Viviana I. Risca
Stanford University
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Featured researches published by Viviana I. Risca.
Nature | 1999
Catherine Taylor Clelland; Viviana I. Risca; Carter Bancroft
The microdot is a means of concealing messages (steganography) that was developed by Professor Zapp and used by German spies in the Second World War to transmit secret information. A microdot (“the enemys masterpiece of espionage”) was a greatly reduced photograph of a typewritten page that was pasted over a full stop in an innocuous letter. We have taken the microdot a step further and developed a DNA-based, doubly steganographic technique for sending secret messages. A DNA-encoded message is first camouflaged within the enormous complexity of human genomic DNA and then further concealed by confining this sample to a microdot.
Nature | 2017
Viviana I. Risca; Sarah K. Denny; Aaron F. Straight; William J. Greenleaf
Chromatin structure at the length scale encompassing local nucleosome–nucleosome interactions is thought to play a crucial role in regulating transcription and access to DNA. However, this secondary structure of chromatin remains poorly understood compared with the primary structure of single nucleosomes or the tertiary structure of long-range looping interactions. Here we report the first genome-wide map of chromatin conformation in human cells at the 1–3 nucleosome (50–500 bp) scale, obtained using ionizing radiation-induced spatially correlated cleavage of DNA with sequencing (RICC-seq) to identify DNA–DNA contacts that are spatially proximal. Unbiased analysis of RICC-seq signal reveals regional enrichment of DNA fragments characteristic of alternating rather than adjacent nucleosome interactions in tri-nucleosome units, particularly in H3K9me3-marked heterochromatin. We infer differences in the likelihood of nucleosome–nucleosome contacts among open chromatin, H3K27me3-marked, and H3K9me3-marked repressed chromatin regions. After calibrating RICC-seq signal to three-dimensional distances, we show that compact two-start helical fibre structures with stacked alternating nucleosomes are consistent with RICC-seq fragmentation patterns from H3K9me3-marked chromatin, while non-compact structures and solenoid structures are consistent with open chromatin. Our data support a model of chromatin architecture in intact interphase nuclei consistent with variable longitudinal compaction of two-start helical fibres.
Trends in Genetics | 2015
Viviana I. Risca; William J. Greenleaf
A decade of rapid method development has begun to yield exciting insights into the 3D architecture of the metazoan genome and the roles it may play in regulating transcription. Here we review core methods and new tools in the modern genomicists toolbox at three length scales, ranging from single base pairs to megabase-scale chromosomal domains, and discuss the emerging picture of the 3D genome that these tools have revealed. Blind spots remain, especially at intermediate length scales spanning a few nucleosomes, but thanks in part to new technologies that permit targeted alteration of chromatin states and time-resolved studies, the next decade holds great promise for hypothesis-driven research into the mechanisms that drive genome architecture and transcriptional regulation.
Nature Methods | 2017
M. Ryan Corces; Alexandro E. Trevino; Emily G. Hamilton; Peyton Greenside; Nicholas A Sinnott-Armstrong; Sam Vesuna; Ansuman T. Satpathy; Adam J Rubin; Kathleen S. Montine; Beijing Wu; Arwa Kathiria; Seung Woo Cho; Maxwell R. Mumbach; Ava C. Carter; Maya Kasowski; Lisa A. Orloff; Viviana I. Risca; Anshul Kundaje; Paul A. Khavari; Thomas J. Montine; William J. Greenleaf; Howard Y. Chang
We present Omni-ATAC, an improved ATAC-seq protocol for chromatin accessibility profiling that works across multiple applications with substantial improvement of signal-to-background ratio and information content. The Omni-ATAC protocol generates chromatin accessibility profiles from archival frozen tissue samples and 50-μm sections, revealing the activities of disease-associated DNA elements in distinct human brain structures. The Omni-ATAC protocol enables the interrogation of personal regulomes in tissue context and translational studies.
Cancer Discovery | 2017
Shin-Heng Chiou; Viviana I. Risca; Gordon Wang; Dian Yang; Barbara M. Grüner; Arwa Kathiria; Rosanna K. Ma; Dedeepya Vaka; Pauline Chu; Margaret M. Kozak; Laura Castellini; Edward E. Graves; Grace E. Kim; Philippe Mourrain; Albert C. Koong; Amato J. Giaccia; Monte M. Winslow
Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) is one of the most metastatic and deadly cancers. Despite the clinical significance of metastatic spread, our understanding of molecular mechanisms that drive PDAC metastatic ability remains limited. By generating a genetically engineered mouse model of human PDAC, we uncover a transient subpopulation of cancer cells with exceptionally high metastatic ability. Global gene expression profiling and functional analyses uncovered the transcription factor BLIMP1 as a driver of PDAC metastasis. The highly metastatic PDAC subpopulation is enriched for hypoxia-induced genes, and hypoxia-mediated induction of BLIMP1 contributes to the regulation of a subset of hypoxia-associated gene expression programs. These findings support a model in which upregulation of BLIMP1 links microenvironmental cues to a metastatic stem cell character.Significance: PDAC is an almost uniformly lethal cancer, largely due to its tendency for metastasis. We define a highly metastatic subpopulation of cancer cells, uncover a key transcriptional regulator of metastatic ability, and define hypoxia as an important factor within the tumor microenvironment that increases metastatic proclivity. Cancer Discov; 7(10); 1184-99. ©2017 AACR.See related commentary by Vakoc and Tuveson, p. 1067This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 1047.
Cell Reports | 2014
Shin-Heng Chiou; Caroline Kim-Kiselak; Viviana I. Risca; Megan Heimann; Chen-Hua Chuang; Aurora A. Burds; William J. Greenleaf; Tyler Jacks; David M. Feldser; Monte M. Winslow
Conditional gene deletion in mice has contributed immensely to our understanding of many biological and biomedical processes. Despite an increasing awareness of nonprotein-coding functional elements within protein-coding transcripts, current gene-targeting approaches typically involve simultaneous ablation of noncoding elements within targeted protein-coding genes. The potential for protein-coding genes to have additional noncoding functions necessitates the development of novel genetic tools capable of precisely interrogating individual functional elements. We present a strategy that couples Cre/loxP-mediated conditional gene disruption with faithful GFP reporter expression in mice in which Cre-mediated stable inversion of a splice acceptor-GFP-splice donor cassette concurrently disrupts protein production and creates a GFP fusion product. Importantly, cassette inversion maintains physiologic transcript structure, thereby ensuring proper microRNA-mediated regulation of the GFP reporter, as well as maintaining expression of nonprotein-coding elements. To test this potentially generalizable strategy, we generated and analyzed mice with this conditional knockin reporter targeted to the Hmga2 locus.
eLife | 2018
Jason C. Bell; David Jukam; Nicole A. Teran; Viviana I. Risca; Owen K Smith; Whitney L Johnson; Jan M. Skotheim; William J. Greenleaf; Aaron F. Straight
RNA is a critical component of chromatin in eukaryotes, both as a product of transcription, and as an essential constituent of ribonucleoprotein complexes that regulate both local and global chromatin states. Here, we present a proximity ligation and sequencing method called Chromatin-Associated RNA sequencing (ChAR-seq) that maps all RNA-to-DNA contacts across the genome. Using Drosophila cells, we show that ChAR-seq provides unbiased, de novo identification of targets of chromatin-bound RNAs including nascent transcripts, chromosome-specific dosage compensation ncRNAs, and genome-wide trans-associated RNAs involved in co-transcriptional RNA processing.
Trends in Cell Biology | 2015
Viviana I. Risca; William J. Greenleaf
Paired-end sequencing has enabled a variety of new methods for high-throughput interrogation of both genome structure and chromatin architecture. Here, we discuss how the paired-end paradigm can be used to interpret sequencing data as biophysical measurements of in vivo chromatin structure that report on single molecules in single cells.
F1000 - Post-publication peer review of the biomedical literature | 2018
William J. Greenleaf; Viviana I. Risca
F1000 - Post-publication peer review of the biomedical literature | 2018
William J. Greenleaf; Viviana I. Risca