3 research outputs found

    DNA Methylation Dynamics of Human Hematopoietic Stem Cell Differentiation

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    Hematopoietic stem cells give rise to all blood cells in a differentiation process that involves widespread epigenome remodeling. Here we present genome-wide reference maps of the associated DNA methylation dynamics. We used a meta-epigenomic approach that combines DNA methylation profiles across many small pools of cells and performed single-cell methylome sequencing to assess cell-to-cell heterogeneity. The resulting dataset identified characteristic differences between HSCs derived from fetal liver, cord blood, bone marrow, and peripheral blood. We also observed lineage-specific DNA methylation between myeloid and lymphoid progenitors, characterized immature multi-lymphoid progenitors, and detected progressive DNA methylation differences in maturing megakaryocytes. We linked these patterns to gene expression, histone modifications, and chromatin accessibility, and we used machine learning to derive a model of human hematopoietic differentiation directly from DNA methylation data. Our results contribute to a better understanding of human hematopoietic stem cell differentiation and provide a framework for studying blood-linked diseases.This work was funded by the BLUEPRINT project (European Union’s Seventh Framework Programme grant 282510), the NIHR Cambridge Biomedical Research Centre, and the Austrian Academy of Sciences. F.A.C. is supported by a Medical Research Council Clinical Training Fellowship (grant MR/K024043/1). F.H. is supported by a postdoctoral fellowship of the German Research Council (DFG; grant HA 7723/1-1). J.K. is supported by a DOC Fellowship of the Austrian Academy of Sciences. W.H.O. is supported by the NIHR, BHF (grants PG-0310-1002 and RG/09/12/28096), and NHS Blood and Transplant. E.L. is supported by a Wellcome Trust Sir Henry Dale Fellowship (grant 107630/Z/15/Z) and core support grant from the Wellcome Trust and MRC to the Wellcome Trust-Medical Research Council Cambridge Stem Cell Institute. M. Frontini is supported by the BHF Cambridge Centre of Excellence (grant RE/13/6/30180). C.B. is supported by a New Frontiers Group award of the Austrian Academy of Sciences and by a European Research Council (ERC) Starting Grant (European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation program; grant 679146)

    in keeping with the spirit of the albertine statute constitutionalisation of the national unification

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    This chapter deals with the difficult process of constitutionalisation which characterised Italian Unification. Constitutionalisation is a long-term phenomenon which had the purpose of giving constitutional forms to the Nation. The promulgation of the Albertine Statute is more the start than the arrival of this phenomenon. The focus of this investigation is, therefore, to study the Constitution through its evolution paying particular attention to the process of legal integration within the structures of the Albertine Statute and to the amendment mechanisms of the constitutional text. The preamble of the Albertine Statute speaks of «perpetual and irrevocable fundamental law». The word «perpetual» meant the prohibition of revoking constitutional concession, while the word «irrevocable» was intended as a pact between the Sovereign and the Nation. Over the years, very few were the changes to the letter of the Albertine Statute. The interpretation and the practice represented the most important mechanisms of constitutional change (implicit constitutional changes). A primary role was acknowledged to non-written norms. In this perspective, it may well be said that the Italian Constitution consisted in something more than the written text and dwelt in the spirit and not in the letter of the Albertine Statute

    Is There a Populist Turn in the Italian Parliament? Continuity and Discontinuity in the Non-Legislative Procedures

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    This chapter provides a critical analysis of whether and how the populist turn of Italian politics has affected the performance of the non-legislative functions of the Parliament. In particular, after a brief review of how populist forces can influence the status of members of Parliament, the chapter deals with the expressive-informing functions of the Parliament, linked to the transparency and publicity of its activity and to the ability to act as a representative institution. It then explores the impact of populist forces on the parliamentary function of scrutiny and oversight, in particular on whether this has been exercised in continuity with the past, of a Parliament not very keen to fully exploit its tools and of governments inclined to escape parliamentary control
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