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Browsing by Author "Simpson, Ed"
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Item Aspergillus versicolor Inhalation Triggers Neuroimmune, Glial, and Neuropeptide Transcriptional Changes(Sage, 2021) Ladd, Thatcher B.; Johnson, James A., Jr.; Mumaw, Christen L.; Greve, Hendrik J.; Xuei, Xiaoling; Simpson, Ed; Barnes, Mark A.; Green, Brett J.; Croston, Tara L.; Ahmed, Chandrama; Lemons, Angela; Beezhold, Donald H.; Block, Michelle L.; Medical and Molecular Genetics, School of MedicineIncreasing evidence associates indoor fungal exposure with deleterious central nervous system (CNS) health, such as cognitive and emotional deficits in children and adults, but the specific mechanisms by which it might impact the brain are poorly understood. Mice were exposed to filtered air, heat-inactivated Aspergillus versicolor (3 × 105 spores), or viable A. versicolor (3 × 105 spores) via nose-only inhalation exposure 2 times per week for 1, 2, or 4 weeks. Analysis of cortex, midbrain, olfactory bulb, and cerebellum tissue from mice exposed to viable A. versicolor spores for 1, 2, and 4 weeks revealed significantly elevated pro-inflammatory (Tnf and Il1b) and glial activity (Gdnf and Cxc3r1) gene expression in several brain regions when compared to filtered air control, with the most consistent and pronounced neuroimmune response 48H following the 4-week exposure in the midbrain and frontal lobe. Bulk RNA-seq analysis of the midbrain tissue confirmed that 4 weeks of A. versicolor exposure resulted in significant transcriptional enrichment of several biological pathways compared to the filtered air control, including neuroinflammation, glial cell activation, and regulation of postsynaptic organization. Upregulation of Drd1, Penk, and Pdyn mRNA expression was confirmed in the 4-week A. versicolor exposed midbrain tissue, highlighting that gene expression important for neurotransmission was affected by repeated A. versicolor inhalation exposure. Taken together, these findings indicate that the brain can detect and respond to A. versicolor inhalation exposure with changes in neuroimmune and neurotransmission gene expression, providing much needed insight into how inhaled fungal exposures can affect CNS responses and regulate neuroimmune homeostasis.Item Author Correction: Upregulation of lipid metabolism genes in the breast prior to cancer diagnosis(Springer Nature, 2024-06-17) Marino, Natascia; German, Rana; Rao, Xi; Simpson, Ed; Liu, Sheng; Wan, Jun; Liu, Yunlong; Sandusky, George; Jacobsen, Max; Stovall, Miranda; Cao, Sha; Storniolo, Anna Maria V.; Medicine, School of MedicineCorrection to: npj Breast Cancer 10.1038/s41523-020-00191-8, published online 06 October 2020 In this article, the author name Miranda Stovall was incorrectly written as Miranda Stoval. The original article has been corrected.Item Bioinformatics detection of modulators controlling splicing factor‐dependent intron retention in the human brain(Wiley, 2022) Chen, Steven X.; Simpson, Ed; Reiter, Jill L.; Liu, Yunlong; Medical and Molecular Genetics, School of MedicineAlternative RNA splicing is an important means of genetic control and transcriptome diversity. However, when alternative splicing events are studied independently, coordinated splicing modulated by common factors is often not recognized. As a result, the molecular mechanisms of how splicing regulators promote or repress splice site recognition in a context‐dependent manner are not well understood. The functional coupling between multiple gene regulatory layers suggests that splicing is modulated by additional genetic or epigenetic components. Here, we developed a bioinformatics approach to identify causal modulators of splicing activity based on the variation of gene expression in large RNA sequencing datasets. We applied this approach in a neurological context with hundreds of dorsolateral prefrontal cortex samples. Our model is strengthened with the incorporation of genetic variants to impute gene expression in a Mendelian randomization‐based approach. We identified novel modulators of the splicing factor SRSF1, including UIMC1 and the long noncoding RNA CBR3‐AS1, that function over dozens of SRSF1 intron retention splicing targets. This strategy can be widely used to identify modulators of RNA‐binding proteins involved in tissue‐specific alternative splicing.Item Breast Cancer Cell Detection and Characterization from Breast Milk-Derived Cells(American Association for Cancer Research, 2020-11) Bhat-Nakshatri, Poornima; Kumar, Brijesh; Simpson, Ed; Ludwig, Kandice K.; Cox, Mary L.; Gao, Hongyu; Liu, Yunlong; Nakshatri, Harikrishna; Surgery, School of MedicineRadiologic techniques remain the main method for early detection for breast cancer and are critical to achieve a favorable outcome from cancer. However, more sensitive detection methods to complement radiologic techniques are needed to enhance early detection and treatment strategies. Using our recently established culturing method that allows propagation of normal and cancerous breast epithelial cells of luminal origin, flow cytometry characterization, and genomic sequencing, we show that cancer cells can be detected in breast milk. Cells derived from milk from the breast with cancer were enriched for CD49f+/EpCAM-, CD44+/CD24-, and CD271+ cancer stem-like cells (CSC). These CSCs carried mutations within the cytoplasmic retention domain of HDAC6, stop/gain insertion in MORF4L1, and deletion mutations within SWI/SNF complex component SMARCC2. CSCs were sensitive to HDAC6 inhibitors, BET bromodomain inhibitors, and EZH2 inhibitors, as mutations in SWI/SNF complex components are known to increase sensitivity to these drugs. Among cells derived from breast milk of additional ten women not known to have breast cancer, two of them contained cells that were enriched for the CSC phenotype and carried mutations in NF1 or KMT2D, which are frequently mutated in breast cancer. Breast milk-derived cells with NF1 mutations also carried copy-number variations in CDKN2C, PTEN, and REL genes. The approach described here may enable rapid cancer cell characterization including driver mutation detection and therapeutic screening for pregnancy/postpartum breast cancers. Furthermore, this method can be developed as a surveillance or early detection tool for women at high risk for developing breast cancer. SIGNIFICANCE: These findings describe how a simple method for characterization of cancer cells in pregnancy and postpartum breast cancer can be exploited as a surveillance tool for women at risk of developing breast cancer.Item Cardiac Troponin I-interacting Kinase impacts cardiomyocyte S-phase activity but not cardiomyocyte proliferation(American Heart Association, 2023) Reuter, Sean P.; Soonpaa, Mark H.; Field, Dorothy; Simpson, Ed; Rubart-von der Lohe, Michael; Lee, Han Kyu; Sridhar, Arthi; Ware, Stephanie M.; Green, Nick; Li, Xiaochun; Ofner, Susan; Marchuk, Douglas A.; Wollert, Kai C.; Field, Loren J.; Pediatrics, School of MedicineBackground: Identifying genetic variants that affect the level of cell cycle reentry and establishing the degree of cell cycle progression in those variants could help guide development of therapeutic interventions aimed at effecting cardiac regeneration. We observed that C57Bl6/NCR (B6N) mice have a marked increase in cardiomyocyte S-phase activity after permanent coronary artery ligation compared with infarcted DBA/2J (D2J) mice. Methods: Cardiomyocyte cell cycle activity after infarction was monitored in D2J, (D2J×B6N)-F1, and (D2J×B6N)-F1×D2J backcross mice by means of bromodeoxyuridine or 5-ethynyl-2'-deoxyuridine incorporation using a nuclear-localized transgenic reporter to identify cardiomyocyte nuclei. Genome-wide quantitative trait locus analysis, fine scale genetic mapping, whole exome sequencing, and RNA sequencing analyses of the backcross mice were performed to identify the gene responsible for the elevated cardiomyocyte S-phase phenotype. Results: (D2J×B6N)-F1 mice exhibited a 14-fold increase in cardiomyocyte S-phase activity in ventricular regions remote from infarct scar compared with D2J mice (0.798±0.09% versus 0.056±0.004%; P<0.001). Quantitative trait locus analysis of (D2J×B6N)-F1×D2J backcross mice revealed that the gene responsible for differential S-phase activity was located on the distal arm of chromosome 3 (logarithm of the odds score=6.38; P<0.001). Additional genetic and molecular analyses identified 3 potential candidates. Of these, Tnni3k (troponin I-interacting kinase) is expressed in B6N hearts but not in D2J hearts. Transgenic expression of TNNI3K in a D2J genetic background results in elevated cardiomyocyte S-phase activity after injury. Cardiomyocyte S-phase activity in both Tnni3k-expressing and Tnni3k-nonexpressing mice results in the formation of polyploid nuclei. Conclusions: These data indicate that Tnni3k expression increases the level of cardiomyocyte S-phase activity after injury.Item Loss of succinyl-CoA synthetase in mouse forebrain results in hypersuccinylation with perturbed neuronal transcription and metabolism(Elsevier, 2023) Lancaster, Makayla S.; Kim, Byungwook; Doud, Emma H.; Tate, Mason D.; Sharify, Ahmad D.; Gao, Hongyu; Chen, Duojiao; Simpson, Ed; Gillespie, Patrick; Chu, Xiaona; Miller, Marcus J.; Wang, Yue; Liu, Yunlong; Mosley, Amber L.; Kim, Jungsu; Graham, Brett H.; Medical and Molecular Genetics, School of MedicineLysine succinylation is a subtype of protein acylation associated with metabolic regulation of succinyl-CoA in the tricarboxylic acid cycle. Deficiency of succinyl-CoA synthetase (SCS), the tricarboxylic acid cycle enzyme catalyzing the interconversion of succinyl-CoA to succinate, results in mitochondrial encephalomyopathy in humans. This report presents a conditional forebrain-specific knockout (KO) mouse model of Sucla2, the gene encoding the ATP-specific beta isoform of SCS, resulting in postnatal deficiency of the entire SCS complex. Results demonstrate that accumulation of succinyl-CoA in the absence of SCS leads to hypersuccinylation within the murine cerebral cortex. Specifically, increased succinylation is associated with functionally significant reduced activity of respiratory chain complex I and widescale alterations in chromatin landscape and gene expression. Integrative analysis of the transcriptomic data also reveals perturbations in regulatory networks of neuronal transcription in the KO forebrain. Together, these findings provide evidence that protein succinylation plays a significant role in the pathogenesis of SCS deficiency.Item QKI is a critical pre-mRNA alternative splicing regulator of cardiac myofibrillogenesis and contractile function(Springer Nature, 2021-01-04) Chen, Xinyun; Liu, Ying; Xu, Chen; Ba, Lina; Liu, Zhuo; Li, Xiuya; Huang, Jie; Simpson, Ed; Gao, Hongyu; Cao, Dayan; Sheng, Wei; Qi, Hanping; Ji, Hongrui; Sanderson, Maria; Cai, Chen-Leng; Li, Xiaohui; Yang, Lei; Na, Jie; Yamamura, Kenichi; Liu, Yunlong; Huang, Guoying; Shou, Weinian; Sun, Ning; Pediatrics, School of MedicineThe RNA-binding protein QKI belongs to the hnRNP K-homology domain protein family, a well-known regulator of pre-mRNA alternative splicing and is associated with several neurodevelopmental disorders. Qki is found highly expressed in developing and adult hearts. By employing the human embryonic stem cell (hESC) to cardiomyocyte differentiation system and generating QKI-deficient hESCs (hESCs-QKIdel) using CRISPR/Cas9 gene editing technology, we analyze the physiological role of QKI in cardiomyocyte differentiation, maturation, and contractile function. hESCs-QKIdel largely maintain normal pluripotency and normal differentiation potential for the generation of early cardiogenic progenitors, but they fail to transition into functional cardiomyocytes. In this work, by using a series of transcriptomic, cell and biochemical analyses, and the Qki-deficient mouse model, we demonstrate that QKI is indispensable to cardiac sarcomerogenesis and cardiac function through its regulation of alternative splicing in genes involved in Z-disc formation and contractile physiology, suggesting that QKI is associated with the pathogenesis of certain forms of cardiomyopathies.Item Upregulation of lipid metabolism genes in the breast prior to cancer diagnosis(Nature Publishing Group, 2020-10-06) Marino, Natascia; German, Rana; Rao, Xi; Simpson, Ed; Liu, Sheng; Wan, Jun; Liu, Yunlong; Sandusky, George; Jacobsen, Max; Stoval, Miranda; Cao, Sha; Storniolo, Anna Maria V.; Medicine, School of MedicineHistologically normal tissue adjacent to the tumor can provide insight of the microenvironmental alterations surrounding the cancerous lesion and affecting the progression of the disease. However, little is known about the molecular changes governing cancer initiation in cancer-free breast tissue. Here, we employed laser microdissection and whole-transcriptome profiling of the breast epithelium prior to and post tumor diagnosis to identify the earliest alterations in breast carcinogenesis. Furthermore, a comprehensive analysis of the three tissue compartments (microdissected epithelium, stroma, and adipose tissue) was performed on the breast donated by either healthy subjects or women prior to the clinical manifestation of cancer (labeled “susceptible normal tissue”). Although both susceptible and healthy breast tissues appeared histologically normal, the susceptible breast epithelium displayed a significant upregulation of genes involved in fatty acid uptake/transport (CD36 and AQP7), lipolysis (LIPE), and lipid peroxidation (AKR1C1). Upregulation of lipid metabolism- and fatty acid transport-related genes was observed also in the microdissected susceptible stromal and adipose tissue compartments, respectively, when compared with the matched healthy controls. Moreover, inter-compartmental co-expression analysis showed increased epithelium-adipose tissue crosstalk in the susceptible breasts as compared with healthy controls. Interestingly, reductions in natural killer (NK)-related gene signature and CD45+/CD20+ cell staining were also observed in the stromal compartment of susceptible breasts. Our study yields new insights into the cancer initiation process in the breast. The data suggest that in the early phase of cancer development, metabolic activation of the breast, together with increased epithelium-adipose tissue crosstalk may create a favorable environment for final cell transformation, proliferation, and survival.