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Cowan, Chad

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Cowan

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Chad

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Cowan, Chad

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Now showing 1 - 10 of 23
  • Publication

    Expression Analysis of Macrodactyly Identifies Pleiotrophin Upregulation

    (Public Library of Science, 2012) Lau, Frank; Xia, Fang; Kaplan, Adam; Cerrato, Felecia; Greene, Arin; Taghinia, Amir; Cowan, Chad; Labow, Brian

    Macrodactyly is a rare family of congenital disorders characterized by the diffuse enlargement of 1 or more digits. Multiple tissue types within the affected digits are involved, but skeletal patterning and gross morphological features are preserved. Not all tissues are equally involved and there is marked heterogeneity with respect to clinical phenotype. The molecular mechanisms responsible for these growth disturbances offer unique insight into normal limb growth and development, in general. To date, no genes or loci have been implicated in the development of macrodactyly. In this study, we performed the first transcriptional profiling of macrodactyly tissue. We found that pleiotrophin (PTN) was significantly overexpressed across all our macrodactyly samples. The mitogenic functions of PTN correlate closely with the clinical characteristics of macrodactyly. PTN thus represents a promising target for further investigation into the etiology of overgrowth phenotypes.

  • Publication

    White-to-brown metabolic conversion of human adipocytes by JAK inhibition

    (2014) Moisan, Annie; Lee, Youn-Kyoung; Zhang, Jitao David; Hudak, Carolyn S.; Meyer, Claas A.; Prummer, Michael; Zoffmann, Sannah; Truong, Hoa Hue; Ebeling, Martin; Kiialainen, Anna; Gérard, Régine; Xia, Fang; Schinzel, Robert T.; Amrein, Kurt E.; Cowan, Chad

    The rising incidence of obesity and related disorders such as diabetes and heart disease has focused considerable attention on the discovery of novel therapeutics. One promising approach has been to increase the number or activity of brown-like adipocytes in white adipose depots, as this has been shown to prevent diet-induced obesity and reduce the incidence and severity of type 2 diabetes. Thus, the conversion of fat-storing cells into metabolically active thermogenic cells has become an appealing therapeutic strategy to combat obesity. Here, we report a screening platform for the identification of small molecules capable of promoting a white-to-brown metabolic conversion in human adipocytes. We identified two inhibitors of Janus Kinase (JAK) activity with no precedent in adipose tissue biology that stably confer brown-like metabolic activity to white adipocytes. Importantly, these metabolically converted adipocytes exhibit elevated UCP1 expression and increased mitochondrial activity. We further found that repression of interferon signalling and activation of hedgehog signalling in JAK-inactivated adipocytes contributes to the metabolic conversion observed in these cells. Our findings highlight a novel role for the JAK/STAT pathway in the control of adipocyte function and establish a platform to identify compounds for the treatment of obesity.

  • Publication

    N-cadherin prevents the premature differentiation of anterior heart field progenitors in the pharyngeal mesodermal microenvironment

    (Nature Publishing Group, 2014) Soh, Boon-Seng; Buac, Kristina; Xu, Huansheng; Li, Edward; Ng, Shi-Yan; Wu, Hao; Chmielowiec, Jolanta; Jiang, Xin; Bu, Lei; Li, Ronald A; Cowan, Chad; Chien, Kenneth R

    The cardiac progenitor cells (CPCs) in the anterior heart field (AHF) are located in the pharyngeal mesoderm (PM), where they expand, migrate and eventually differentiate into major cell types found in the heart, including cardiomyocytes. The mechanisms by which these progenitors are able to expand within the PM microenvironment without premature differentiation remain largely unknown. Through in silico data mining, genetic loss-of-function studies, and in vivo genetic rescue studies, we identified N-cadherin and interaction with canonical Wnt signals as a critical component of the microenvironment that facilitates the expansion of AHF-CPCs in the PM. CPCs in N-cadherin mutant embryos were observed to be less proliferative and undergo premature differentiation in the PM. Notably, the phenotype of N-cadherin deficiency could be partially rescued by activating Wnt signaling, suggesting a delicate functional interaction between the adhesion role of N-cadherin and Wnt signaling in the early PM microenvironment. This study suggests a new mechanism for the early renewal of AHF progenitors where N-cadherin provides additional adhesion for progenitor cells in the PM, thereby allowing Wnt paracrine signals to expand the cells without premature differentiation.

  • Publication

    Highly Efficient Reprogramming to Pluripotency and Directed Differentiation of Human Cells with Synthetic Modified mRNA

    (Elsevier BV, 2010) Warren, Luigi; Manos, Philip D.; Ahfeldt, Tim; Loh, Yuin-Han; Li, Hualin; Lau, Frank; Ebina, Wataru; Mandal, Pankaj; Smith, Zachary; Meissner, Alexander; Daley, George; Brack, Andrew S; Collins, James; Cowan, Chad; Schlaeger, Thorsten; Rossi, Derrick

    Clinical application of induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) is limited by the low efficiency of iPSC derivation and the fact that most protocols modify the genome to effect cellular reprogramming. Moreover, safe and effective means of directing the fate of patient-specific iPSCs toward clinically useful cell types are lacking. Here we describe a simple, nonintegrating strategy for reprogramming cell fate based on administration of synthetic mRNA modified to overcome innate antiviral responses. We show that this approach can reprogram multiple human cell types to pluripotency with efficiencies that greatly surpass established protocols. We further show that the same technology can be used to efficiently direct the differentiation of RNA-induced pluripotent stem cells (RiPSCs) into terminally differentiated myogenic cells. This technology represents a safe, efficient strategy for somatic cell reprogramming and directing cell fate that has broad applicability for basic research, disease modeling, and regenerative medicine.

  • Publication

    A purified population of multipotent cardiovascular progenitors derived from primate pluripotent stem cells engrafts in postmyocardial infarcted nonhuman primates

    (American Society for Clinical Investigation, 2010) Blin, Guillaume; Nury, David; Stefanovic, Sonia; Neri, Tui; Guillevic, Oriane; Brinon, Benjamin; Bellamy, Valérie; Rücker-Martin, Catherine; Barbry, Pascal; Bel, Alain; Bruneval, Patrick; Cowan, Chad; Pouly, Julia; Mitalipov, Shoukhrat; Gouadon, Elodie; Binder, Patrice; Hagège, Albert; Desnos, Michel; Renaud, Jean-François; Menasché, Philippe; Pucéat, Michel

    Cell therapy holds promise for tissue regeneration, including in individuals with advanced heart failure. However, treatment of heart disease with bone marrow cells and skeletal muscle progenitors has had only marginal positive benefits in clinical trials, perhaps because adult stem cells have limited plasticity. The identification, among human pluripotent stem cells, of early cardiovascular cell progenitors required for the development of the first cardiac lineage would shed light on human cardiogenesis and might pave the way for cell therapy for cardiac degenerative diseases. Here, we report the isolation of an early population of cardiovascular progenitors, characterized by expression of OCT4, stage-specific embryonic antigen 1 (SSEA-1), and mesoderm posterior 1 (MESP1), derived from human pluripotent stem cells treated with the cardiogenic morphogen BMP2. This progenitor population was multipotential and able to generate cardiomyocytes as well as smooth muscle and endothelial cells. When transplanted into the infarcted myocardium of immunosuppressed nonhuman primates, an (SSEA-1^+) progenitor population derived from Rhesus embryonic stem cells differentiated into ventricular myocytes and reconstituted 20% of the scar tissue. Notably, primates transplanted with an unpurified population of cardiac-committed cells, which included (SSEA-1^–) cells, developed teratomas in the scar tissue, whereas those transplanted with purified (SSEA-1^+) cells did not. We therefore believe that the (SSEA-1^+) progenitors that we have described here have the potential to be used in cardiac regenerative medicine.

  • Publication

    From Noncoding Variant to Phenotype via SORT1 at the 1p13 Cholesterol Locus

    (Springer Nature, 2010) Musunuru, Kiran; Strong, Alanna; Frank-Kamenetsky, Maria; Lee, Noemi E.; Ahfeldt, Tim; Sachs, Katherine V.; Li, Xiaoyu; Li, Hui; Kuperwasser, Nicolas; Ruda, Vera M.; Pirruccello, James; Muchmore, Brian; Prokunina-Olsson, Ludmila; Hall, Jennifer L.; Schadt, Eric E.; Morales, Carlos R.; Lund-Katz, Sissel; Phillips, Michael C.; Wong, Jamie; Cantley, William; Racie, Timothy; Ejebe, Kenechi G.; Orho-Melander, Marju; Melander, Olle; Koteliansky, Victor; Fitzgerald, Kevin; Krauss, Ronald M.; Cowan, Chad; Kathiresan, Sekar; Rader, Daniel J.

    Recent genome-wide association studies (GWASs) have identified a locus on chromosome 1p13 strongly associated with both plasma low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) and myocardial infarction (MI) in humans. Here we show through a series of studies in human cohorts and human-derived hepatocytes that a common noncoding polymorphism at the 1p13 locus, rs12740374, creates a C/EBP (CCAAT/enhancer binding protein) transcription factor binding site and alters the hepatic expression of the SORT1 gene. With small interfering RNA (siRNA) knockdown and viral overexpression in mouse liver, we demonstrate that Sort1 alters plasma LDL-C and very low-density lipoprotein (VLDL) particle levels by modulating hepatic VLDL secretion. Thus, we provide functional evidence for a novel regulatory pathway for lipoprotein metabolism and suggest that modulation of this pathway may alter risk for MI in humans. We also demonstrate that common noncoding DNA variants identified by GWASs can directly contribute to clinical phenotypes.

  • Publication

    Rewirable gene regulatory networks in the preimplantation embryonic development of three mammalian species

    (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, 2010) Xie, Dan; Chen, Chieh-Chun; Ptaszek, Leon; Xiao, Shu; Cao, Xiaoyi; Fang, Fang; Ng, Huck H.; Lewin, Harry A.; Cowan, Chad; Zhong, Sheng

    Mammalian preimplantation embryonic development (PED) is thought to be governed by highly conserved processes. While it had been suggested that some plasticity of conserved signaling networks exists among different mammalian species, it was not known to what extent modulation of the genomes and the regulatory proteins could “rewire” the gene regulatory networks (GRN) that control PED. We therefore generated global transcriptional profiles from three mammalian species (human, mouse, and bovine) at representative stages of PED, including: zygote, two-cell, four-cell, eight-cell, 16-cell, morula and blastocyst. Coexpression network analysis suggested that 40.2% orthologous gene triplets exhibited different expression patterns among these species. Combining the expression data with genomic sequences and the ChIP-seq data of 16 transcription regulators, we observed two classes of genomic changes that contributed to interspecies expression difference, including single nucleotide mutations leading to turnover of transcription factor binding sites, and insertion of cis-regulatory modules (CRMs) by transposons. About 10% of transposons are estimated to carry CRMs, which may drive species-specific gene expression. The two classes of genomic changes act in concert to drive mouse-specific expression of MTF2, which links POU5F1/NANOG to NOTCH signaling. We reconstructed the transition of the GRN structures as a function of time during PED. A comparison of the GRN transition processes among the three species suggested that in the bovine system, POU5F1's interacting partner SOX2 may be replaced by HMGB1 (a TF sharing the same DNA binding domain with SOX2), resulting in rewiring of GRN by a trans change.

  • Publication

    Optimal Timing of Inner Cell Mass Isolation Increases the Efficiency of Human Embryonic Stem Cell Derivation and Allows Generation of Sibling Cell Lines

    (Elsevier, 2009) Chen, Alice E.; Egli, Dieter; Niakan, Kathy; Deng, Jie; Akutsu, Hidenori; Yamaki, Mariko; Cowan, Chad; Fitz-Gerald, Claire; Zhang, Kun; Melton, Douglas A.; Eggan, Kevin; Cowan, Chad; Melton, Douglas; Eggan, Kevin
  • 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

    Enhanced Efficiency of Human Pluripotent Stem Cell Genome Editing through Replacing TALENs with CRISPRs

    (Elsevier BV, 2013) Ding, Qiurong; Regan, Stephanie; Xia, Yulei; Oostrom, Leoníe A.; Cowan, Chad; Musunuru, Kiran