Lab News!

2024

Welcome Zekun and Hagar to the lab!

2023

December 2023

Thilinie presented her work on Notch Signaling and Extramedullary Hematopoiesis in the Adult Liver at ASH’s 65th Annual Meeting in San Diego. Congratulations Thilinie!

November 2023

Congratulations Dr. Na Yoon Paik!

Check out Na Yoon’s Thesis Defense on May 30th in CMWT 227! 

Full Article can be found HERE

 

“Hematopoietic Jagged-1 is a fetal liver niche factor required for functional maturation and engraftment of fetal hematopoietic stem cells”

Notch signaling is essential for the emergence of definitive hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) in the embryo and their development in the fetal liver niche. However, how Notch signaling is activated and which fetal liver cell type provides the ligand for receptor activation in HSCs is unknown. Here we provide evidence that endothelial Jagged1 (Jag1) has a critical early role in fetal liver vascular development but is not required for hematopoietic function during fetal HSC expansion. We demonstrate that Jag1 is expressed in many hematopoietic cells in the fetal liver, including HSCs, and that its expression is lost in adult bone marrow HSCs. Deletion of hematopoietic Jag1 does not affect fetal liver development; however, Jag1-deficient fetal liver HSCs exhibit a significant transplantation defect. Bulk and single-cell transcriptomic analysis of HSCs during peak expansion in the fetal liver indicates that loss of hematopoietic Jag1 leads to the downregulation of critical hematopoietic factors such as GATA2, Mllt3, and HoxA7, but does not perturb Notch receptor expression. Ex vivo activation of Notch signaling in Jag1-deficient fetal HSCs partially rescues the functional defect in a transplant setting. These findings indicate a new fetal-specific niche that is based on juxtracrine hematopoietic Notch signaling and reveal Jag1 as a fetal-specific niche factor essential for HSC function.

Keywords: Notch signaling; embryonic development; fetal liver; hematopoietic stem cells.

Jacob is attending the American Society of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics (ASPET) from May 18th – 22nd in St. Louis, MO. His presentation is about his work on developing cell free targeted therapy for T-cell Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia.

March 2023

The women in the Pajcini Lab attended the 6th annual Chicago Women in Stem Symposium . This event aims to address the disappointing statistics regarding the representation of women in STEM-related careers by hosting a variety of speakers who will share their stories and provide valuable information about resilience, empowerment, and breaking through both visible and invisible barriers in STEM

2022

November 2022

The Department of Pharmacology & Regenerative Medicine Retreat November 4, 2022

Graduate students of the lab presented their current research posters.  

Faculty Research Presentations –

-Jae-won Shin, PhD, Associate Professor, “Engineering matrix remodeling for regeneration”

– Preetish Kadur Lakshminarasimha Murthy, PhD, Assistant Professor, “Spatial and single cell transcriptomics revise human lung cell atlas”

– Dolly Mehta, PhD, Professor, “The lung endothelial cells generate inflammatory T cell precursors during injury

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