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Marina Lizio

Cambridge Environmental Research Consultants (United Kingdom)

ORCID: 0000-0001-7337-7325

Publishes on Genomics and Chromatin Dynamics, Cancer-related molecular mechanisms research, RNA Research and Splicing. 102 papers and 7.2k citations.

102Publications
7.2kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

A draft network of ligand–receptor-mediated multicellular signalling in human
Jordan A. Ramilowski, Tatyana Goldberg, Jayson Harshbarger et al.|Nature Communications|2015
Cited by 986Open Access

Cell-to-cell communication across multiple cell types and tissues strictly governs proper functioning of metazoans and extensively relies on interactions between secreted ligands and cell-surface receptors. Herein, we present the first large-scale map of cell-to-cell communication between 144 human primary cell types. We reveal that most cells express tens to hundreds of ligands and receptors to create a highly connected signalling network through multiple ligand-receptor paths. We also observe extensive autocrine signalling with approximately two-thirds of partners possibly interacting on the same cell type. We find that plasma membrane and secreted proteins have the highest cell-type specificity, they are evolutionarily younger than intracellular proteins, and that most receptors had evolved before their ligands. We provide an online tool to interactively query and visualize our networks and demonstrate how this tool can reveal novel cell-to-cell interactions with the prediction that mast cells signal to monoblastic lineages via the CSF1-CSF1R interacting pair.

Gateways to the FANTOM5 promoter level mammalian expression atlas
Marina Lizio, Jayson Harshbarger, Hisashi Shimoji et al.|Genome Biology|2015
Cited by 941Open Access

The FANTOM5 project investigates transcription initiation activities in more than 1,000 human and mouse primary cells, cell lines and tissues using CAGE. Based on manual curation of sample information and development of an ontology for sample classification, we assemble the resulting data into a centralized data resource (http://fantom.gsc.riken.jp/5/). This resource contains web-based tools and data-access points for the research community to search and extract data related to samples, genes, promoter activities, transcription factors and enhancers across the FANTOM5 atlas.

Transcribed enhancers lead waves of coordinated transcription in transitioning mammalian cells
Cited by 607Open Access

Although it is generally accepted that cellular differentiation requires changes to transcriptional networks, dynamic regulation of promoters and enhancers at specific sets of genes has not been previously studied en masse. Exploiting the fact that active promoters and enhancers are transcribed, we simultaneously measured their activity in 19 human and 14 mouse time courses covering a wide range of cell types and biological stimuli. Enhancer RNAs, then messenger RNAs encoding transcription factors, dominated the earliest responses. Binding sites for key lineage transcription factors were simultaneously overrepresented in enhancers and promoters active in each cellular system. Our data support a highly generalizable model in which enhancer transcription is the earliest event in successive waves of transcriptional change during cellular differentiation or activation.