2 research outputs found

    Twenty Novel Disease Group-Specific and 12 New Shared Macrophage Pathways in Eight Groups of 34 Diseases Including 24 Inflammatory Organ Diseases and 10 Types of Tumors.

    Get PDF
    The mechanisms underlying pathophysiological regulation of tissue macrophage (MĪ†) subsets remain poorly understood. From the expression of 207 MĪ† genes comprising 31 markers for 10 subsets, 45 transcription factors (TFs), 56 immunometabolism enzymes, 23 trained immunity (innate immune memory) enzymes, and 52 other genes in microarray data, we made the following findings. (1) When 34 inflammation diseases and tumor types were grouped into eight categories, there was differential expression of the 31 MĪ† markers and 45 MĪ† TFs, highlighted by 12 shared and 20 group-specific disease pathways. (2) MĪ† in lung, liver, spleen, and intestine (LLSI-MĪ†) express higher M1 MĪ† markers than lean adipose tissue MĪ† (ATMĪ†) physiologically. (3) Pro-adipogenic TFs C/EBPÎą and PPARÎŗ and proinflammatory adipokine leptin upregulate the expression of M1 MĪ† markers. (4) Among 10 immune checkpoint receptors (ICRs), LLSI-MĪ† and bone marrow (BM) MĪ† express higher levels of CD274 (PDL-1) than ATMĪ†, presumably to counteract the M1 dominant status via its reverse signaling behavior. (5) Among 24 intercellular communication exosome mediators, LLSI- and BM- MĪ† prefer to use RAB27A and STX3 than RAB31 and YKT6, suggesting new inflammatory exosome mediators for propagating inflammation. (6) MĪ† in peritoneal tissue and LLSI-MĪ† upregulate higher levels of immunometabolism enzymes than does ATMĪ†. (7) MĪ† from peritoneum and LLSI-MĪ† upregulate more trained immunity enzyme genes than does ATMĪ†. Our results suggest that multiple new mechanisms including the cell surface, intracellular immunometabolism, trained immunity, and TFs may be responsible for disease group-specific and shared pathways. Our findings have provided novel insights on the pathophysiological regulation of tissue MĪ†, the disease group-specific and shared pathways of MĪ†, and novel therapeutic targets for cancers and inflammations

    Increasing Upstream Chromatin Long–Range Interactions May Favor Induction of Circular RNAs in LysoPC-Activated Human Aortic Endothelial Cells

    Get PDF
    Circular RNAs (circRNAs) are non-coding RNAs that form covalently closed continuous loops, and act as gene regulators in physiological and disease conditions. To test our hypothesis that proatherogenic lipid lysophosphatidylcholine (LPC) induce a set of circRNAs in human aortic endothelial cell (HAEC) activation, we performed circRNA analysis by searching our RNA-Seq data from LPC-activated HAECs, and found: (1) LPC induces significant modulation of 77 newly characterized cirRNAs, among which 47 circRNAs (61%) are upregulated; (2) 34 (72%) out of 47 upregulated circRNAs are upregulated when the corresponding mRNAs are downregulated, suggesting that the majority of circRNAs are upregulated presumably via LPC-induced “abnormal splicing” when the canonical splicing for generation of corresponding mRNAs is suppressed; (3) Upregulation of 47 circRNAs is temporally associated with mRNAs-mediated LPC-upregulated cholesterol synthesis-SREBP2 pathway and LPC-downregulated TGF-β pathway; (4) Increase in upstream chromatin long-range interaction sites to circRNA related genes is associated with preferred circRNA generation over canonical splicing for mRNAs, suggesting that shifting chromatin long-range interaction sites from downstream to upstream may promote induction of a list of circRNAs in lysoPC-activated HAECs; (5) Six significantly changed circRNAs may have sponge functions for miRNAs; and (6) 74% significantly changed circRNAs contain open reading frames, suggesting that putative short proteins may interfere with the protein interaction-based signaling. Our findings have demonstrated for the first time that a new set of LPC-induced circRNAs may contribute to homeostasis in LPC-induced HAEC activation. These novel insights may lead to identifications of new therapeutic targets for treating metabolic cardiovascular diseases, inflammations, and cancers
    corecore