scholarly journals Normalization of cholesterol metabolism in spinal microglia alleviates neuropathic pain

2021 ◽  
Vol 218 (7) ◽  
Author(s):  
Juliana M. Navia-Pelaez ◽  
Soo-Ho Choi ◽  
Luciano dos Santos Aggum Capettini ◽  
Yining Xia ◽  
Ayelet Gonen ◽  
...  

Neuroinflammation is a major component in the transition to and perpetuation of neuropathic pain states. Spinal neuroinflammation involves activation of TLR4, localized to enlarged, cholesterol-enriched lipid rafts, designated here as inflammarafts. Conditional deletion of cholesterol transporters ABCA1 and ABCG1 in microglia, leading to inflammaraft formation, induced tactile allodynia in naive mice. The apoA-I binding protein (AIBP) facilitated cholesterol depletion from inflammarafts and reversed neuropathic pain in a model of chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy (CIPN) in wild-type mice, but AIBP failed to reverse allodynia in mice with ABCA1/ABCG1–deficient microglia, suggesting a cholesterol-dependent mechanism. An AIBP mutant lacking the TLR4-binding domain did not bind microglia or reverse CIPN allodynia. The long-lasting therapeutic effect of a single AIBP dose in CIPN was associated with anti-inflammatory and cholesterol metabolism reprogramming and reduced accumulation of lipid droplets in microglia. These results suggest a cholesterol-driven mechanism of regulation of neuropathic pain by controlling the TLR4 inflammarafts and gene expression program in microglia and blocking the perpetuation of neuroinflammation.

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shang-Tong Li ◽  
Han-Qing Zhao ◽  
Pan Zhang ◽  
Chung-Yi Liang ◽  
Yan-Ping Zhang ◽  
...  

SummaryThe roles and regulatory mechanisms of transriptome changes during aging are unclear. It has been proposed that the transcriptome suffers decay during aging owing to age-associated down-regulation of transcription factors. In this study, we characterized the role of a transcription factor DAF-16, which is a highly conserved lifespan regulator, in the normal aging process of Caenorhabditis elegans. We found that DAF-16 translocates into the nucleus in aged wild-type worms and activates the expression of hundreds of genes in response to age-associated cellular stress. Most of the age-dependent DAF-16 targets are different from the canonical DAF-16 targets downstream of insulin signaling, indicating that activation of DAF-16 during aging is not due to reduced insulin signaling from DAF-2. Further analysis showed that it is due to the loss of proteostasis during aging, at least in part. We also found that without daf-16, dramatic gene expression changes occur as early as on adult day 2, indicating that DAF-16 acts to stabilize the transcriptome during normal aging. Our results thus reveal that normal aging is not simply a process in which the gene expression program descends into chaos due to loss of regulatory activities; rather, there is active transcriptional regulation that fights aging.


Blood ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 126 (23) ◽  
pp. 2428-2428
Author(s):  
Simone Riedel ◽  
Jessica Haladyna ◽  
Brett Stevens ◽  
Craig T Jordan ◽  
Daniel Pollyea ◽  
...  

Abstract Meningioma-1 (MN1) is frequently overexpressed in AML, and associated with a poor prognosis. In addition, MN1-TEL fusions are found in AML, underscoring the importance and possible driver function of MN1 in AML. Forced expression of MN1 in murine hematopoietic progenitors induces a highly aggressive leukemia as a single hit. The mechanism by which MN1 induces AML is unclear. MN1 is a transcriptional co-activator with almost no sequence or structural similarity to any other protein, and no targeted approaches to MN1-high AML are currently available. We sought to understand the mechanism by which MN1 induces AML with the goal to identify targetable downstream effectors. We found that the gene expression program induced by forced expression of MN1 in hematopoietic progenitors substantially overlaps with a set of genes that is downregulated in response to loss of the histone methyltransferase Dot1l in normal hematopoietic progenitors. This led us to hypothesize that the MN1-induced leukemogenic gene expression program might be dependent on Dot1l. We established MN1 leukemias on a Dot1l conditional knockout background and found that of Dot1l indeed induced cell cycle arrest, differentiation and apoptosis, and prolonged the survival of transplanted mice in vivo. This was associated with the downregulation of the MN1-induced gene expression program. We next sought to investigate a possible mechanism for this observation. MN1 has been reported to be recruited to its target genes based on ChIP-seq, but it does not itself possess sequence specific DNA binding capacity. The mediator of this recruitment is thus unclear. Since Dot1l has been shown to be required for the high level expression of MLL-fusion target genes in MLL-rearranged leukemias, we asked whether MN1 might cooperate with wild type MLL, explaining the dependence on Dot1l. In order to test whether wild-type MLL is required for MN1 leukemias, we established AML on a MLL-conditional background. Results phenocopied the loss of Dot1l, suggesting that MN1 cooperates with both MLL and Dot1l to induce leukemia. We are currently investigating whether MN1 binds MLL and/or DOT1L directly to exert this function using biochemical and genomic approaches. Finally, we asked whether our findings had relevance for human AML. MN1 overexpression is found over a wide range of different molecular subgroups but is relatively under-represented in MLL-rearranged AML, suggesting redundant pathways. A subgroup that frequently displays very high levels of MN1 expression are AML with a complex karyotype with loss of 5q or 7 sequences, and high expression of HOXA cluster genes. We analyzed the response of a human cell line and two patient samples with high MN1/high HOXA9 expression to inhibition of DOT1L, and found induction of differentiation and apoptosis similar to our mouse model. In summary, our data suggest that MN1 cooperates with wild type MLL to induce a leukemogenic gene expression program that results in AML, and that this program may be targetable by inhibiting DOT1L. Disclosures Pollyea: GlycoMimetics: Other: Member of data safety monitoring board; Celgene: Consultancy, Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees, Research Funding; Ariad: Consultancy; Karyopharm: Consultancy; Pfizer: Consultancy; Agios: Consultancy, Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees. Armstrong:Epizyme, Inc: Consultancy. Ernst:Amgen: Other: 528 shares of stock. Neff:Epizyme: Patents & Royalties: US Patent 62/026583 Dot1l Inhibition in Patients with MN1 High AML filed 7/2014 Coinventor: Tobias Neff.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jin-Ran Chen ◽  
Oxana P. Lazarenko ◽  
Dongzheng Gai ◽  
Can Li ◽  
Michael L. Blackburn ◽  
...  

The polycomb group (PcG) protein enhancer of zeste homologue 2 (Ezh2), a histone lysine methyltransferase is associated with epigenetic regulation of numerous cellular processes, it is not yet clear on its involvement in bone cell development and homeostasis. Conditional deletion of Ezh2 in macrophages resulted in significant increases in postnatal bone growth in the first 6 months of life, but tibia length and body weight gains were not different in knockout mice compared with their wild type controls. Significantly decreased osteoclastogenesis but increased bone mass without osteopetrosis were found in Ezh2 CKO mice. In contrast to female mice, one floxed Ezh2 gene copy recombinant with LysM-Cre+ (Ezh2flox/+LysM-Cre+) produced increased bone mass in young adult male mice compared with control mice (Ezh2flox/flox, LysM-Cre+ and wild type). Deletion of Ezh2 in macrophages triggered increased gene expression of osteoclast suppressors, IRF8, MafB and Arg1 due to decreased Ezh2-induced trimethylation of H3K27me3. These findings suggest that pre-osteoclastic cell differentiation is under epigenetic control of osteoclast suppressive gene expression via an Ezh2-dependent mechanisms.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (7) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ian Edward Gentle ◽  
Isabel Moelter ◽  
Mohamed Tarek Badr ◽  
Konstanze Döhner ◽  
Michael Lübbert ◽  
...  

AbstractMutations in the transcription factor C/EBPα are found in ~10% of all acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) cases but the contribution of these mutations to leukemogenesis is incompletely understood. We here use a mouse model of granulocyte progenitors expressing conditionally active HoxB8 to assess the cell biological and molecular activity of C/EBPα-mutations associated with human AML. Both N-terminal truncation and C-terminal AML-associated mutations of C/EBPα substantially altered differentiation of progenitors into mature neutrophils in cell culture. Closer analysis of the C/EBPα-K313-duplication showed expansion and prolonged survival of mutant C/EBPα-expressing granulocytes following adoptive transfer into mice. C/EBPα-protein containing the K313-mutation further showed strongly enhanced transcriptional activity compared with the wild-type protein at certain promoters. Analysis of differentially regulated genes in cells overexpressing C/EBPα-K313 indicates a strong correlation with genes regulated by C/EBPα. Analysis of transcription factor enrichment in the differentially regulated genes indicated a strong reliance of SPI1/PU.1, suggesting that despite reduced DNA binding, C/EBPα-K313 is active in regulating target gene expression and acts largely through a network of other transcription factors. Strikingly, the K313 mutation caused strongly elevated expression of C/EBPα-protein, which could also be seen in primary K313 mutated AML blasts, explaining the enhanced C/EBPα activity in K313-expressing cells.


BMC Genomics ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
E Soltanmohammadi ◽  
Y Zhang ◽  
I Chatzistamou ◽  
H. Kiaris

Abstract Background Genes that belong to the same network are frequently co-expressed, but collectively, how the coordination of the whole transcriptome is perturbed during aging remains unclear. To explore this, we calculated the correlation of each gene in the transcriptome with every other, in the brain of young and older outbred deer mice (P. leucopus and P. maniculatus). Results In about 25 % of the genes, coordination was inversed during aging. Gene Ontology analysis in both species, for the genes that exhibited inverse transcriptomic coordination during aging pointed to alterations in the perception of smell, a known impairment occurring during aging. In P. leucopus, alterations in genes related to cholesterol metabolism were also identified. Among the genes that exhibited the most pronounced inversion in their coordination profiles during aging was THBS4, that encodes for thrombospondin-4, a protein that was recently identified as rejuvenation factor in mice. Relatively to its breadth, abolishment of coordination was more prominent in the long-living P. leucopus than in P. maniculatus but in the latter, the intensity of de-coordination was higher. Conclusions There sults suggest that aging is associated with more stringent retention of expression profiles for some genes and more abrupt changes in others, while more subtle but widespread changes in gene expression appear protective. Our findings shed light in the mode of the transcriptional changes occurring in the brain during aging and suggest that strategies aiming to broader but more modest changes in gene expression may be preferrable to correct aging-associated deregulation in gene expression.


Genetics ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 217 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Amir Fallahshahroudi ◽  
Martin Johnsson ◽  
Enrico Sorato ◽  
S J Kumari A Ubhayasekera ◽  
Jonas Bergquist ◽  
...  

Abstract Domestic chickens are less fearful, have a faster sexual development, grow bigger, and lay more eggs than their primary ancestor, the red junglefowl. Several candidate genetic variants selected during domestication have been identified, but only a few studies have directly linked them with distinct phenotypic traits. Notably, a variant of the thyroid stimulating hormone receptor (TSHR) gene has been under strong positive selection over the past millennium, but it’s function and mechanisms of action are still largely unresolved. We therefore assessed the abundance of the domestic TSHR variant and possible genomic selection signatures in an extensive data set comprising multiple commercial and village chicken populations as well as wild-living extant members of the genus Gallus. Furthermore, by mean of extensive backcrossing we introgressed the wild-type TSHR variant from red junglefowl into domestic White Leghorn chickens and investigated gene expression, hormone levels, cold adaptation, and behavior in chickens possessing either the wild-type or domestic TSHR variant. While the domestic TSHR was the most common variant in all studied domestic populations and in one of two red junglefowl population, it was not detected in the other Gallus species. Functionally, the individuals with the domestic TSHR variant had a lower expression of the TSHR in the hypothalamus and marginally higher in the thyroid gland than wild-type TSHR individuals. Expression of TSHB and DIO2, two regulators of sexual maturity and reproduction in birds, was higher in the pituitary gland of the domestic-variant chickens. Furthermore, the domestic variant was associated with higher activity in the open field test. Our findings confirm that the spread of the domestic TSHR variant is limited to domesticated chickens, and to a lesser extent, their wild counterpart, the red junglefowl. Furthermore, we showed that effects of genetic variability in TSHR mirror key differences in gene expression and behavior previously described between the red junglefowl and domestic chicken.


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