41 research outputs found
MicroRNA-222 regulates muscle alternative splicing through Rbm24 during differentiation of skeletal muscle cells
A number of microRNAs have been shown to regulate skeletal muscle development and differentiation. MicroRNA-222 is downregulated during myogenic differentiation and its overexpression leads to alteration of muscle differentiation process and specialized structures. By using RNA-induced silencing complex (RISC) pulldown followed by RNA sequencing, combined with in silico microRNA target prediction, we have identified two new targets of microRNA-222 involved in the regulation of myogenic differentiation, Ahnak and Rbm24. Specifically, the RNA-binding protein Rbm24 is a major regulator of muscle-specific alternative splicing and its downregulation by microRNA-222 results in defective exon inclusion impairing the production of muscle-specific isoforms of Coro6, Fxr1 and NACA transcripts. Reconstitution of normal levels of Rbm24 in cells overexpressing microRNA-222 rescues muscle-specific splicing. In conclusion, we have identified a new function of microRNA-222 leading to alteration of myogenic differentiation at the level of alternative splicing, and we provide evidence that this effect is mediated by Rbm24 protei
CARPET: a web-based package for the analysis of ChIP-chip and expression tiling data
Summary: CARPET (Collection of Automated Routine Programs for Easy Tiling) is a set of Perl, Python and R scripts, integrated on the Galaxy2 web-based platform, for the analysis of ChIP-chip and expression tiling data, both for standard and custom chip designs. CARPET allows rapid experimental data entry, simple quality control, normalization, easy identification and annotation of enriched ChIP-chip regions, detection of the absolute or relative transcriptional status of genes assessed by expression tiling experiments and, more importantly, it allows the integration of ChIP-chip and expression data. Results can be visualized instantly in a genomic context within the UCSC genome browser as graph-based custom tracks through Galaxy2. All generated and uploaded data can be stored within sessions and are easily shared with other users. Availability: http://bio.ifom-ieo-campus.it/galaxy Contacts: [email protected] lucilla.luzi@if om-ieo-campus.i
Transcription factor binding sites are genetic determinants of retroviral integration in the human genome.
Gamma-retroviruses and lentiviruses integrate non-randomly in mammalian genomes, with specific preferences for active chromatin, promoters and regulatory regions. Gene transfer vectors derived from gamma-retroviruses target at high frequency genes involved in the control of growth, development and differentiation of the target cell, and may induce insertional tumors or pre-neoplastic clonal expansions in patients treated by gene therapy. The gene expression program of the target cell is apparently instrumental in directing gamma-retroviral integration, although the molecular basis of this phenomenon is poorly understood. We report a bioinformatic analysis of the distribution of transcription factor binding sites (TFBSs) flanking >4,000 integrated proviruses in human hematopoietic and non-hematopoietic cells. We show that gamma-retroviral, but not lentiviral vectors, integrate in genomic regions enriched in cell-type specific subsets of TFBSs, independently from their relative position with respect to genes and transcription start sites. Analysis of sequences flanking the integration sites of Moloney leukemia virus (MLV)- and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-derived vectors carrying mutations in their long terminal repeats (LTRs), and of HIV vectors packaged with an MLV integrase, indicates that the MLV integrase and LTR enhancer are the viral determinants of the selection of TFBS-rich regions in the genome. This study identifies TFBSs as differential genomic determinants of retroviral target site selection in the human genome, and suggests that transcription factors binding the LTR enhancer may synergize with the integrase in tethering retroviral pre-integration complexes to transcriptionally active regulatory regions. Our data indicate that gamma-retroviruses and lentiviruses have evolved dramatically different strategies to interact with the host cell chromatin, and predict a higher risk in using gamma-retroviral vs. lentiviral vectors for human gene therapy applications
miRNA-126 Orchestrates an Oncogenic Program in B Cell Precursor Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia
MicroRNA (miRNA)-126 is a known regulator of hematopoietic stem cell quiescence. We engineered murine hematopoiesis to express miRNA-126 across all differentiation stages. Thirty percent of mice developed monoclonal B cell leukemia, which was prevented or regressed when a tetracycline-repressible miRNA-126 cassette was switched off. Regression was accompanied by upregulation of cell-cycle regulators and B cell differentiation genes, and downregulation of oncogenic signaling pathways. Expression of dominant-negative p53 delayed blast clearance upon miRNA-126 switch-off, highlighting the relevance of p53 inhibition in miRNA-126 addiction. Forced miRNA-126 expression in mouse and human progenitors reduced p53 transcriptional activity through regulation of multiple p53-related targets. miRNA-126 is highly expressed in a subset of human B-ALL, and antagonizing miRNA-126 in ALL xenograft models triggered apoptosis and reduced disease burden
lung cancer predisposition in women with previous breast cancer identified by whole exome sequencing
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Histone Modifications in a Mouse Model of Early Adversities and Panic Disorder: Role for Asic1 and Neurodevelopmental Genes
Hyperventilation following transient, CO2-induced acidosis is ubiquitous in mammals and heritable.
In humans, respiratory and emotional hypersensitivity to CO2 marks separation anxiety and panic
disorders, and is enhanced by early-life adversities. Mice exposed to the repeated cross-fostering
paradigm (RCF) of interference with maternal environment show heightened separation anxiety and
hyperventilation to 6% CO2-enriched air. Gene-environment interactions affect CO2 hypersensitivity
in both humans and mice. We therefore hypothesised that epigenetic modifications and increased
expression of genes involved in pH-detection could explain these relationships. Medullae oblongata
of RCF- and normally-reared female outbred mice were assessed by ChIP-seq for H3Ac, H3K4me3,
H3K27me3 histone modifications, and by SAGE for differential gene expression. Integration of multiple
experiments by network analysis revealed an active component of 148 genes pointing to the mTOR
signalling pathway and nociception. Among these genes, Asic1 showed heightened mRNA expression,
coherent with RCF-mice’s respiratory hypersensitivity to CO2 and altered nociception. Functional
enrichment and mRNA transcript analyses yielded a consistent picture of enhancement for several
genes affecting chemoception, neurodevelopment, and emotionality. Particularly, results with Asic1
support recent human findings with panic and CO2 responses, and provide new perspectives on how
early adversities and genes interplay to affect key components of panic and related disorders
miR-17-92 family clusters control iNKT cell ontogenesis via modulation of TGF-β signaling
Invariant natural killer T cells (iNKT) cells are T lymphocytes displaying innate effector functions, acquired through a distinct thymic developmental program regulated by microRNAs (miRNAs). Deleting miRNAs by Dicer ablation (Dicer KO) in thymocytes selectively impairs iNKT cell survival and functional differentiation. To unravel this miRNA-dependent program, we systemically identified transcripts that were differentially expressed between WT and Dicer KO iNKT cells at different differentiation stages and predicted to be targeted by the iNKT cell-specific miRNAs. TGF-\u3b2 receptor II (TGF-\u3b2RII), critically implicated in iNKT cell differentiation, was found up-regulated in iNKT Dicer KO cells together with enhanced TGF-\u3b2 signaling. miRNA members of the miR-17-92 family clusters were predicted to target Tgfbr2 mRNA upon iNKT cell development. iNKT cells lacking all three miR-17-92 family clusters (miR-17-92, miR-106a-363, miR-106b-25) phenocopied both increased TGF-\u3b2RII expression and signaling, and defective effector differentiation, displayed by iNKT Dicer KO cells. Consistently, genetic ablation of TGF-\u3b2 signaling in the absence of miRNAs rescued iNKT cell differentiation. These results elucidate the global impact of miRNAs on the iNKT cell developmental program and uncover the targeting of a lineage-specific cytokine signaling by miRNAs as a mechanism regulating innate-like T-cell development and effector differentiation
Problemática actual de los intereses moratorios en los préstamos hipotecarios
El trabajo aborda la problemática en cuanto a la fijación de un límite para la declaración de abusividad de la cláusula que establece los intereses moratorios en el marco de un contrato de préstamo hipotecario para la adquisición de la vivienda actual. Para ello, primero hace un análisis de la regulación existente así como de la jurisprudencia tanto del TS como del TJUE, de cuáles son sus convergencias y divergencias. Concluyendo con el análisis de la evolución de la regulación de esta materia desde anteproyecto de ley a la aprobación de la ley 5/2019, pasando por las diversas enmiendas y el informe emitido por el Consejo del Poder Judicial. Fianalmente, la citada nueva ley parece poner un límite claro a estos intereses, fijándolos en el interés remuneratorio más tres puntos porcentuales.Grado en Derecho y Grado en Dirección y Administración de Empresa