Publications by authors named "Gwen Ellis"

Article Synopsis
  • - The study investigates how genomic context affects gene regulation, focusing on the Igf2/H19 locus in mice, where CTCF binds to a control region that determines which gene is activated based on enhancers.
  • - By using synthetic regulatory genomics to replace the native genetic locus with 157-kb payloads, researchers discovered new long-range regulatory relationships and how enhancers interact with their environment.
  • - The research found that while the H19 enhancers depend on their native location, the Sox2 locus control region operates independently, suggesting that the context of enhancers is crucial for their function across different cell types.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The loss of the tail is among the most notable anatomical changes to have occurred along the evolutionary lineage leading to humans and to the 'anthropomorphous apes', with a proposed role in contributing to human bipedalism. Yet, the genetic mechanism that facilitated tail-loss evolution in hominoids remains unknown. Here we present evidence that an individual insertion of an Alu element in the genome of the hominoid ancestor may have contributed to tail-loss evolution.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Enhancer function is frequently investigated piecemeal using truncated reporter assays or single deletion analysis. Thus it remains unclear to what extent enhancer function at native loci relies on surrounding genomic context. Using the Big-IN technology for targeted integration of large DNAs, we analyzed the regulatory architecture of the murine / locus, a paradigmatic model of enhancer selectivity.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Sox2 expression in mouse embryonic stem cells (mESCs) depends on a distal cluster of DNase I hypersensitive sites (DHSs), but their individual contributions and degree of interdependence remain a mystery. We analyzed the endogenous Sox2 locus using Big-IN to scarlessly integrate large DNA payloads incorporating deletions, rearrangements, and inversions affecting single or multiple DHSs, as well as surgical alterations to transcription factor (TF) recognition sequences. Multiple mESC clones were derived for each payload, sequence-verified, and analyzed for Sox2 expression.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Overwriting counterselectable markers is an efficient strategy for removing wild-type DNA or replacing it with payload DNA of interest. Currently, one bottleneck of efficient genome engineering in mammals is the shortage of counterselectable (negative selection) markers that work robustly without affecting organismal developmental potential. Here, we report a conditional knockout strategy that enables efficient proaerolysin-based counterselection in mouse embryonic stem cells.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Aggressive competition for resources among juveniles is documented in many species, but the neural mechanisms regulating this behavior in young animals are poorly understood. In poison frogs, increased parental care is associated with decreased water volume of tadpole pools, resource limitation, and aggression. Indeed, the tadpoles of many poison frog species will attack, kill, and cannibalize other tadpoles.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF