Only in Your Head
Greta Friar | Whitehead Institute
October 9, 2018

Cambridge, Mass. — Brain development is a delicately choreographed dance in which cell division and differentiation into mature cell types must be performed in the right balance for normal growth. In order to better understand factors affecting brain development, Whitehead Institute researchers investigated a genetic mutation that leads to a brain-specific developmental disorder in spite of the gene’s prevalent expression in other cell types.

Kinetochore null protein 1 (KNL1) acts throughout the body during cell division to help ensure the accurate segregation of chromosomes into each daughter cell. A mutation in the KNL1 gene caused by a single change in its DNA sequence leads to microcephaly, a condition in which the brain fails to properly develop, causing babies to be born with small heads, often accompanied by intellectual disabilities and other health problems. In an article published online October 9 in the journal Cell Reports, Whitehead Institute Founding Member Rudolf Jaenisch and colleagues investigated how this KNL1 mutation can lead to microcephaly without affecting other cell types, providing important insights into the underlying basis of microcephaly and the role that KNL1 normally plays in brain development.

“The key question we were interested in was why, if the gene is ubiquitously expressed, is there a brain-specific phenotype,” says Jaenisch, who is also a professor of biology at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Jaenisch lab graduate student Attya Omer Javed, a co-first author on the paper along with past lab members Yun Li and Julien Muffat, used CRISPR-Cas9 to recreate the mutation—a point mutation, or one-letter change in the DNA sequence of the KNL1 gene—in several different cell types derived from human stem cells in the lab. Of the three cell types tested, they found that only the neural progenitor cells, early stage cells that become brain cells, appeared to be affected.

As the brain develops, each neural progenitor can either keep dividing to increase the overall number of cells in the brain, or it can mature into a differentiated brain cell, at which point it is no longer able to divide. For a healthy brain to develop, there needs to be a careful balance between these two processes of proliferation and differentiation. If the progenitors take too long to differentiate, the developing brain won’t have the specific cells it needs to assemble. But if all of the cells differentiate too quickly, before they can divide, there will be a shortage of cells and the brain will be too small.

“Neural progenitors are going through many cell cycles, dividing quickly during brain development. Even a small defect could accumulate to have a huge impact,” Omer Javed says.

The researchers discovered that neural progenitors with the KNL1 mutation differentiated prematurely at the cost of proliferation, resulting in the small brain size that characterizes microcephaly. The brain cells with the mutation also were at a greater risk of cell death, disruption of the cell cycle, ending up with the wrong number of chromosomes, and malfunctions during attempted cell division.

KNL1’s role is in the kinetochore, an assembly of proteins that operate during mitosis to attach chromosomes to the machinery that will pull them apart into the daughter cells. This is why the KNL1 mutation negatively affects cell division. Co-author and Whitehead Member Iain Cheesemanhelped identify KNL1’s role in the kinetochore as a postdoctoral researcher years ago, and his expertise provided an opportunity for collaboration between his lab and Jaenisch’s.

“I have always found it interesting that inherited mutations to the kinetochore seem to lead to microcephaly,” Cheeseman says. “Investigating KNL1 together was an exciting chance to combine our labs’ diverse scientific knowledge.”

In order for the researchers to study the cells in an environment that more closely mimicked a human brain, they used a 3D cell culture technique to grow organoids made up of neural progenitors. Omer Javed found that the neural progenitors were extremely sensitive, as the organoids with the mutation expressed the microcephaly phenotype after as little as two weeks of growth.

Omer Javed then looked for differences between neural progenitors and the other cell types that would explain the brain-specific effects of the mutation. Even with the mutation, the KNL1 gene appeared able to make a functioning protein, explaining its lack of effect on the other cell types. So Omer Javed turned her attention to factors involved in regulating gene expression. For many of our genes to be expressed, first sections called introns must be removed, or spliced out, in order for the correct DNA sequence to then be read into RNA and then translated into a functional protein.

Omer Javed found that the KNL1 mutation created a site for splicing inhibitors to bind and silence the KNL1 gene by preventing it from being read into RNA. She also found a disparity in the level of a protein involved in this process between the cell types: the inhibitory splicing protein hnRNPA1 was much more prevalent in neural progenitors than elsewhere. When hnRNPA1 came across the site caused by the mutation, it prevented the gene from being expressed. The high quantity of hnRNPA1 in neural progenitors appears to be the main factor mediating the brain-specific effects of the mutation.

The work complements and extends previous investigations by the researchers into how neural progenitor proliferation may have contributed to the evolution of large human brains, as well as studies investigating why neural progenitors are so vulnerable to the Zika virus, which has been associated with microcephaly. Given their work suggesting that KNL1 could be a regulator of brain size, Omer Javed hopes that future research will reveal its role in the evolution of the human brain.

 

This research was supported by Boehringer Ingelheim Fonds, the Simons Foundation, the International Rett Syndrome Foundation, Brain & Behavior Research Foundation, the European Leukodystrophy Association, the National Institutes of Health (NIH grants HD 045022, R37-CA084198 and 1U19AI131135-01). Jaenisch is a cofounder of Fate Therapeutics, Fulcrum Therapeutics, and Omega Therapeutics.

 

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Rudolf Jaenisch’s primary affiliation is with Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research, where his laboratory is located and all his research is conducted. He is also a professor of biology at Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
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Full citation:
“Microcephaly modeling of kinetochore mutation reveals a brain-specific phenotype”
Cell Reports, online October 9, 2018
Attya Omer (1,2,8), Yun Li (2,3,4,8), Julien Muffat (2,4,5,8), Kuan-Chung Su (2), Malkiel A. Cohen (2), Tenzin Lungjangwa (2), Patrick Aubourg (1,6), Iain M. Cheeseman (2,7), and Rudolf Jaenisch (2,7).
1. Université Paris-Saclay, ED 569, 5 Rue Jean-Baptiste Clément, 92290 Châtenay-Malabry, France
2.  Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research, 455 Main Street, Cambridge, MA 02142, USA
3. Program in Developmental and Stem Cell Biology, The Hospital for Sick Children, 686 Bay Street, Toronto, ON M4G 0A4, Canada
4. Department of Molecular Genetics, University of Toronto, 1 King’s College Circle, Toronto, ON M5S 1A8, Canada
5. Program in Neurosciences and Mental Health, The Hospital for Sick Children, 686 Bay Street, Toronto, ON M5G 0A4, Canada
6. INSERM U1169, CHU Bicêtre Paris Sud, Le Kremlin-Bicêtre, France.
7. Department of Biology, MIT, 31 Ames Street, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA
8. These authors contributed equally
A Summer of Protein Degradation and the Beauty of Basic Science

MSRP-Bio student Elizabeth Bond worked in the Baker Lab, investigating the macromolecular machines that roam the cell and gobble up unneeded proteins.

Raleigh McElvery
September 25, 2018

Elizabeth Bond’s greatest summer accomplishment is proudly displayed as the background image on her phone. To the casual observer, it looks like columns of black blobs, but to Bond this stained protein gel signifies that, after two long weeks, she successfully isolated her protein of interest. The snapshot also underscores that she’s found her “people” — the kind who, as she describes, “will freak out with you over a great looking gel.”

A rising senior at UMass Amherst, Bond joined 18 fellow MIT Summer Research Program in Biology (MSRP-Bio) students — collaborating in labs across the biology department and various MIT-affiliated institutes for 10 weeks. Together, they attended seminars, lectures, Q&A sessions, meals, and field trips while living in dorms and bonding over science and life in general.

“You’re with a group of other college students looking towards the future, and you’re all stressing out about what comes next,” she says. “That’s amazing because you’re able to talk about your different insecurities and anxieties. You have a built-in support system that you might not get by staying at your home institution over the summer.”

Bond grew up not too far from MIT in the quiet town of Boxford, Massachusetts. Before setting foot on campus, she expected MIT to be cutthroat and competitive. Instead, she found “a bunch of nerds who are willing to help other nerds learn, make mistakes, and be human beings.” The researchers she met were supportive and eager to share their insights, scientific or otherwise. “In addition to being really interesting, these conversations helped me feel that I fit in with a group of very intelligent scientists,” she says.

As a biochemistry major, Bond appreciates basic science because it allows her to probe biological phenomena with no immediate goal other than to understand the underlying mechanisms. “Maybe 10 years down the line my research will help someone’s translational work, but right now I can pursue knowledge for its own sake,” she says. “The beauty of basic science is that you’re able to study things because they’re cool, while also contributing to the body of work your lab family began before you.”

At UMass Amherst, she serves as an undergraduate research assistant, investigating AAA+ proteases — the same protein degradation machines she studied all summer in Tania Baker’s lab, mentored by graduate student Kristin Zuromski. Back home, Bond examines these proteases in bacteria, using a combination of microbiology and computational biology. As a member of the Baker lab, she studied these macromolecular machines leveraging biochemical approaches.

She likens AAA+ proteases to Pac-Men from the classic arcade game, roaming the cell and gobbling up misfolded, excess, or unneeded proteins. One of the AAA+ proteases studied in the Baker lab is ClpAP, which is comprised of the AAA+ unfoldase ClpA and its partner peptidase ClpP. Bond’s protein of interest this summer was ClpA, a hexameric protein depicted as a cylinder with a central channel. ClpA unfolds and threads protein substrates through its channel, which contains pore loop structures that protrude from the chamber and play important roles in the function of ClpA. From there, the proteins enter ClpP, where they are degraded into small peptide fragments.

There are two types of pore loops in ClpA, D1 and D2, but their respective roles in the recognition, unfolding, and movement of proteins for degradation are not fully characterized. Bond hoped to discern their roles relative to one another.

She introduced a mutation into the gene that encodes ClpA, switching one amino acid for another in the D2 pore loop, in a region thought to be critical for recognizing proteins targeted for degradation. This mutation would, in theory, lead to a variant of ClpA where the D1 pore loop retained normal activity, but the D2 pore loop was unable to function. She used chemical crosslinking to generate a ClpA dimer variant that was half wildtype and half mutant in the D2 pore loops, and monitored the ability of the assembled hexameric AAA+ protease to function.

By observing the degradation activity of this crosslinked ClpA variant containing three active and three inactive D2 pore loops in an alternating order, she hoped to get a better sense of the role the D2 pore loops play in ClpAP protease function.

Although there is still more to be done to answer this particular question, reflecting on the summer Bond feels her project went “surprisingly well,” despite being more challenging than she initially anticipated — primarily due to multi-week protein purification experiments and performing many procedures simultaneously. She arrived with the sole intention of bolstering her biochemistry knowledge, and left with a greater appreciation for the breadth of scientific fields she could pursue.

“MSRP-Bio gave me the chance to talk with students and faculty members working in multiple branches of science,” she says. “I study bacteria, but I can learn a lot from someone researching roundworms or cancer cells, or using computational approaches to biology. Those conversations prompted me to think more critically about my own research.”

Besides feeling integrated into the tightly-knit Baker lab, her favorite aspect of the summer was the bond she formed within her MSRP-Bio cohort. In addition to freaking out over protein gels, they started their own journal club, and they discussed personal struggles, family, where they came from, and where they want to go.

“A lot of students of color who come from underrepresented groups in science, like I do, have this anxiety about not being smart enough or not fitting in,” she says. “The program allows you to bond over these shared feelings and that is part of what makes it really amazing for students who are trying to do great things, but do not often feel fully represented.”

At the beginning of the summer, Bond hadn’t fully admitted to herself that she wanted to apply to grad school. “It was easier for me to be ambiguous about what I wanted to do, because it was scary to admit that grad school was something I might actually want,” she recalls. After a summer at MIT, she’s gained the confidence to apply and state her ambitions out loud.

“My project’s been amazing and great, but now I want to have my own body of work,” she says. “It’s something I have this great urge to do — and, because of MSRP-Bio, I’m ready for it.”

Photo credit: Raleigh McElvery
Parasite’s riff on essential enzyme highlights unique biology
Nicole Giese Rura | Whitehead Institute
September 18, 2018

Cambridge, Mass. — The primary currency of energy in cells—adenosine triphosphate (ATP)—is essential for their survival and without it, cellular processes would seize. In the apicomplexan Toxoplasma gondii (T. gondii), a parasite that Whitehead Member Sebastian Lourido studies, key components of the ATP synthase—the enzyme responsible for ATP production—have remained elusive. While investigating indispensable proteins with unknown functions, Lourido and Diego Huet, a postdoctoral researcher in Lourido’s lab, identified a critical component of the enzyme. While highly conserved from yeast to humans, it proved to be considerably different in T. gondii. The findings, published online September 11 in the journal eLife, underscore the unique biology of these parasites and highlight differences between them and their human hosts.

More closely related to plants than to animals, the single-celled apicomplexans are among the most common and deadly human pathogens. According to the World Health Organization, every year these diseases sicken hundreds of millions, kill hundreds of thousands—primarily children—and cost billions of dollars to treat. Species of apicomplexans cause malaria (Plasmodium spp.), cryptosporidiosis (Cryptosporidium spp.), and toxoplasmosis (T. gondii).

Using a CRISPR-based genetic screen that they had adapted to T. gondii, Lourido and Huet had previously identified about 200 genes in T. gondii that are fitness-conferring and specific to apicomplexans. Of that cadre, a few were localized to the mitochondria, where cells manufacture ATP, the cellular currency of energy. Because those genes have not been annotated previously, and the proteins encoded by them have no known function, Huet ran their protein sequences through a database that compared them to protein sequences with known structures.

One of the proteins came back with an interesting hit: it shares structural similarity, but not sequence similarity, with an integral part of the ATP synthase. Most of the protein subunits that compose the apicomplexan ATP synthase have been identified, but key components of the stator—a portion of the enzyme essential for its function—was not yet known.

When Huet experimentally removed the function of the stator subunit in T. gondii, the parasites’ growth stalled, their mitochondria were misshapen and shrunken, and energy production halted—all traits typical of interrupted ATP synthase function.

Because the apicomplexan ATP synthase varies so much from its hosts’ version, those differences, like the unusual stator, could serve as future drug targets. But for Lourido, who is also an assistant professor of biology at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), the unique stator protein emphasizes how unique and extraordinary apicomplexan organisms are compared to us and their other hosts.

This work was supported by the National Institutes of Health (NIH grants 1DP5OD017892, R21AI123746, and K99AI137218).

* * *

Sebastian Lourido’s primary affiliation is with Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research, where his laboratory is located and all his research is conducted. He is also an assistant professor of biology at Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

* * *

Full Citation:

“Identification of cryptic subunits from an apicomplexan ATP synthase”

eLife, online September 11, 2018.  DOI: 10.7554/eLife.38097

Diego Huet (1) , Esther Rajendran (2) , Giel G van Dooren (2) , Sebastian Lourido (1,3*).

1. Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research, Cambridge, United States

2. Research School of Biology, Australian National University, Canberra, Australia

3. Department of Biology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States

Jarrett Smith receives Hanna Gray Fellowship from HHMI
Greta Friar | Whitehead Institute
September 12, 2018

Cambridge, Mass — Jarrett Smith, postdoctoral researcher in David Bartel’s lab at the Whitehead Institute, has been announced as a recipient of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI)’s 2018 Hanna Gray fellowship. The fellowship supports outstanding early career scientists from groups underrepresented in the life sciences. Each of this year’s fifteen awardees will be given up to $1.4 million dollars in funding over the course of their postdoctoral program and beginning of a tenure-track faculty position.

“This program will help us retain the most diverse talent in science,” said HHMI President Erin O’Shea. “We feel it’s critically important in academia to have exceptional people from all walks of life, all cultures, and all backgrounds – people who can inspire the next generation of scientists.”

For Smith, who began his postdoctoral training in the Bartel lab in January, finding out he got the fellowship was a defining moment.

“I’m grateful for the support that the fellowship will provide during the formative years of my career,” Smith says. “This kind of opportunity gives you the confidence to set ambitious research goals and find out what you can accomplish.”

In the Bartel lab, Smith studies how cells respond to stress. When a cell is exposed to environmental stressors such as heat, UV radiation, or viral infection, proteins and RNAs in the cell may clump together into dense aggregates called stress granules. Several diseases are associated with altered stress granule formation, but the exact function of stress granules and their potential role in disease are unknown. Smith is investigating changes in the cell linked to their formation. His findings could shed light on a potential role for stress granules in cancer, viral infection, and neurodegenerative disease.

Growing up, Smith was always interested in science but no one in his family had ever received a PhD, making biology research feel like an unlikely career path for him. Nevertheless, he followed his passion, which led him to a PhD program at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. Despite his strong academic performance, Smith began graduate school with doubts about his ability to become a scientist. His mentors were incredible teachers but their self-assuredness could be intimidating.

“They were absolutely my role models, but I didn’t think of them as having gone through what I was going through. In the first few years, I felt like I had a lot of catching up to do,” Smith said.

Smith says he was frequently inspired and guided by his graduate school mentor, Geraldine Seydoux. Under her tutorship he became more confident in his abilities.

“I try to pick mentors who are the kind of scientist I aspire to be,” Smith said.

With that tenet in mind, he set his sights on David Bartel’s lab for his postdoctoral research. He had heard that Bartel was a great mentor and knew the Bartel lab had expertise in all of the research techniques he wanted to learn. Since arriving at Whitehead Institute, Smith says he has experienced support not only from Bartel, but from the entire lab as well.

“Jarrett’s graduate experience with P granules in nematodes brings much appreciated expertise to our lab, and we are all excited about what he will discover here on stress-granule function,” Bartel says. “Receiving this fellowship is a well-deserved honor, and I am very happy for him.”

Smith noted that he is deeply grateful for the community he’s found at Whitehead Institute. However, he also noted that throughout his scientific career he has typically been the only black person in the room. One of the joys of applying for the fellowship was meeting the rest of the candidates, a diverse and impressive group of scientists, he says. He looks forward to seeing the other fellows again at meetings hosted by the HHMI.

“I’ve never really had a scientific role model that shared those experiences or that I could identify with in that way,” Smith says, but he hopes that future aspiring scientists won’t have to go through the same experience. His brother-in-law recently began an undergraduate major in biology. Smith enjoys being there to answer his questions about school work or life as a researcher.

“I’d never ask him if he thinks of me as a role model,” Smith says, laughing. “But I’m glad that I have the chance to help people who—like I did—might question whether they could be successful in the sciences.” With the support of the fellowship and his lab, and an exciting research question he is eager to tackle, Smith has never been more certain that he belongs right where he is.

A Summer of Science

Victor Rivera-Santana, a chemistry major at the University of Puerto Rico at Mayagüez, visited MIT Biology for 10 weeks to investigate protein form and function.

August 30, 2018

Victor Rivera-Santana grew up on the western edge of Puerto Rico, in what he refers to as an “atmosphere of science.” His mother is a professor of animal science at the University of Puerto Rico at Mayagüez, and in elementary school he would attend her lectures about the effects of environment and hormones on animal behavior. Three years ago, Rivera-Santana enrolled there as an undergraduate, and has been studying chemistry ever since — with the exception of this past summer, when he became a full-fledged member of the MIT Biology Department for 10 weeks during MIT’s Summer Research Program in Biology (MSRP­-Bio).

Rivera-Santana remembers being drawn to basic research because of its simple, pure, and noble nature, stemming from the creativity of the researcher. “Science almost always has an application, so the fact that researchers in basic science are not looking for an application per se doesn’t mean their work won’t have one in the future,” he says. “The researcher fulfills his or her own curiosity, and afterwards someone else can find a way to put that into practice in society.”

A rising senior, Rivera-Santana chose chemistry because he enjoyed analyzing the minute building blocks of life, but wasn’t sure which field he would ultimately pursue. With chemistry, he could engineer the major to encompass biology and physics as well, which would give him “a taste of everything.”

At first he didn’t know what post-graduation life might hold. However, two weeks into the MSRP-Bio program he’d made up his mind: a PhD. “I like the people, I like the passion, and most importantly I like the research — everything is so interesting it’s hard to pick,” he says.

Rivera-Santana applied to MSRP-Bio early last January because he had it on good authority from three independent sources that this was the program for him. First a good friend and former MSRP-Bio student suggested it, then his professor, and finally his father.

He had two main expectations coming in. First, that everyone would be intimidating and aloof. “Boy was I wrong,” he says. “The MIT faculty are really accessible and engage you as a potential researcher. You can stop them as they’re walking down the hall, or ask them questions during the scheduled Q&A sessions.”

Second, he expected everyone would be hardworking, irrespective of their area of focus. “I was very pleased to find that’s the case,” he says. “I have not met one person at MIT who would not go the extra mile to do their job correctly.”

Rivera-Santana worked in Thomas Schwartz’s lab, investigating an aggregate of proteins known as the nuclear pore complex (NPC), which is embedded in the nuclear envelope and controls the passage of proteins, RNAs, and even ribosomal subunits between the cytoplasm and the nucleus. Although the NPC is vital to cellular survival, its structure is not yet fully understood.

The Schwartz lab goes bit by bit, studying each of its components and their interactions with one another. Rivera-Santana concentrated on one NPC protein in particular, Nup93, parsing its role and design. He hopes this work will eventually help scientists understand the complex as a whole, “because as the name says, it’s complex.”

Rivera-Santana studied four different variants of Nup93, working to express each variant by itself in bacteria. Most of his days in lab went by “either very slowly or very quickly.” He would spend the beginning of the week growing the bacteria to express his proteins — a relatively low-key process since the bacteria “essentially take care of themselves.” The latter half of the week, though, when he began the purification process, was more fast-paced. It involved extracting and purifying the proteins from the bacterial cytosol, while at the same time taking steps to prevent the proteins from becoming damaged, such as keeping them at low temperatures by performing the purification steps in the cold room.

“Purifying is the really challenging part, but it’s also the most fun,” Rivera-Santana says. “I had to work at four degrees Celsius, and I’m from Puerto Rico so you can just imagine how I bear the temperature,” he adds.

Looking back, his most exciting summer experience was purifying his first protein. “I just felt this bundle of joy well up inside me,” he says. “When I ran it through the gel to check its identity and I saw that beautiful blob of ‘ink’ that told me I had my protein, I just felt so happy.”

While Rivera-Santana thoroughly enjoyed his experiences in lab, he was also thrilled to meet other budding researchers and explore Boston’s museums and brick buildings. His proudest moment was cooking his first meal for his new MSRP-Bio friends (a classic Puerto Rican dish: rice, beans, chicken, and plantains). He enjoys putting smiles on people’s faces, “especially when those grins are full of food.” After all, MSRP-Bio isn’t just about being at MIT; it’s also about meeting people and being part of the community.

He also learned he could live by himself, thousands of miles from his family. And he’s prepared to do it again next summer, perhaps in the same lab. “I’m definitely considering doing MSRP-Bio again,” he says. “And I’m certainly also thinking about MIT for graduate school.”

Until then, the three things he’ll miss the most — in no particularly order — are his MSRP-Bio cohort, his lab mentor, and the tasty East Coast cherries.

Photo credit: Raleigh McElvery
The cartographer of cells

Aviv Regev helped pioneer single-cell genomics. Now she’s cochairing a massive effort to map the trillions of cells in the human body. Biology will never be the same.

Sam Apple | MIT Technology Review
August 23, 2018

Last October, Aviv Regev spoke to a gathering of international scientists at Israel’s Weizmann Institute of Science. For Regev, a computational and systems biologist at the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard, the gathering was also a homecoming of sorts. Regev earned her PhD from nearby Tel Aviv University in 2002. Now, 15 years later, she was back to discuss one of the most ambitious projects in the history of biology.

The project, the Human Cell Atlas, aims to create a reference map that categorizes all the approximately 37 trillion cells that make up a human. The Human Cell Atlas is often compared to the Human Genome Project, the monumental scientific collaboration that gave us a complete readout of human DNA, or what might be considered the unabridged cookbook for human life. In a sense, the atlas is a continuation of that project’s work. But while the same DNA cookbook is found in every cell, each cell type reads only some of the recipes—that is, it expresses only certain genes, following their DNA instructions to produce the proteins that carry out a cell’s activities. The promise of the Human Cell Atlas is to reveal which specific genes are expressed in every cell type, and where the cells expressing those genes can be found.

Speaking to her colleagues at the meeting in Israel, Regev, who is cochairing the Human Cell Atlas Organizing Committee with Sarah Teichmann of the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute, displayed the no-nonsense demeanor you might expect of someone at the helm of a massive scientific undertaking. The project had been under way for a year, and Regev, an MIT biology professor who is also chair of the faculty of the Broad and director of its Klarman Cell Observatory and Cell Circuits Program, was reviewing a newly published white paper detailing how the Human Cell Atlas is expected to change the way we diagnose, monitor, and treat disease.

As Regev made her way through the white paper, the possibilities began to seem almost endless. At the most basic level, as a reference map detailing the genes expressed by each different type of healthy cell, the Human Cell Atlas will make it easier to identify how gene expression and signaling go awry in the case of disease. The same map could also help drug developers avoid toxic side effects: researchers targeting a gene that’s harmful in one part of the body would know if the same gene is playing a vital role in another. And because the atlas is expected to reveal many new types of cells, it could also add much more sensitivity to a type of standard blood test, which simply counts different subsets of immune cells. Likewise, looking at individual intestinal cells might provide new insights into the specific cells responsible for inflammation and food allergies. And a better understanding of types of neurons could have far-reaching implications for brain science.

The final product, Regev says, will amount to nothing less than a “periodic table of our cells,” a tool that is designed not to answer one specific question but to make countless new discoveries possible. Eric Lander, the founding director and president of the Broad Institute and a member of the Human Cell Atlas Organizing Committee, likens it to genomics. “People thought at the beginning they might use genomics for this application or that application,” he says. “Nothing has failed to be transformed by genomics, and nothing will fail to be transformed by having a cell atlas.”

Cellular circuits

Regev’s interest in cells began at Tel Aviv University, where she was one of just 15 or so entering students in a highly selective program that gave them the freedom to take high-level courses in any subject. “You could go your first day as a freshman and decide to take a graduate class in political science,” she says.

Regev took a genetics class her first semester and got hooked on the computational challenge of finding order in the complex, interconnected networks of proteins and genes within each cell. She pursued that topic for her doctoral work, characterizing living systems in a mathematical language that had been designed to describe computer processes. As she finished her doctorate in 2002, she was accepted into a program at Harvard’s Bauer Center for Genomics Research that allowed her to start her own lab without first training as a postdoc.

Not long after, Lander, who’d begun his own career as a mathematician after studying algebraic coding theory and combinatorial mathematics at Oxford, was searching for star talent for the newly created Broad Institute, whose mission is to use genomics to study human disease and help advance its treatment. He first met Regev at a lunch at the Bauer Center during which the fellows took turns speaking about their research for five to 10 minutes. “By the time we got all the way around the table I had written down ‘Hire Aviv Regev,’” he recalls.

Convinced by Lander to join the Broad after “many cups of tea” at Cafe Algiers in Harvard Square, Regev continued to apply computational approaches to study the mind-bogglingly complicated machinery of the cell. A single cell is made up of millions of molecules that are in constant conversation as they work together to do all the things cells need to do: divide, grow, repair internal damage, and, in the case of immune cells, signal other cells about threats. Inside the nucleus, the DNA is transcribed into RNA. That in turn gives rise to proteins, the molecules that do the work inside a cell. Meanwhile, proteins on the surface of the cell are constantly receiving molecular messages from outside—glucose is available, an invader has arrived. These must be relayed back to proteins in the nucleus, which will respond by transcribing other DNA, giving rise to new proteins and still more signaling networks.

“It’s like a complex computer that is made of these many, many different parts that are interacting with each other and telling each other what to do,” says Regev. The protein signaling networks are like “circuits”—and you can think about the cell “almost like a wiring diagram,” she says. But using computational approaches to understand their activity first requires gathering an enormous amount of data, which Regev has long done through RNA sequencing. Unlike DNA sequencing, she says, it can tell her which genes are actually being expressed, so it offers a far more dynamic picture of a cell in action. But simply sequencing the RNA of the cells she’s studying can tell her only so much. To understand how the circuits change under different circumstances, Regev subjects cells to different stimuli, such as hormones or pathogens, to see how the resulting protein signals change.

Next comes what she calls “the modeling step”—creating algorithms that try to decipher the most likely sequence of molecular events following a stimulus. And just as someone might study a computer by cutting out circuits and seeing how that changes the machine’s operation, Regev tests her model by seeing if it can predict what will happen when she silences specific genes and then exposes the cells to the same stimulus.

In a 2009 study, Regev and her team examined how exposure to molecular components of pathogens like bacteria, viruses, or fungi affected the circuitry of the immune system’s dendritic cells. She turned to a technique known as RNA interference (she now uses CRISPR), which allowed her to systematically shut genes down. Then she looked at which genes were expressed to determine how the cells’ response changed in each case. Her team singled out 100 different genes that were involved in regulating the response to the pathogens—some of which weren’t previously known to be involved in immune function. The study, published in Science, generated headlines. But according to longtime colleague Dana Pe’er, now chair of computational and systems biology at the Sloan Kettering Institute at the Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center and a member of the Human Cell Atlas Organizing Committee, what really sets Regev apart is the elegance of her work. Regev, says Pe’er, “has a rare, innate ability of seeing complex biology and simplifying it and formalizing it into beautiful, abstract, describable principles.”

From smoothies to fruit salad

There are lots of empty coffee mugs in Regev’s office at the Broad Institute, but very little in the way of decoration. She approaches her science with a businesslike efficiency. “There are many brilliant people,” says Lander. “She’s a brilliant person who can get things done.”

In the fast-changing arena of genomics (“2015 in my field is considered ancient history,” she says), she is known for making the most of the latest innovations—and for helping to spur the next ones. For years, she and others in the field struggled with a dirty secret of RNA sequencing: though its promise has always been precision—the power of knowing the exact code—the techniques produced results that were unspecific. Every cell has only a minuscule amount of RNA. For sequencing purposes, the RNA from millions of cells had to be pooled together. Bulk RNA sequencing left researchers with what she likens to a smoothie. Once it’s blended together, there’s no way to distinguish all the fruits—or in this case, the RNA from individual cells—that went into it. What researchers needed was something more like a fruit salad, a way to separate all the blueberries, raspberries, and blackberries.

In 2011, working with Broad Institute colleague Joshua Levin, PhD ’92, and postdocs Alex Shalek, now at MIT’s Institute for Medical Engineering and Science, and Rahul Satija, now at the New York Genome Center, Regev managed to obtain enough RNA from a single cell to sequence it. To test the method, they sequenced 18 individual dendritic cells from the bone marrow of a mouse. The cells were all obtained in the same way and were expected to be the same type. But to the researchers’ amazement, they were expressing different genes and could be classified into two distinct subtypes. It was like finding out the smoothie you’d been drinking for years had ingredients you’d never known about.

Regev and her colleagues weren’t the only ones figuring out how to sequence a single cell with such sensitivity, nor were they the very first to succeed. Other labs were making similar advances at approximately the same time, each using its own technology and algorithms. And they all faced the same problem: isolating and extracting enough RNA from individual cells was time consuming and expensive. Regev and her colleagues had spent many thousands of dollars to sequence only 18 cells. If the body was full of rare, undiscovered cells, it was going to take an extraordinarily long time to find them.

Skip ahead seven years and the cost of single-cell RNA sequencing is down to only pennies per cell. A critical breakthrough was Drop-Seq, a new technology developed by researchers at Harvard and the Broad Institute, including Regev and members of her lab. The device embeds individual cells into distinct oil droplets with a tiny “bar-coded” bead. When the cell is broken apart for sequencing, some of its RNA attaches to the bead in its droplet. This allows researchers to analyze thousands at once without getting their genetic material mixed up.

Cell theory 2.0

When cell theory was first proposed by German scientists some 180 years ago, it was hard to fathom that our tissues are built from “individual elementary units,” as Theodor Schwann, one of the two scientists credited with the theory, described cells. But it soon became a central tenet of biology, and over the decades and centuries, cells began to give up their secrets. Microscopes improved; new staining and sorting techniques became available. With each advance, new distinctions became possible. Muscle cells could be distinguished from neurons, and then categorized again as smooth or skeletal muscle cells. Cells, it became clear, were all fundamentally similar but came in different forms that had different properties.

By the 21st century, 200 to 300 major cell types had been identified. And while biologists have long recognized that the true number of cell types must be higher, the extent of their diversity is only now coming into full focus, thanks in large part to single-cell RNA sequencing. Regev says that the immune system alone can now be divided into more than 200 cell types and that even our retinas have 100 or more distinct types of neurons. She and her colleagues have discovered several of them.

The idea that knowing so much more about our cells could lead to medical breakthroughs is no longer hypothetical. By sequencing the RNA of individual cancer cells in recent years—“Every cell is an experiment now,” she says—she has found remarkable differences between the cells of a single tumor, even when they have the same mutations. (Last year that work led to Memorial Sloan Kettering’s Paul Marks Prize for Cancer Research.) She found that while some cancers are thought to develop resistance to therapy, a subset of melanoma cells were resistant from the start. And she discovered that two types of brain cancer, oligodendroglioma and astrocytoma, harbor the same cancer stem cells, which could have important implications for how they’re treated.

The excitement in the field has become tangible as more new cell types have been found. And yet Regev realized that if the aim was comprehensive knowledge, the approach needed to be coordinated. If each lab were to rely on its own techniques, it would be hard to standardize the computational tools and the resulting data. The new studies were producing “very nice glimmers of light,” Regev says—“a thing here, a thing there.” But she wanted to make sure those findings could be connected.Regev has also been busily mapping cells from the immune system, brain, gut, and elsewhere. She is not alone. Other labs have started their own mapping projects, each tackling a different part of the body. Last year researchers at the University of Washington attempted to classify every cell type in the microscopic worm C. elegans. “Every single field in biology is saying, ‘Of course we have to look at single-cell resolution,’” says Lander. “How did we ever imagine we were going to solve a problem without single-cell resolution?”

Regev began to advocate creating something more unified: a map that would allow researchers to chart gene expression and cell types across the entire body. Sarah Teichmann had been thinking along the same lines. When she reached out to Regev in late 2015 about the possibility of joining forces, Regev immediately said yes.

A Google Maps for our cells

The Human Cell Atlas is a collaboration among hundreds of biologists, technologists, and software engineers across the globe. Results from single-cell RNA sequencing will be combined with other data points to provide a comprehensive catalogue of all human cells.

But the many researchers involved won’t simply be compiling spreadsheets listing different cell types. The atlas will also reveal where the cells are located in the body, how many there are, what forms they can take, even the developmental history of different cell types as they differentiated from stem cells. And all of this will be made accessible through a data coordination platform and a rich visual interface that Regev compares to Google Maps. It will allow users to zoom in to the molecular level of our cells, but zooming out to the level of tissues and organs will be important too. As a 2017 overview of the Human Cell Atlas by the project’s organizing committee noted, an atlas “is a map that aims to show the relationships among its elements.” Just as corresponding coastlines seen in an atlas of Earth offer visual evidence of continental drift, compiling all the data about our cells in one place could reveal relationships among cells, tissues, and organs, including some that are entirely unexpected. And just as the periodic table made it possible to predict the existence of elements yet to be observed, the Human Cell Atlas, Regev says, could help us predict the existence of cells that haven’t been found.

The plan is not to sequence all 37 trillion cells but to sample from every part of the body. As Regev talks about the project, her enthusiasm evident, she digs up a slide to demonstrate how effective sampling can be. The slide, first only an empty frame of white, begins to fill in, pixel by pixel, with specks of blue and yellow. Soon, even though many of the pixels haven’t yet been filled, the image on the screen is unmistakable: it is Van Gogh’s Starry Night. Likewise, Regev explains, the Human Cell Atlas can give a complete picture even if not every single cell has been sequenced.

To do the sequencing, Regev and Teichmann have welcomed and recruited experts in each different tissue type. Though expected to take years, the project is moving ahead rapidly with such backers as NIH, the EU, the Wellcome Trust, the Manton Foundation, and the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative, which pledged to spend $3 billion to battle disease over the next decade; this year alone it will fund 85 Human Cell Atlas grants. Early results are already pouring in. In March, Swedish researchers working on cells related to human development announced they had sequenced 250,000 individual cells. In May, a team at the Broad made a data set of more than 500,000 immune cells available on a preview site. The goal, Regev says, is for researchers everywhere to be able to use the open-source platform of the Human Cell Atlas to perform joint analyses.

Plenty of challenges remain before the atlas can become a reality. New visualization software must be developed. Sequencing and computational approaches will need to be standardized across a huge number of labs. Conceptual issues, such as what distinguishes one cell type from another, have to be worked through. But the community behind the Human Cell Atlas—including more than 800 individuals as of June—has no shortage of motivation.

One of Regev’s own recent studies, published in August in Nature, is perhaps the best example of how the project could change biology. In mapping cells of the lungs, Regev and Jay Rajagopal’s lab at Massachusetts General Hospital found a new, very rare cell type that primarily expresses a gene linked to cystic fibrosis. Regev now thinks that these rare cells probably play a key role in the disease. More surprising yet, researchers had previously thought that a different cell type was expressing the gene.

“Imagine if somebody wanted to do gene therapy,” Regev says. “You have to fix the gene, but you have to fix it in the right cell.” The Human Cell Atlas could help researchers identify the right cell and understand how the gene in question is regulated by that cell’s extraordinarily complicated molecular networks.

For Regev, the importance of the Human Cell Atlas goes beyond its promise to revolutionize biology and medicine. As she once put it, without an atlas of our cells, “we don’t really know what we’re made of.”

Altering Neuronal Activity at Will

Graduate student Nicole Aponte Santiago uses fruit flies to probe the relationship between the many nerve cells passing signals from the brain to the muscles.

Raleigh McElvery
August 16, 2018

As fifth year graduate student Nicole Aponte Santiago puts it, she has the power to alter nerve cell activity in fruit flies at will. She’ll also tell you point-blank that flies are her favorite model organism, although that wasn’t always the case. They have many well-cited advantages — they procreate often, have short lifespans, and many of their genes overlap with humans while being easy to manipulate. But Aponte suggests an additional reason for her change of heart. She suspects “looking them straight in the eye” so frequently ultimately convinced her, using their physical features to deduce their genetic makeup, and from there investigate the relationship between the many nerve cells (neurons) passing signals from the brain to the muscles.

Aponte credits her initial interest in science to her father, a dentist who used to take her for long walks on the beaches of Puerto Rico where she grew up. Together the two would examine the minute details of the coastal world around them, discussing various phenomena. Where does sand come from? How do the tides form? What types of shelled critters reside at the sea’s edge?

She first set foot on MIT’s campus in January of 2011 while a sophomore at the University of Puerto Rico, Río Piedras, attending the weeklong Quantitative Methods Workshop to learn various quantitative tools and programming languages. In June of that same year she returned, this time for 10 weeks as an MIT Summer Research Program (MSRP) student. Aponte joined Hazel Sive’s lab at the Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research, gathering preliminary data for a paper that was eventually published in Fluids and Barriers of the CNS.

“I was introduced to basic science through both programs,” Aponte says. “Discovery-based research lays the foundation for translational research later on, and it allows you to address questions that no one has answered before. If you’re lucky enough to witness those discoveries, for a few moments you’re the only person in the world with that knowledge, and I find that prospect incredibly exciting.”

As a first-year graduate student in 2013, she tested out several different labs and ultimately chose Troy Littleton’s lab located in the Picower Institute for Learning and Memory. She was drawn to the friendly and collaborative atmosphere, as well as the breadth of potential projects — from those related to the central nervous system and Huntington’s disease to the connections between nerve cells.

Aponte investigates how nerve cells interface with one another and neighboring muscles, focusing on the tiny gap between neurons and muscles, known as neuromuscular junctions. Multiple neurons can form connections with the same neuron or muscle cell, but which connections remain depends on competition between the nerve cells and how often those connections are used. New ones are constantly being shaped as we learn new things and acquire new experiences, while less frequently used connections get trimmed away. Aponte wants to understand how neurons that talk to the same muscle cell interact with each other, determining which lines of communication will be strengthened and which will be pruned away.

When Aponte first began in the Littleton lab five years ago, she screened scores of unique drivers — segments of DNA that “drive” gene expression in specific cells during a specific time in development. She hoped to find drivers that could trigger the expression of a green fluorescent protein (GFP) at the neuromuscular junction, and ultimately identified two different drivers which caused GFP expression in two separate neurons targeting the same muscle near the back of the fly. These drivers would allow her to control the expression of not just GFP, but also other genes that she connected to the drivers, including genes that can increase or decrease the activity of the neurons, or even kill them.

“It’s really from there that my entire project was born,” Aponte recalls.

Each morning, she heads to the fly room to collect virgin flies and determine which ones to breed in order to generate progeny with her desired genetic makeup. She can infer something about the flies’ chromosomes based on their physical characteristics, which allow her to keep track of their genes and create offspring with the GFP marker in her neurons of interest. As is true for most things these days, there’s an app for that. As we chat, she takes out her phone and begins to scroll through images that illustrate which genetic markers engender which physical characteristics. The Tubby mutation makes the flies rather fat, whereas Bar makes their eyes noticeably skinnier.

“In the same way that I can express GFP in just one of the two motor neurons to distinguish between them and monitor their shape,” she says, “I can also express genes that increase or decrease activity of one of the neurons, or even kill one of the neurons. In this way, I create an input imbalance by increasing or decreasing the activity in either neuron to see how that affects the activity of its partner neuron.”

In the afternoons, sometimes she uses molecular fluorophores to highlight the changes in structure of these neurons. She also assesses the activity in the muscles by poking them with electrodes and observing what happens when the muscle receives more or less input from one of the motor neurons. Additionally, she explores what happens to surrounding muscles when these inputs are modified

Recently, she’s stumbled upon a rather baffling phenomenon. When she kills one of the two neurons (let’s call it “Neuron A”) the other one, Neuron B, remains relatively unchanged. Yet, when she kills Neuron B, Neuron A shrinks. This suggests Neuron B may be sending a “permissive” signal to Neuron A, telling it to contact the muscle. She is monitoring the neuromuscular junction over time to determine if Neuron A will ever reach the muscle, and if the muscle will change over time in response.

“This has never been seen before, so right now I’m trying to identify the smaller neuron to see if it is functional,” she says. “I’m going to look at it during different stages of development to see if it starts and stops communicating with the muscle at some point.”

This endeavor will constitute her main focus over the next few months. After she graduates, Aponte intends to pursue an academic postdoc studying flies, despite developing an allergy to her subjects over the past year. (She’s since acquired a face mask that keeps dust and fly particles away.) “I’m just excited to see where the research will take me,” she says. Now that’s dedication.

Photo credit: Raleigh McElvery
Researchers discover new type of lung cell, critical insights for cystic fibrosis

A comprehensive single-cell analysis of airway cells in mice, validated in human tissue, reveals molecular details critical to understanding lung disease.

Karen Zusi
August 1, 2018

Researchers have identified a rare cell type in airway tissue, previously uncharacterized in the scientific literature, that appears to play a key role in the biology of cystic fibrosis. Using new technologies that enable scientists to study gene expression in thousands of individual cells, the team comprehensively analyzed the airway in mice and validated the results in human tissue.

Led by researchers from the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard and Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH), the molecular survey also characterized gene expression patterns for other new cell subtypes. The work expands scientific and clinical understanding of lung biology, with broad implications for all diseases of the airway — including asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and bronchitis.

Jayaraj Rajagopal, a physician in the Pulmonary and Critical Care Unit at MGH, associate member at the Broad Institute, and a Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI) faculty scholar, and Broad core institute member Aviv Regev, director of the Klarman Cell Observatory at the Broad Institute, professor of biology at MIT, and an HHMI investigator, supervised the research. Daniel Montoro, a graduate student in Rajagopal’s lab, and postdoctoral fellows Adam Haber and Moshe Biton in the Regev lab are co-first authors on the paper published today in Nature.

“We have the framework now for a new cellular narrative of lung disease,” said Rajagopal, who is also a professor at Harvard Medical School and a principal faculty member at the Harvard Stem Cell Institute. “We’ve uncovered a whole distribution of cell types that seem to be functionally relevant. What’s more, genes associated with complex lung diseases can now be linked to specific cells that we’ve characterized. The data are starting to change the way we think about lung diseases like cystic fibrosis and asthma.”

“With single-cell sequencing technology, and dedicated efforts to map cell types in different tissues, we’re making new discoveries — new cells that we didn’t know existed, cell subtypes that are rare or haven’t been noticed before, even in systems that have been studied for decades,” said Regev, who is also co-chair of the international Human Cell Atlas consortium. “And for some of these, understanding and characterizing them sheds new light immediately on what’s happening inside the tissue.”

Using single-cell RNA sequencing, the researchers analyzed tens of thousands of cells from the mouse airway, mapping the physical locations of cell types and creating a cellular “atlas” of the tissue. They also developed a new method called pulse-seq to monitor development of cell types from their progenitors in the mouse airway. The findings were validated in human tissue.

One extremely rare cell type, making up roughly one percent of the cell population in mice and humans, appeared radically different from other known cells in the dataset. The team dubbed this cell the “pulmonary ionocyte” because its gene expression pattern was similar to ionocytes — specialized cells that regulate ion transport and hydration in fish gills and frog skin.

Strikingly, at levels higher than any other cell type, these ionocytes expressed the gene CFTR — which, when mutated, causes cystic fibrosis in humans. CFTR is critical for airway function, and for decades researchers and clinicians have assumed that it is frequently expressed at low levels in ciliated cells, a common cell type spread throughout the entire airway.

But according to the new data, the majority of CFTR expression occurs in only a few cells, which researchers didn’t even know existed until now.

When the researchers disrupted a critical molecular process in pulmonary ionocytes in mice, they observed the onset of key features associated with cystic fibrosis — most notably, the formation of dense mucus. This finding underscores how important these cells are to airway-surface regulation.

“Cystic fibrosis is an amazingly well-studied disease, and we’re still discovering completely new biology that may alter the way we approach it,” said Rajagopal. “At first, we couldn’t believe that the majority of CFTR expression was located in these rare cells, but the graduate students and postdocs on this project really brought us along with their data.”

The results may also have implications for developing targeted cystic fibrosis therapies, according to the team. For example, a gene therapy that corrects for a mutation in CFTRwould need to be delivered to the right cells, and a cell atlas of the tissue could provide a reference map to guide that process.

The study further highlighted where other disease-associated genes are expressed in the airway. For example, asthma development has been previously linked with a gene that encodes a sensor for rhinoviruses, and the data now indicate that this gene is expressed by ciliated cells. Another gene linked with asthma is expressed in tuft cells, which separated into at least two groups — one that senses chemicals in the airway and one that produces inflammation. The results suggest that a whole ensemble of cells may be responsible for different aspects of asthma.

Using the pulse-seq assay, the researchers tracked how the newly characterized cells and subtypes in the mouse airway develop. They demonstrated that mature cells in the airway arise from a common progenitor: the basal cells. The team also discovered a previously undescribed cellular structure in the tissue. These structures, which the researchers called “hillocks,” are unique zones of rapid cell turnover, and their function is not yet understood.

“The atlas that we’ve created is already starting to drastically re-shape our understanding of airway and lung biology,” said Regev. “And, for this and other organ systems being studied at the single-cell level, we’ll have to drape everything we know on top of this new cellular diversity to understand human health and disease.”

Funding for this study was provided in part by the Klarman Cell Observatory at the Broad Institute, Manton Foundation, HHMI, New York Stem Cell Foundation, Harvard Stem Cell Institute, Human Frontiers Science Program, and National Institutes of Health.

Paper(s) cited:

Montoro DT, Haber AL, Biton M et al. A revised airway epithelial hierarchy includes CFTR-expressing ionocytesNature. Online August 1, 2018. DOI: 10.1038/s41586-018-0393-7

The Y chromosome: Holding steadfast in a sea of change
Nicole Davis
August 2, 2018

The human Y chromosome is, in many ways, a study in contrasts. For decades, scientists have struggled to dissect its evolution in part because it does not have a genetic partner (or homolog), as all of the other human chromosomes do. That solitary existence means the Y chromosome is subject to some unusual evolutionary pressures. For example, it does not swap genetic material with a homologous chromosome — a practice known as recombination that other chromosomes follow — along the lion’s share of its length. However, its lack of recombination presents a unique opportunity: Because so much of its own genetic material stays put, scientists can trace the history of individual human Y chromosomes much further back in time than other chromosomes — in fact, they can go as far back as the data will allow.

That is precisely the approach taken by a team of Whitehead Institute researchers, led by Whitehead Institute Director David Page, who is also a professor of biology at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and a Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator. Their work is published in the August 2nd online issue of the American Journal of Human Genetics. Page and his colleagues, including graduate student and first author Levi Teitz, set out to examine a series of regions on the Y chromosome called amplicons — vast stretches of DNA, from tens of thousands to millions of nucleotides in length, which are present in two or more copies per chromosome. While the DNA contained in amplicons is often highly repetitive, it also houses biologically important genes. Although the precise functions of many of these genes remains to be determined, some have been found to play important roles in the development of sperm cells and testicular cancer. However, the amplicons vary drastically among species, so scientists cannot look to other organisms such as mice or chimpanzees to help reconstruct their past.

Page’s team zeroed in on these amplicons. Specifically, they looked at how the number of amplicon copies varies from one person’s Y chromosome to another. The researchers developed sophisticated computational tools to analyze DNA sequencing data collected from more than 1,200 males as part of the 1000 Genomes Project. What they discovered was quite surprising. Although the amplicons are quite variable, they found that overall, the configuration of amplicon copies on the Y chromosome has been painstakingly maintained over the last 300,000 years of human evolution. That means that despite the high level of mutation the chromosome experiences, evolutionary forces work to counteract this change and preserve its ancestral structure.

More work is needed to determine which aspects of the amplicons’ structure are important for chromosome biology, and in turn proper male development and fertility. However, the efforts of Teitz, Page, and their colleagues shed new light on the unusual tricks the solo chromosome uses to maintain its genomic integrity.

This research is supported by the National Institutes of Health and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute.

 

Written by Nicole Davis

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David Page’s primary affiliation is with Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research, where his laboratory is located and all his research is conducted. He is also a Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigator and a Professor of Biology at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

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Full citation:

“Selection Has Countered High Mutability to Preserve the Ancestral Copy Number of Y Chromosome Amplicons in Diverse Human Lineages”

American Journal of Human Genetics, online August 2, 2018.

Levi S. Teitz (1,2), Tatyana Pyntikova (1), Helen Skaletsky (1,3), and David C. Page (1,2,3).

1. Whitehead Institute, Cambridge, MA 02142, USA

2. Department of Biology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA 02142, USA

3. Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Whitehead Institute, Cambridge, MA 02142, USA