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1.
PLoS One ; 7(5): e38119, 2012.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22675440

ABSTRACT

The vast majority of animals mate more or less promiscuously. A few mammals, including humans, utilize more restrained mating strategies that entail a longer term affiliation with a single mating partner. Such pair bonding mating strategies have been resistant to genetic analysis because of a lack of suitable model organisms. Prairie voles are small mouse-like rodents that form enduring pair bonds in the wild as well as in the laboratory, and consequently they have been used widely to study social bonding behavior. The lack of targeted genetic approaches in this species however has restricted the study of the molecular and neural circuit basis of pair bonds. As a first step in rendering the prairie vole amenable to reverse genetics, we have generated induced pluripotent stem cell (IPSC) lines from prairie vole fibroblasts using retroviral transduction of reprogramming factors. These IPSC lines display the cellular and molecular hallmarks of IPSC cells from other organisms, including mice and humans. Moreover, the prairie vole IPSC lines have pluripotent differentiation potential since they can give rise to all three germ layers in tissue culture and in vivo. These IPSC lines can now be used to develop conditions that facilitate homologous recombination and eventually the generation of prairie voles bearing targeted genetic modifications to study the molecular and neural basis of pair bond formation.


Subject(s)
Arvicolinae/metabolism , Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells/cytology , Animals , Cell Culture Techniques , Cell Differentiation , Cell Line , Fibroblasts/cytology , Homologous Recombination , Humans , Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells/metabolism , Transgenes
2.
Cell ; 145(4): 555-70, 2011 May 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21529909

ABSTRACT

Constitutive heterochromatin is traditionally viewed as the static form of heterochromatin that silences pericentromeric and telomeric repeats in a cell cycle- and differentiation-independent manner. Here, we show that, in the mouse olfactory epithelium, olfactory receptor (OR) genes are marked in a highly dynamic fashion with the molecular hallmarks of constitutive heterochromatin, H3K9me3 and H4K20me3. The cell type and developmentally dependent deposition of these marks along the OR clusters are, most likely, reversed during the process of OR choice to allow for monogenic and monoallelic OR expression. In contrast to the current view of OR choice, our data suggest that OR silencing takes place before OR expression, indicating that it is not the product of an OR-elicited feedback signal. Our findings suggest that chromatin-mediated silencing lays a molecular foundation upon which singular and stochastic selection for gene expression can be applied.


Subject(s)
Chromatin Assembly and Disassembly , Gene Silencing , Olfactory Mucosa/metabolism , Receptors, Odorant/genetics , Animals , Chromatin Immunoprecipitation , Gene Expression , Heterochromatin , Histone Code , Mice , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Mice, Transgenic , Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis
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