- When: Tuesday, Nov. 6, 12:15 PM
- Where: Room W4019
- W4019 is a small classroom on the eastern side of the SPH building (couldn't get E6519 for all of our meetings)
Friday, October 26, 2012
November 6, 2012 journal club
Thursday, October 4, 2012
October 9, 2012 journal club
- When: Tuesday, Oct. 9, 12:15 PM
- Where: Room W4019
- W4019 is a small classroom on the eastern side of the SPH building (Alas, we couldn't get E6519 for all of our meetings)
DNA Damage-induced primordial follicle oocyte apoptosis and loss of fertility require TAp63-mediated induction of Puma and Noxa
Molecular Cell, EPub ahead of print (doi: 10.1016/j.molcel.2012.08.017)
Kerr et al. [Andreas Strasser lab link]
This paper also was recently highlighted in the lay/science press (such as EurekAlert and ScienceDaily) as well as Biology of Reproduction's regular column, World of Reproductive Biology.
Hyo's comment on this paper pick:
"I thought this article had an interesting combination of genome integrity and reproductive biology. Preserving fertility in women cancer patients is becoming an increasingly important aspect of cancer treatment, and this paper provides insights into some biological aspects affecting fertility preservation. In our lab, we have an expert in this field, Mindy Christianson, MD, a fellow in the Division of Reproductive Endocrinology and Infertility in the Department of Gynecology and Obstetrics, who can also share her clinical expertise on this subject during our discussions."
Voilà! Another paper with broad relevance to the multiple interests in the RBJC group and BMB department! As always, all welcome!
Thursday, September 20, 2012
September 25, 2012 journal club
- When: Tuesday, Sept. 25, 12:15 PM
- Where: Room E6519
Kate Laws of the Drummond-Barbosa lab will be presenting a paper, hot off the presses in Nature:
RPN-6 determines C. elegans longevity under proteotoxic stress conditions
Nature 489:263-268
Vilchez et al.
Dillin lab page at Salk Dillin lab personal page
Kate's comments on why she chose this paper (just in case you're looking at the title and thinking, "What a minute, what does this have to do with reproduction?") ...
"Previous studies discussed in this very journal club have noted the inverse correlation between an organism's reproductive capacity and its lifespan, with a lot of attention granted to insulin and insulin-like signaling pathways (which I probably don't need to mention is of particular interest to our lab). Here, the authors set their sights on another pathway that they hypothesize could contribute to longevity: the ubiquitin proteasome system. By employing germline-ablated animals, the investigators are able to probe the implications of partitioned resources have on longevity...pretty neat!"
Thus, broad relevance of this paper with multiple interests in the RBJC group and BMB department! All welcome!
Wednesday, May 23, 2012
May 29, 2012 journal club
- When: Tuesday, May 29, 12:15 PM
- Where: Room E6519, BSPH
We'll get to hear something fun and a little different this week. For those of you who aren't familiar with Greg Ball's lab's work, the general area is behavioral neuroendocrinology, namely, "the interrelation of hormones, brain, and behavior." (and FYI, Greg also has an appointment in Neuroscience). The work has multiple implications: how hormones affect the brain, how hormones affect the learning of behaviors, and how various stimuli (including behaviors) can regulate seasonal reproduction.
Melvin will present two papers related to their work:
Estradiol-dependent modulation of serotonergic markers in auditory areas of a seasonally breeding songbird.
Behav Neurosci 126:110-122, Matragrano et al. [Maney lab website]
Individual differences in the motivation to communicate relate to levels of midbrain and striatal catecholamine markers in male European starlings.
Horm Behav 60:529-539, Heimovics et al. [Riters lab website]
Friday, May 11, 2012
May 15, 2012 journal club
- When: Tuesday, May 15, 12:15 PM
- Where: Room E6519, BSPH
I will present two related papers, mostly focusing on this first one in JCB:
Ovastacin, a cortical granule protease, cleaves ZP2 in the zona pellucida to prevent polyspermy.
Burkart et la. (2012) J Cell Biol 197: 37-44. [Jurrien Dean's lab website]
Oocyte-specific oolemmal SAS1B involved in sperm binding through intra-acrosomal SLLP1 during fertilization.
Sachdev et al. (2012) Dev Biol 363: 40-51. [John Herr's lab website]
If you dwell on these titles for a little while, you might think to yourself, "These papers are related? What is Janice smoking? Did she give us the wrong papers?"
I don't blame you for thinking such things. But scroll down to the bottom of the JCB paper and you'll find:
So these are two papers, from two different groups, with completely different interests and completely different functions ascribed to this protein. A thick plot, no?
Monday, April 30, 2012
May 1, 2012 journal club
- When: Tuesday, May 1, 12:15 PM
- Where: Room E6519, BSPH
MITOPLD Is a Mitochondrial Protein Essential for Nuage Formation and piRNA Biogenesis in the Mouse Germline.
Watanabe et al.
Dev Cell 20:364
piRNA-Associated Germline Nuage Formation and Spermatogenesis Require MitoPLD Profusogenic Mitochondrial-Surface Lipid Signaling.
Huang et al. [Frohman lab website]
Dev Cell 20:376.
Jenn's comments on her paper choices . . .
(with a little bold font, done by me for emphasis on keywords):
"These papers revolve around the conserved, membrane-less, electron-dense RNA-protein aggregates in germ cells known as germ granules or nuage. These structures have been found to be crucial for the production of piRNAs, small RNAs that are required for maintaining genome integrity in the germline. The mechanisms by which germ granules assemble in germ cells is not fully understood and is actively studied. It has been known for many years that they are associated with mitochondria, (one of the many names for this structure in mammals is "intermitochondrial cement," or IMC) but the functional significance of mitochondrial association is not known.
In this set of papers, the authors show that MITOPLD, a mitochondrial enzyme, is required for IMC assembly and function. In the absence of MITOPLD, male mice are sterile, with spermatocytes arrested in meiosis due to retrotransposon derepression. MITOPLD is the mitochondrial phospholipase D and generates phosphatidic acid, a signaling molecule. The authors propose that phosphatidic acid may act to signal IMC component assembly or activation. I picked these papers because they bring up the intriguing cell biology of interorganellar dynamics, with important consequences to the germ cells. Moreover, these papers are a good example of evolutionary conservation, as zucchini, the Drosophila ortholog of MITOPLD, also acts in piRNA biogenesis. Finally, germ granule assembly is close to the center of my heart (and at the center of my thesis work)."
Thursday, April 12, 2012
April 17, 2012 journal club
- When: Tuesday, April 17, 12:15 PM
- Where: Room E6519, BSPH
Calcium influx-mediated signaling is required for complete mouse egg activation
PNAS 2012, 109: 4169-4174
Miao et al. (Carmen Williams' research group website)
Lauren's comments about this paper:
"Cytosolic calcium oscillations are characteristic of the egg-to-embryo transition. It has been thought that the intracellular calcium that drives egg activation comes from the endoplasmic reticulum, but this paper looks into the necessity for calcium influx across the plasma membrane as a requirement for egg activation, in addition to a function of influx in restoring intercellular calcium stores that are depleted as a consequence of fertilization. I was interested in this paper because the experimental findings potentially provide insight into my project on post-ovulatory aging, and specifically why aged eggs commonly undergo spontaneous egg activation. The Evans lab has found that aged eggs have reduced cortical tension compared to young eggs and this decrease in membrane rigidity may allow additional calcium to enter the cell across the plasma membrane thereby initiating critical signaling pathways to activate the egg."
Tuesday, April 3, 2012
RBJC schedule for rest of spring 2012
April 17 - Lauren McGinnis (Evans lab)
May 1 - Jenn Wang (Seydoux lab)
May 15 - Shaina Palmere (Drummond-Barbosa lab)
May 29 - Melvin Rouse (Ball lab)
Time and place as per usual -- 12:15 in Room E6519 in the School of Public Health.
Wednesday, March 28, 2012
Seminar - April 10, 2012
[link for research paper and commentary]
Department of Genetics, Harvard Medical School
"Living and reproducing in a complex environment: Assessing the impact of environmental exposures of health using C. elegans"
Tuesday, April 11, 2012
10:30 AM, Room W1020 (Becton-Dickinson Auditorium)
School of Public Health
April 3, 2012 journal club (no foolin')
- When: Tuesday, April 3, 12:15 PM
- Where: Room E6519, BSPH
She will be presenting something near and dear to her heart:
The proto-oncogene Ret is required for male foetal germ cell survival
Dev. Biol. in press
Miles et al. (Patrick Western's research group)
Wednesday, March 21, 2012
Seminar - March 27, 2012
[link for research paper]
The Jackson Laboratory
"Polo-like kinase 1 un-SYPs homologs during meiosis I"
Tuesday, March 27, 2012
12:00 PM, Room W1020 (Becton-Dickinson Auditorium)
School of Public Health
Monday, March 19, 2012
Seminar - March 22, 2012
[link for research paper and review]
Department of Molecular and Cell Biology, University of California at Berkeley
"Keeping sisters together: understanding the mechanisms that ensure genome stability during gamete production in C. elegans"
Thursday, March 22, 2012
12:00 PM, Room W1020 (Becton-Dickinson Auditorium)
School of Public Health
Thursday, March 15, 2012
Seminar - March 20, 2012
[link for paper]
Department of Molecular Biology, Massachusetts General Hospital
"Long noncoding RNAs: roles in stem cell integrity and behavior"
Tuesday, March 20, 2012
12:00 PM, Room W1020 (Becton-Dickinson Auditorium)
School of Public Health
Monday, March 12, 2012
Seminar - March 12, 2012
[link for research paper]
The Whitehead Institute
"Recent Specialization of the Mammalian X Chromosome"
Monday, March 12, 2012
12:00 PM, Room W1020 (Becton-Dickinson Auditorium)
School of Public Health
Tuesday, February 21, 2012
Seminar - February 28, 2012
[links for research paper and recent review]
Samuel Lunenfeld Research Institute, University of Toronto
"Reading arginine methylation in the germline: the royal family of Tudor domain proteins regulates Piwi pathway and spermatogenesis"
Tuesday, February 28, 2012
12:00 PM, Room W1020 (Becton-Dickinson Auditorium)
School of Public Health
Thursday, February 16, 2012
Seminar - February 21, 2012
Dr. Tony DeFalco [click here for recent publication]
Department of Cell Biology, Duke University Medical Center
"Beyond the immune: Macrophages in reproductive and stem cell biology"
Tuesday, February 21, 2012
12:15 PM, Room W1020 (Becton-Dickinson Auditorium)
School of Public Health
Saturday, February 4, 2012
Feb. 7 , 2012 journal club
- When: Tuesday, Feb. 7, 12:15 PM
- Where: Room E6519, BSPH
A big thank-you to Hyo Lee (from my lab), who I roped in to starting off our journal club for this academic term. She'll be presenting:
Rhythmic actomyosin-driven contractions induced by sperm entry predict mammalian embryo viability
Nature Communications* 2011, 2:417 (Nat Commun is the Nature Publishing Group's new open access journal, another in the mushroom field of open access journals to pop up in the last year or so ... if you're losing count, so am I!)
Ajduk A, Ilozue T, Windsor S, Yu Y, Seres KB, Bomphrey RJ, Tom BD, Swann K, Thomas A, Graham CF, Zernicka-Goetz M. [lab website -- cool pics!]
The paper has some nice imaging of mouse embryos, revealing cellular events that were known to occur in other early embryos. (C. elegans embryos being especially famous for their cytoplasmic flows, and also are a model for events similar to those that Hyo is interested in in her project.) The authors of this paper also try to make the claim that characteristics of these flows will predict what embryos will produce live births -- something that the Assisted Reproductive Technology world would be quite interested in! But see what you think of the data ...