刘丹

青岛阜外心血管病医院有限公司 检验科

Identification of Potential Differentially-Methylated/Expressed Genes in Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease.

Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a chronic inflammatory lung disease that causes obstructed airflow from the lungs. DNA methylation can regulate gene expression. Understanding the potential molecular mechanism of COPD is of great importance. The aim of this study was to find differentially methylated/expressed genes in COPD. DNA methylation and gene expression profiles in COPD were downloaded from the dataset, followed by functional analysis of differentially-methylated/expressed genes. The potential diagnostic value of these differentially-methylated/expressed genes was determined by receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis. Expression validation of differentially-methylated/expressed genes was performed by in vitro experiment and extra online datasets. Totally, 81 hypermethylated-low expression genes and 121 hypomethylated-high expression genes were found in COPD. Among which, 9 core hypermethylated-low expression genes (CD247, CCR7, CD5, IKZF1, SLAMF1, IL2RB, CD3E, CD7 and IL7R) and 8 core hypomethylated-high expression genes (TREM1, AQP9, CD300LF, CLEC12A, NOD2, IRAK3, NLRP3 and LYZ) were identified in the protein-protein interaction (PPI) network. Moreover, these genes had a potential diagnostic utility for COPD. Some signaling pathways were identified in COPD, including T cell receptor signaling pathway, cytokine-cytokine receptor interaction, hematopoietic cell lineage, HTLV-I infection, endocytosis and Jak-STAT signaling pathway. In conclusion, differentially-methylated/expressed genes and involved signaling pathways are likely to be associated with the process of COPD.

2.2
4区

COPD 2023

Identification of candidate aberrant differentially methylated/expressed genes in asthma.

BACKGROUND:Asthma is an important non-communicable disease worldwide. DNA methylation is associated with the occurrence and development of asthma. We are aimed at assuring differential expressed genes (DEGs) modified by aberrantly methylated genes (DMGs) and pathways related to asthma by integrating bioinformatics analysis.METHODS:One mRNA dataset (GSE64913) and one gene methylation dataset (GSE137716) were selected from the Gene Expression Omnibus (GEO) database. Functional enrichment analysis was performed using GeneCodies 4.0 database. All gene expression matrices were analyzed by Gene set enrichment analysis (GSEA) software. STRING was applied to construct a protein-protein interaction (PPI) network to find the hub genes. Then, electronic validation was performed to verify the hub genes, followed by the evaluation of diagnostic value. Eventually, quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR) was utilized to detect the expression of hub genes.RESULTS:In total, 14 hypomethylated/high-expression genes and 10 hypermethylated/low-expression genes were obtained in asthma. Among them, 10 hub genes were identified in the PPI network. Functional analysis demonstrated that the differentially methylated/expressed genes were primarily associated with the lung development, cytosol and protein binding. Notably, HLA-DOA was enriched in asthma. FKBP5, WNT5A, TM4SF1, PDK4, EPAS1 and GMPR had potential diagnostic value for asthma.CONCLUSION:The project explored the pathogenesis of asthma, which may provide a research basis for the prediction and the drug development of asthma.

2.7
4区

Allergy, asthma, and clinical immunology : official journal of the Canadian Society of Allergy and Clinical Immunology 2022

Long Noncoding RNA TPRG1-AS1 Suppresses Migration of Vascular Smooth Muscle Cells and Attenuates Atherogenesis via Interacting With MYH9 Protein.

BACKGROUND:Migration of human aortic smooth muscle cells (HASMCs) contributes to the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis. This study aims to functionally characterize long noncoding RNA TPRG1-AS1 (tumor protein p63 regulated 1, antisense 1) in HASMCs and reveal the underlying mechanism of TPRG1-AS1 in HASMCs migration, neointima formation, and subsequent atherosclerosis.METHODS:The expression of TPRG1-AS1 in atherosclerotic plaques was verified a series of in silico analysis and quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction analysis. Northern blot, rapid amplification of cDNA ends and Sanger sequencing were used to determine its full length. In vitro transcription-translation assay was used to investigate the protein-coding capacity of TPRG1-AS1. RNA fluorescent in situ hybridization was used to confirm its subcellular localization. Loss- and gain-of-function studies were used to investigate the function of TPRG1-AS1. Furthermore, the effect of TPRG1-AS1 on the pathological response was evaluated in carotid balloon injury model, wire injury model, and atherosclerosis model, respectively.RESULTS:TPRG1-AS1 was significantly increased in atherosclerotic plaques. TPRG1-AS1 did not encode any proteins and its full length was 1279nt, which was bona fide a long noncoding RNA. TPRG1-AS1 was mainly localized in cytoplasmic and perinuclear regions in HASMCs. TPRG1-AS1 directly interacted with MYH9 (myosin heavy chain 9) protein in HASMCs, promoted MYH9 protein degradation through the proteasome pathway, hindered F-actin stress fiber formation, and finally inhibited HASMCs migration. Vascular smooth muscle cell-specific transgenic overexpression of TPRG1-AS1 significantly reduced neointima formation, and attenuated atherosclerosis in apolipoprotein E knockout (Apoe-/-) mice.CONCLUSIONS:This study demonstrated that TPRG1-AS1 inhibited HASMCs migration through interacting with MYH9 protein and consequently suppressed neointima formation and atherosclerosis.

8.7
1区

Arteriosclerosis, thrombosis, and vascular biology 2022

Coronary artery disease risk factors affected by RNA modification-related genetic variants.

Background:Single nucleotide polymorphisms that affect RNA modification (RNAm-SNPs) may have functional roles in coronary artery disease (CAD). The aim of this study was to identify RNAm-SNPs in CAD susceptibility loci and highlight potential risk factors.Methods:CAD-associated RNAm-SNPs were identified in the CARDIoGRAMplusC4D and UK Biobank genome-wide association studies. Gene expression and circulating protein levels affected by the RNAm-SNPs were identified by QTL analyses. Cell experiments and Mendelian randomization (MR) methods were applied to test whether the gene expression levels were associated with CAD.Results:We identified 81 RNAm-SNPs that were associated with CAD or acute myocardial infarction (AMI), including m6A-, m1A-, m5C-, A-to-I- and m7G-related SNPs. The m6A-SNPs rs3739998 in JCAD, rs148172130 in RPL14 and rs12190287 in TCF21 and the m7G-SNP rs186643756 in PVT1 were genome-wide significant. The RNAm-SNPs were associated with gene expression (e.g., MRAS, DHX36, TCF21, JCAD and SH2B3), and the expression levels were associated with CAD. Differential m6A methylation and differential expression in FTO-overexpressing human aorta smooth muscle cells and peripheral blood mononuclear cells of CAD patients and controls were detected. The RNAm-SNPs were associated with circulating levels of proteins with specific biological functions, such as blood coagulation, and the proteins (e.g., cardiotrophin-1) were confirmed to be associated with CAD and AMI in MR analyses.Conclusion:The present study identified RNAm-SNPs in CAD susceptibility genes, gene expression and circulating proteins as risk factors for CAD and suggested that RNA modification may play a role in the pathogenesis of CAD.

3.6
3区

Frontiers in cardiovascular medicine 2022