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Dive into the research topics where Yaron E. Antebi is active.

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Featured researches published by Yaron E. Antebi.


Science | 2016

Dynamics of epigenetic regulation at the single-cell level

Lacramioara Bintu; John Yong; Yaron E. Antebi; Kayla McCue; Yasuhiro Kazuki; Narumi Uno; Mitsuo Oshimura; Michael B. Elowitz

Quantitative analysis of epigenetic memory To explore quantitative and dynamic properties of transcriptional regulation by epigenetic modifications, Bintu et al. monitored a transcriptional reporter gene carried on a human artificial chromosome in Chinese hamster ovary cells (see the Perspective by Keung and Khalil). They measured effects of DNA methylation and histone modifications by methylation or deacetylation in single cells using time-lapse microscopy. Silencing was an all-or-none, stochastic event, so graded adjustments to transcription occurred from changes in the proportion of cells that responded. Furthermore, the duration of recruitment of the chromatin regulators determined the fraction of cells that were silenced. Thus, distinct modifiers can produce different characteristics of epigenetic memory. Science, this issue p. 720; see also p. 661 Quantitative, single-cell measurements reveal characteristics of epigenetic control of transcription. [Also see Perspective by Keung and Khalil] Chromatin regulators play a major role in establishing and maintaining gene expression states. Yet how they control gene expression in single cells, quantitatively and over time, remains unclear. We used time-lapse microscopy to analyze the dynamic effects of four silencers associated with diverse modifications: DNA methylation, histone deacetylation, and histone methylation. For all regulators, silencing and reactivation occurred in all-or-none events, enabling the regulators to modulate the fraction of cells silenced rather than the amount of gene expression. These dynamics could be described by a three-state model involving stochastic transitions between active, reversibly silent, and irreversibly silent states. Through their individual transition rates, these regulators operate over different time scales and generate distinct types of epigenetic memory. Our results provide a framework for understanding and engineering mammalian chromatin regulation and epigenetic memory.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

The ePetri dish, an on-chip cell imaging platform based on subpixel perspective sweeping microscopy (SPSM)

Guoan Zheng; Seung Ah Lee; Yaron E. Antebi; Michael B. Elowitz; Changhuei Yang

We report a chip-scale lensless wide-field-of-view microscopy imaging technique, subpixel perspective sweeping microscopy, which can render microscopy images of growing or confluent cell cultures autonomously. We demonstrate that this technology can be used to build smart Petri dish platforms, termed ePetri, for cell culture experiments. This technique leverages the recent broad and cheap availability of high performance image sensor chips to provide a low-cost and automated microscopy solution. Unlike the two major classes of lensless microscopy methods, optofluidic microscopy and digital in-line holography microscopy, this new approach is fully capable of working with cell cultures or any samples in which cells may be contiguously connected. With our prototype, we demonstrate the ability to image samples of area 6 mm × 4 mm at 660-nm resolution. As a further demonstration, we showed that the method can be applied to image color stained cell culture sample and to image and track cell culture growth directly within an incubator. Finally, we showed that this method can track embryonic stem cell differentiations over the entire sensor surface. Smart Petri dish based on this technology can significantly streamline and improve cell culture experiments by cutting down on human labor and contamination risks.


PLOS Biology | 2013

Mapping Differentiation under Mixed Culture Conditions Reveals a Tunable Continuum of T Cell Fates

Yaron E. Antebi; Shlomit Reich-Zeliger; Yuval Hart; Avi Mayo; Inbal Eizenberg; Jacob Rimer; Prabhakar Putheti; Dana Pe'er; Nir Friedman

An experimental and theoretical study of T cell differentiation in response to mixed-input conditions reveals that cells can tune between Th1 and Th2 states through a continuum of mixed phenotypes.


Lab on a Chip | 2012

Monitoring the dynamics of primary T cell activation and differentiation using long term live cell imaging in microwell arrays

Irina Zaretsky; Michal Polonsky; Eric Shifrut; Shlomit Reich-Zeliger; Yaron E. Antebi; Guy Aidelberg; Nir Waysbort; Nir Friedman

Methods that allow monitoring of individual cells over time, using live cell imaging, are essential for studying dynamical cellular processes in heterogeneous cell populations such as primary T lymphocytes. However, applying single cell time-lapse microscopy to study activation and differentiation of these cells was limited due to a number of reasons. First, primary naïve T cells are non-adherent and become highly motile upon activation through their antigen receptor. Second, CD4(+) T cell differentiation is a relatively slow process which takes 3-4 days. As a result, long-term dynamic monitoring of individual cells during the course of activation and differentiation is challenging as cells rapidly escape out of the microscope field of view. Here we present and characterize a platform which enables capture and growth of primary T lymphocytes with minimal perturbation, allowing for long-term monitoring of cell activation and differentiation. We use standard cell culture plates combined with PDMS based arrays containing thousands of deep microwells in which primary CD4(+) T cells are trapped and activated by antigen coated microbeads. We demonstrate that this system allows for live cell imaging of individual T cells for up to 72 h, providing quantitative data on cell proliferation and death times. In addition, we continuously monitor dynamics of gene expression in those cells, of either intracellular proteins using cells from transgenic mice expressing fluorescent reporter proteins, or cell surface proteins using fluorescently labeled antibodies. Finally, we show how intercellular interactions between different cell types can be investigated using our device. This system provides a new platform in which dynamical processes and intercellular interactions within heterogeneous populations of primary T cells can be studied at the single cell level.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Design principles of cell circuits with paradoxical components

Yuval Hart; Yaron E. Antebi; Avraham E. Mayo; Nir Friedman; Uri Alon

Biological systems display complex networks of interactions both at the level of molecules inside the cell and at the level of interactions between cells. Networks of interacting molecules, such as transcription networks, have been shown to be composed of recurring circuits called network motifs, each with specific dynamical functions. Much less is known about the possibility of such circuit analysis in networks made of communicating cells. Here, we study models of circuits in which a few cell types interact by means of signaling molecules. We consider circuits of cells with architectures that seem to recur in immunology. An intriguing feature of these circuits is their use of signaling molecules with a pleiotropic or paradoxical role, such as cytokines that increase both cell growth and cell death. We find that pleiotropic signaling molecules can provide cell circuits with systems-level functions. These functions include for different circuits maintenance of homeostatic cell concentrations, robust regulation of differentiation processes, and robust pulses of cells or cytokines.


Cell | 2014

Paradoxical Signaling by a Secreted Molecule Leads to Homeostasis of Cell Levels

Yuval Hart; Shlomit Reich-Zeliger; Yaron E. Antebi; Irina Zaretsky; Avraham E. Mayo; Uri Alon; Nir Friedman

A widespread feature of extracellular signaling in cell circuits is paradoxical pleiotropy: the same secreted signaling molecule can induce opposite effects in the responding cells. For example, the cytokine IL-2 can promote proliferation and death of T cells. The role of such paradoxical signaling remains unclear. To address this, we studied CD4(+) T cell expansion in culture. We found that cells with a 30-fold difference in initial concentrations reached a homeostatic concentration nearly independent of initial cell levels. Below an initial threshold, cell density decayed to extinction (OFF-state). We show that these dynamics relate to the paradoxical effect of IL-2, which increases the proliferation rate cooperatively and the death rate linearly. Mathematical modeling explained the observed cell and cytokine dynamics and predicted conditions that shifted cell fate from homeostasis to the OFF-state. We suggest that paradoxical signaling provides cell circuits with specific dynamical features that are robust to environmental perturbations.


Physical Review D | 2005

Open string moduli in Kachru-Kallosh-Linde-Trivedi compactifications

Ofer Aharony; Yaron E. Antebi; Micha Berkooz

In the Kachru-Kallosh-Linde-Trivedi (KKLT) de-Sitter construction one introduces an anti-D3-brane that breaks the supersymmetry and leads to a positive cosmological constant. In this paper we investigate the open string moduli associated with this antiD3-brane, corresponding to its position on the S at the tip of the deformed conifold. We show that in the KKLT construction these moduli are very light, and we suggest a possible way to give these moduli a large mass by putting orientifold planes in the KKLT “throat”.


Cell | 2017

Combinatorial Signal Perception in the BMP Pathway

Yaron E. Antebi; James M. Linton; Heidi Klumpe; Bogdan Bintu; Mengsha Gong; Christina Su; Reed McCardell; Michael B. Elowitz

The bone morphogenetic protein (BMP) signaling pathway comprises multiple ligands and receptors that interact promiscuously with one another and typically appear in combinations. This feature is often explained in terms of redundancy and regulatory flexibility, but it has remained unclear what signal-processing capabilities it provides. Here, we show that the BMP pathway processes multi-ligand inputs using a specific repertoire of computations, including ratiometric sensing, balance detection, and imbalance detection. These computations operate on the relative levels of different ligands and can arise directly from competitive receptor-ligand interactions. Furthermore, cells can select different computations to perform on the same ligand combination through expression of alternative sets of receptor variants. These results provide a direct signal-processing role for promiscuous receptor-ligand interactions and establish operational principles for quantitatively controlling cells with BMP ligands. Similar principles could apply to other promiscuous signaling pathways.


BMC Systems Biology | 2012

Balancing speed and accuracy of polyclonal T cell activation: a role for extracellular feedback

Yonatan Savir; Nir Waysbort; Yaron E. Antebi; Tsvi Tlusty; Nir Friedman

BackgroundExtracellular feedback is an abundant module of intercellular communication networks, yet a detailed understanding of its role is still lacking. Here, we study interactions between polyclonal activated T cells that are mediated by IL-2 extracellular feedback as a model system.ResultsUsing mathematical modeling we show that extracellular feedback can give rise to opposite outcomes: competition or cooperation between interacting T cells, depending on their relative levels of activation. Furthermore, the outcome of the interaction also depends on the relative timing of activation of the cells. A critical time window exists after which a cell that has been more strongly activated nevertheless cannot exclude an inferior competitor.ConclusionsIn a number of experimental studies of polyclonal T-cell systems, outcomes ranging from cooperation to competition as well as time dependent competition were observed. Our model suggests that extracellular feedback can contribute to these observed behaviors as it translates quantitative differences in T cells’ activation strength and in their relative activation time into qualitatively different outcomes. We propose extracellular feedback as a general mechanism that can balance speed and accuracy – choosing the most suitable responders out of a polyclonal population under the clock of an escalating threat.


Current Opinion in Systems Biology | 2017

An operational view of intercellular signaling pathways

Yaron E. Antebi; Nagarajan Nandagopal; Michael B. Elowitz

Animal cells use a conserved repertoire of intercellular signaling pathways to communicate with one another. These pathways are well-studied from a molecular point of view. However, we often lack an “operational” understanding that would allow us to use these pathways to rationally control cellular behaviors. This requires knowing what dynamic input features each pathway perceives and how it processes those inputs to control downstream processes. To address these questions, researchers have begun to reconstitute signaling pathways in living cells, analyzing their dynamic responses to stimuli, and developing new functional representations of their behavior. Here we review important insights obtained through these new approaches, and discuss challenges and opportunities in understanding signaling pathways from an operational point of view.

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Shlomit Reich-Zeliger

Weizmann Institute of Science

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Nir Friedman

Weizmann Institute of Science

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Michael B. Elowitz

California Institute of Technology

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David Hagin

Weizmann Institute of Science

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Jacob Rimer

Weizmann Institute of Science

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Micha Berkooz

Weizmann Institute of Science

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Nir Waysbort

Weizmann Institute of Science

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Ofer Aharony

Weizmann Institute of Science

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Yair Reisner

Weizmann Institute of Science

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Yuval Hart

Weizmann Institute of Science

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