Ting Zhou; Christopher L. Robinson; Su-Yi Tsai; Miguel Crespo; Sadaf Amin; Xiangyi Lin; Jane Hon; Todd Evans; Shuibing Chen

We established an efficient strategy to direct human pluripotent stem cells, including human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) and an induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC) line derived from patients with cystic fibrosis, to differentiate into pancreatic ductal epithelial cells (PDECs). After purification, more than 98% of hESC‐derived PDECs expressed functional cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) protein. In addition, iPSC lines were derived from a patient with CF carrying compound frameshift and mRNA splicing mutations and were differentiated to PDECs. PDECs derived from Weill Cornell cystic fibrosis (WCCF)‐iPSCs showed defective expression of mature CFTR protein and impaired chloride ion channel activity, recapitulating functional defects of patients with CF at the cellular level. These studies provide a new methodology to derive pure PDECs expressing CFTR and establish a “disease in a dish” platform to identify drug candidates to rescue the pancreatic defects of patients with CF.

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Michael Rendl

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Carlos Clavel

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Dung Fang Lee

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Jia Lu

New York University

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Laura Grisanti

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Amélie Rezza

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Erwin P. Bottinger

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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