BACKGROUND: Mammalian microRNAs (miR) regulate the expression of genes relevant for the development of adaptive and innate immunity against cancer. Since T cell dysfunction has previously been reported in patients with renal cell carcinoma (RCC; clear cell type), we aimed to analyse these immune cells for genetic and protein differences when compared to normal donor T cells freshly after isolation and 35 days after in vitro stimulation (IVS) with HLA-matched RCC tumor cells.
miR-29b and miR-198 overexpression in CD8+ T cells of renal cell carcinoma patients down-modulates JAK3 and MCL-1 leading to immune dysfunction.
Sex, Age, Specimen part, Disease, Subject, Time
View SamplesRecent pre-clinical and clinical evidences indicate that hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPCs) and/or their progeny can serve as vehicles for therapeutic molecule delivery across the blood brain barrier by contributing to the turnover of myeloid cell populations in the brain. However, the differentiation and functional characteristics of the cells reconstituted after transplantation are still to be determined, and in particular whether bona fide microglia could be reconstituted by the donor cell progeny post-transplant to be assessed. We here firstly demonstrate that HSPC transplantation can generate transcriptionally-dependable new microglia through a stepwise process reminiscent of physiological post-natal microglia maturation. Hematopoietic cells able to generate new microglia upon transplantation into myeloablated recipients are retained within human and murine long-term hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs). Similar transcriptionally dependable new microglia cells can also be generated by intra-cerebral ventricular delivery of HSPCs. Importantly, this novel route is associated to a clinically relevant faster and more widespread microglia replacement compared to systemic HSPC injection. Overall, this work supports the relevance and feasibility of employing HSPCs for renewing brain myeloid and microglia cells with new populations endowed with the ability to exert therapeutic effects in the central nervous system, and identifies novel modalities, such as transplantation of enriched stem cell fractions and direct brain delivery of HSPCs, for increasing the actual contribution of the transplanted cells to microgliosis and their therapeutic activity. Overall design: mRNA profiles of µ and TAµ myeloid brain populations were obtained in triplicate mice of Adult control, P10 control and Adult BU-treated mice after GFP Lin-transplantation (both µ and TAµ populations)
Intracerebroventricular delivery of hematopoietic progenitors results in rapid and robust engraftment of microglia-like cells.
Specimen part, Cell line, Subject
View SamplesOur understanding of cellular mechanisms by which animals regulate their response to starvation is limited despite the close relevance of the problem to major human health issues. L1 diapause of Caenorhabditis elegans, where newly hatched first stage larval arrested in response to food-less environment, is an excellent system to study the problem. We found through genetic manipulation and lipid analysis that ceramide biosynthesis, particularly those with longer fatty acid side chains, critically impacts animal survival during L1 diapause. Genetic and expression analyses indicate that ceramide likely regulate this response by affecting gene expression and activity in multiple regulatory pathways known to regulate starvation-induced stress, including the insulin-IGF-1 signaling (IIS) pathway, Rb and other pathways that mediate pathogen/toxin/oxidative stress responses. These findings provide an important insight into the roles of sphingolipid metabolism in not only starvation response but also aging and food-response related human health problems.
Starvation-Induced Stress Response Is Critically Impacted by Ceramide Levels in Caenorhabditis elegans.
No sample metadata fields
View SamplesWe find significant evidence of the OVOL, AP1, STAT1, STAT3, and NFKB1 TFs having important roles in MET. We prioritize known gene/drug targets for follow-up in the clinic, and show that the AP1/MYC TF pair is a strong candidate for intervention. Overall design: Examination of the effects of OVOL1 and OVOL2 overexpression common to prostate cancer and breast cancer models.
A bioinformatics approach reveals novel interactions of the OVOL transcription factors in the regulation of epithelial - mesenchymal cell reprogramming and cancer progression.
No sample metadata fields
View SamplesTo investigate the molecular bases of diet induced differences in milk composition, we collected milk from mid lactation dairy ewes and after 3 weeks of diet supplementation with extruded linseed. RNAs were isolated from milk somatic cells isolated from milk of 3 sheep and Illumina RNA sequencing was performed to analyze RNA synthesis in these cells. Overall design: Transcriptional profiling of milk somatic cells of sheep fed with normal diet and with a supplementation with extruded linseed. Sequence data were generated by deep sequencing, on three replicates, using Illumina HiSeq2000.
Transcript profiling in the milk of dairy ewes fed extruded linseed.
Specimen part, Subject
View SamplesWe developed a bioinformatics approach called the Read-Split-Walk (RSW) pipeline, and evaluated it using two Ire1a heterozygous and two Ire1a-null samples. The 26nt non-canonical splice site in Xbp1 was detected as the top hit by our RSW pipeline in heterozygous samples but not in the negative control Ire1a knockout samples. We compared the Xbp1 results from our approach with results using the alignment program BWA, STAR, Exonerate and the Unix “grep” command. We then applied our RSW pipeline to RNA-Seq data from the SKBR3 human breast cancer cell line. RSW reported a large number of non-canonical spliced regions for 108 genes in chromosome 17, which were identified by an independent study. Overall design: Identification of non-canonical spliced regions for mouse MEF samples (two Ire1a heterozygous and two Ire1a-null samples)
Novel bioinformatics method for identification of genome-wide non-canonical spliced regions using RNA-Seq data.
No sample metadata fields
View SamplesPrimary effusion lymphoma is an aggressive B-cell lymphoma most commonly diagnosed in HIV-positive patients and universally associated with Kaposis sarcoma-associated herpesvirus (KSHV). Chemotherapy treatment of PEL yields only short-term remissions in the vast majority of patients yet efforts to develop superior therapeutic approaches have been impeded by lack of animal models that more accurately mimic human disease. To address this issue we developed a direct xenograft model, UM-PEL-1, by transferring freshly-isolated human PEL cells into the peritoneal cavities of NOD/SCID mice without in vitro cell growth. We utilized this model to show that bortezomib induces PEL remission and extends overall survival of mice bearing lymphomatous effusions. Transcriptome analysis by genomic arrays revealed that bortezomib downregulated cell cycle progression, DNA replication, and Myc-target genes.
Efficacy of bortezomib in a direct xenograft model of primary effusion lymphoma.
Cell line
View SamplesThis SuperSeries is composed of the SubSeries listed below.
Integrated molecular analysis of Tamoxifen-resistant invasive lobular breast cancer cells identifies MAPK and GRM/mGluR signaling as therapeutic vulnerabilities.
Treatment
View SamplesInvasive lobular breast cancer (ILC) is an understudied malignancy with distinct clinical, pathological, and molecular features that distinguish it from the more common invasive ductal carcinoma (IDC). Mounting evidence suggests that estrogen receptor-alpha positive (ER+) ILC has a poor response to Tamoxifen (TAM), but the mechanistic drivers of this are undefined. In the current work, we comprehensively characterize the SUM44/LCCTam ILC model system through integrated analysis of gene expression, copy number, and mutation, with the goal of identifying actionable alterations relevant to clinical ILC that can be co-targeted along with ER to improve treatment outcomes. We show that TAM has several distinct effects on the transcriptome of LCCTam cells, that this resistant cell model has acquired copy number alterations and mutations that impinge on MAPK and metabotropic glutamate receptor (GRM/mGluR) signaling networks, and that pharmacological inhibition of either improves or restores the growth-inhibitory actions of endocrine therapy.
Integrated molecular analysis of Tamoxifen-resistant invasive lobular breast cancer cells identifies MAPK and GRM/mGluR signaling as therapeutic vulnerabilities.
Treatment
View SamplesMurine models have been valuable instruments in defining the pathogenesis of diabetic nephropathy (DN), but they only partially recapitulate disease manifestations of human DN, limiting their utility . In order to define the molecular similarities and differences between human and murine DN, we performed a cross-species comparison of glomerular transcriptional networks. Glomerular gene expression was profiled in patients with early type 2 DN and in three mouse models (streptozotocin DBA/2 mice, db/db C57BLKS, and eNOS-deficient C57BLKS db/db mice). Species-specific transcriptional networks were generated and compared with a novel network-matching algorithm. Three shared, human-mouse cross-species glomerular transcriptional networks containing 143 (Human-STZ), 97 (Human- db/db), and 162 (Human- eNOS-/- db/db) gene nodes were generated. Shared nodes across all networks reflected established pathogenic mechanisms of diabetic complications, such as elements of JAK-STAT and VEGFR signaling pathways . In addition, novel pathways not formally associated with DN and cross-species gene nodes and pathways unique to each of the human-mouse networks were discovered. The human-mouse shared glomerular transcriptional networks will assist DN researchers in the selection of mouse models most relevant to the human disease process of interest. Moreover, they will allow identification of new pathways shared between mice and humans.
Identification of cross-species shared transcriptional networks of diabetic nephropathy in human and mouse glomeruli.
Age, Specimen part, Disease, Disease stage, Treatment
View Samples