Charles Dean Stiles

Charles Dean Stiles, PhD

Professor of Neurobiology, Emeritus

We are currently focused on a pair of CNS-specific bHLH transcription factors known as Olig1 and Olig2. The two Olig genes map to within 40 kb of each other on human chromosome 21 within the Down syndrome critical region. During embryonic development and also in the postnatal brain, the two Olig genes are expressed in progenitor cells that give rise to oligodendrocytes and certain types of neurons (notably motor neurons). Beyond merely marking these cell types, targeted disruption of Olig1/2 in developing embryos disrupts patterning of the ventral spinal cord, ablates formation of oligodendrocytes throughout the CNS and prevents formation of motor neurons. The two Olig proteins are similar to each other within the DNA-targeting bHLH motif. Outside the bHLH domain however, Olig1 and Olig2 are very different proteins and this is reflected in non-overlapping biological functions. Olig1 function has been shown to be essential for the repair of demyelinating lesions in murine models of multiple sclerosis. Olig2 is expressed in the stem-like cells that are found in high-grade human gliomas and is essential for tumor formation in “genetically relevant” murine models of human glioma. Current activities in the Stiles lab are aimed at defining 1) structural features of the two Olig proteins that underlie their separate biological functions, 2) genetic targets of Olig genes and 3) key co-regulator proteins. A variety of methods are used towards these ends including mass spectroscopy, ChIP/Seq and high throughput RNAi screens.

"The two Olig genes map to within 40 kb of each other on human chromosome 21 within the Down syndrome critical region. During embryonic development and also in the postnatal brain, the two Olig genes are expressed in progenitor cells that give rise to oligodendrocytes and certain types of neurons (notably motor neurons)."

Publications View
Interleukin-1 is a potent regulator of JE and KC gene expression in quiescent BALB/c fibroblasts.
Authors: Authors: Hall DJ, Brownlee C, Stiles CD.
J Cell Physiol
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Environment-dependent growth inhibition of human epidermal keratinocytes by recombinant human transforming growth factor-beta.
Authors: Authors: Rollins BJ, O'Connell TM, Bennett G, Burton LE, Stiles CD, Rheinwald JG.
J Cell Physiol
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Evidence for a novel signal transduction pathway activated by platelet-derived growth factor and by double-stranded RNA.
Authors: Authors: Hall DJ, Jones SD, Kaplan DR, Whitman M, Rollins BJ, Stiles CD.
Mol Cell Biol
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The platelet-derived growth factor-inducible KC gene encodes a secretory protein related to platelet alpha-granule proteins.
Authors: Authors: Oquendo P, Alberta J, Wen DZ, Graycar JL, Derynck R, Stiles CD.
J Biol Chem
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Regulation of 2',5'-oligoadenylate synthetase gene expression by interferons and platelet-derived growth factor.
Authors: Authors: Garcia-Blanco MA, Lengyel P, Morrison E, Brownlee C, Stiles CD, Rutherford M, Hannigan G, Williams BR.
Mol Cell Biol
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Serum-inducible genes.
Authors: Authors: Rollins BJ, Stiles CD.
Adv Cancer Res
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Labile repressors are involved in the transcriptional control of PDGF-responsive genes.
Authors: Authors: Hall DJ, Alberta JA, Stiles CD.
Oncogene Res
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Platelet-derived growth factor A chain is maternally encoded in Xenopus embryos.
Authors: Authors: Mercola M, Melton DA, Stiles CD.
Science
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Comparison of fibroblast and T-cell activation genes.
Authors: Authors: Burd PR, Rollins BJ, Wilson SD, Billings PR, Stiles CD, Dorf ME.
Cell Immunol
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Cloning and expression of JE, a gene inducible by platelet-derived growth factor and whose product has cytokine-like properties.
Authors: Authors: Rollins BJ, Morrison ED, Stiles CD.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A
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