Andrew lassar

Andrew B. Lassar, Ph.D.

Professor of Biological Chemistry and Molecular Pharmacology

Current work in the Lassar Lab focuses on the transcriptional regulatory pathways that regulate chondrocyte formation and maturation, elucidation of how mechanical loading regulates gene expression in the joint, a molecular dissection of the signals and transcription factors that maintain articular cartilage stem cells, and the development of a gene therapy model to treat osteoarthritis.

Andrew Lassar received his B. A. from Yale (’75) and his Ph.D. (’83) from Washington University in St. Louis, where he worked with Bob Roeder. He then performed his postdoctoral work in the laboratory of Hal Weintraub at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle, WA.  In 1991, he established his own lab in the Department of Biological Chemistry and Molecular Pharmacology at Harvard Medical School, where he runs a research lab and teaches developmental biology.

Research:

The overarching goal of the Lassar lab is to understand how different cells types (i.e., articular or epiphyseal chondrocytes, ligaments and synoviocytes) emerge from a common precursor population during the formation of the synovial joint.  Towards this goal, work in the Lassar lab focuses on the transcriptional regulatory pathways that regulate chondrocyte formation and maturation, elucidation of how mechanical loading regulates gene expression in the joint, and a molecular dissection of the signals and transcription factors that maintain articular cartilage stem cells. We are studying how the initial cartilage template is induced in the embryo and are trying to elucidate how chondrocytes “decide” whether to undergo maturation, which leads to endochondral ossification, or remain immature, as in the articular cartilage of our joints. The Lassar lab identified a stem cell population for articular cartilage; and we are employing genome-wide ATAC-Seq, Cut&Run-Seq, and RNA-Seq methodologies to elucidate the transcriptional regulators that control both the induction and maintenance of these stem cells.

Identification of factors that are necessary for Sox9 to activate the chondrogenic differentiation program.  The transcription factor Sox9 is critical for mesenchymal cells to commit to and execute the chondrogenic differentiation program; in its absence chondrogenesis is blocked.  Sox9 both directly activates chondrocyte differentiation markers and induces the expression of Sox5 and Sox6, which work together with Sox9 to activate the chondrocyte differentiation program. However, in addition to its essential role in initiating the chondrogenic differentiation program, Sox9 is also expressed in a number of other cells types, including neural stem cells, oligodendrocyte precursors, intestinal stem cells, hair follicle stem cells, and the developing testis. Taken together, these findings indicate that the ability of Sox9 to induce the chondrocyte differentiation program is context dependent, suggesting that additional factors are necessary for Sox9 to activate chondrocyte-specific transcriptional targets.   We have recently identified additional chondrogenic competence factors; and are studying how these factors establish the competence for Sox9 to induce chondrocyte formation.

Identification of a transcriptional network that controls the formation and maintenance of articular cartilage stem cells.  Lineage tracing studies have suggested that growth plate and articular chondrocytes arise from distinct progenitor populations, such that articular chondrocytes share a common origin with synovial cells that line the joint cavity. The superficial-most layer of articular cartilage is distinguished from deeper layers by expression of lubricin, which is encoded by the Prg4 locus.  Prior work by the Lassar lab and others indicated that Prg4-expressing cells in embryonic and early post-natal joints constitute a progenitor pool for all regions of the articular cartilage in the adult.    Recently, we identified Creb5 as a transcription factor that is specifically expressed in superficial zone articular chondrocytes and is required for TGF-b and EGFR signaling to induce Prg4 expression.  Notably, forced expression of Creb5 in chondrocytes derived from the deep zone of the articular cartilage confers the competence for TGF-b and EGFR signals to induce Prg4 expression.   Chromatin-IP and ATAC-Seq analyses have revealed that Creb5 directly binds to two Prg4 promoter-proximal regulatory elements, that display an open chromatin conformation specifically in superficial zone articular chondrocytes; and which work in combination with a more distal regulatory element to drive induction of Prg4 by TGF-b.  By engineering mice that either lack Creb5 function, or mis-express this transcription factor in the developing limb bud mesenchyme, we have found that Creb5 is necessary to initiate the expression of signaling molecules that both direct the formation of synovial joints and guide perichondrial tissue to form articular cartilage instead of bone.  In addition, we have found that Creb5 function is critical to maintain the articular cartilage stem cell population in postnatal mice.  We are currently determining both what signals regulate Creb5 expression and elucidating how Creb5 works with other transcriptional regulators to regulate both the formation and maintenance of articular cartilage stem cells; with the goal of employing this knowledge to restore articular cartilage stem cells in degenerating joint tissue.

Address: 

Room SGM 302A

240 Longwood Avenue

Boston, MA 02115

Publications View
Regulatory mechanisms that coordinate skeletal muscle differentiation and cell cycle withdrawal.
Authors: Authors: Lassar AB, Skapek SX, Novitch B.
Curr Opin Cell Biol
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Wiring diagrams: regulatory circuits and the control of skeletal myogenesis.
Authors: Authors: Lassar A, Münsterberg A.
Curr Opin Cell Biol
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A novel myoblast enhancer element mediates MyoD transcription.
Authors: Authors: Tapscott SJ, Lassar AB, Weintraub H.
Mol Cell Biol
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Muscle-specific transcriptional activation by MyoD.
Authors: Authors: Weintraub H, Dwarki VJ, Verma I, Davis R, Hollenberg S, Snider L, Lassar A, Tapscott SJ.
Genes Dev
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Functional activity of myogenic HLH proteins requires hetero-oligomerization with E12/E47-like proteins in vivo.
Authors: Authors: Lassar AB, Davis RL, Wright WE, Kadesch T, Murre C, Voronova A, Baltimore D, Weintraub H.
Cell
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MyoD induces growth arrest independent of differentiation in normal and transformed cells.
Authors: Authors: Crescenzi M, Fleming TP, Lassar AB, Weintraub H, Aaronson SA.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A
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MyoD binds cooperatively to two sites in a target enhancer sequence: occupancy of two sites is required for activation.
Authors: Authors: Weintraub H, Davis R, Lockshon D, Lassar A.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A
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The MyoD DNA binding domain contains a recognition code for muscle-specific gene activation.
Authors: Authors: Davis RL, Cheng PF, Lassar AB, Weintraub H.
Cell
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MyoD: a regulatory gene of skeletal myogenesis.
Authors: Authors: Tapscott SJ, Davis RL, Lassar AB, Weintraub H.
Adv Exp Med Biol
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Id: a negative regulator of helix-loop-helix DNA binding proteins. Control of terminal myogenic differentiation.
Authors: Authors: Benezra R, Davis RL, Lassar A, Tapscott S, Thayer M, Lockshon D, Weintraub H.
Ann N Y Acad Sci
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