Publications by authors named "Core L"

Article Synopsis
  • Centromeres rely on the histone variant CENP-A and the role of surrounding DNA repeats is not fully understood, while retroelements are abundant in centromeres and may help with transcription and CENP-A integration.* -
  • This study focuses on the retroelement Jockey-3 in Drosophila melanogaster, showing it is a significant part of the centromeric transcriptome and that its RNA localizes to centromeres during cell division.* -
  • The research suggests that Jockey-3 inserts itself at centromeres to aid its own replication, while also supporting transcription in these areas, which could provide insights into similar mechanisms in other species.*
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Working memory for nonverbal auditory information is essential for everyday functioning but its cognitive organisation is not well understood. Here we addressed this issue in a musician, YA, with absolute pitch (AP, the uncommon ability to categorise and label individual musical pitches without an external reference) who developed posterior cortical atrophy. We assessed YA's AP ability and her working memory for pitch and rhythmic patterns using procedures modelled on a standard test of auditory verbal working memory (digit span), referenced to age-matched, cognitively-normal AP and non-AP possessing musicians.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigated both peripheral (basic hearing ability) and central (speech processing ability) hearing in different dementia patients compared to healthy individuals.
  • Findings revealed that while central hearing (measured through dichotic listening) was significantly impaired in dementia patients, peripheral hearing (measured with pure-tone audiometry) showed no notable difference from healthy controls.
  • The results suggest a critical link between central hearing abilities and cognitive functioning in dementia, emphasizing the need to assess both types of hearing to better understand and address the auditory challenges faced by these patients.
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Great apes have maintained a stable karyotype with few large-scale rearrangements; in contrast, gibbons have undergone a high rate of chromosomal rearrangements coincident with rapid centromere turnover. Here we characterize assembled centromeres in the Eastern hoolock gibbon, (HLE), finding a diverse group of transposable elements (TEs) that differ from the canonical alpha satellites found across centromeres of other apes. We find that HLE centromeres contain a CpG methylation centromere dip region, providing evidence this epigenetic feature is conserved in the absence of satellite arrays; nevertheless, we report a variety of atypical centromeric features, including protein-coding genes and mismatched replication timing.

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Objectives: On phenotypic and neuroanatomical grounds, music exposure might potentially affect the clinical expression of behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia (bvFTD). However, this has not been clarified.

Methods: 14 consecutive patients with bvFTD fulfilling consensus diagnostic criteria were recruited via a specialist cognitive clinic.

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Article Synopsis
  • Centromeres require the histone variant CENP-A for their function and inheritance, while the role of centromeric DNA repeats is still being investigated.
  • Recent research focuses on a centromere-specific retroelement, which contributes significantly to the centromeric transcriptome and produces RNAs that localize to centromeres during cell division.
  • The study suggests that this retroelement enhances the maintenance of centromeres by promoting transcription and is preferentially found within CENP-A-containing chromatin, highlighting its potential evolutionary significance across species.
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Article Synopsis
  • Binary reversals, like confusing 'yes' and 'no', have been found in patients with primary progressive aphasia (PPA) but their significance for diagnosis remains unclear.
  • A study analyzed data from 83 patients with different PPA types and behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia (bvFTD) to compare the occurrence of binary reversals and their diagnostic value.
  • Findings showed that binary reversals were present in all nfvPPA patients, making them a strong indicator of this specific diagnosis, especially when observed early on.
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Motivation: Investigating cell differentiation under a genetic disorder offers the potential for improving current gene therapy strategies. Clonal tracking provides a basis for mathematical modelling of population stem cell dynamics that sustain the blood cell formation, a process known as haematopoiesis. However, many clonal tracking protocols rely on a subset of cell types for the characterization of the stem cell output, and the data generated are subject to measurement errors and noise.

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Background: Mathematical models of haematopoiesis can provide insights on abnormal cell expansions (clonal dominance), and in turn can guide safety monitoring in gene therapy clinical applications. Clonal tracking is a recent high-throughput technology that can be used to quantify cells arising from a single haematopoietic stem cell ancestor after a gene therapy treatment. Thus, clonal tracking data can be used to calibrate the stochastic differential equations describing clonal population dynamics and hierarchical relationships in vivo.

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Mobilized peripheral blood is increasingly used instead of bone marrow as a source of autologous hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells for ex vivo gene therapy. Here, we present an unplanned exploratory analysis evaluating the hematopoietic reconstitution kinetics, engraftment and clonality in 13 pediatric Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome patients treated with autologous lentiviral-vector transduced hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells derived from mobilized peripheral blood (n = 7), bone marrow (n = 5) or the combination of the two sources (n = 1). 8 out of 13 gene therapy patients were enrolled in an open-label, non-randomized, phase 1/2 clinical study (NCT01515462) and the remaining 5 patients were treated under expanded access programs.

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Phonological processing skills have not only been shown to be important for reading skills, but also for arithmetic skills. Specifically, previous research in typically developing children has suggested that phonological processing skills may be more closely related to arithmetic problems that are solved through fact retrieval (e.g.

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Mobile elements and repetitive genomic regions are sources of lineage-specific genomic innovation and uniquely fingerprint individual genomes. Comprehensive analyses of such repeat elements, including those found in more complex regions of the genome, require a complete, linear genome assembly. We present a de novo repeat discovery and annotation of the T2T-CHM13 human reference genome.

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Viral vectors are used to insert genetic material into semirandom genomic positions of hematopoietic stem cells which, after reinfusion into patients, regenerate the entire hematopoietic system. Hematopoietic cells originating from genetically modified stem cells will harbor insertions in specific genomic positions called integration sites, which represent unique genetic marks of clonal identity. Therefore, the analysis of vector integration sites present in the genomic DNA of circulating cells allows to determine the number of clones in the blood ecosystem.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study investigates how mouse pluripotent stem cells (PSCs) reset their molecular features after cell division (mitosis), focusing on the transcriptional and structural changes that occur when they enter the G1 phase.
  • - Researchers found that after mitosis, there are distinct phases of gene reactivation, including quick activation of stem cell genes and temporary activation of genes related to specific lineages, alongside changes in chromatin structure.
  • - Key findings suggest that the retention of a specific chemical marker (H3K27 acetylation) during mitosis helps in the early reactivation of crucial stem cell genes, while the overall structure of chromatin remains stable and unaffected by this marker.
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Rapid perturbation of protein function permits the ability to define primary molecular responses while avoiding downstream cumulative effects of protein dysregulation. The auxin-inducible degron (AID) system was developed as a tool to achieve rapid and inducible protein degradation in nonplant systems. However, tagging proteins at their endogenous loci results in chronic auxin-independent degradation by the proteasome.

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Precise spatio-temporal control of gene activity is essential for organismal development, growth, and survival in a changing environment. Decisive steps in gene regulation involve the pausing of RNA polymerase II (Pol II) in early elongation, and the controlled release of paused polymerase into productive RNA synthesis. Here we describe the factors that enable pausing and the events that trigger Pol II release into the gene.

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Angelman syndrome (AS) is a severe neurodevelopmental disorder caused by the loss of function from the maternal allele of , a gene encoding an E3 ubiquitin ligase. is only expressed from the maternally inherited allele in mature human neurons due to tissue-specific genomic imprinting. Imprinted expression of is restricted to neurons by expression of () from the paternally inherited allele, which silences the paternal allele of in However, the mechanism restricting expression and imprinting to neurons is not understood.

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The aberrant activities of transcription factors such as the androgen receptor (AR) underpin prostate cancer development. While the AR -regulation has been extensively studied in prostate cancer, information pertaining to the spatial architecture of the AR transcriptional circuitry remains limited. In this paper, we propose a novel framework to profile long-range chromatin interactions associated with AR and its collaborative transcription factor, erythroblast transformation-specific related gene (ERG), using chromatin interaction analysis by paired-end tag (ChIA-PET).

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The human genome encodes a variety of poorly understood RNA species that remain challenging to identify using existing genomic tools. We developed chromatin run-on and sequencing (ChRO-seq) to map the location of RNA polymerase for almost any input sample, including samples with degraded RNA that are intractable to RNA sequencing. We used ChRO-seq to map nascent transcription in primary human glioblastoma (GBM) brain tumors.

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Gene expression programs change during cellular transitions. It is well established that a network of transcription factors and chromatin modifiers regulate RNA levels during embryonic stem cell (ESC) differentiation, but the full impact of post-transcriptional processes remains elusive. While cytoplasmic RNA turnover mechanisms have been implicated in differentiation, the contribution of nuclear RNA decay has not been investigated.

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Implants for the treatment of tissue defects should mimic the mechanical properties of the native tissue of interest and should be resorbable as well as biocompatible. In this work, we developed a scaffold from variants of poly(glycolic) acid which were braided and coated with an elastomer of poly(glycolide-co-caprolactone) and crosslinked. The coating of the scaffold with the elastomer led to higher mechanical strength in terms of compression, expansion and elasticity compared to braids without the elastomer coating.

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The coordinated regulation of gene expression at the transcriptional level is fundamental to development and homeostasis. Inducible systems are invaluable when studying transcription because the regulatory process can be triggered instantaneously, allowing the tracking of ordered mechanistic events. Here, we use precision run-on sequencing (PRO-seq) to examine the genome-wide heat shock (HS) response in Drosophila and the function of two key transcription factors on the immediate transcription activation or repression of all genes regulated by HS.

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We provide a protocol for precision nuclear run-on sequencing (PRO-seq) and its variant, PRO-cap, which map the location of active RNA polymerases (PRO-seq) or transcription start sites (TSSs) (PRO-cap) genome-wide at high resolution. The density of RNA polymerases at a particular genomic locus directly reflects the level of nascent transcription at that region. Nuclei are isolated from cells and, under nuclear run-on conditions, transcriptionally engaged RNA polymerases incorporate one or, at most, a few biotin-labeled nucleotide triphosphates (biotin-NTPs) into the 3' end of nascent RNA.

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