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Dive into the research topics where Valya Russanova is active.

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Featured researches published by Valya Russanova.


Cell | 1996

The Transcriptional Coactivators p300 and CBP Are Histone Acetyltransferases

Vasily V. Ogryzko; R. Louis Schiltz; Valya Russanova; Bruce H. Howard; Yoshihiro Nakatani

p300/CBP is a transcriptional adaptor that integrates signals from many sequence-specific activators via direct interactions. Various cellular and viral factors target p300/CBP to modulate transcription and/or cell cycle progression. One such factor, the cellular p300/CBP associated factor (PCAF), possesses intrinsic histone acetyltransferase activity. Here, we demonstrate that p300/CBP is not only a transcriptional adaptor but also a histone acetyltransferase. p300/CBP represents a novel class of acetyltransferases in that it does not have the conserved motif found among various other acetyltransferases. p300/CBP acetylates all four core histones in nucleosomes. These observations suggest that p300/CBP acetylates nucleosomes in concert with PCAF.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2012

Postnatal development- and age-related changes in DNA-methylation patterns in the human genome

Paraskevi Salpea; Valya Russanova; Tazuko H. Hirai; Thomae G. Sourlingas; Kalliope E. Sekeri-Pataryas; Roberto Romero; Jonathan I. Epstein; Bruce H. Howard

Alterations in DNA methylation have been reported to occur during development and aging; however, much remains to be learned regarding post-natal and age-associated epigenome dynamics, and few if any investigations have compared human methylome patterns on a whole genome basis in cells from newborns and adults. The aim of this study was to reveal genomic regions with distinct structure and sequence characteristics that render them subject to dynamic post-natal developmental remodeling or age-related dysregulation of epigenome structure. DNA samples derived from peripheral blood monocytes and in vitro differentiated dendritic cells were analyzed by methylated DNA Immunoprecipitation (MeDIP) or, for selected loci, bisulfite modification, followed by next generation sequencing. Regions of interest that emerged from the analysis included tandem or interspersed-tandem gene sequence repeats (PCDHG, FAM90A, HRNR, ECEL1P2), and genes with strong homology to other family members elsewhere in the genome (FZD1, FZD7 and FGF17). Our results raise the possibility that selected gene sequences with highly homologous copies may serve to facilitate, perhaps even provide a clock-like function for, developmental and age-related epigenome remodeling. If so, this would represent a fundamental feature of genome architecture in higher eukaryotic organisms.


Molecular Immunology | 2008

Developmental and epigenetic regulation of the human TLR3 gene

Analia Porrás; Sarah Kozar; Valya Russanova; Paraskevi Salpea; Tazuko H. Hirai; Nicholas Sammons; Pooja Mittal; Ji Young Kim; Keiko Ozato; Roberto Romero; Bruce H. Howard

The receptor encoded by the human TLR3 gene recognizes double-strand RNAs (dsRNAs) associated with viral infection. TLR3 expression is strongly activated upon differentiation of monocytes to dendritic cells, and can be further stimulated by the dsRNA analog polyinosine:polycytosine (PI:C). We report evidence for developmental regulation of the TLR3 gene. In dendritic cells derived from cord blood, both differentiation- and PI:C-associated TLR3 transcriptional activation are impaired as compared to cells from adults. Consistent with relative expression patterns, chromatin states and remodeling differ between newborn and adult samples. TLR3 expression in newborn dendritic cells exhibits heterocellularity and allelic imbalance (skewing), features characteristic of cis-acting epigenetic control. These findings reveal a new source for variability in innate immune system function and provide a model for further study of perinatal epigenetic transitions during development.


eLife | 2016

Epigenetic regulation of hematopoiesis by DNA methylation

Aniket V. Gore; Brett Athans; James R. Iben; Kristin Johnson; Valya Russanova; Daniel Castranova; Van N. Pham; Matthew G. Butler; Lisa Williams-Simons; James T. Nichols; Erica Bresciani; Bejamin Feldman; Charles B. Kimmel; Paul Liu; Brant M. Weinstein

During embryonic development, cell type-specific transcription factors promote cell identities, while epigenetic modifications are thought to contribute to maintain these cell fates. Our understanding of how genetic and epigenetic modes of regulation work together to establish and maintain cellular identity is still limited, however. Here, we show that DNA methyltransferase 3bb.1 (dnmt3bb.1) is essential for maintenance of hematopoietic stem and progenitor cell (HSPC) fate as part of an early Notch-runx1-cmyb HSPC specification pathway in the zebrafish. Dnmt3bb.1 is expressed in HSPC downstream from Notch1 and runx1, and loss of Dnmt3bb.1 activity leads to reduced cmyb locus methylation, reduced cmyb expression, and gradual reduction in HSPCs. Ectopic overexpression of dnmt3bb.1 in non-hematopoietic cells is sufficient to methylate the cmyb locus, promote cmyb expression, and promote hematopoietic development. Our results reveal an epigenetic mechanism supporting the maintenance of hematopoietic cell fate via DNA methylation-mediated perdurance of a key transcription factor in HSPCs. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.11813.001


PLOS ONE | 2018

Epigenome comparisons reveal linkage between gene expression and postnatal remodeling of chromatin domain topology

Bruce H. Howard; Tazuko H. Hirai; Valya Russanova

Substantial evidence has accumulated linking epigenome change to alterations in stem cell function during postnatal development and aging. Yet much remains to be learned about causal relationships, and large gaps remain in our understanding of epigenome-transcriptome interactions. Here we investigate structural features of large histone H3K27me3-enriched regions in human stem cell-like monocytes and their dendritic cell derivatives, where the H3K27me3 modification is considered to demarcate Polycomb (PcG) domains. Both differentiation- and postnatal development-related change are explored, initially by confirming expected reciprocal relationships between transcript abundance and span of PcG domains overlapping transcribed regions. PcG-associated postnatal transcriptome change specific to the stem cell-like monocytes is found to be incompletely explained by conventional measures of PcG region structure. To address this, we introduce algorithms that quantify local nucleosome-scale conservation of PcG-region topology. It is shown that topology-based comparisons can reveal broad statistical linkage between postnatal gene down-regulation and epigenome remodeling; further, such comparisons provide access to a previously unexplored dimension of epigenome architecture.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1997

A histone deacetylase inhibitor potentiates retinoid receptor action in embryonal carcinoma cells

Saverio Minucci; Valerie J. Horn; Nisan Bhattacharyya; Valya Russanova; Vasily Ogryzko; Lucia Gabriele; Bruce H. Howard; Keiko Ozato


Oncotarget | 2015

DNA methylome and transcriptome sequencing in human ovarian granulosa cells links age-related changes in gene expression to gene body methylation and 3’-end GC density

Bo Yu; Valya Russanova; Silvia Gravina; Stephen W. Hartley; James C. Mullikin; Alice Ignezweski; J.R. Graham; James H. Segars; Alan H. DeCherney; Bruce H. Howard


Journals of Gerontology Series A-biological Sciences and Medical Sciences | 2004

Mapping Development-Related and Age-Related Chromatin Remodeling by a High Throughput ChIP-HPLC Approach

Valya Russanova; Tazuko H. Hirai; Andrei V. Tchernov; Bruce H. Howard


Journals of Gerontology Series A-biological Sciences and Medical Sciences | 2004

Semirandom Sampling to Detect Differentiation-Related and Age-Related Epigenome Remodeling

Valya Russanova; Tazuko H. Hirai; Bruce H. Howard


Fertility and Sterility | 2012

Diminished ovarian function is associated with distinctive DNA methylome changes in human ovarian granulosa cells

Bo Yu; Alan H. DeCherney; James H. Segars; A. Ignaszewski; Valya Russanova; Bruce H. Howard

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Bruce H. Howard

Laboratory of Molecular Biology

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Tazuko H. Hirai

National Institutes of Health

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Bruce H. Howard

Laboratory of Molecular Biology

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Alan H. DeCherney

National Institutes of Health

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Bo Yu

National Institutes of Health

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Keiko Ozato

National Institutes of Health

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Paraskevi Salpea

National Institutes of Health

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Roberto Romero

National Institutes of Health

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