Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Wesley D. Gifford is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Wesley D. Gifford.


Nature | 2009

Adult mice generated from induced pluripotent stem cells

Michael J. Boland; Jennifer L. Hazen; Kristopher L. Nazor; Alberto R. Rodriguez; Wesley D. Gifford; Greg Martin; Sergey Kupriyanov; Kristin K. Baldwin

Recent landmark experiments have shown that transient overexpression of a small number of transcription factors can reprogram differentiated cells into induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells that resemble embryonic stem (ES) cells. These iPS cells hold great promise for medicine because they have the potential to generate patient-specific cell types for cell replacement therapy and produce in vitro models of disease, without requiring embryonic tissues or oocytes. Although current iPS cell lines resemble ES cells, they have not passed the most stringent test of pluripotency by generating full-term or adult mice in tetraploid complementation assays, raising questions as to whether they are sufficiently potent to generate all of the cell types in an organism. Whether this difference between iPS and ES cells reflects intrinsic limitations of direct reprogramming is not known. Here we report fertile adult mice derived entirely from iPS cells that we generated by inducible genetic reprogramming of mouse embryonic fibroblasts. Producing adult mice derived entirely from a reprogrammed fibroblast shows that all features of a differentiated cell can be restored to an embryonic level of pluripotency without exposure to unknown ooplasmic factors. Comparing these fully pluripotent iPS cell lines to less developmentally potent lines may reveal molecular markers of different pluripotent states. Furthermore, mice derived entirely from iPS cells will provide a new resource to assess the functional and genomic stability of cells and tissues derived from iPS cells, which is important to validate their utility in cell replacement therapy and research applications.


Nature | 2012

Embryonic stem cell potency fluctuates with endogenous retrovirus activity

Todd S. Macfarlan; Wesley D. Gifford; Shawn P. Driscoll; Karen Lettieri; Helen M. Rowe; Dario Bonanomi; Amy L. Firth; Oded Singer; Didier Trono; Samuel L. Pfaff

Embryonic stem (ES) cells are derived from blastocyst-stage embryos and are thought to be functionally equivalent to the inner cell mass, which lacks the ability to produce all extraembryonic tissues. Here we identify a rare transient cell population within mouse ES and induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cell cultures that expresses high levels of transcripts found in two-cell (2C) embryos in which the blastomeres are totipotent. We genetically tagged these 2C-like ES cells and show that they lack the inner cell mass pluripotency proteins Oct4 (also known as Pou5f1), Sox2 and Nanog, and have acquired the ability to contribute to both embryonic and extraembryonic tissues. We show that nearly all ES cells cycle in and out of this privileged state, which is partially controlled by histone-modifying enzymes. Transcriptome sequencing and bioinformatic analyses showed that many 2C transcripts are initiated from long terminal repeats derived from endogenous retroviruses, suggesting this foreign sequence has helped to drive cell-fate regulation in placental mammals.


Molecular Cell | 2011

Identification of a MicroRNA that Activates Gene Expression by Repressing Nonsense-Mediated RNA Decay

Ivone G. Bruno; Rachid Karam; Lulu Huang; Anjana Bhardwaj; Chih H. Lou; Eleen Y. Shum; Hye Won Song; Mark Corbett; Wesley D. Gifford; Jozef Gecz; Samuel L. Pfaff; Miles F. Wilkinson

Nonsense-mediated decay (NMD) degrades both normal and aberrant transcripts harboring stop codons in particular contexts. Mutations that perturb NMD cause neurological disorders in humans, suggesting that NMD has roles in the brain. Here, we identify a brain-specific microRNA-miR-128-that represses NMD and thereby controls batteries of transcripts in neural cells. miR-128 represses NMD by targeting the RNA helicase UPF1 and the exon-junction complex core component MLN51. The ability of miR-128 to regulate NMD is a conserved response occurring in frogs, chickens, and mammals. miR-128 levels are dramatically increased in differentiating neuronal cells and during brain development, leading to repressed NMD and upregulation of mRNAs normally targeted for decay by NMD; overrepresented are those encoding proteins controlling neuron development and function. Together, these results suggest the existence of a conserved RNA circuit linking the microRNA and NMD pathways that induces cell type-specific transcripts during development.


Trends in Cell Biology | 2013

Transposable elements as genetic regulatory substrates in early development

Wesley D. Gifford; Samuel L. Pfaff; Todd S. Macfarlan

The abundance and ancient origins of transposable elements (TEs) in eukaryotic genomes has spawned research into the potential symbiotic relationship between these elements and their hosts. In this review, we introduce the diversity of TEs, discuss how distinct classes are uniquely regulated in development, and describe how they appear to have been coopted for the purposes of gene regulation and the orchestration of a number of processes during early embryonic development. Although young, active TEs play an important role in somatic tissues and evolution, we focus mostly on the contributions of the older, fixed elements in mammalian genomes. We also discuss major challenges inherent in the study of TEs and contemplate future experimental approaches to further investigate how they coordinate developmental processes.


Science | 2015

Loss of motoneuron-specific microRNA-218 causes systemic neuromuscular failure

Neal D. Amin; Ge Bai; Jason R. Klug; Dario Bonanomi; Matthew T. Pankratz; Wesley D. Gifford; Christopher A. Hinckley; Matthew J. Sternfeld; Shawn P. Driscoll; Bertha Dominguez; Kuo-Fen Lee; Xin Jin; Samuel L. Pfaff

The makings of motor neuron disease Developing motor neurons link the muscles to the central nervous system. Amin et al. found that microRNA-218 (miR-218) was expressed in developing motor neurons and repressed a wide network of genes whose expression typifies other sorts of neurons. Mice lacking miR-218 died at birth with symptoms characteristic of human motor neuron diseases. Science, this issue p. 1525 Construction of neural connections to muscles during development requires a microRNA to repress alternative neuronal identities. Dysfunction of microRNA (miRNA) metabolism is thought to underlie diseases affecting motoneurons. One miRNA, miR-218, is abundantly and selectively expressed by developing and mature motoneurons. Here we show that mutant mice lacking miR-218 die neonatally and exhibit neuromuscular junction defects, motoneuron hyperexcitability, and progressive motoneuron cell loss, all of which are hallmarks of motoneuron diseases such as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and spinal muscular atrophy. Gene profiling reveals that miR-218 modestly represses a cohort of hundreds of genes that are neuronally enriched but are not specific to a single neuron subpopulation. Thus, the set of messenger RNAs targeted by miR-218, designated target218, defines a neuronal gene network that is selectively tuned down in motoneurons to prevent neuromuscular failure and neurodegeneration.


Genome Biology | 2015

Local compartment changes and regulatory landscape alterations in histone H1-depleted cells

Geert Geeven; Yun Zhu; Byung Ju Kim; Boris Bartholdy; Seung Min Yang; Todd S. Macfarlan; Wesley D. Gifford; Samuel L. Pfaff; Marjon J.A.M. Verstegen; Hugo Pinto; Marit W. Vermunt; Menno P. Creyghton; Patrick J. Wijchers; John A. Stamatoyannopoulos; Arthur I. Skoultchi; Wouter de Laat

BackgroundLinker histone H1 is a core chromatin component that binds to nucleosome core particles and the linker DNA between nucleosomes. It has been implicated in chromatin compaction and gene regulation and is anticipated to play a role in higher-order genome structure. Here we have used a combination of genome-wide approaches including DNA methylation, histone modification and DNase I hypersensitivity profiling as well as Hi-C to investigate the impact of reduced cellular levels of histone H1 in embryonic stem cells on chromatin folding and function.ResultsWe find that depletion of histone H1 changes the epigenetic signature of thousands of potential regulatory sites across the genome. Many of them show cooperative loss or gain of multiple chromatin marks. Epigenetic alterations cluster to gene-dense topologically associating domains (TADs) that already showed a high density of corresponding chromatin features. Genome organization at the three-dimensional level is largely intact, but we find changes in the structural segmentation of chromosomes specifically for the epigenetically most modified TADs.ConclusionsOur data show that cells require normal histone H1 levels to expose their proper regulatory landscape. Reducing the levels of histone H1 results in massive epigenetic changes and altered topological organization particularly at the most active chromosomal domains. Changes in TAD configuration coincide with epigenetic landscape changes but not with transcriptional output changes, supporting the emerging concept that transcriptional control and nuclear positioning of TADs are not causally related but independently controlled by the locally associated trans-acting factors.


eLife | 2017

Speed and segmentation control mechanisms characterized in rhythmically-active circuits created from spinal neurons produced from genetically-tagged embryonic stem cells

Matthew J. Sternfeld; Christopher A. Hinckley; Niall J. Moore; Matthew T. Pankratz; Kathryn L. Hilde; Shawn P. Driscoll; Marito Hayashi; Neal D. Amin; Dario Bonanomi; Wesley D. Gifford; Kamal Sharma; Martyn Goulding; Samuel L. Pfaff

Flexible neural networks, such as the interconnected spinal neurons that control distinct motor actions, can switch their activity to produce different behaviors. Both excitatory (E) and inhibitory (I) spinal neurons are necessary for motor behavior, but the influence of recruiting different ratios of E-to-I cells remains unclear. We constructed synthetic microphysical neural networks, called circuitoids, using precise combinations of spinal neuron subtypes derived from mouse stem cells. Circuitoids of purified excitatory interneurons were sufficient to generate oscillatory bursts with properties similar to in vivo central pattern generators. Inhibitory V1 neurons provided dual layers of regulation within excitatory rhythmogenic networks - they increased the rhythmic burst frequency of excitatory V3 neurons, and segmented excitatory motor neuron activity into sub-networks. Accordingly, the speed and pattern of spinal circuits that underlie complex motor behaviors may be regulated by quantitatively gating the intra-network cellular activity ratio of E-to-I neurons. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.21540.001


Patterning and Cell Type Specification in the Developing CNS and PNS#R##N#Comprehensive Developmental Neuroscience | 2013

Spinal Cord Patterning

Wesley D. Gifford; M. Hayashi; M. Sternfeld; J. Tsai; W.A. Alaynick; Samuel L. Pfaff

This chapter describes the extracellular and intracellular signaling cascades that control neuronal specification in the spinal cord. The embryonic spinal cord is exposed to an array of inductive factors that instruct the cell fate of the undifferentiated multipotential neuroepithelial precursors comprising the immature neural tube. Some of these signals act locally in a binary fashion between adjacent cells, whereas others are secreted factors that act over longer distances in a concentration-dependent manner. Thus, cells at different locations within the neural tube encounter distinct combinations of signals that are then integrated and converted into coherent intracellular readouts in the form of transcription factor codes. The cell-specific profile of transcription factors ultimately dictates which effector genes become activated and establishes the unique characteristics of the mature neuronal and glial subtypes. As development progresses these distinct cells then assemble into larger circuit structures important for coordinated body movement and proper sensory perception.


Genes & Development | 2011

Endogenous retroviruses and neighboring genes are coordinately repressed by LSD1/KDM1A

Todd S. Macfarlan; Wesley D. Gifford; Saurabh Agarwal; Shawn P. Driscoll; Karen Lettieri; Jianxun Wang; Shane E. Andrews; Laura Franco; Michael G. Rosenfeld; Bing Ren; Samuel L. Pfaff


Archive | 2013

Totipotent stem cells

Samuel L. Pfaff; Todd S. Macfarlan; Wesley D. Gifford

Collaboration


Dive into the Wesley D. Gifford's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Samuel L. Pfaff

Salk Institute for Biological Studies

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Todd S. Macfarlan

National Institutes of Health

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Shawn P. Driscoll

Salk Institute for Biological Studies

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Dario Bonanomi

Salk Institute for Biological Studies

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Christopher A. Hinckley

Salk Institute for Biological Studies

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Greg Martin

Scripps Research Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jennifer L. Hazen

Scripps Research Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Karen Lettieri

Salk Institute for Biological Studies

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge