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Publication
Journal: Blood
December/1/2018
Publication
Journal: Leukemia
April/14/2020
Publication
Journal: Journal of Infection and Chemotherapy
July/27/2019
Abstract
We report a case of a 27-year old woman with persistent fever and pancytopenia who had multiple episodes of a hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis (HLH) like condition. The criterion for HLH was satisfied; primary cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection was identified as the cause. Further examination revealed a GATA binding protein 2 mutation. Reports of GATAs deficiency presenting with HLH after primary CMV infection is very limited. As early recognition and diagnosis will improve patients' outcomes, internists and infectious disease specialists should be aware of this disease.
Publication
Journal: Cell and Tissue Research
November/2/2009
Abstract
Serotonergic (5-HT) neurons of the reticular formation play a key role in the modulation of behavior, and their dysfunction is associated with severe neurological and psychiatric disorders, such as depression and schizophrenia. However, the molecular mechanisms underlying the differentiation of the progenitor cells and the specification of the 5-HT phenotype are not fully understood. A primary neurosphere cell-culture system from mouse ventral rostral hindbrain at embryonic day 12 was therefore established. The generated primary neurospheres comprised progenitor cells and fully differentiated neurons. Bromodeoxyuridine incorporation experiments in combination with immunocytochemistry for neural markers revealed the proliferation capacity of the neural multipotent hindbrain progenitors within neurospheres and their ability to differentiate toward the neuronal lineage and serotonergic phenotype. Gene expression analysis by reverse transcription with the polymerase chain reaction showed that the neurospheres were regionally specified, as reflected by the expression of the transcription factors Gata2 and Pet1. Treatment of dissociated primary neurospheres with exogenous Shh significantly increased the number of 5-HT-immunopositive cells compared with controls, whereas neutralization of endogenous Shh significantly decreased the number of 5-HT neurons. Thus, the primary neurosphere culture system presented here allows the expansion of hindbrain progenitor cells and the experimental control of their differentiation toward the serotonergic phenotype. This culture system is therefore a useful model for in vitro studies dealing with the development of 5-HT neurons.
Publication
Journal: Oncotarget
April/2/2017
Abstract
Intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasm (IPMN) is the most common cystic preneoplastic lesion of pancreatic cancer. We used an approach coupling high resolution cytogenetic analysis (Affymetrix Oncoscan FFPE Array) with clinically-oriented bioinformatic interpretation of data to understand the most relevant alterations of precursor lesions at different stages to identify new diagnostic markers.
We identified multiple copy number alterations, particularly in lesions with severe dysplasia, with 7 IPMN with low-intermediate dysplasia carrying a nearly normal karyotype and 13 IPMN with complex Karyotype >> 4 alterations), showing high grade dysplasia. A specific gain of chromosome arm 3q was found in IPMN with complex Karyotype (92%). This gain of 3q is particularly interesting for the presence of oncogenes such as PIK3CA, GATA2 and TERC that are part of pathways that deregulate cell growth and promote disease progression. Quantitative PCR and FISH analysis confirmed the data . Further demonstration of the overexpression of the PIK3CA gene supports the identification of this alteration as a possible biomarker in the early identification of patients with IPMN at higher risk for disease progression.
High resolution cytogenetic analysis was performed in 20 formalin fixed paraffin embedded samples of IPMN by Oncoscan FFPE assay. Results were validated by qPCR and FISH analysis.
The identification of these markers at an early stage of disease onset could help to identify patients at risk for cancer progression and new candidates for a more specific targeted therapy.
Publication
Journal: Scientific Reports
August/14/2019
Abstract
The patho-mechanism of somatic driver mutations in cancer usually involves transcription, but the proportion of mutations and wild-type alleles transcribed from DNA to RNA is largely unknown. We systematically compared the variant allele frequencies of recurrently mutated genes in DNA and RNA sequencing data of 246 acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) patients. We observed that 95% of all detected variants were transcribed while the rest were not detectable in RNA sequencing with a minimum read-depth cut-off (10x). Our analysis focusing on 11 genes harbouring recurring mutations demonstrated allelic imbalance (AI) in most patients. GATA2, RUNX1, TET2, SRSF2, IDH2, PTPN11, WT1, NPM1 and CEBPA showed significant AIs. While the effect size was small in general, GATA2 exhibited the largest allelic imbalance. By pooling heterogeneous data from three independent AML cohorts with paired DNA and RNA sequencing (N = 253), we could validate the preferential transcription of GATA2-mutated alleles. Differential expression analysis of the genes with significant AI showed no significant differential gene and isoform expression for the mutated genes, between mutated and wild-type patients. In conclusion, our analyses identified AI in nine out of eleven recurrently mutated genes. AI might be a common phenomenon in AML which potentially contributes to leukaemogenesis.
Publication
Journal: Rinsho ketsueki] The Japanese journal of clinical hematology
July/8/2019
Abstract
Myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) and myelodysplastic/myeloproliferative neoplasms (MDS/MPN) are heterogeneous myeloid neoplasms that frequently evolve into secondary acute myeloid leukemia (sAML). Recent progress in next-generation sequencing technologies has allowed us to discover frequent mutations throughout the coding regions of MDS, MDS/MPN, and sAML, subsequently providing information on more than 60 driver genes in these diseases. As shown by many study groups recently, such driver mutations are acquired in a gene-specific fashion. DDX41 and SAMD9/SAMD9L mutations are observed in germline cells long before MDS presentation. In blood samples from healthy elderly individuals, somatic DNMT3A, TET2, and ASXL1 mutations are detected as age-related clonal hematopoiesis and supposed to be a risk factor for hematological neoplasms. Recent reports on MDS have shown that mutations in genes such as NRAS and FLT3, designated as Type I genes, were significantly associated with leukemic evolution. Another type (Type II) of genes, including RUNX1 and GATA2, has been shown to be related to the progression from low-risk to high-risk MDS. These driver mutations are significantly concomitant during disease progression. Overall, various types of driver mutations are sequentially acquired in MDS, accounting for the heterogeneity of these disorders.
Publication
Journal: Casopis Lekaru Ceskych
November/8/2006
Abstract
The ecotropic viral integration site 1 (EVI1) gene was identified as a common locus of retroviral integration in myeloid tumors found in mice. EVI1 gene is highly conserved through evolution and human gene EVI1 on chromosome 3q26 encodes zinc fingers-containing transcription factor. EVI1 is expressed in nonhematopoietic tissues but not in normal blood or bone marrow. EVI1 was detected in hematopoietic cells in retrovirus-induced myeloid leukemias in mice and several reports documented EVI1 expression in human myelodysplastic syndromes and other hematologic malignancies without 3q26 translocations. EVI1 is abnormally expressed in human myeloid leukemias that are associated with the t(3;3)(q21;q26), t(3;21)(q26;q22), inv(3)(q21q26) and other chromosomal rearrangements. EVI1 is overexpressed in some ovarian cancers and human colon cancer cell lines and may play a role in the initiation and/or progression of solid tumors, as well as hematopoietic malignancies. EVI1 is a transcriptional repressor which inhibits transforming growth factor beta (TGFbeta) family signalling by binding signal transducers (Smad proteins) and recruiting transcriptional corepressors. TGFbeta is an important regulator of proliferation, differentiation, apoptosis and migration of cells. EVI1 inhibits TGFbeta-mediated apoptosis. Knockdown of EVI1 function by small interference RNA increases the sensitivity of malignant cells to TGFbeta-mediated or other inducer-mediated apoptosis. Overexpressed EVI-1 blocks granulocyte and erythroid differentiation and possess the ability of growth promotion in some types of cells. EVI1 functions in some cases as a transcriptional activator which stimulates for example GATA2 and GATA3 promoters. The study of EVI1 target genes will help to clear the mechanism by which EVI1 upregulates cell proliferation, impairs cell differentiation, and induces cell transformation.
Authors
Publication
Journal: Pigment Cell and Melanoma Research
November/19/2017
Abstract
GATA2 deficiency is a recently described genetic disorder affecting hematopoietic stem cells and is associated with immunodeficiency, hematologic malignancy, and various cutaneous pathologies including cutaneous tumors. To explore the incidence and clinical course of melanoma in patients with germline GATA2 deficiencies, we conducted a retrospective chart review of 71 such patients and identified two with invasive melanoma. One melanoma was diagnosed early because it was associated with pruritus due to a graft-versus-tumor effect following bone marrow transplantation. The other one, a lentigo maligna melanoma, was locally excised but progressed to widespread metastasis and death several years later. Our observations and published studies of melanoma biology suggest an association between decreased GATA2 expression and melanoma progression. These findings suggest that GATA2 deficient patients may have an increased risk of melanoma and should be observed closely for new or changing skin lesions.
Publication
Journal: Journal of the European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology
April/25/2017
Publication
Journal: Journal of Applied Genetics
June/13/2020
Abstract
There is an agreement about joint genetic and environmental background of musical reception and performance. Musical abilities tend to cluster in families. The studies done on a random population, twins and families of gifted musicians provided a strong support for genetic contribution. Modern biomolecular techniques exploring linkage analysis, variation of gene copy number, scanning for whole-genome expression helped to identify genes, or chromosome regions associated with musical aptitude. Some studies were focused on rare ability to recognize tone without reference that is known as a perfect pitch where a far ethnic differentiation was established. On the other hand, gene deletion leading to dysfunction in amusical individuals also indicated appropriate loci "by negation." The strongest support for an association of genes with musicality was provided for genes: AVPR1 (12q14.2), SLC6A4 (17q11.2), GALM (2p22), PCDH7 (4p15.1), GATA2 (3q21.3), and few others as well for 4q22, 4q23, and 8q13-21 chromosome bands.
Keywords: Absolute pitch; Amusia; Genes; Musicality.
Publication
Journal: Rinsho ketsueki] The Japanese journal of clinical hematology
July/9/2018
Abstract
An 18-year-old man was diagnosed with Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) -associated hemophagocytic syndrome (HPS) and treated with prednisolone (PSL) at a previous hospital. During PSL tapering, the HPS symptoms reappeared, and the patient was referred to our hospital. Increased PSL improved the symptoms, but the EBV infection remained unresolved. At age 20, he was admitted to our hospital for newly developed pneumonia and diagnosed with myelodysplastic syndrome (refractory cytopenia with multilineage dysplasia) (MDS-RCMD; normal karyotype, IPSS: Int-1) by bone marrow examination. MDS remission was achieved following bone marrow transplantation from an unrelated donor, and he is currently alive without relapse. The patient's father had also been diagnosed with MDS when he was young and died from leukoencephalopathy at approximately 50 years old. These observations support a diagnosis of familial MDS. GATA2 mutation p.R230Hfs*44 was identified in both bone marrow and control cells (buccal swab) at MDS diagnosis, and he was diagnosed with monocytopenia and mycobacterial infection (MonoMAC) syndrome. Furthermore, an acquired STAG2 mutation (splicing site change, c.820-2A>G) in the bone marrow cells was also identified, which might contribute to MDS progression.
Publication
Journal: Pediatric Blood and Cancer
June/19/2020
Publication
Journal: Journal of Pathology
March/27/2019
Abstract
The establishment of the peristaltic machinery of the ureter is precisely controlled to cope with the onset of urine production in the fetal kidney. Retinoic acid (RA) has been identified as a signal that maintains the mesenchymal progenitors of the contractile smooth muscle cells (SMCs), while WNTs, SHH, and BMP4 induce their differentiation. How the activity of the underlying signalling pathways is controlled in time, space, and quantity to activate coordinately the SMC programme is poorly understood. Here, we provide evidence that the Zn-finger transcription factor GATA2 is involved in this crosstalk. In mice, Gata2 is expressed in the undifferentiated ureteric mesenchyme under control of RA signalling. Conditional deletion of Gata2 by a Tbx18cre driver results in hydroureter formation at birth, associated with a loss of differentiated SMCs. Analysis at earlier stages and in explant cultures revealed that SMC differentiation is not abrogated but delayed and that dilated ureters can partially regain peristaltic activity when relieved of urine pressure. Molecular analysis identified increased RA signalling as one factor contributing to the delay in SMC differentiation, possibly caused by reduced direct transcriptional activation of Cyp26a1, which encodes an RA-degrading enzyme. Our study identified GATA2 as a feedback inhibitor of RA signalling important for precise onset of ureteric SMC differentiation, and suggests that in a subset of cases of human congenital ureter dilatations, temporary relief of urine pressure may ameliorate the differentiation status of the SMC coat. © 2019 Pathological Society of Great Britain and Ireland. Published by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Publication
Journal: FEBS Letters
June/19/2000
Abstract
The acetyl-CoA transporter gene (Acatn) encodes a hydrophobic, multitransmembrane protein that is involved in the process of O-acetylation of sialic acid residues on gangliosides. O-Acetylated gangliosides have been found to play important roles in tissue development and organization during early embryonic stages. We have cloned the gene for mouse acetyl-CoA transporter. The gene spans approximately 20 kb and is composed of seven exons and six introns. A single transcription initiation site, 371 bp upstream of the ATG start codon, was identified. The promoter region was found to lack a TATA box. However, several potential transcription factor binding motifs such as AP1, AP2, C/EBPalpha, C/EBPbeta, HSF, GATA2 and MZF1 were identified in the promoter region.
Publication
Journal: Phytomedicine
May/7/2017
Abstract
BACKGROUND
The F-box protein 7 (FBXO7) mutations have been identified in families with early-onset parkinsonism and pyramidal tract signs, and designated as PARK15. In addition, FBXO7 mutations were found in typical and young onset Parkinson's disease (PD). Evidence has also shown that FBXO7 plays an important role in the development of dopaminergic neurons and increased stability and overexpression of FBXO7 may be beneficial to PD.
OBJECTIVE
We screened extracts of medicinal herbs to enhance FBXO7 expression for neuroprotection in MPP+-treated cells.
METHODS
Promoter reporter assay in HEK-293 cells was used to examine the cis/trans elements controlling FBXO7 expression and to screen extracts of medicinal herbs enhancing FBXO7 expression. MTT assay was performed to assess cell viability of MPP+-treated HEK-293/SH-SY5Y cells. In addition, proteasome activity, mitochondrial membrane potential and FBXO7/TRAF2/GATA2 protein expression were evaluated.
RESULTS
We demonstrated that -202--57 region of the FBXO7 promoter is likely to contain sequences that are bound by positive trans protein factors to activate FBXO7 expression and GATA2 is the main trans protein factor enhancing FBXO7 expression. Extracts of medicinal herbs Oenanthe javanica (Blume) DC. (Umbelliferae), Casuarina equisetifolia L. (Casuarinaceae), and Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench (Gramineae) improved cell viability of both MPP+-treated HEK-293 and SH-SY5Y cells, rescued proteasome activity in MPP+-treated HEK-293 cells, and restored mitochondrial membrane potential in MPP+-treated SH-SY5Y cells. These protection effects of herbal extracts are acting through enhancing FBXO7 and decreasing TRAF2 expression, which is probably mediated by GATA2 induction.
CONCLUSIONS
Collectively, our study provides new targets, FBXO7 and its regulator GATA2, for the development of potential treatments of PD.
Publication
Journal: Stem Cells
July/31/2016
Abstract
Based on its physical interactions with histone-modifying enzymes, the transcriptional corepressor Rcor1 has been implicated in the epigenetic regulation blood cell development. Previously, we have demonstrated that Rcor1 is essential for the maturation of definitive erythroid cells and fetal survival. To determine the functional role of Rcor1 in steady-state hematopoiesis in the adult, we used a conditional knockout approach. Here, we show that the loss of Rcor1 expression results in the rapid onset of severe anemia due to a complete, cell autonomous block in the maturation of committed erythroid progenitors. By contrast, both the frequency of megakaryocyte progenitors and their capacity to produce platelets were normal. Although the frequency of common lymphoid progenitors and T cells was not altered, B cells were significantly reduced and showed increased apoptosis. However, Rcor1-deficient bone marrow sustained normal levels of B-cells following transplantation, indicating a non-cell autonomous requirement for Rcor1 in B-cell survival. Evaluation of the myelomonocytic lineage revealed an absence of mature neutrophils and a significant increase in the absolute number of monocytic cells. Rcor1-deficient monocytes were less apoptotic and showed ∼100-fold more colony-forming activity than their normal counterparts, but did not give rise to leukemia. Moreover, Rcor1(-/-) monocytes exhibited extensive, cytokine-dependent self-renewal and overexpressed genes associated with hematopoietic stem/progenitor cell expansion including Gata2, Meis1, and Hoxa9. Taken together, these data demonstrate that Rcor1 is essential for the normal differentiation of myeloerythroid progenitors and for appropriately regulating self-renewal activity in the monocyte lineage.
Publication
Journal: Cancer Cell International
October/1/2012
Abstract
We have investigated the role of erythroid transcription factors mRNA expression in patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) in the context of cytogenetic and other prognostic molecular markers, such as FMS-like Tyrosine Kinase 3 (FLT3), Nucleophosmin 1 (NPM1), and CCAAT/enhance-binding protein α (CEBPA) mutations. Further validation of Erythroid Krüppel-like Factor (EKLF) mRNA expression as a prognostic factor was assessed.We evaluated GATA binding protein 1 (GATA1), GATA binding protein 2 (GATA2), EKLF and Myeloproliferative Leukemia virus oncogen homology (cMPL) gene mRNA expression in the bone marrow of 65 AML patients at diagnosis, and assessed any correlation with NPM1, FLT3 and CEBPA mutations. EKLF-positive AML was associated with lower WBC in peripheral blood (P = 0.049), a higher percentage of erythroblasts in bone marrow (p = 0.057), and secondary AMLs (P = 0.036). High expression levels of EKLF showed a trend to association with T-cell antigen expression, such as CD7 (P = 0.057). Patients expressing EKLF had longer Overall Survival (OS) and Event Free Survival (EFS) than those patients not expressing EKLF (median OS was 35.61 months and 19.31 months, respectively, P = 0.0241; median EFS was 19.80 months and 8.03 months, respectively, P = 0.0140). No correlation of GATA1, GATA2, EKLF and cMPL levels was observed with FLT-3 or NPM1 mutation status. Four of four CEBPA mutated AMLs were EKLF positive versus 10 of 29 CEBPA wild-type AMLs; three of the CEBPA mutated, EKLF-positive AMLs were also GATA2 positive. There were no cases of CEBPA mutations in the EKLF-negative AML group. In conclusion, we have validated EKLF mRNA expression as an independent predictor of outcome in AML, and its expression is not associated with FLT3-ITD and NPM1 mutations. EKLF mRNA expression in AML patients may correlate with dysregulated CEBPA.
Publication
Journal: Frontiers in Immunology
November/12/2018
Abstract
GATA2 is a transcription factor that binds to the promoter of hematopoietic genes. Mutations in one copy of the gene are associated with haploinsufficiency and reduced levels of protein. This results in reduced numbers of several cell types important for immune surveillance including dendritic cells, monocytes, CD4, and NK cells, as well as impaired NK cell function. Recently, GATA2 has been associated with several different presentations of severe Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) disease including primary infection requiring repeated hospitalizations, chronic active EBV disease, EBV-associated hydroa vacciniforme with hemophagocytosis, and EBV-positive smooth muscle tumors. EBV was found predominantly in B cells in each of the cases in which it was studied, unlike most cases of chronic active EBV disease in which the virus is usually present in T or NK cells. The variety of EBV-associated diseases seen in patients with GATA2 deficiency suggest that additional forms of severe EBV disease may be found in patients with GATA2 deficiency in the future.
Publication
Journal: Cancer Medicine
May/6/2020
Abstract
Intravenous leiomyomatosis (IVL) is currently regarded as a special variant of the common uterine leiomyoma (LM). Though IVL shows a similar histological morphology to LM, IVL is characterized by unique intravenous growth patterns and low-grade malignant potential, which are quite different from LM. There are currently few studies underlying the molecular alterations of IVL, though this information is important for understanding the pathogenesis of the disease, and for identifying potential biomarkers.We carried out a high-throughput whole transcriptome sequencing of tumor and normal tissue samples from five IVL patients and five LM patients and compared the differentially expressed genes (DEGs) between IVL and leiomyoma. We performed multiple different enrichment and target analyses, and the expression of selected DEGs was validated using RT-qPCR in formalin-fixed samples.Our study identified substantial different genes and pathways between IVL and LM, and functional enrichment analyses found several important pathways, such as angiogenesis and antiapoptosis pathways, as well as important related genes, including SH2D2A, VASH2, ADAM8, GATA2, TNF, and the lncRNA GATA6-AS1, as being significantly different between IVL and LM (P = .0024, P = .0195, P = .0212, P = .0435, P = .0401, and P = .0246, respectively). CXCL8, LIF, CDKN2A, BCL2A1, COL2A1, IGF1, and HMGA2 were also differently expressed between IVL and LM groups, but showed no statistical difference (P = .2409, P = .1773, P = .0596, P = .2737, P = .1553, P = .1045, and P = .1847, respectively) due to the large differences among individuals. Furthermore, RT-qPCR results for five selected DEGs in IVL tissues and adjacent nontumor tissues were mainly consistent with our sequencing results.Our results indicated that IVL may be a solid entity that is unique and different from LM, proving consistent with previous studies. Furthermore, we identified DEGs, particularly within angiogenesis and antiapoptosis pathway-related genes that may play crucial roles in the development and pathogenesis of IVL and may be potential specific biomarkers.
Publication
Journal: Journal of Biomolecular Structure and Dynamics
February/2/2021
Abstract
The SENP1 (Sentrin-Specific Protease1) is essential for desumoylation. SENP1 plays an essential role in many diseases such as cardiovascular disease, diabetes and cancer via targeting GATA2, NEMO, Pin1, SMAD4 and HIF-1α for deSUMOylation. Considering that, over expression of SENP1 was reported in cancer, thus an optional inhibitor of SENP1 can restitute the balance to the skewed system of SUMO and act as an effective therapeutic agent. The purpose of this study was to select and to sort inhibitors with a stronger binding affinity with SENP1. Molecular docking of SENP1 with natural compounds including Gallic acid, Caffeic acid, Thymoquinone, Thymol, Betaine, Alkannin, Ellagic acid, Betanin, Shikonin, Betanidin and Momordin IC was performed using AutoDock 4, then docking complexes for molecular dynamics (MD) simulation with GROMACS 4.6.5 were applied. Results with RMSD, RMSF, SASA, DSSP, gyrate, H-bond, ADMET and TOPKAT measurements, binding energy and structural features were surveyed. Among those, Gallic acid has shown the most significant results including RMSD and RMSF plots with high stability, high hydrogen bonds, high binding energy and the highest intermolecular bonds with SENP1. Gallic acid demonstrated strong connections and results of toxicity better than Momordin as control. Gallic acid is a phenolic compound which affects several pharmacological and biochemical pathways and has strong antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, antimutagenic and anticancer properties. Further research can improve the appropriate use of plant products drastically. Basic, pre-clinical and clinical research on Gallic acid may provide a roadmap for its ultimate application in the field of cancer prevention. Communicated by Ramaswamy H. Sarma.
Keywords: Cancer; Gallic acid; SENP1; molecular docking; molecular dynamics simulation.
Publication
Journal: Blood advances
August/25/2020
Abstract
Adaptive immune responses are acknowledged to evolve from innate immunity. However, limited information exists regarding whether encounters between innate cells direct the generation of specialized T-cell subsets. We aim to understand how natural killer (NK) cells modulate cell-mediated immunity in humans. We found that human CD14+CD16- monocytes that differentiate into inflammatory dendritic cells (DCs) are shaped at the early stages of differentiation by cell-to-cell interactions with NK cells. Although a fraction of monocytes is eliminated by NK-cell-mediated cytotoxicity, the polarization of interferon-γ (IFN-γ) at the NKp30-stabilized synapses triggers a stable IFN-γ signature in surviving monocytes that persists after their differentiation into DCs. Notably, NK-cell-instructed DCs drive the priming of type 17 CD8+ T cells (Tc17) with the capacity to produce IFN-γ and interleukin-17A. Compared with healthy donors, this cellular network is impaired in patients with classical NK-cell deficiency driven by mutations in the GATA2 gene. Our findings reveal a previously unrecognized connection by which Tc17-mediated immunity might be regulated by NK-cell-mediated tuning of antigen-presenting cells.
Publication
Journal: Biomicrofluidics
February/8/2016
Abstract
Endothelial cells (ECs) have great potential in vascular diseases research and regenerative medicine. Autologous human ECs are difficult to acquire in sufficient numbers in vitro, and human induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) offer unique opportunity to generate ECs for these purposes. In this work, we present a new and efficient method to simply differentiate human iPSCs into functional ECs, which can respond to physiological level of flow and inflammatory stimulation on a fabricated microdevice. The endothelial-like cells were differentiated from human iPSCs within only one week, according to the inducing development principle. The expression of endothelial progenitor and endothelial marker genes (GATA2, RUNX1, CD34, and CD31) increased on the second and fourth days after the initial inducing process. The differentiated ECs exhibited strong expression of cells-specific markers (CD31 and von Willebrand factor antibody), similar to that present in human umbilical vein endothelial cells. In addition, the hiPSC derived ECs were able to form tubular structure and respond to vascular-like flow generated on a microdevice. Furthermore, the human induced pluripotent stem cell-endothelial cells (hiPSC-ECs) pretreated with tumor necrosis factor (TNF-α) were susceptible to adhesion to human monocyte line U937 under flow condition, indicating the feasibility of this hiPSCs derived microsystem for mimicking the inflammatory response of endothelial cells under physiological and pathological process.
Publication
Journal: Investigational New Drugs
August/10/2020
Abstract
Neuroblastoma (NB) is the most common extracranial solid tumor in children. Under various treatments, some patients still have a poor prognosis. Hence, it is necessary to find new valid targets for NB therapy. In this study, a comprehensive bioinformatic analysis was used to identify differentially expressed genes (DEGs) between NB and control cells, and to select hub genes associated with NB. GSE66586 and GSE78061 datasets were downloaded from the Gene Expression Omnibus (GEO) database and DEGs were selected. Then, Gene Ontology (GO) and Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes (KEGG) analyses were applied to the selected DEGs. The STRING database and Cytoscape software were used to construct protein-protein interaction (PPI) networks and perform modular analysis of the DEGs. The R2 database was used for prognostic analysis. We identified a total of 238 DEGs from two microarray databases. GO enrichment analysis shows that these DEGs are mainly concentrated in the regulation of cell growth, cell migration, cell fate determination, and cell maturation. KEGG pathway analysis showed that these DEGs are mainly involved in focal adhesion, the TNF signaling pathway, cancer-related pathways, and signaling pathways regulating stem cell pluripotency. We identified the 15 most closely related DEGs from the PPI network, and performed R2 database prognostic analysis to select five hub genes - CTGF, EDN1, GATA2, LOX, and SERPINE1. This study distinguished hub genes and related signaling pathways that can potentially serve as diagnostic indicators and therapeutic biomarkers for NB, thereby improving understanding of the molecular mechanisms involved in NB.
Keywords: Bioinformatics analysis; Biomarkers; Differentially expressed genes; Neuroblastoma; Prognostic.
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