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Hendriks, William

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Hendriks

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William

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Hendriks, William

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Now showing 1 - 3 of 3
  • Publication

    A TALEN Genome-Editing System for Generating Human Stem Cell-Based Disease Models

    (Elsevier BV, 2013) Ding, Qiurong; Lee, Youn-Kyoung; Schaefer, Esperance; Peters, Derek T.; Veres, Adrian; Kim, Kevin; Kuperwasser, Nicolas; Motola, Daniel L; Meissner, Torsten; Hendriks, William; Trevisan, Marta; Gupta, Rajat; Moisan, Annie; Banks, Eric; Friesen, Max; Schinzel, Robert T.; Xia, Fang; Tang, Alexander; Xia, Yulei; Figueroa, Emmanuel; Wann, Amy; Ahfeldt, Tim; Daheron, Laurence; Zhang, Feng; Rubin, Lee; Peng, Lee F; Chung, Raymond; Musunuru, Kiran; Cowan, Chad

    Transcription activator-like effector nucleases (TALENs) are a new class of engineered nucleases that are easier to design to cleave at desired sites in a genome than previous types of nucleases. We report here the use of TALENs to rapidly and efficiently generate mutant alleles of 15 genes in cultured somatic cells or human pluripotent stem cells, the latter for which we differentiated both the targeted lines and isogenic control lines into various metabolic cell types. We demonstrate cell-autonomous phenotypes directly linked to disease—dyslipidemia, insulin resistance, hypoglycemia, lipodystrophy, motor-neuron death, and hepatitis C infection. We found little evidence of TALEN off-target effects, but each clonal line nevertheless harbors a significant number of unique mutations. Given the speed and ease with which we were able to derive and characterize these cell lines, we anticipate TALEN-mediated genome editing of human cells becoming a mainstay for the investigation of human biology and disease.

  • Publication

    Modification of Superoxide Dismutase 1 (SOD1) Properties by a GFP Tag – Implications for Research into Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS)

    (Public Library of Science, 2010) Stevens, James C.; Chia, Ruth; Hendriks, William; Bros-Facer, Virginie; van Minnen, Jan; Martin, Joanne E.; Jackson, Graham S.; Greensmith, Linda; Schiavo, Giampietro; Fisher, Elizabeth M. C.

    Background: Since the discovery that mutations in the enzyme SOD1 are causative in human amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), many strategies have been employed to elucidate the toxic properties of this ubiquitously expressed mutant protein, including the generation of GFP-SOD1 chimaeric proteins for studies in protein localization by direct visualization using fluorescence microscopy. However, little is known about the biochemical and physical properties of these chimaeric proteins, and whether they behave similarly to their untagged SOD1 counterparts. Methodology/Principal Findings: Here we compare the physicochemical properties of SOD1 and the effects of GFP-tagging on its intracellular behaviour. Immunostaining demonstrated that SOD1 alone and GFP-SOD1 have an indistinguishable intracellular distribution in PC12 cells. Cultured primary motor neurons expressing GFP or GFP-SOD1 showed identical patterns of cytoplasmic expression and of movement within the axon. However, GFP tagging of SOD1 was found to alter some of the intrinsic properties of SOD1, including stability and specific activity. Evaluation of wildtype and mutant SOD1, tagged at either the N- or C-terminus with GFP, in PC12 cells demonstrated that some chimaeric proteins were degraded to the individual proteins, SOD1 and GFP. Conclusions/Significance: Our findings indicate that most, but not all, properties of SOD1 remain the same with a GFP tag.

  • Publication

    Disease onset in X-linked dystonia-parkinsonism correlates with expansion of a hexameric repeat within an SVA retrotransposon in TAF1

    (National Academy of Sciences, 2017) Bragg, D. Cristopher; Mangkalaphiban, Kotchaphorn; Vaine, Christine; Kulkarni, Nichita J.; Shin, David; Yadav, Rachita; Dhakal, Jyotsna; Ton, Mai-Linh; Cheng, Anne; Russo, Christopher T.; Ang, Mark; Acuña, Patrick; Go, Criscely; Franceour, Taylor N.; Multhaupt-Buell, Trisha; Ito, Naoto; Müller, Ulrich; Hendriks, William; Breakefield, Xandra; Sharma, Nutan; Ozelius, Laurie

    X-linked dystonia-parkinsonism (XDP) is a neurodegenerative disease associated with an antisense insertion of a SINE-VNTR-Alu (SVA)-type retrotransposon within an intron of TAF1. This unique insertion coincides with six additional noncoding sequence changes in TAF1, the gene that encodes TATA-binding protein–associated factor-1, which appear to be inherited together as an identical haplotype in all reported cases. Here we examined the sequence of this SVA in XDP patients (n = 140) and detected polymorphic variation in the length of a hexanucleotide repeat domain, (CCCTCT)n. The number of repeats in these cases ranged from 35 to 52 and showed a highly significant inverse correlation with age at disease onset. Because other SVAs exhibit intrinsic promoter activity that depends in part on the hexameric domain, we assayed the transcriptional regulatory effects of varying hexameric lengths found in the unique XDP SVA retrotransposon using luciferase reporter constructs. When inserted sense or antisense to the luciferase reading frame, the XDP variants repressed or enhanced transcription, respectively, to an extent that appeared to vary with length of the hexamer. Further in silico analysis of this SVA sequence revealed multiple motifs predicted to form G-quadruplexes, with the greatest potential detected for the hexameric repeat domain. These data directly link sequence variation within the XDP-specific SVA sequence to phenotypic variability in clinical disease manifestation and provide insight into potential mechanisms by which this intronic retroelement may induce transcriptional interference in TAF1 expression.