S

Sydney K. Hart

New York Genome Center

ORCID: 0000-0003-0228-6471

Publishes on RNA Research and Splicing, CRISPR and Genetic Engineering, Cancer-related molecular mechanisms research. 9 papers and 384 citations.

9Publications
384Total Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Single cell analysis reveals immune cell–adipocyte crosstalk regulating the transcription of thermogenic adipocytes
Cited by 177Open Access

Immune cells are vital constituents of the adipose microenvironment that influence both local and systemic lipid metabolism. Mice lacking IL10 have enhanced thermogenesis, but the roles of specific cell types in the metabolic response to IL10 remain to be defined. We demonstrate here that selective loss of IL10 receptor α in adipocytes recapitulates the beneficial effects of global IL10 deletion, and that local crosstalk between IL10-producing immune cells and adipocytes is a determinant of thermogenesis and systemic energy balance. S ingle N uclei A di p ocyte RNA -seq uencing (SNAP-seq) of subcutaneous adipose tissue defined a metabolically-active mature adipocyte subtype characterized by robust expression of genes involved in thermogenesis whose transcriptome was selectively responsive to IL10Rα deletion. Furthermore, single-cell transcriptomic analysis of adipose stromal populations identified lymphocytes as a key source of IL10 production in response to thermogenic stimuli. These findings implicate adaptive immune cell-adipocyte communication in the maintenance of adipose subtype identity and function.

Low copy CRISPR-Cas13d mitigates collateral RNA cleavage
Sydney K. Hart, Hans‐Hermann Wessels, Alejandro Méndez‐Mancilla et al.|bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)|2024
Cited by 7Open Access

Abstract While CRISPR-Cas13 systems excel in accurately targeting RNA, the potential for collateral RNA degradation poses a concern for therapeutic applications and limits broader adoption for transcriptome perturbations. We evaluate the extent to which collateral RNA cleavage occurs when Rfx Cas13d is delivered via plasmid transfection or lentiviral transduction and find that collateral activity only occurs with high levels of Rfx Cas13d expression. Using transcriptome-scale and combinatorial CRISPR pooled screens in cell lines with low-copy Rfx Cas13d, we find high on-target knockdown, without extensive collateral activity regardless of the expression level of the target gene. In contrast, transfection of Rfx Cas13d, which yields higher nuclease expression, results in collateral RNA degradation. Further, our analysis of a high-fidelity Cas13 variant uncovers a marked decrease in on-target efficiency, suggesting that its reduced collateral activity may be due to an overall diminished nuclease capability.