Yiqin Xiong
Stanford University
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Featured researches published by Yiqin Xiong.
Nature | 2010
Ruchi Bajpai; Denise A. Chen; Alvaro Rada-Iglesias; Junmei Zhang; Yiqin Xiong; Jill A. Helms; Ching Pin Chang; Yingming Zhao; Tomek Swigut; Joanna Wysocka
Heterozygous mutations in the gene encoding the CHD (chromodomain helicase DNA-binding domain) member CHD7, an ATP-dependent chromatin remodeller homologous to the Drosophila trithorax-group protein Kismet, result in a complex constellation of congenital anomalies called CHARGE syndrome, which is a sporadic, autosomal dominant disorder characterized by malformations of the craniofacial structures, peripheral nervous system, ears, eyes and heart. Although it was postulated 25 years ago that CHARGE syndrome results from the abnormal development of the neural crest, this hypothesis remained untested. Here we show that, in both humans and Xenopus, CHD7 is essential for the formation of multipotent migratory neural crest (NC), a transient cell population that is ectodermal in origin but undergoes a major transcriptional reprogramming event to acquire a remarkably broad differentiation potential and ability to migrate throughout the body, giving rise to craniofacial bones and cartilages, the peripheral nervous system, pigmentation and cardiac structures. We demonstrate that CHD7 is essential for activation of the NC transcriptional circuitry, including Sox9, Twist and Slug. In Xenopus embryos, knockdown of Chd7 or overexpression of its catalytically inactive form recapitulates all major features of CHARGE syndrome. In human NC cells CHD7 associates with PBAF (polybromo- and BRG1-associated factor-containing complex) and both remodellers occupy a NC-specific distal SOX9 enhancer and a conserved genomic element located upstream of the TWIST1 gene. Consistently, during embryogenesis CHD7 and PBAF cooperate to promote NC gene expression and cell migration. Our work identifies an evolutionarily conserved role for CHD7 in orchestrating NC gene expression programs, provides insights into the synergistic control of distal elements by chromatin remodellers, illuminates the patho-embryology of CHARGE syndrome, and suggests a broader function for CHD7 in the regulation of cell motility.
Nature | 2014
Pei Han; Wei Li; Chiou Hong Lin; Jin Yang; Ching Shang; Sylvia T. Nurnberg; Kevin K. Jin; Weihong Xu; Chieh-Yu Lin; Chien Jung Lin; Yiqin Xiong; Huan Chieh Chien; Bin Zhou; Euan A. Ashley; Daniel Bernstein; Peng Sheng Chen; Huei sheng Vincent Chen; Thomas Quertermous; Ching Pin Chang
The role of long noncoding RNA (lncRNA) in adult hearts is unknown; also unclear is how lncRNA modulates nucleosome remodelling. An estimated 70% of mouse genes undergo antisense transcription, including myosin heavy chain 7 (Myh7), which encodes molecular motor proteins for heart contraction. Here we identify a cluster of lncRNA transcripts from Myh7 loci and demonstrate a new lncRNA–chromatin mechanism for heart failure. In mice, these transcripts, which we named myosin heavy-chain-associated RNA transcripts (Myheart, or Mhrt), are cardiac-specific and abundant in adult hearts. Pathological stress activates the Brg1–Hdac–Parp chromatin repressor complex to inhibit Mhrt transcription in the heart. Such stress-induced Mhrt repression is essential for cardiomyopathy to develop: restoring Mhrt to the pre-stress level protects the heart from hypertrophy and failure. Mhrt antagonizes the function of Brg1, a chromatin-remodelling factor that is activated by stress to trigger aberrant gene expression and cardiac myopathy. Mhrt prevents Brg1 from recognizing its genomic DNA targets, thus inhibiting chromatin targeting and gene regulation by Brg1. It does so by binding to the helicase domain of Brg1, a domain that is crucial for tethering Brg1 to chromatinized DNA targets. Brg1 helicase has dual nucleic-acid-binding specificities: it is capable of binding lncRNA (Mhrt) and chromatinized—but not naked—DNA. This dual-binding feature of helicase enables a competitive inhibition mechanism by which Mhrt sequesters Brg1 from its genomic DNA targets to prevent chromatin remodelling. A Mhrt–Brg1 feedback circuit is thus crucial for heart function. Human MHRT also originates from MYH7 loci and is repressed in various types of myopathic hearts, suggesting a conserved lncRNA mechanism in human cardiomyopathy. Our studies identify a cardioprotective lncRNA, define a new targeting mechanism for ATP-dependent chromatin-remodelling factors, and establish a new paradigm for lncRNA–chromatin interaction.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013
Wei Li; Yiqin Xiong; Ching Shang; Karen Y. Twu; Calvin T. Hang; Jin Yang; Pei Han; Chieh-Yu Lin; Chien Jung Lin; Feng-Chiao Tsai; Kryn Stankunas; Tobias Meyer; Daniel Bernstein; Minggui Pan; Ching Pin Chang
Development of the cerebral vessels, pharyngeal arch arteries (PAAs). and cardiac outflow tract (OFT) requires multipotent neural crest cells (NCCs) that migrate from the neural tube to target tissue destinations. Little is known about how mammalian NCC development is orchestrated by gene programming at the chromatin level, however. Here we show that Brahma-related gene 1 (Brg1), an ATPase subunit of the Brg1/Brahma-associated factor (BAF) chromatin-remodeling complex, is required in NCCs to direct cardiovascular development. Mouse embryos lacking Brg1 in NCCs display immature cerebral vessels, aberrant PAA patterning, and shortened OFT. Brg1 suppresses an apoptosis factor, Apoptosis signal-regulating kinase 1 (Ask1), and a cell cycle inhibitor, p21cip1, to inhibit apoptosis and promote proliferation of NCCs, thereby maintaining a multipotent cell reservoir at the neural crest. Brg1 also supports Myosin heavy chain 11 (Myh11) expression to allow NCCs to develop into mature vascular smooth muscle cells of cerebral vessels. Within NCCs, Brg1 partners with chromatin remodeler Chromodomain-helicase-DNA-binding protein 7 (Chd7) on the PlexinA2 promoter to activate PlexinA2, which encodes a receptor for semaphorin to guide NCCs into the OFT. Our findings reveal an important role for Brg1 and its downstream pathways in the survival, differentiation, and migration of the multipotent NCCs critical for mammalian cardiovascular development.
Developmental Cell | 2013
Yiqin Xiong; Wei Li; Ching Shang; Richard M. Chen; Pei Han; Jin Yang; Kryn Stankunas; Bingruo Wu; Minggui Pan; Bin Zhou; Michael T. Longaker; Ching Pin Chang
Hair follicle stem cells (bulge cells) are essential for hair regeneration and early epidermal repair after wounding. Here we show that Brg1, a key enzyme in the chromatin-remodeling machinery, is dynamically expressed in bulge cells to control tissue regeneration and repair. In mice, sonic hedgehog (Shh) signals Gli to activate Brg1 in bulge cells to begin hair regeneration, whereas Brg1 recruits NF-κB to activate Shh in matrix cells to sustain hair growth. Such reciprocal Brg1-Shh interaction is essential for hair regeneration. Moreover, Brg1 is indispensable for maintaining the bulge cell reservoir. Without Brg1, bulge cells are depleted over time, partly through the ectopic expression of the cell-cycle inhibitor p27(Kip1). Also, bulge Brg1 is activated by skin injury to facilitate early epidermal repair. Our studies demonstrate a molecular circuit that integrates chromatin remodeling (Brg1), transcriptional regulation (NF-κB, Gli), and intercellular signaling (Shh) to control bulge stem cells during tissue regeneration.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2016
Pei Han; Wei Li; Jin Yang; Ching Shang; Chiou Hong Lin; Wei Cheng; Calvin T. Hang; Hsiu Ling Cheng; Chen Hao Chen; Johnson Wong; Yiqin Xiong; Mingming Zhao; Stavros G. Drakos; Andrea Ghetti; Dean Y. Li; Daniel Bernstein; Huei sheng Vincent Chen; Thomas Quertermous; Ching Pin Chang
Chromatin structure is determined by nucleosome positioning, histone modifications, and DNA methylation. How chromatin modifications are coordinately altered under pathological conditions remains elusive. Here we describe a stress-activated mechanism of concerted chromatin modification in the heart. In mice, pathological stress activates cardiomyocytes to express Brg1 (nucleosome-remodeling factor), G9a/Glp (histone methyltransferase), and Dnmt3 (DNA methyltransferase). Once activated, Brg1 recruits G9a and then Dnmt3 to sequentially assemble repressive chromatin-marked by H3K9 and CpG methylation-on a key molecular motor gene (Myh6), thereby silencing Myh6 and impairing cardiac contraction. Disruption of Brg1, G9a or Dnmt3 erases repressive chromatin marks and de-represses Myh6, reducing stress-induced cardiac dysfunction. In human hypertrophic hearts, BRG1-G9a/GLP-DNMT3 complex is also activated; its level correlates with H3K9/CpG methylation, Myh6 repression, and cardiomyopathy. Our studies demonstrate a new mechanism of chromatin assembly in stressed hearts and novel therapeutic targets for restoring Myh6 and ventricular function. The stress-induced Brg1-G9a-Dnmt3 interactions and sequence of repressive chromatin assembly on Myh6 illustrates a molecular mechanism by which the heart epigenetically responds to environmental signals. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Cardiomyocyte Biology: Integration of Developmental and Environmental Cues in the Heart edited by Marcus Schaub and Hughes Abriel.
Methods of Molecular Biology | 2012
Yiqin Xiong; Bin Zhou; Ching Pin Chang
Malformations of heart valves are one of the most common serious congenital defects. Heart valves are developed from endocardial cushions of the heart. The endocardial cushion in early heart development consists of two cell layers: an outer myocardial cell layer and an inner endocardial cell layer with abundant extracellular matrix (cardiac jelly) in between. Endocardial cells of the cushion, triggered by signals from myocardial cells, delaminate from the surface of the endocardial cushion and undergo transdifferentiation into mesenchymal cells. This process of endocardial-to-mesenchymal transformation (EMT) begins in the atrioventricular canal at embryonic day 9 (E9) and in the cardiac outflow tract at E10 of mouse development. Once formed by the EMT, the mesenchymal cells invade the cardiac jelly, proliferate, and populate the endocardial cushion. The cellularized endocardial cushion then undergoes morphological remodeling; it lengthens and matures into a thin elongated valve leaflet. Here we describe a method to culture endocardial cushions and measure EMT ex vivo. EMT can thus be analyzed independent of other concurrent developmental defects in mice. This culture method also enables ex vivo manipulations of signaling or gene function during EMT to delineate molecular pathways essential for heart valve development.
Cardiovascular Research | 2014
Jin Yang; Miriam Zeini; Chieh-Yu Lin; Chien Jung Lin; Yiqin Xiong; Ching Shang; Pei Han; Wei Li; Thomas Quertermous; Bin Zhou; Ching Pin Chang
AIMS Congenital coronary artery anomalies produce serious events that include syncope, arrhythmias, myocardial infarction, or sudden death. Studying the mechanism of coronary development will contribute to the understanding of the disease and help design new diagnostic or therapeutic strategies. Here, we characterized a new calcineurin-NFAT signalling which specifically functions in the epicardium to regulate the development of smooth muscle wall of the coronary arteries. METHODS AND RESULTS Using tissue-specific gene deletion, we found that calcineurin-NFAT signals in the embryonic epicardium to direct coronary smooth muscle cell development. The smooth muscle wall of coronary arteries fails to mature in mice with epicardial deletion of calcineurin B1 (Cnb1), and accordingly these mutant mice develop cardiac dysfunction with reduced exercise capacity. Inhibition of calcineurin at various developmental windows shows that calcineurin-NFAT signals within a narrow time window at embryonic Day 12.5-13.5 to regulate coronary smooth muscle cell development. Within the epicardium, NFAT transcriptionally activates the expression of Smad2, whose gene product is critical for transducing transforming growth factor β (TGFβ)-Alk5 signalling to control coronary development. CONCLUSION Our findings demonstrate new spatiotemporal and molecular actions of calcineurin-NFAT that dictate coronary arterial wall development and a new mechanism by which calcineurin-NFAT integrates with TGFβ signalling during embryonic development.
Genomics data | 2015
Sylvia T. Nurnberg; Karen Cheng; Azad Raiesdana; Ramendra K. Kundu; Clint L. Miller; Juyong Brian Kim; Komal Arora; Ivan Carcamo-Oribe; Yiqin Xiong; Nikhil Tellakula; Vivek Nanda; Nikitha Murthy; William A. Boisvert; Ulf Hedin; Ljubica Perisic; Silvia Aldi; Lars Maegdefessel; Milos Pjanic; Gary K. Owens; Michelle D. Tallquist; Thomas Quertermous
TCF21 is a basic helix–loop–helix transcription factor that has recently been implicated as contributing to susceptibility to coronary heart disease based on genome wide association studies. In order to identify transcriptionally regulated target genes in a major disease relevant cell type, we performed siRNA knockdown of TCF21 in in vitro cultured human coronary artery smooth muscle cells and compared the transcriptome of siTCF21 versus siCONTROL treated cells. The raw (FASTQ) as well as processed (BED) data from 3 technical replicates per treatment has been deposited with Gene Expression Omnibus (GSE44461).
Genesis | 2014
Wei Li; Chieh-Yu Lin; Ching Shang; Pei Han; Yiqin Xiong; Chien Jung Lin; Jing Yang; Licia Selleri; Ching Pin Chang
Insufficiency of surfactants is a core factor in respiratory distress syndrome, which causes apnea and neonatal death, particularly in preterm infants. Surfactant proteins are secreted by alveolar type II cells in the lung epithelium, the differentiation of which is regulated by Fgf10 elaborated by the adjacent mesenchyme. However, the molecular regulation of mesenchymal Fgf10 during lung development has not been fully understood. Here, we show that Pbx1, a homeodomain transcription factor, is required in the lung mesenchyme for the expression of Fgf10. Mouse embryos lacking Pbx1 in the lung mesenchyme show compact terminal saccules and perinatal lethality with failure of postnatal alveolar expansion. Mutant embryos had severely reduced expression of Fgf10 and surfactant genes (Spa, Spb, Spc, and Spd) that are essential for alveolar expansion for gas exchange at birth. Molecularly, Pbx1 directly binds to the Fgf10 promoter and cooperates with Meis and Hox proteins to transcriptionally activate Fgf10. Our results thus show how Pbx1 controls Fgf10 in the developing lung. genesis 52:399–407, 2014.
PLOS Genetics | 2015
Sylvia T. Nurnberg; Karen Cheng; Azad Raiesdana; Ramendra K. Kundu; Clint L. Miller; Juyong Brian Kim; Komal Arora; Ivan Carcamo-Oribe; Yiqin Xiong; Nikhil Tellakula; Vivek Nanda; Nikitha Murthy; William A. Boisvert; Ulf Hedin; Ljubica Perisic; Silvia Aldi; Lars Maegdefessel; Milos Pjanic; Gary K. Owens; Michelle D. Tallquist; Thomas Quertermous