5 research outputs found

    Performances de la puce exon et son application dans l’analyse de l’épissage alternatif associé à la métastase du cancer de sein

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    Nous montrons l’utilisation de la puce exon d’Affymetrix pour l’analyse simultanée de l’expression des gènes et de la variation d’isoformes. Nous avons utilisé les échantillons d’ARN du cerveau et des tissus de référence qui ont été antérieurement utilisés dans l’étude du consortium MicroArray Quality Control (MAQC). Nous démontrons une forte concordance de la quantification de l’expression des gènes entre trois plateformes d’expression populaires à savoir la puce exon d’Affymetrix, la puce Illumina et la puce U133A d’Affymetrix. Plus intéressant nous montrons que la majorité des discordances entre les trois plateformes résulterait des positions différentes des sondes à travers les plateformes et que les variations d’isoforme exactes ne peuvent être identifiées que par la puce exon. Nous avons détecté avec succès, entre les tissus de référence et ceux du cerveau, une centaine de cas d’évènements d’épissage alternatif. La puce exon est requise dans l’analyse de l’épissage alternatif associé aux pathologies telles que les cancers et les troubles neurologiques. Comme application de cette technologie, nous avons analysé les variations d’épissage dans la métastase du cancer de sein développé dans le model de la souris. Nous avons utilisé une gamme bien définie de trois lignées de tumeur mammaire ayant différents potentiels métastatiques. Par des analyses statistiques, nous avons répertorié 2623 transcripts présentant des variations d’expression et d’isoformes entre les types de tumeur. Une analyse du réseau de gènes montre qu’environ la moitié d’entre eux est impliquée dans plusieurs activités cellulaires, ainsi que dans nombreux cancers et désordres génétiques.We demonstrate how the Affymetrix Exon Array, can be used to simultaneously profile gene expression level, and detect variations at the isoform level. We use a well studied set of brain and reference RNA samples previously used by the MicroArray Quality Control (MAQC) consortium study. We demonstrate a high concordance of gene expression measurements among three popular expression platforms – Affymetrix Exon Array, Illumina, and Affymetrix 3’ targeted array (U133A). More interestingly, we show that in many cases of discordant results, the effect can be explained by differential probe placements across platforms, and that the exact isoform change can only be captured by the Exon Array. Finally, we are able to detect hundreds of cases of splicing, transcript initiation, and termination differences between the brain and reference tissue samples. We propose that the Exon Array is a highly effective tool for transcript isoform profiling, and that it should be used in a variety of systems where such changes are known to be associated with diseases, such as neurological disorders and cancer. As application, we used the Affymetrix Exon Array to identify metastatis-specific alternative splicing in mouse model of breast cancer at the whole genome level. We utilize a well characterized series of three mouse mammary tumor lines exhibiting varying levels of metastatic potential. We catalogued 2623 transcripts which exhibit splicing aberrations during the progression of cancer. A genetic pathway analysis shows the half of them implicated in several cell activities, cancers and genetic disorders

    Gene Expression and Isoform Variation Analysis using Affymetrix Exon Arrays

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    Correction to Bemmo A, Benovoy D, Kwan T, Gaffney DJ, Jensen RV, Majewski J: Gene expression and isoform variation analysis using Affymetrix Exon Arrays. BMC Genomics 2008, 9: 529

    Exon-Level Transcriptome Profiling in Murine Breast Cancer Reveals Splicing Changes Specific to Tumors with Different Metastatic Abilities

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    In breast cancer patients, tumor metastases at distant sites are the main cause of death. However, the molecular mechanisms of metastasis of breast cancer remain unclear. It is thought that changes occurring at the level of RNA processing contribute to cancer. Alternative splicing (AS) of pre-mRNA, a key post-transcriptional mechanism allowing for the production of distinct proteins from a single gene, affects over 90% of human genes. Such splicing events are responsible for generating mRNAs that encode protein isoforms that can have very different biological properties and functions. A well-studied example is the BCL-X gene, whose two major transcript isoforms produce two proteins having antagonistic functions: the short form (BCL-XS) promotes apoptosis while the long form (BCL-XL) is anti-apoptotic. Moreover, overexpression of BCL-XL has been reported to enhance the metastatic potential of breast tumor cells in patients

    Sonic hedgehog accelerates DNA replication to cause replication stress promoting cancer initiation in medulloblastoma

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    The mechanisms generating cancer-initiating mutations are not well understood. Sonic hedgehog (SHH) pathway activation is frequent in medulloblastoma (MB), with PTCH1 mutations being a common initiating event. Here we investigated the role of the developmental mitogen SHH in initiating carcinogenesis in the cells of origin: granule cell progenitors (GCPs). We delineate a molecular mechanism for tumor initiation in MB. Exposure of GCPs to Shh causes a distinct form of DNA replication stress, increasing both origin firing and fork velocity. Shh promotes DNA helicase loading and activation, with increased Cdc7-dependent origin firing. The S-phase duration is reduced and hyper-recombination occurs, causing copy number neutral loss of heterozygosity—a frequent event at the PTCH1/ptch1 locus. Moreover, Cdc7 inhibition to attenuate origin firing reduces recombination and preneoplastic tumor formation in mice. Therefore, tissue-specific replication stress induced by Shh promotes loss of heterozygosity, which in tumor-prone Ptch1+/− GCPs results in loss of this tumor suppressor—an early cancer-initiating event

    Fusion of TTYH1 with the C19MC microRNA cluster drives expression of a brain-specific DNMT3B isoform in the embryonal brain tumor ETMR

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    Embryonal tumors with multilayered rosettes (ETMRs) are rare, deadly pediatric brain tumors characterized by high-level amplification of the microRNA cluster C19MC. We performed integrated genetic and epigenetic analyses of 12 ETMR samples and identified, in all cases, C19MC fusions to TTYH1 driving expression of the microRNAs. ETMR tumors, cell lines and xenografts showed a specific DNA methylation pattern distinct from those of other tumors and normal tissues. We detected extreme overexpression of a previously uncharacterized isoform of DNMT3B originating at an alternative promoter that is active only in the first weeks of neural tube development. Transcriptional and immunohistochemical analyses suggest that C19MC-dependent DNMT3B deregulation is mediated by RBL2, a known repressor of DNMT3B. Transfection with individual C19MC microRNAs resulted in DNMT3B upregulation and RBL2 downregulation in cultured cells. Our data suggest a potential oncogenic re-engagement of an early developmental program in ETMR via epigenetic alteration mediated by an embryonic, brain-specific DNMT3B isoform
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