382 research outputs found

    Integrative biology and systems biology

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    Higher order structure in the cancer transcriptome and systems medicine

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    BRCA1 function in T lymphocytes: a cellular specificity of a different kind

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    Recent work by Mak et al demonstrates that mice carrying a T-cell-specific disruption of the brca1 gene display markedly impaired T-lymphocyte development and proliferation in the absence of any increased tendency for the formation of tumors. Interestingly, the extent of these defects was found to be highly dependent on cellular context. Contrasting the rather broad tissue expression pattern of brca1 against its exquisitely selective etiologic role in cancers of the breast and ovary, many of us are left to ponder - where is the specificity

    GAS6 Induces Axl-mediated Chemotaxis of Vascular Smooth Muscle Cells

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    Atherosclerosis and arterial restenosis are disease processes involving the accumulation of vascular smooth muscle cells following vascular injury. Key events leading to these processes are migration and proliferation of these cells. Here, we demonstrate that GAS6, encoded by the growth arrest-specific gene 6, induces a directed migration (chemotaxis) of both rat and human primary vascular smooth muscle cells while showing only marginal mitogenic potential in human vascular smooth muscle cells. GAS6 stimulation induces Axl autophosphorylation in human vascular smooth muscle cells, indicating that specific GAS6-Axl interactions may be associated with GAS6-directed chemotaxis. To test this hypothesis, vascular smooth muscle cells overexpressing Axl were generated by gene transfer and assessed for their ability to migrate along a GAS6 gradient. These Axl overexpressors exhibited 2-5-fold increased sensitivity to GAS6-induced chemotaxis. Furthermore, vascular smooth muscle cells expressing the kinase dead mutant of Axl or exposure to the soluble Axl extracellular domain showed attenuated GAS6-induced migration. Taken together, these results suggest that GAS6 is a novel chemoattractant that induces Axl-mediated migration of vascular smooth muscle cells. The separation of mitogenesis from migration provided by this study may enhance the molecular dissection of cell migration in vascular damage

    Generation and quality control of lipidomics data for the alzheimers disease neuroimaging initiative cohort.

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    Alzheimers disease (AD) is a major public health priority with a large socioeconomic burden and complex etiology. The Alzheimer Disease Metabolomics Consortium (ADMC) and the Alzheimer Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (ADNI) aim to gain new biological insights in the disease etiology. We report here an untargeted lipidomics of serum specimens of 806 subjects within the ADNI1 cohort (188 AD, 392 mild cognitive impairment and 226 cognitively normal subjects) along with 83 quality control samples. Lipids were detected and measured using an ultra-high-performance liquid chromatography quadruple/time-of-flight mass spectrometry (UHPLC-QTOF MS) instrument operated in both negative and positive electrospray ionization modes. The dataset includes a total 513 unique lipid species out of which 341 are known lipids. For over 95% of the detected lipids, a relative standard deviation of better than 20% was achieved in the quality control samples, indicating high technical reproducibility. Association modeling of this dataset and available clinical, metabolomics and drug-use data will provide novel insights into the AD etiology. These datasets are available at the ADNI repository at http://adni.loni.usc.edu/

    GAS6 Mediates Adhesion of Cells Expressing the Receptor Tyrosine Kinase Axl

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    Axl is a receptor tyrosine kinase that contains both immunoglobulin and fibronectin III repeats in its extracellular domain reminiscent of cell adhesion molecules. Expression of the receptor tyrosine kinase Axl in the 32D myeloid cell line permits aggregation of cells in response to treatment with the native ligand GAS6; this aggregation was not observed in untreated 32D-Axl cells nor in treated parental cells. This aggregation can be blocked by the addition of excess Axl extracellular domain peptide and does not require intracellular Axl kinase activity. Cell surface binding activity of GAS6 was mapped to distinct plasma membrane interacting domains that are separate from the GAS6 motifs that engage the Axl receptor. This suggests that aggregation is mediated by a heterotypic intercellular mechanism whereby cell-bound GAS6 interacts with Axl receptor on an adjacent cell. This mechanism is supported by our observation that GAS6 binds to 32D parental cells which then permits their aggregation with untreated 32D-Axl cells. We have recently demonstrated that the GAS6-Axl interaction does not initiate mitogenesis in 32D cells. When considered with the adhesion results, these data suggest that an important biological function of the Axl-GAS6 interaction is to mediate cell-cell binding

    Chromatin topology reorganization and transcription repression by PML-RARĪ± in acute promyeloid leukemia.

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    BACKGROUND: Acute promyeloid leukemia (APL) is characterized by the oncogenic fusion protein PML-RARĪ±, a major etiological agent in APL. However, the molecular mechanisms underlying the role of PML-RARĪ± in leukemogenesis remain largely unknown. RESULTS: Using an inducible system, we comprehensively analyze the 3D genome organization in myeloid cells and its reorganization after PML-RARĪ± induction and perform additional analyses in patient-derived APL cells with native PML-RARĪ±. We discover that PML-RARĪ± mediates extensive chromatin interactions genome-wide. Globally, it redefines the chromatin topology of the myeloid genome toward a more condensed configuration in APL cells; locally, it intrudes RNAPII-associated interaction domains, interrupts myeloid-specific transcription factors binding at enhancers and super-enhancers, and leads to transcriptional repression of genes critical for myeloid differentiation and maturation. CONCLUSIONS: Our results not only provide novel topological insights for the roles of PML-RARĪ± in transforming myeloid cells into leukemia cells, but further uncover a topological framework of a molecular mechanism for oncogenic fusion proteins in cancers
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