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What are stem cells

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Can be used for both reproductive and therapeutic cloning. ... Bernstein, B.E. Angelina Jolie, Brad Pitt, Jennifer Aniston et al. (2006) Cell 125: 315-326 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: What are stem cells


1
Biol/Chem 473
Schulze lecture 10 Stem cells and chromatin
2
What are stem cells?
  • Non-specialized cells that have the capacity to
    divide in culture and differentiate into more
    mature cells with specialized functions.
  • Can be used for both reproductive and therapeutic
    cloning.

3
Reproductive and therapeutic cloning begin the
same way
4
A decade of reproductive cloning
2000
2001
1996
1998
2003
RETRACTED
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7
Stem cell chromatin
  • Lots of dramatic DNA methylation changes
  • Changes in chromatin accessibility at key
    developmental loci (homeotic gene clusters)
  • Key PcG genes are essential for development ES
    lines cant be established without them

8
Two important histone methyltransferasesEnhancer
of Zeste (PcG) trithorax (trxG)
9
HCNEs highly conserved non-coding elements in
vertebrates
Fugu rubripes
Homo sapiens
Compare non-coding sequence
Filter out transposons etc and matches less than
100bp
Map sequences on human genome
Functional in vivo assay in zebrafish
  • These HCNEs map in clusters (i.e., non-randomly
    distributed)
  • 93 of these clusters are located within 50kb or
    one or more genes important in transcriptional
    regulation or development

Woolfe et al. (2005) PLOS Biology 3(1) 0116
10
HCNEs cluster near developmentally important
genes in vertebrates
Woolfe et al. (2005) PLOS Biology 3(1) 0116
11
A bivalent chromatin structure marks key
developmental genes in embryonic stem cells
  • Bernstein, B.E. Angelina Jolie, Brad Pitt,
    Jennifer Aniston et al. (2006)
  • Cell 125 315-326

12
Hypothesis
  • HCNEs represent conserved regulatory sequences
    that control vertebrate developmental genetic
    expression

Prediction
  • The regulation of developmental gene expression
    programs will correlate with specific epigenetic
    markers on the HCNE control regions

13
Strategy
  • Map histone methylation patterns in mouse
    embryonic stem (ES) cells across specific
    regions of the genome
  • Use ChiP (chromatin immunoprecipitation) on a
    genomic Chip (tiling genomic oligonucleotide
    arrays)
  • Focus on arrays that represent HOX and HCNE
    sequences

14
Bivalent domains contain BOTH repressive AND
activating histone modifications
  • Confirmed high concordance of H3K4me and
    transcriptional start sites (TSS)
  • H3K4me domains relatively small
  • H3K27Me domains much larger
  • Three quarters of the H3K27Me domains contained
    H3K4me domains within them
  • These are termed bivalent domains as they
    harbour both activating and repressive marks

15
Bivalent domains repressive AND activating
histone modifications
H3K4me
H3K27me
A higher than expected incidence of bivalents
occur in HCNEs
Fig 1A
16
Hypothesis
  • Genes that encode proteins that establish cell
    identity are enriched for bivalent domains
  • These bivalent domains are responsible for
    maintaining developmentally important genes in a
    poised state that resolve one way or the other
    through differentiation

Prediction
  • Differentiated cells will contain few, if any,
    bivalent domains

17
Strategy
  • Look at chromatin marks on same regions in
    differentiated cell types
  • Mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs)
  • Mouse primary lung fibroblasts (MLFs)
  • C2C12 myoblasts
  • Neuro2a neuroblastoma cells

18
Fig 2
19
Bivalent domains in ES cells are not bivalent in
differentiated cells
  • Bivalent domains on TSSs (transcriptional start
    sites) of ES cells are monovalent in
    differentiated cells

20
Validation?
  • This is a novel chromatin mark
  • Nobody will believe us
  • Also, maybe these two states (H3K27Me and H3K4Me)
    exist separately in different subpopulations of
    chromatin pulled out of the stem cells in ChIP
  • Test coincidence of H3K4Me and H3K27Me with
    sequential ChIP
  • Test fold enrichment quantitatively with real
    time quantitative (Q)PCR

21
QPCR (Real Time quantitative PCR)
  • Amplification products are labeled by a DNA
    binding dye or probe chemistry that emit
    fluorescent signal when excited
  • The signal strength of the emitted light is
    directly proportional to the amount of PCR
    product in the reaction
  • The fluorescence intensity is detected and
    recorded every cycle
  • DNA amplification is monitored as the reaction
    occurs (hence, real time)
  • Reverse transcriptase PCR and real time PCR are
    not necessarily the same things always check
    context!

22
QPCR, like regular PCR, occurs in stages
PCR just getting started amount of product not
proportional to amount of starting material
(cant measure it anyway)
End of reaction and PCR components depleted
amount of product not proportional to amount of
starting material
Linear phase amount of product is proportional
to amount of starting material
23
Real time measurement during log phase of PCR
correlates with starting concentration
http//www.dorak.info/genetics/realtime.html
24
Fig 3
25
Bivalents keep genes silent, but poised for
later expression
H3K27Me is epistatic to H3K4Me
Fig 4
26
Poised state to resolved state differentiation
in cell culture
Reverse transcriptase PCR ie., starting
template is mRNA population (not the same as QPCR)
All genes associated with bivalent domains
Bivalent marks resolve into monovalent K4Me or
K27Me, depending on the transcriptional state
after differentiation
Fig 5
27
Findings and significance
  • Bivalent domains hold developmentally important
    genes in a poised state in stem cells
  • This poised state is fundamentally repressive,
    but contains within it the potential for
    activation upon differentiation
  • The poised state can also resolve into a
    continued repressed state upon differentiation
  • The resolved monovalent domains are much larger
    than the bivalent domains
  • This may create a larger pool of modified
    histones with which to perpetuate the epigenetic
    mark

28
How is are the bivalent domains established?
  • DNA sequence features???
  • H3K4Me in ES cells positively correlates with CpG
    islands (a marker for promoters)
  • H3K4Me is a mark made by trxG proteins
  • trxG proteins associate with CpG-rich DNA
  • H3K27Me in ES cells positively correlates with
    transposon-poor sequences (as do the HCNEs)
  • Transposon rich sequences acquire different
    repressive marks that may interfere with bivalent
    structure
  • What is the mark in this region that attracts the
    PcG proteins that methylate K27? Dont know
  • These correlations between sequence features and
    methylation states breaks down in differentiated
    cells because lineage-specific transcriptional
    programs result in transfer to a greater degree
    of epigenetic control

29
Questions
  • HCNEs do they define targets for creating
    specific chromatin conformations and/or nuclear
    localizations that affect the establishment of
    bivalent domains?
  • Do bivalents that persist in differentiated cell
    types correspond with genes that have the
    potential for further, later induction?
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