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Dive into the research topics where Vanessa Lopez-Pajares is active.

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Featured researches published by Vanessa Lopez-Pajares.


Developmental Cell | 2015

A LncRNA-MAF:MAFB Transcription Factor Network Regulates Epidermal Differentiation

Vanessa Lopez-Pajares; Kun Qu; Jiajing Zhang; Dan E. Webster; Brook Barajas; Zurab Siprashvili; Brian J. Zarnegar; Lisa D. Boxer; Eon J. Rios; Shiying Tao; Markus Kretz; Paul A. Khavari

Progenitor differentiation requires remodeling of genomic expression; however, in many tissues, such as epidermis, the spectrum of remodeled genes and the transcription factors (TFs) that control them are not fully defined. We performed kinetic transcriptome analysis during regeneration of differentiated epidermis and identified gene sets enriched in progenitors (594 genes), in early (159 genes), and in late differentiation (387 genes). Module mapping of 1,046 TFs identified MAF and MAFB as necessary and sufficient for progenitor differentiation. MAF:MAFB regulated 393 genes altered in this setting. Integrative analysis identified ANCR and TINCR lncRNAs as essential upstream MAF:MAFB regulators. ChIP-seq analysis demonstrated MAF:MAFB binding to known epidermal differentiation TF genes whose expression they controlled, including GRHL3, ZNF750, KLF4, and PRDM1. Each of these TFs rescued expression of specific MAF:MAFB target gene subsets in the setting of MAF:MAFB loss, indicating they act downstream of MAF:MAFB. A lncRNA-TF network is thus essential for epidermal differentiation.


Trends in Genetics | 2013

Genetic pathways in disorders of epidermal differentiation

Vanessa Lopez-Pajares; Karen Yan; Brian J. Zarnegar; Katherine L. Jameson; Paul A. Khavari

More than 100 human genetic skin diseases, impacting over 20% of the population, are characterized by disrupted epidermal differentiation. A significant proportion of the 90 genes identified in these disorders to date are concentrated within several functional pathways, suggesting the emergence of organizing themes in epidermal differentiation. Among these are the Notch, transforming growth factor β (TGFβ), IκB kinase (IKK), Ras/mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK), phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K), p63, and Wnt signaling pathways, as well as core biological processes mediating calcium homeostasis, tissue integrity, cornification, and lipid biogenesis. Here, we review recent results supporting the central role of these pathways in epidermal differentiation, highlighting the integration of genetic information with functional studies to illuminate the biological actions of these pathways in humans as well as to guide development of future therapeutics to correct their dysfunction.


Cell Stem Cell | 2013

ACTL6a enforces the epidermal progenitor state by suppressing SWI/SNF-dependent induction of KLF4

Xiaomin Bao; Jiong Tang; Vanessa Lopez-Pajares; Shiying Tao; Kun Qu; Gerald R. Crabtree; Paul A. Khavari

Somatic progenitors suppress differentiation to maintain tissue self-renewal. The mammalian SWI/SNF chromatin-remodeling complex regulates nucleosome packaging to control differentiation in embryonic and adult stem cells. Catalytic Brg1 and Brm subunits are required for these processes; however, the roles of SWI/SNF regulatory subunits are not fully understood. Here, we show that ACTL6a/BAF53A modulates the SWI/SNF complex to suppress differentiation in epidermis. Conditional loss of ACTL6a resulted in terminal differentiation, cell-cycle exit, and hypoplasia, whereas ectopic expression of ACTL6a promoted the progenitor state. A significant portion of genes regulated by ACTL6a were found to also be targets of KLF4, a known activator of epidermal differentiation. Mechanistically, we show that ACTL6a prevents SWI/SNF complex binding to promoters of KLF4 and other differentiation genes and that SWI/SNF catalytic subunits are required for full induction of KLF4 targets. Thus, ACTL6a controls the epidermal progenitor state by sequestering SWI/SNF to prevent activation of differentiation programs.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2012

Genomic Profiling of a Human Organotypic Model of AEC Syndrome Reveals ZNF750 as an Essential Downstream Target of Mutant TP63

Brian J. Zarnegar; Dan E. Webster; Vanessa Lopez-Pajares; Brook Vander Stoep Hunt; Kun Qu; Karen J. Yan; David R. Berk; George L. Sen; Paul A. Khavari

The basis for impaired differentiation in TP63 mutant ankyloblepharon-ectodermal dysplasia-clefting (AEC) syndrome is unknown. Human epidermis harboring AEC TP63 mutants recapitulated this impairment, along with downregulation of differentiation activators, including HOPX, GRHL3, KLF4, PRDM1, and ZNF750. Gene-set enrichment analysis indicated that disrupted expression of epidermal differentiation programs under the control of ZNF750 and KLF4 accounted for the majority of disrupted epidermal differentiation resulting from AEC mutant TP63. Chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) analysis and ChIP-sequencing of TP63 binding in differentiated keratinocytes revealed ZNF750 as a direct target of wild-type and AEC mutant TP63. Restoring ZNF750 to AEC model tissue rescued activator expression and differentiation, indicating that AEC TP63-mediated ZNF750 inhibition contributes to differentiation defects in AEC. Incorporating disease-causing mutants into regenerated human tissue can thus dissect pathomechanisms and identify targets that reverse disease features.


Pflügers Archiv: European Journal of Physiology | 2016

Long non-coding RNA regulation of gene expression during differentiation

Vanessa Lopez-Pajares

Transcriptome analysis of mammalian genomes has revealed widespread transcription, much of which does not encode protein. Long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs) are a subset of the non-coding transcriptome that are emerging as critical regulators of various cellular processes. Differentiation of stem and progenitor cells requires a careful execution of specific genetic programs, and recent studies have revealed that lncRNA expression contributes to specification of cell identity. LncRNAs participate in regulating differentiation at multiple levels of gene expression through various mechanisms of action. In this review, functional roles of lncRNAs in regulating cellular differentiation of blood, muscle, skin, cardiomyocytes, adipocytes, and neurons are discussed.


Genes & Development | 2015

CALML5 is a ZNF750- and TINCR-induced protein that binds stratifin to regulate epidermal differentiation

Bryan K. Sun; Lisa D. Boxer; Julia D. Ransohoff; Zurab Siprashvili; Kun Qu; Vanessa Lopez-Pajares; S. Tyler Hollmig; Paul A. Khavari

Outward migration of epidermal progenitors occurs with induction of hundreds of differentiation genes, but the identities of all regulators required for this process are unknown. We used laser capture microdissection followed by RNA sequencing to identify calmodulin-like 5 (CALML5) as the most enriched gene in differentiating outer epidermis. CALML5 mRNA was up-regulated by the ZNF750 transcription factor and then stabilized by the long noncoding RNA TINCR. CALML5 knockout impaired differentiation, abolished keratohyalin granules, and disrupted epidermal barrier function. Mass spectrometry identified SFN (stratifin/14-3-3σ) as a CALML5-binding protein. CALML5 interacts with SFN in suprabasal epidermis, cocontrols 13% of late differentiation genes, and modulates interaction of SFN to some of its binding partners. A ZNF750-TINCR-CALML5-SFN network is thus essential for epidermal differentiation.


Cell Cycle | 2016

Epidermal differentiation gene regulatory networks controlled by MAF and MAFB

Andrew T. Labott; Vanessa Lopez-Pajares

ABSTRACT Numerous regulatory factors in epidermal differentiation and their role in regulating different cell states have been identified in recent years. However, the genetic interactions between these regulators over the dynamic course of differentiation have not been studied. In this Extra-View article, we review recent work by Lopez-Pajares et al. that explores a new regulatory network in epidermal differentiation. They analyze the changing transcriptome throughout epidermal regeneration to identify 3 separate gene sets enriched in the progenitor, early and late differentiation states. Using expression module mapping, MAF along with MAFB, are identified as transcription factors essential for epidermal differentiation. Through double knock-down of MAF:MAFB using siRNA and CRISPR/Cas9-mediated knockout, epidermal differentiation was shown to be impaired both in-vitro and in-vivo, confirming MAF:MAFBs role to activate genes that drive differentiation. Lopez-Pajares and collaborators integrated 42 published regulator gene sets and the MAF:MAFB gene set into the dynamic differentiation gene expression landscape and found that lncRNAs TINCR and ANCR act as upstream regulators of MAF:MAFB. Furthermore, ChIP-seq analysis of MAF:MAFB identified key transcription factor genes linked to epidermal differentiation as downstream effectors. Combined, these findings illustrate a dynamically regulated network with MAF:MAFB as a crucial link for progenitor gene repression and differentiation gene activation.


Nature Genetics | 2017

Lineage-specific dynamic and pre-established enhancer-promoter contacts cooperate in terminal differentiation

Adam J Rubin; Brook Barajas; Mayra Furlan-Magaril; Vanessa Lopez-Pajares; Maxwell R. Mumbach; Imani Howard; Daniel S. Kim; Lisa D. Boxer; Jonathan Cairns; Mikhail Spivakov; Steven W. Wingett; Minyi Shi; Zhixin Zhao; William J. Greenleaf; Anshul Kundaje; Michael Snyder; Howard Y. Chang; Peter Fraser; Paul A. Khavari


Developmental Cell | 2015

Network Analysis Identifies Mitochondrial Regulation of Epidermal Differentiation by MPZL3 and FDXR

Aparna Bhaduri; Alexander Ungewickell; Lisa D. Boxer; Vanessa Lopez-Pajares; Brian J. Zarnegar; Paul A. Khavari


Journal of Investigative Dermatology | 2018

Cancer-Associated Long Noncoding RNA SMRT-2 Controls Epidermal Differentiation

Carolyn S. Lee; Angela Mah; Cody J. Aros; Vanessa Lopez-Pajares; Aparna Bhaduri; Dan E. Webster; Markus Kretz; Paul A. Khavari

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Kun Qu

Stanford University

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Aparna Bhaduri

University of California

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