- Browse by Subject
Browsing by Subject "Gene co-expression analysis"
Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
Results Per Page
Sort Options
Item An induced pluripotent stem cell model of Schwann cell differentiation reveals NF2- related gene regulatory networks(Research Square, 2025-06-16) Lazaro, Olivia; Li, Sihong; Carter, William; Smiley, Jake; Awosika, Oluwamayowa; Robertson, Sylvia; Haskell, Angela; Hinkel, Raven; Hickey, Brooke E.; Angus, Steven P.; House, Austin; Clapp, D. Wade; Syed, Abdul Q.; Johnson, Travis S.; Rhodes, Steven D.; Pediatrics, School of MedicineSchwann cells are vital to development and maintenance of the peripheral nervous system and their dysfunction has been implicated in a range of neurological and neoplastic disorders, including NF2-related schwannomatosis (NF2-SWN). We have developed a novel human induced pluripotent stem cell (hiPSC) model for the study of Schwann cell differentiation in health and disease. We performed transcriptomic, immunofluorescence, and morphological analysis of hiPSC derived Schwann cell precursors (SPCs) and terminally differentiated Schwann cells (SCs) representing distinct stages of development. To further validate our findings, we performed integrated, cross-species analyses across multiple external datasets at bulk and single cell resolution. Our hiPSC model of Schwann cell development shared overlapping gene expression signatures with human amniotic mesenchymal stem cell (hAMSCs) derived SCs and in vivo mouse models, but also revealed unique features that may reflect species-specific aspects of Schwann cell biology. Moreover, we have identified gene co-expression modules that are dynamically regulated during hiPSC to SC differentiation associated with ear and neural development, cell fate determination, the NF2 gene, and extracellular matrix (ECM) organization. Through integrated analysis of multiple datasets and genetic disruption of NF2 via CRISPR-Cas9 gene editing in hiPSC derived SCPs, we have identified a series of novel ECM associated genes regulated by Merlin. Our hiPSC model further provides a tractable platform for studying Schwann cell development in the context of rare diseases such as NF2-SWN which lack effective medical therapies.Item Gene Co-Expression Networks Restructured Gene Fusion in Rhabdomyosarcoma Cancers(MDPI, 2019-08-30) Helm, Bryan R.; Zhan, Xiaohui; Pandya, Pankita H.; Murray, Mary E.; Pollok, Karen E.; Renbarger, Jamie L.; Ferguson, Michael J.; Han, Zhi; Ni, Dong; Zhang, Jie; Huang, Kun; Medicine, School of MedicineRhabdomyosarcoma is subclassified by the presence or absence of a recurrent chromosome translocation that fuses the FOXO1 and PAX3 or PAX7 genes. The fusion protein (FOXO1-PAX3/7) retains both binding domains and becomes a novel and potent transcriptional regulator in rhabdomyosarcoma subtypes. Many studies have characterized and integrated genomic, transcriptomic, and epigenomic differences among rhabdomyosarcoma subtypes that contain the FOXO1-PAX3/7 gene fusion and those that do not; however, few investigations have investigated how gene co-expression networks are altered by FOXO1-PAX3/7. Although transcriptional data offer insight into one level of functional regulation, gene co-expression networks have the potential to identify biological interactions and pathways that underpin oncogenesis and tumorigenicity. Thus, we examined gene co-expression networks for rhabdomyosarcoma that were FOXO1-PAX3 positive, FOXO1-PAX7 positive, or fusion negative. Gene co-expression networks were mined using local maximum Quasi-Clique Merger (lmQCM) and analyzed for co-expression differences among rhabdomyosarcoma subtypes. This analysis observed 41 co-expression modules that were shared between fusion negative and positive samples, of which 17/41 showed significant up- or down-regulation in respect to fusion status. Fusion positive and negative rhabdomyosarcoma showed differing modularity of co-expression networks with fusion negative (n = 109) having significantly more individual modules than fusion positive (n = 53). Subsequent analysis of gene co-expression networks for PAX3 and PAX7 type fusions observed 17/53 were differentially expressed between the two subtypes. Gene list enrichment analysis found that gene ontology terms were poorly matched with biological processes and molecular function for most co-expression modules identified in this study; however, co-expressed modules were frequently localized to cytobands on chromosomes 8 and 11. Overall, we observed substantial restructuring of co-expression networks relative to fusion status and fusion type in rhabdomyosarcoma and identified previously overlooked genes and pathways that may be targeted in this pernicious disease.