25 research outputs found

    Foxn1 regulates key target genes essential for T cell development in postnatal thymic epithelial cells

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    Thymic epithelial cell differentiation, growth and function depend on the expression of the transcription factor Foxn1; however, its target genes have never been physically identified. Using static and inducible genetic model systems and chromatin studies, we developed a genome-wide map of direct Foxn1 target genes for postnatal thymic epithelia and defined the Foxn1 binding motif. We determined the function of Foxn1 in these cells and found that, in addition to the transcriptional control of genes involved in the attraction and lineage commitment of T cell precursors, Foxn1 regulates the expression of genes involved in antigen processing and thymocyte selection. Thus, critical events in thymic lympho-stromal cross-talk and T cell selection are indispensably choreographed by Foxn1

    Heterozygous transcriptional and nonsense decay signatures in blood outgrowth endothelial cells from patients with hereditary haemorrhagic telangiectasia

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    In order to identify cellular phenotypes resulting from nonsense (gain of stop/premature termination codon) variants, we devised a framework of analytic methods that minimised confounder contributions, and applied to blood outgrowth endothelial cells (BOECs) derived from controls and patients with heterozygous nonsense variants in ACVRL1 , ENG or SMAD4 causing hereditary haemorrhagic telangiectasia (HHT). Following validation of 48 pre-selected genes by single cell qRT-PCR, discovery RNASeq ranked HHT-differential alignments of 16,807 Ensembl transcripts. Consistent gene ontology (GO) processes enriched compared to randomly-selected gene lists included bone morphogenetic protein, transforming growth factor-β and angiogenesis GO processes already implicated in HHT, further validating methodologies. Additional terms/genes including for endoplasmic reticulum stress could be attributed to a generic process of inefficient nonsense mediated decay (NMD). NMD efficiency ranged from 78-92% (mean 87%) in different BOEC cultures, with misprocessed mutant protein production confirmed by pulse chase experiments. Genes in HHT-specific and generic nonsense decay (ND) lists displayed differing expression profiles in normal endothelial cells exposed to an additional stress of exogenous 10Οmol/L iron which acutely upregulates multiple mRNAs: Despite differing donors and endothelial cell types, >50% of iron-induced variability could be explained by the magnitude of transcript downregulation in HHT BOECs with less efficient NMD. The Genotype Tissue Expression (GTEx) Project indicated ND list genes were usually most highly expressed in non-endothelial tissues. However, across 5 major tissues, although 18/486 nonsense and frameshift variants in highly expressed genes were captured in GTEx, none were sufficiently prevalent to obtain genome-wide significant p values for expression quantitative trait loci (GnomAD allele frequencies <0.0005). In conclusion, RNASeq analytics of rare genotype-selected, patient-derived endothelial cells facilitated identification of natural disease-specific and more generic transcriptional signatures. Future studies should evaluate wider relevance and whether injury from external agents is augmented in cells with already high burdens of defective protein production

    Foxn1 regulates key target genes essential for T cell development in postnatal thymic epithelial cells.

    No full text
    Thymic epithelial cell differentiation, growth and function depend on the expression of the transcription factor Foxn1; however, its target genes have never been physically identified. Using static and inducible genetic model systems and chromatin studies, we developed a genome-wide map of direct Foxn1 target genes for postnatal thymic epithelia and defined the Foxn1 binding motif. We determined the function of Foxn1 in these cells and found that, in addition to the transcriptional control of genes involved in the attraction and lineage commitment of T cell precursors, Foxn1 regulates the expression of genes involved in antigen processing and thymocyte selection. Thus, critical events in thymic lympho-stromal cross-talk and T cell selection are indispensably choreographed by Foxn1

    Foxn1 regulates in postnatal thymic epithelial cells key target genes essential for T cell development

    No full text
    Thymic epithelial cell differentiation, growth and function depend on the expression of the transcription factor Foxn1, however its target genes have never been physically identified. Using novel static and inducible genetic model systems and chromatin studies, we provide now a genome wide map of direct Foxn1 target genes for postnatal thymic epithelia and define the Foxn1 binding motif. We detail the function of Foxn1 in these cells and demonstrate that in addition to the transcriptional control of genes involved in the attraction and lineage commitment of T cell precursors, Foxn1 regulates the expression of genes involved in antigen processing and thymocyte selection. Thus, critical events in thymic lympho-stromal cross-talk and T cell selection are indispensably choreographed by Foxn1

    Association of pre-transplant statin use with delayed graft function in kidney transplant recipients

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    Background: Administration of HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors (statins), prior to ischemia or prior to reperfusion has been shown to decrease ischemia-reperfusion renal injury in animal studies. It is unknown whether this protective effect is applicable to renal transplantation in humans. The aim of this study was to determine the relationship between prior statin use in renal transplant recipients and the subsequent risk of delayed graft function
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