Victoria Moignard
University of Cambridge
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Publication
Featured researches published by Victoria Moignard.
Nature Cell Biology | 2013
Victoria Moignard; Iain C. Macaulay; Gemma Swiers; Florian Buettner; Judith Schütte; Fernando J. Calero-Nieto; Sarah Kinston; Anagha Joshi; Rebecca Hannah; Fabian J. Theis; Sten Eirik W. Jacobsen; Marella de Bruijn; Berthold Göttgens
Cellular decision-making is mediated by a complex interplay of external stimuli with the intracellular environment, in particular transcription factor regulatory networks. Here we have determined the expression of a network of 18 key haematopoietic transcription factors in 597 single primary blood stem and progenitor cells isolated from mouse bone marrow. We demonstrate that different stem/progenitor populations are characterized by distinctive transcription factor expression states, and through comprehensive bioinformatic analysis reveal positively and negatively correlated transcription factor pairings, including previously unrecognized relationships between Gata2, Gfi1 and Gfi1b. Validation using transcriptional and transgenic assays confirmed direct regulatory interactions consistent with a regulatory triad in immature blood stem cells, where Gata2 may function to modulate cross-inhibition between Gfi1 and Gfi1b. Single-cell expression profiling therefore identifies network states and allows reconstruction of network hierarchies involved in controlling stem cell fate choices, and provides a blueprint for studying both normal development and human disease.
Nature Biotechnology | 2015
Victoria Moignard; Steven Woodhouse; Laleh Haghverdi; Andrew J. Lilly; Yosuke Tanaka; Adam C. Wilkinson; Florian Buettner; Iain C. Macaulay; Wajid Jawaid; Evangelia Diamanti; Shin-Ichi Nishikawa; Nir Piterman; Valerie Kouskoff; Fabian J. Theis; Jasmin Fisher; Berthold Göttgens
Reconstruction of the molecular pathways controlling organ development has been hampered by a lack of methods to resolve embryonic progenitor cells. Here we describe a strategy to address this problem that combines gene expression profiling of large numbers of single cells with data analysis based on diffusion maps for dimensionality reduction and network synthesis from state transition graphs. Applying the approach to hematopoietic development in the mouse embryo, we map the progression of mesoderm toward blood using single-cell gene expression analysis of 3,934 cells with blood-forming potential captured at four time points between E7.0 and E8.5. Transitions between individual cellular states are then used as input to develop a single-cell network synthesis toolkit to generate a computationally executable transcriptional regulatory network model of blood development. Several model predictions concerning the roles of Sox and Hox factors are validated experimentally. Our results demonstrate that single-cell analysis of a developing organ coupled with computational approaches can reveal the transcriptional programs that underpin organogenesis.
Cell Reports | 2014
Bidesh Mahata; Xiuwei Zhang; Aleksandra A. Kolodziejczyk; Valentina Proserpio; Liora Haim-Vilmovsky; Angela E. Taylor; Daniel Hebenstreit; Felix A. Dingler; Victoria Moignard; Berthold Göttgens; Wiebke Arlt; Andrew N. J. McKenzie; Sarah A. Teichmann
Summary T helper 2 (Th2) cells regulate helminth infections, allergic disorders, tumor immunity, and pregnancy by secreting various cytokines. It is likely that there are undiscovered Th2 signaling molecules. Although steroids are known to be immunoregulators, de novo steroid production from immune cells has not been previously characterized. Here, we demonstrate production of the steroid pregnenolone by Th2 cells in vitro and in vivo in a helminth infection model. Single-cell RNA sequencing and quantitative PCR analysis suggest that pregnenolone synthesis in Th2 cells is related to immunosuppression. In support of this, we show that pregnenolone inhibits Th cell proliferation and B cell immunoglobulin class switching. We also show that steroidogenic Th2 cells inhibit Th cell proliferation in a Cyp11a1 enzyme-dependent manner. We propose pregnenolone as a “lymphosteroid,” a steroid produced by lymphocytes. We speculate that this de novo steroid production may be an intrinsic phenomenon of Th2-mediated immune responses to actively restore immune homeostasis.
Nature Communications | 2013
Gemma Swiers; Claudia Baumann; O'Rourke Jf; Eleni Giannoulatou; Stephen Taylor; Anagha Joshi; Victoria Moignard; Cristina Pina; Thomas Bee; Konstantinos D. Kokkaliaris; Momoko Yoshimoto; Mervin C. Yoder; Jon Frampton; Timm Schroeder; Tariq Enver; Berthold Göttgens; Marella de Bruijn
Haematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) are the founding cells of the adult haematopoietic system, born during ontogeny from a specialized subset of endothelium, the haemogenic endothelium (HE) via an endothelial-to-haematopoietic transition (EHT). Although recently imaged in real time, the underlying mechanism of EHT is still poorly understood. We have generated a Runx1 +23 enhancer-reporter transgenic mouse (23GFP) for the prospective isolation of HE throughout embryonic development. Here we perform functional analysis of over 1,800 and transcriptional analysis of 268 single 23GFP(+) HE cells to explore the onset of EHT at the single-cell level. We show that initiation of the haematopoietic programme occurs in cells still embedded in the endothelial layer, and is accompanied by a previously unrecognized early loss of endothelial potential before HSCs emerge. Our data therefore provide important insights on the timeline of early haematopoietic commitment.
Nature | 2016
Antonio Scialdone; Yosuke Tanaka; Wajid Jawaid; Victoria Moignard; Nicola K. Wilson; Iain C. Macaulay; John C. Marioni; Berthold Göttgens
In mammals, specification of the three major germ layers occurs during gastrulation, when cells ingressing through the primitive streak differentiate into the precursor cells of major organ systems. However, the molecular mechanisms underlying this process remain unclear, as numbers of gastrulating cells are very limited. In the mouse embryo at embryonic day 6.5, cells located at the junction between the extra-embryonic region and the epiblast on the posterior side of the embryo undergo an epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition and ingress through the primitive streak. Subsequently, cells migrate, either surrounding the prospective ectoderm contributing to the embryo proper, or into the extra-embryonic region to form the yolk sac, umbilical cord and placenta. Fate mapping has shown that mature tissues such as blood and heart originate from specific regions of the pre-gastrula epiblast, but the plasticity of cells within the embryo and the function of key cell-type-specific transcription factors remain unclear. Here we analyse 1,205 cells from the epiblast and nascent Flk1+ mesoderm of gastrulating mouse embryos using single-cell RNA sequencing, representing the first transcriptome-wide in vivo view of early mesoderm formation during mammalian gastrulation. Additionally, using knockout mice, we study the function of Tal1, a key haematopoietic transcription factor, and demonstrate, contrary to previous studies performed using retrospective assays, that Tal1 knockout does not immediately bias precursor cells towards a cardiac fate.
Nature Cell Biology | 2016
Roshana Thambyrajah; Milena Mazan; Rahima Patel; Victoria Moignard; Monika Stefanska; Elli Marinopoulou; Yaoyong Li; Christophe Lancrin; Thomas Clapes; Tarik Möröy; Catherine Robin; Crispin J. Miller; Shaun M. Cowley; Berthold Göttgens; Valerie Kouskoff; Georges Lacaud
In vertebrates, the first haematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) with multi-lineage and long-term repopulating potential arise in the AGM (aorta–gonad–mesonephros) region. These HSCs are generated from a rare and transient subset of endothelial cells, called haemogenic endothelium (HE), through an endothelial-to-haematopoietic transition (EHT). Here, we establish the absolute requirement of the transcriptional repressors GFI1 and GFI1B (growth factor independence 1 and 1B) in this unique trans-differentiation process. We first demonstrate that Gfi1 expression specifically defines the rare population of HE that generates emerging HSCs. We further establish that in the absence of GFI1 proteins, HSCs and haematopoietic progenitor cells are not produced in the AGM, revealing the critical requirement for GFI1 proteins in intra-embryonic EHT. Finally, we demonstrate that GFI1 proteins recruit the chromatin-modifying protein LSD1, a member of the CoREST repressive complex, to epigenetically silence the endothelial program in HE and allow the emergence of blood cells.
The EMBO Journal | 2014
Fernando J. Calero-Nieto; Felicia Sl Ng; Nicola K. Wilson; Rebecca Hannah; Victoria Moignard; Ana I Leal‐Cervantes; Isabel Jimenez-Madrid; Evangelia Diamanti; Lorenz Wernisch; Berthold Göttgens
Despite major advances in the generation of genome‐wide binding maps, the mechanisms by which transcription factors (TFs) regulate cell type identity have remained largely obscure. Through comparative analysis of 10 key haematopoietic TFs in both mast cells and blood progenitors, we demonstrate that the largely cell type‐specific binding profiles are not opportunistic, but instead contribute to cell type‐specific transcriptional control, because (i) mathematical modelling of differential binding of shared TFs can explain differential gene expression, (ii) consensus binding sites are important for cell type‐specific binding and (iii) knock‐down of blood stem cell regulators in mast cells reveals mast cell‐specific genes as direct targets. Finally, we show that the known mast cell regulators Mitf and c‐fos likely contribute to the global reorganisation of TF binding profiles. Taken together therefore, our study elucidates how key regulatory TFs contribute to transcriptional programmes in several distinct mammalian cell types.
eLife | 2016
Judith Schütte; Huange Wang; Stella Antoniou; Andrew Jarratt; Nicola K. Wilson; Joey Riepsaame; Fernando J. Calero-Nieto; Victoria Moignard; Silvia Basilico; Sarah Kinston; Rebecca Hannah; Mun Chiang Chan; Sylvia T. Nurnberg; Willem H. Ouwehand; Nicola Bonzanni; Marella de Bruijn; Berthold Göttgens
Transcription factor (TF) networks determine cell-type identity by establishing and maintaining lineage-specific expression profiles, yet reconstruction of mammalian regulatory network models has been hampered by a lack of comprehensive functional validation of regulatory interactions. Here, we report comprehensive ChIP-Seq, transgenic and reporter gene experimental data that have allowed us to construct an experimentally validated regulatory network model for haematopoietic stem/progenitor cells (HSPCs). Model simulation coupled with subsequent experimental validation using single cell expression profiling revealed potential mechanisms for cell state stabilisation, and also how a leukaemogenic TF fusion protein perturbs key HSPC regulators. The approach presented here should help to improve our understanding of both normal physiological and disease processes. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.11469.001
BioEssays | 2014
Victoria Moignard; Berthold Göttgens
Transcriptional networks regulate cell fate decisions, which occur at the level of individual cells. However, much of what we know about their structure and function comes from studies averaging measurements over large populations of cells, many of which are functionally heterogeneous. Such studies conceal the variability between cells and so prevent us from determining the nature of heterogeneity at the molecular level. In recent years, many protocols and platforms have been developed that allow the high throughput analysis of gene expression in single cells, opening the door to a new era of biology. Here, we discuss the need for single cell gene expression analysis to gain deeper insights into the transcriptional control of cell fate decisions, and consider the insights it has provided so far into transcriptional regulatory networks in development.
Blood Cells Molecules and Diseases | 2013
Victoria Moignard; Steven Woodhouse; Jasmin Fisher; Berthold Göttgens
Hematopoiesis represents one of the paradigmatic systems for studying stem cell biology, but our understanding of how the hematopoietic system develops during embryogenesis is still incomplete. While many lessons have been learned from studying the mouse embryo, embryonic stem cells have come to the fore as an alternative and more tractable model to recapitulate hematopoietic development. Here we review what is known about the embryonic origin of blood from these complementary systems and how transcription factor networks regulate the emergence of hematopoietic tissue from the mesoderm. Furthermore, we have performed an integrated analysis of genome-wide microarray and ChIP-seq data sets from mouse embryos and embryonic stem (ES) cell lines deficient in key regulators and demonstrate how this type of analysis can be used to reconstruct regulatory hierarchies that both confirm existing regulatory linkages and suggest additional interactions.