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Dive into the research topics where William M. Keyes is active.

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Featured researches published by William M. Keyes.


Cell | 2013

Senescence is a developmental mechanism that contributes to embryonic growth and patterning.

Mekayla Storer; Alba Mas; Alexandre Robert-Moreno; Matteo Pecoraro; M. Carmen Ortells; Valeria Di Giacomo; Reut Yosef; Noam Pilpel; Valery Krizhanovsky; James Sharpe; William M. Keyes

Senescence is a form of cell-cycle arrest linked to tumor suppression and aging. However, it remains controversial and has not been documented in nonpathologic states. Here we describe senescence as a normal developmental mechanism found throughout the embryo, including the apical ectodermal ridge (AER) and the neural roof plate, two signaling centers in embryonic patterning. Embryonic senescent cells are nonproliferative and share features with oncogene-induced senescence (OIS), including expression of p21, p15, and mediators of the senescence-associated secretory phenotype (SASP). Interestingly, mice deficient in p21 have defects in embryonic senescence, AER maintenance, and patterning. Surprisingly, the underlying mesenchyme was identified as a source for senescence instruction in the AER, whereas the ultimate fate of these senescent cells is apoptosis and macrophage-mediated clearance. We propose that senescence is a normal programmed mechanism that plays instructive roles in development, and that OIS is an evolutionarily adapted reactivation of a developmental process.


Nature Cell Biology | 2009

TAp63 induces senescence and suppresses tumorigenesis in vivo

Xuecui Guo; William M. Keyes; Cristian Papazoglu; Johannes Zuber; Wangzhi Li; Scott W. Lowe; Hannes Vogel; Alea A. Mills

p63 is distinct from its homologue p53 in that its role as a tumour suppressor is controversial, an issue complicated by the existence of two classes of p63 isoforms. Here we show that TAp63 isoforms are robust mediators of senescence that inhibit tumorigenesis in vivo. Whereas gain of TAp63 induces senescence, loss of p63 enhances sarcoma development in mice lacking p53. Using a new TAp63-specific conditional mouse model, we demonstrate that TAp63 isoforms are essential for Ras-induced senescence, and that TAp63 deficiency increases proliferation and enhances Ras-mediated oncogenesis in the context of p53 deficiency in vivo. TAp63 induces senescence independently of p53, p19Arf and p16Ink4a, but requires p21Waf/Cip1 and Rb. TAp63-mediated senescence overrides Ras-driven transformation of p53-deficient cells, preventing tumour initiation, and doxycycline-regulated expression of TAp63 activates p21Waf/Cip1, induces senescence and inhibits progression of established tumours in vivo. Our findings demonstrate that TAp63 isoforms function as tumour suppressors by regulating senescence through p53-independent pathways. The ability of TAp63 to trigger senescence and halt tumorigenesis irrespective of p53 status identifies TAp63 as a potential target of anti-cancer therapy for human malignancies with compromised p53.


Neuron | 2005

p63 is an essential proapoptotic protein during neural development.

W. Bradley Jacobs; Gregory Govoni; Daniel Ho; Jasvinder K. Atwal; Fanie Barnabé-Heider; William M. Keyes; Alea A. Mills; Freda D. Miller; David R. Kaplan

The p53 family member p63 is required for nonneural development, but has no known role in the nervous system. Here, we define an essential proapoptotic role for p63 during naturally occurring neuronal death. Sympathetic neurons express full-length TAp63 during the developmental death period, and TAp63 levels increase following NGF withdrawal. Overexpression of TAp63 causes neuronal apoptosis in the presence of NGF, while cultured p63-/- neurons are resistant to apoptosis following NGF withdrawal. TAp63 is also essential in vivo, since embryonic p63-/- mice display a deficit in naturally occurring sympathetic neuron death. While both TAp63 and p53 induce similar apoptotic signaling proteins and require BAX expression and function for their effects, TAp63 induces neuronal death in the absence of p53, but p53 requires coincident p63 expression for its proapoptotic actions. Thus, p63 is essential for developmental neuronal death, likely functioning both on its own, and as an obligate proapoptotic partner for p53.


Cell Cycle | 2007

Neural potential of a stem cell population in the hair follicle.

John Mignone; Jose L. Roig-Lopez; Natalia Fedtsova; Dustin E. Schones; Louis N. Manganas; Mirjana Maletic-Savatic; William M. Keyes; Alea A. Mills; Anatoli S. Gleiberman; Michael Q. Zhang; Grigori Enikolopov

The bulge region of the hair follicle serves as a repository for epithelial stem cells that can regenerate the follicle in each hair growth cycle and contribute to epidermis regeneration upon injury. Here we describe a population of multipotential stem cells in the hair follicle bulge; these cells can be identified by fluorescence in transgenic nestin-GFP mice. The morphological features of these cells suggest that they maintain close associations with each other and with the surrounding niche. Upon explantation, these cells can give rise to neurosphere-like structures in vitro. When these cells are permitted to differentiate, they produce several cell types, including cells with neuronal, astrocytic, oligodendrocytic, smooth muscle, adipocytic, and other phenotypes. Furthermore, upon implantation into the developing nervous system of chick, these cells generate neuronal cells in vivo. We used transcriptional profiling to assess the relationship between these cells and embryonic and postnatal neural stem cells and to compare them with other stem cell populations of the bulge. Our results show that nestin-expressing cells in the bulge of the hair follicle have stem cell-like properties, are multipotent, and can effectively generate cells of neural lineage in vitro and in vivo.


Genes & Development | 2012

Age-associated inflammation inhibits epidermal stem cell function

Jason Doles; Mekayla Storer; Luca Cozzuto; Guglielmo Roma; William M. Keyes

Altered stem cell homeostasis is linked to organismal aging. However, the mechanisms involved remain poorly understood. Here we report novel alterations in hair follicle stem cells during skin aging, including increased numbers, decreased function, and an inability to tolerate stress. Performing high-throughput RNA sequencing on aging stem cells, cytokine arrays, and functional assays, we identify an age-associated imbalance in epidermal Jak-Stat signaling that inhibits stem cell function. Collectively, this study reveals a role for the aging epidermis in the disruption of cytokine and stem cell homeostasis, suggesting that stem cell decline during aging may be part of broader tumor-suppressive mechanisms.


Cell Cycle | 2006

p63: a new link between senescence and aging

William M. Keyes; Alea A. Mills

Cellular senescence is a distinctive form of cell cycle arrest that has been suggested to modulatethe processes of tumor suppression and aging. Though a detailed understanding of the cellularmachinery regulating this process is emerging, a more thorough understanding of the key playerslinking senescence to organismal aging is needed. The recent discovery that loss of the p53-related protein p63 induces cellular senescence and causes features of accelerated aging providesfurther evidence that cellular senescence is intimately linked with organismal aging, andidentifies p63 as a key regulator of both of these processes.


Cancer Cell | 2013

Chromatin-Bound IκBα Regulates a Subset of Polycomb Target Genes in Differentiation and Cancer

Maria Carmen Mulero; Dolors Ferres-Marco; Abul B.M.M.K. Islam; Pol Margalef; Matteo Pecoraro; Agustí Toll; Nils J. D. Drechsel; Cristina Charneco; Shelly M. Davis; Nicolás Bellora; Fernando Gallardo; Erika López-Arribillaga; Elena Asensio-Juan; Verónica Rodilla; Jessica González; Mar Iglesias; Vincent Feng-Sheng Shih; M. Mar Albà; Luciano Di Croce; Alexander Hoffmann; Jordi Villà-Freixa; Nuria Lopez-Bigas; William M. Keyes; M.I. Domínguez; Anna Bigas; Lluis Espinosa

IκB proteins are the primary inhibitors of NF-κB. Here, we demonstrate that sumoylated and phosphorylated IκBα accumulates in the nucleus of keratinocytes and interacts with histones H2A and H4 at the regulatory region of HOX and IRX genes. Chromatin-bound IκBα modulates Polycomb recruitment and imparts their competence to be activated by TNFα. Mutations in the Drosophila IκBα gene cactus enhance the homeotic phenotype of Polycomb mutants, which is not counteracted by mutations in dorsal/NF-κB. Oncogenic transformation of keratinocytes results in cytoplasmic IκBα translocation associated with a massive activation of Hox. Accumulation of cytoplasmic IκBα was found in squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) associated with IKK activation and HOX upregulation.


Oncogene | 2013

ZRF1 controls oncogene-induced senescence through the INK4-ARF locus

Joana Domingues Ribeiro; Lluis Morey; A Mas; Arantxa Gutierrez; Nuno Miguel Luis; Stefania Mejetta; Holger Richly; William M. Keyes; L Di Croce

The reactivation of the INK4-ARF locus, which is epigenetically repressed by Polycomb proteins in healthy cells, is a hallmark of senescence. One mechanism of reactivating Polycomb-silenced genes is mediated by the epigenetic factor ZRF1, which associates with ubiquitinated histone H2A. We show that cells undergoing senescence following oncogenic Ras expression have increased ZRF1 levels, and that this binds to the p15INK4b, ARF and p16INK4a promoters. Furthermore, ZRF1 depletion in oncogenic Ras-expressing cells restores proliferation by preventing Arf and p16Ink4a expression, consequently bypassing senescence. Thus, ZRF1 regulates the INK4-ARF locus during cellular proliferation and senescence, and alterations in ZRF1 may contribute to tumorigenesis.


Biochemical Society Transactions | 2014

New insights into skin stem cell aging and cancer

M. Carmen Ortells; William M. Keyes

Adult tissue homoeostasis requires continual replacement of cells that are lost due to normal turnover, injury and disease. However, aging is associated with an overall decline in tissue function and homoeostasis, suggesting that the normal regulatory processes that govern self-renewal and regeneration may become impaired with age. Tissue-specific SCs (stem cells) lie at the apex of organismal conservation and regeneration, ultimately being responsible for continued tissue maintenance. In many tissues, there are changes in SC numbers, or alteration of their growth properties during aging, often involving imbalances in tumour-suppressor- and oncogene-mediated pathways. Uncovering the molecular mechanisms leading to changes in SC function during aging will provide an essential tool to address tissue-specific age-related pathologies. In the present review, we summarize the age-related alterations found in different tissue SC populations, highlighting recently identified changes in aged HFSCs (hair-follicle SCs) in the skin.


Trends in Biotechnology | 2003

Inducible systems see the light

William M. Keyes; Alea A. Mills

Advances in our capacity to design and use novel strategies for achieving inducible gene expression will improve our ability to define gene function. An extremely efficient system designed by nature -- that of the regulatable phytochrome system in plants -- has provided the basis for developing a novel inducible gene expression system.

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Alea A. Mills

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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Xuecui Guo

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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Grigori Enikolopov

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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Scott W. Lowe

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Wangzhi Li

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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Alba Mas

Pompeu Fabra University

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