scholarly journals Post-transcriptional mechanisms distinguish human and chimp forebrain progenitor cells

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniela A Grassi ◽  
Per Ludvik Brattås ◽  
Jeovanis G Valdés ◽  
Melinda Rezeli ◽  
Marie E Jönsson ◽  
...  

AbstractThe forebrain has expanded in size and complexity during hominoid evolution. The contribution of post-transcriptional control of gene expression to this process is unclear. Using in-depth proteomics in combination with bulk and single-cell RNA sequencing, we analyzed protein and RNA levels of almost 5,000 genes in human and chimpanzee forebrain neural progenitor cells. We found that species differences in protein expression level was often independent of RNA levels, and more frequent than transcriptomic differences. Low-abundant proteins were more likely to show species-specific expression levels, while proteins expressed at a high level appeared to have evolved under stricter constraints. Our study implicates a previously unappreciated broad and important role for post-transcriptional regulatory mechanisms in the evolution of the human forebrain.

2021 ◽  
Vol 7 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pilar Menendez-Gil ◽  
Alejandro Toledo-Arana

Bacterial messenger RNAs (mRNAs) are composed of 5′ and 3′ untranslated regions (UTRs) that flank the coding sequences (CDSs). In eukaryotes, 3′UTRs play key roles in post-transcriptional regulatory mechanisms. Shortening or deregulation of these regions is associated with diseases such as cancer and metabolic disorders. Comparatively, little is known about the functions of 3′UTRs in bacteria. Over the past few years, 3′UTRs have emerged as important players in the regulation of relevant bacterial processes such as virulence, iron metabolism, and biofilm formation. This MiniReview is an update for the different 3′UTR-mediated mechanisms that regulate gene expression in bacteria. Some of these include 3′UTRs that interact with the 5′UTR of the same transcript to modulate translation, 3′UTRs that are targeted by specific ribonucleases, RNA-binding proteins and small RNAs (sRNAs), and 3′UTRs that act as reservoirs of trans-acting sRNAs, among others. In addition, recent findings regarding a differential evolution of bacterial 3′UTRs and its impact in the species-specific expression of orthologous genes are also discussed.


Blood ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 134 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 1183-1183 ◽  
Author(s):  
Justin Le ◽  
Vi Luan Ha ◽  
Fan Li ◽  
Virginia Camacho ◽  
Sweta Patel ◽  
...  

The initial stages of thymopoiesis are characterized by the induction of T-lineage genes (specification) and the repression of alternative lineage genes (commitment). Multilineage (Thy1 and Thy2) and committed (Thy3) populations representing successive differentiation stages have been defined within CD34+ progenitor cells in the human thymus by the expression of CD7 and CD1a. However, due to intra-population heterogeneity and unstudied transitional states between populations, our understanding of the transcriptional programs that launch human thymopoiesis remains incomplete. Also, the interpretation of species specific gene expression profiles seen in these populations is confounded by species related differences in progenitor immunophenotypes. To our knowledge, whole transcriptome profiles of human thymic CD34+ progenitors at single cell resolution have not been reported. To resolve the transcriptional landscape of the initial stages of thymopoiesis, we performed single cell RNA-Seq (sRNA-Seq) of FACS sorted unfractionated human thymic CD34+CD4-CD8- cells from 3 donors using 10X (1 thymus, 5000 cells), Indrop (1 thymus, 2000 cells), or BD genomics (1 thymus, 192 index sorted cells) sequencing Averaged sRNA-Seq expression profiles recapitulated previous bulk RNASeq data validating our sRNA-Seq pipeline. Transcriptomes of index sorted cells mapped appropriately to those predicted to be Thy1,Thy2, or Thy3 cells from CD34, CD7, and CD1a RNA levels in the 10x and indrops data indicating the validity of identifying Thy1-3 cells by RNA levels. Seurat clustering showed that CD34+ thymocytes consist of a continuum of cell states rather than discrete populations. Nine cell states marked by gradual changes in CD2, CD44, CD7, CD1A, and CD34 RNA levels were seen: state 1 (Thy1), states 2-6 (Thy2), and states 7-9 (Thy3). Thy2 and Thy3 cells spanned several previously undescribed states with distinct expression profiles. Single cells co-expressing stem and T-lineage genes were seen in state 1 indicating an early onset of T-lineage priming that occurs prior to downregulation of stem cell genes. Within Thy2 cells, high expression of stem and alternative lineage genes was mostly restricted to states 2 and 3, which represent novel Thy2 subpopulations. State 2 cells co-expressed T-cell and high levels of innate immune genes, particularly IRF8. State 3 cells showed low CD2 expression and co-expressed T-cell and stem, myeloid, B-cell, and/ or NK genes. These results indicate concomitant priming of multiple lineage transcriptional programs rather than just the presence of unilineage gene program expressing subpopulations in the earliest thymic progenitor cells. In preliminary experiments, FACS sorted CD2 low Thy2 cells generated T-cells as well as a higher output of alternative lineage cells than CD2 high Thy2 cells. States 7-9 showed committed profiles with upregulated T-cell genes and silenced stem and alternative lineage genes. While state 9 (late Thy3) showed high RAG1 expression and cell cycle arrest, most Thy3 cells (states 7 and 8) were cycling indicating that commitment, which precedes T-cell receptor rearrangement, is not associated with proliferation arrest. Monocle pseudotime analysis finely resolved expression profiles along the differentiation trajectory within Thy1-3 populations: e.g. genes repressed earlier (e.g. MEIS1) vs later (e.g. DTX1). BCL11B, a key T-cell commitment gene was one of the earliest transcription factors (TF) to be induced during human thymopoiesis, and upregulation of TCF7 and BCL11B occurred concurrently. In contrast, in mice induction of Bcl11b occurs later after Tcf7 is fully upregulated. Thus, the initial stages of thymopoiesis are characterized by a continuum of multilineage transcriptional priming followed by a gradual transition to a T-lineage restricted gene program, a process similar to that recently described for lineage commitment of bone marrow hematopoietic progenitors but not previously reported in the thymus. SRNA-Seq yielded expression profiles along numerous data-points on the differentiation trajectory within heterogenous populations, providing high transcriptional resolution not possible with bulk data. We found differences in key TF expression profiles that could imply species specific regulatory mechanisms. Our data are a resource for elucidating transcriptional networks in T-cell development and T-cell leukemias. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2021 ◽  
Vol 118 (6) ◽  
pp. e2022590118 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fangzhou Zhao ◽  
Zhipeng Zhou ◽  
Yunkun Dang ◽  
Hyunsoo Na ◽  
Catherine Adam ◽  
...  

Codon usage bias is a fundamental feature of all genomes and plays an important role in determining gene expression levels. The codon usage was thought to influence gene expression mainly due to its impact on translation. Recently, however, codon usage was shown to affect transcription of fungal and mammalian genes, indicating the existence of a gene regulatory phenomenon with unknown mechanism. In Neurospora, codon usage biases strongly correlate with mRNA levels genome-wide, and here we show that the correlation between codon usage and RNA levels is maintained in the nucleus. In addition, codon optimality is tightly correlated with both total and nuclear RNA levels, suggesting that codon usage broadly influences mRNA levels through transcription in a translation-independent manner. A large-scale RNA sequencing-based genetic screen in Neurospora identified 18 candidate factors that when deleted decreased the genome-wide correlation between codon usage and RNA levels and reduced the codon usage effect on gene expression. Most of these factors, such as the H3K36 methyltransferase, are chromatin regulators or transcription factors. Together, our results suggest that the transcriptional effect of codon usage is mediated by multiple transcriptional regulatory mechanisms.


2010 ◽  
Vol 118 (11) ◽  
pp. 1571-1577 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kathrin Gassmann ◽  
Josef Abel ◽  
Hanno Bothe ◽  
Thomas Haarmann-Stemmann ◽  
Hans F. Merk ◽  
...  

2015 ◽  
Vol 43 (6) ◽  
pp. 1285-1295 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tajekesa K.P. Blee ◽  
Nicola K. Gray ◽  
Matthew Brook

Post-transcriptional control of gene expression is critical for normal cellular function and viability and many of the proteins that mediate post-transcriptional control are themselves subject to regulation by post-translational modification (PTM), e.g. phosphorylation. However, proteome-wide studies are revealing new complexities in the PTM status of mammalian proteins, in particular large numbers of novel methylated and acetylated residues are being identified. Here we review studied examples of methylation/acetylation-dependent regulation of post-transcriptional regulatory protein (PTRP) function and present collated PTM data that points to the huge potential for regulation of mRNA fate by these PTMs.


2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Mackensie R. Gross ◽  
Rosie Hsu ◽  
Kirk W. Deitsch

Abstract Background The most severe form of human malaria is caused by the protozoan parasite Plasmodium falciparum. This unicellular organism is a member of a subgenus of Plasmodium called the Laverania that infects apes, with P. falciparum being the only member that infects humans. The exceptional virulence of this species to humans can be largely attributed to a family of variant surface antigens placed by the parasites onto the surface of infected red blood cells that mediate adherence to the vascular endothelium. These proteins are encoded by a large, multicopy gene family called var, with each var gene encoding a different form of the protein. By changing which var gene is expressed, parasites avoid immune recognition, a process called antigenic variation that underlies the chronic nature of malaria infections. Results Here we show that the common ancestor of the branch of the Laverania lineage that includes the human parasite underwent a remarkable change in the organization and structure of elements linked to the complex transcriptional regulation displayed by the var gene family. Unlike the other members of the Laverania, the clade that gave rise to P. falciparum evolved distinct subsets of var genes distinguishable by different upstream transcriptional regulatory regions that have been associated with different expression profiles and virulence properties. In addition, two uniquely conserved var genes that have been proposed to play a role in coordinating transcriptional switching similarly arose uniquely within this clade. We hypothesize that these changes originated at a time of dramatic climatic change on the African continent that is predicted to have led to significant changes in transmission dynamics, thus selecting for patterns of antigenic variation that enabled lengthier, more chronic infections. Conclusions These observations suggest that changes in transmission dynamics selected for significant alterations in the transcriptional regulatory mechanisms that mediate antigenic variation in the parasite lineage that includes P. falciparum. These changes likely underlie the chronic nature of these infections as well as their exceptional virulence.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Juan Moriano ◽  
Cedric Boeckx

AbstractRecent paleogenomic studies have highlighted a very small set of proteins carrying modern human-specific missense changes in comparison to our closest extinct relatives. Despite being frequently alluded to as highly relevant, species-specific differences in regulatory regions remain understudied. Here, we integrate data from paleogenomics, chromatin modification and physical interaction, and single-cell gene expression of neural progenitor cells to report a set of genes whose enhancers and/or promoters harbor modern human single nucleotide changes that appeared after the split from the Neanderthal/Denisovan lineage. These regulatory regions exert their functions at early stages of cortical development and control a set of genes among which those related to chromatin regulation stand out. This functional category has not yet figured prominently in modern human evolution studies. Specifically, we find an enrichment for the SETD1A histone methyltransferase complex, known to regulate WNT-signaling for the generation and proliferation of intermediate progenitor cells.


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Adam G. Diehl ◽  
Alan P. Boyle

ABSTRACTThe mouse has been widely used as a model system in which to study human genetic mechanisms. However, part of the difficulty in translating findings from mouse is that, despite high levels of gene conservation, regulatory control networks between human and mouse have been extensively rewired. To understand common themes of regulatory control we look beyond physical sharing of regulatory sequence, where extensive turnover of individual transcription factor binding sites complicates cross-species prediction of specific functions, and instead look at conserved properties of the regulatory code itself. We define regulatory conservation in terms of a grammar with shared, species-specific, and tissue-specific segments, and show that this grammar is more predictive of shared chromatin states and gene expression profiles than shared occupancy alone. Furthermore, we demonstrate a marked enrichment of disease associated variation in conserved grammatical patterns. These findings offer new understanding of transcriptional regulatory mechanisms shared between human and mouse.


Biomolecules ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
pp. 313
Author(s):  
Younghoon Lee ◽  
Hee-Seung Lee ◽  
Meehyein Kim ◽  
Heegwon Shin

Flexibility in signal transmission is essential for high-level brain function. This flexibility is achieved through strict spatial and temporal control of gene expression in neurons. Given the key regulatory roles of a variety of noncoding RNAs (ncRNAs) in neurons, studying neuron-specific ncRNAs provides an important basis for understanding molecular principles of brain function. This approach will have wide use in understanding the pathogenesis of brain diseases and in the development of therapeutic agents in the future. Brain cytoplasmic RNAs (BC RNAs) are a leading paradigm for research on neuronal ncRNAs. Since the first confirmation of brain-specific expression of BC RNAs in 1982, their investigation has been an area of active research. In this review, we summarize key studies on the characteristics and functions of BC RNAs in neurons.


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