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Dive into the research topics where Valerie Kouskoff is active.

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Featured researches published by Valerie Kouskoff.


Nature | 2004

Haemangioblast commitment is initiated in the primitive streak of the mouse embryo

Tara L. Huber; Valerie Kouskoff; H. Joerg Fehling; James Palis; Gordon Keller

Haematopoietic and vascular cells are thought to arise from a common progenitor called the haemangioblast. Support for this concept has been provided by embryonic stem (ES) cell differentiation studies that identified the blast colony-forming cell (BL-CFC), a progenitor with both haematopoietic and vascular potential. Using conditions that support the growth of BL-CFCs, we identify comparable progenitors that can form blast cell colonies (displaying haematopoietic and vascular potential) in gastrulating mouse embryos. Cell mixing and limiting dilution analyses provide evidence that these colonies are clonal, indicating that they develop from a progenitor with haemangioblast potential. Embryo-derived haemangioblasts are first detected at the mid-streak stage of gastrulation and peak in number during the neural plate stage. Analysis of embryos carrying complementary DNA of the green fluorescent protein targeted to the brachyury locus demonstrates that the haemangioblast is a subpopulation of mesoderm that co-expresses brachyury (also known as T) and Flk-1 (also known as Kdr). Detailed mapping studies reveal that haemangioblasts are found at highest frequency in the posterior region of the primitive streak, indicating that initial stages of haematopoietic and vascular commitment occur before blood island development in the yolk sac.


Development | 2003

Tracking mesoderm induction and its specification to the hemangioblast during embryonic stem cell differentiation

Hans Jörg Fehling; Georges Lacaud; Atsushi Kubo; Marion Kennedy; Scott M. Robertson; Gordon Keller; Valerie Kouskoff

The hematopoietic and endothelial lineages derive from mesoderm and are thought to develop through the maturation of a common progenitor, the hemangioblast. To investigate the developmental processes that regulate mesoderm induction and specification to the hemangioblast, we generated an embryonic stem cell line with the green fluorescent protein (GFP) targeted to the mesodermal gene, brachyury. After the in vitro differentiation of these embryonic stem cells to embryoid bodies, developing mesodermal progenitors could be separated from those with neuroectoderm potential based on GFP expression. Co-expression of GFP with the receptor tyrosine kinase Flk1 revealed the emergence of three distinct cell populations, GFP-Flk1-, GFP+Flk1- and GFP+Flk1+ cells, which represent a developmental progression ranging from pre-mesoderm to prehemangioblast mesoderm to the hemangioblast.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2003

Visualization of the Genesis and Fate of Isotype-switched B Cells during a Primary Immune Response

Kathryn A. Pape; Valerie Kouskoff; David Nemazee; H. Lucy Tang; Jason G. Cyster; Lina E. Tze; Keli L. Hippen; Timothy W. Behrens; Marc K. Jenkins

The life history of isotype-switched B cells is unclear, in part, because of an inability to detect rare antigen-specific B cells at early times during the immune response. To address this issue, a small population of B cells carrying targeted antibody transgenes capable of class switching was monitored in immunized mice. After contacting helper T cells, the first switched B cells appeared in follicles rather than in the red pulp, as was expected. Later, some of the switched B cells transiently occupied the red pulp and marginal zone, whereas others persisted in germinal centers (GCs). Antigen-experienced IgM B cells were rarely found in GCs, indicating that these cells switched rapidly after entering GCs or did not persist in this environment.


Life Sciences | 2001

Role of receptor editing and revision in shaping the B and T lymphocyte repertoire.

Valerie Kouskoff; David Nemazee

B and T lymphocytes that carry antigen receptors are able to change specificity through subsequent receptor gene rearrangements. Receptor editing and receptor revision are terms used to distinguish those rearrangements occurring, respectively, in central lymphoid organs and the periphery. Secondary rearrangement appears to be a major player at two levels in the life of B lymphocytes. First, editing preserves a diverse repertoire without compromising self-tolerance, and revision further increases this repertoire once B cells have been engaged in an immune response, most likely for a better interaction with microbes. Recent studies have likewise suggested a role for receptor editing and revision in shaping the T cell repertoire during development and tolerance.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2000

B cell receptor expression level determines the fate of developing B lymphocytes: Receptor editing versus selection

Valerie Kouskoff; Georges Lacaud; Kathryn A. Pape; Marc W. Retter; David Nemazee


Current Topics in Microbiology and Immunology | 2000

B-cell-receptor-dependent positive and negative selection in immature B cells.

David Nemazee; Valerie Kouskoff; Marc Hertz; Julie Lang; Doron Melamed; Kathryn A. Pape; M Retter


Trends in Cardiovascular Medicine | 2004

Tracking mesoderm formation and specification to the hemangioblast in vitro.

Georges Lacaud; Gordon Keller; Valerie Kouskoff


Archive | 2008

Method of enriching a mammalian cell population for mesoderm cells

Gordon Keller; Valerie Kouskoff; Atsushi Kubo; Hans Joerg Fehling


Archive | 2016

Brief report Contrasting effects of Sox17- and Sox18-sustained expression at the onset of blood specification

Alicia G. Serrano; Arnaud Gandillet; Stella Pearson; Georges Lacaud; Valerie Kouskoff


Archive | 2014

Embryonic Stem Cell Differentiation – A Model System to Study Embryonic Haematopoiesis

Monika Stefanska; Valerie Kouskoff; Georges Lacaud

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Georges Lacaud

University of Manchester

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Gordon Keller

University of Colorado Denver

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Atsushi Kubo

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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David Nemazee

Scripps Research Institute

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Gordon Keller

University of Colorado Denver

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James Palis

University of Rochester Medical Center

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Marion Kennedy

University Health Network

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Christopher J. Hogan

University of Colorado Denver

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