共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
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In this research, we used RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) to analyze 23 single cell samples and 2 bulk cells sample from human adult bone mesenchyme stem cell line and human fetal bone mesenchyme stem cell line. The results from the research demonstrated that there were big differences between two cell lines. Adult bone mesenchyme stem cell lines showed a strong trend on the blood vessel differentiation and cell motion, 48/49 vascular related differential expressed genes showed higher expression in adult bone mesenchyme stem cell lines (Abmsc) than fetal bone mesenchyme stem cell lines (Fbmsc). 96/106 cell motion related genes showed the same tendency. Further analysis showed that genes like ANGPT1, VEGFA, FGF2, PDGFB and PDGFRA showed higher expression in Abmsc. This work showed cell heterogeneity between human adult bone mesenchyme stem cell line and human fetal bone mesenchyme stem cell line. Also the work may give an indication that Abmsc had a better potency than Fbmsc in the future vascular related application. 相似文献
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Small non-coding RNAs represent RNA species that are not translated to proteins, but which have diverse and broad functional activities in physiological and pathophysiological states. The knowledge of these small RNAs is rapidly expanding in part through the use of massive parallel (deep) sequencing efforts. We present here the first deep sequencing of small RNomes in subcellular compartments with particular emphasis on small RNAs (sRNA) associated with the nucleolus. The vast majority of the cellular, cytoplasmic and nuclear sRNAs were identified as miRNAs. In contrast, the nucleolar sRNAs had a unique size distribution consisting of 19–20 and 25 nt RNAs, which were predominantly composed of small snoRNA-derived box C/D RNAs (termed as sdRNA). Sequences from 47 sdRNAs were identified, which mapped to both 5′ and 3′ ends of the snoRNAs, and retained conserved box C or D motifs. SdRNA reads mapping to SNORD44 comprised 74% of all nucleolar sdRNAs, and were confirmed by Northern blotting as comprising both 20 and 25 nt RNAs. A novel 120 nt SNORD44 form was also identified. The expression of the SNORD44 sdRNA and 120 nt form was independent of Dicer/Drosha–mediated processing pathways but was dependent on the box C/D snoRNP proteins/sno-ribonucleoproteins fibrillarin and NOP58. The 120 nt SNORD44-derived RNA bound to fibrillarin suggesting that C/D sno-ribonucleoproteins are involved in regulating the stability or processing of SNORD44. This study reveals sRNA cell-compartment specific expression and the distinctive unique composition of the nucleolar sRNAs. 相似文献
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Magdalena M. Julkowska Huub C.J. Hoefsloot Selena Mol Richard Feron Gert-Jan de Boer Michel A. Haring Christa Testerink 《Plant physiology》2014,166(3):1387-1402
The plant root is the first organ to encounter salinity stress, but the effect of salinity on root system architecture (RSA) remains elusive. Both the reduction in main root (MR) elongation and the redistribution of the root mass between MRs and lateral roots (LRs) are likely to play crucial roles in water extraction efficiency and ion exclusion. To establish which RSA parameters are responsive to salt stress, we performed a detailed time course experiment in which Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) seedlings were grown on agar plates under different salt stress conditions. We captured RSA dynamics with quadratic growth functions (root-fit) and summarized the salt-induced differences in RSA dynamics in three growth parameters: MR elongation, average LR elongation, and increase in number of LRs. In the ecotype Columbia-0 accession of Arabidopsis, salt stress affected MR elongation more severely than LR elongation and an increase in LRs, leading to a significantly altered RSA. By quantifying RSA dynamics of 31 different Arabidopsis accessions in control and mild salt stress conditions, different strategies for regulation of MR and LR meristems and root branching were revealed. Different RSA strategies partially correlated with natural variation in abscisic acid sensitivity and different Na+/K+ ratios in shoots of seedlings grown under mild salt stress. Applying root-fit to describe the dynamics of RSA allowed us to uncover the natural diversity in root morphology and cluster it into four response types that otherwise would have been overlooked.Salt stress is known to affect plant growth and productivity as a result of its osmotic and ionic stress components. Osmotic stress imposed by salinity is thought to act in the early stages of the response, by reducing cell expansion in growing tissues and causing stomatal closure to minimize water loss. The build-up of ions in photosynthetic tissues leads to toxicity in the later stages of salinity stress and can be reduced by limiting sodium transport into the shoot tissue and compartmentalization of sodium ions into the root stele and vacuoles (Munns and Tester, 2008). The effect of salt stress on plant development was studied in terms of ion accumulation, plant survival, and signaling (Munns et al., 2012; Hasegawa, 2013; Pierik and Testerink, 2014). Most studies focus on traits in the aboveground tissues, because minimizing salt accumulation in leaf tissue is crucial for plant survival and its productivity. This approach has led to the discovery of many genes underlying salinity tolerance (Munns and Tester, 2008; Munns et al., 2012; Hasegawa, 2013; Maathuis, 2014). Another way to estimate salinity stress tolerance is by studying the rate of main root (MR) elongation of seedlings transferred to medium supplemented with high salt concentration. This is how Salt Overly Sensitive mutants were identified, being a classical example of genes involved in salt stress signaling and tolerance (Hasegawa, 2013; Maathuis, 2014). The success of this approach is to be explained by the important role that the root plays in salinity tolerance. Roots not only provide anchorage and ensure water and nutrient uptake, but also act as a sensory system, integrating changes in nutrient availability, water content, and salinity to adjust root morphology to exploit available resources to the maximum capacity (Galvan-Ampudia et al., 2013; Gruber et al., 2013). Understanding the significance of environmental modifications of root system architecture (RSA) for plant productivity is one of the major challenges of modern agriculture (de Dorlodot et al., 2007; Den Herder et al., 2010; Pierik and Testerink, 2014).The RSA of dicotyledonous plants consists of an embryonically derived MR and lateral roots (LRs) that originate from xylem pole pericycle cells of the MR, or from LRs in the case of higher-order LRs. Root growth and branching is mainly guided through the antagonistic action of two plant hormones: auxin and cytokinins (Petricka et al., 2012). Under environmental stress conditions, the synthesis of abscisic acid (ABA), ethylene, and brassinosteroids is known to be induced and to modulate the growth of MRs and LRs (Achard et al., 2006; Osmont et al., 2007; Achard and Genschik, 2009; Duan et al., 2013; Geng et al., 2013). In general, lower concentrations of salt were observed to slightly induce MR and LR elongation, whereas higher concentrations resulted in decreased growth of both MRs and LRs (Wang et al., 2009; Zolla et al., 2010). The reduction of growth is a result of the inhibition of cell cycle progression and a reduction in root apical meristem size (West et al., 2004). However, conflicting results were presented for the effect of salinity on lateral root density (LRD; Wang et al., 2009; Zolla et al., 2010; Galvan-Ampudia and Testerink, 2011). Some studies suggest that mild salinity enhances LR initiation or emergence events, thereby affecting patterning, whereas other studies imply that salinity arrests LR development. The origin of those contradictory observations could be attributable to studying LR initiation and density at single time points, rather than observing the dynamics of LR development, because LR formation changes as a function of root growth rate (De Smet et al., 2012). The dynamics of LR growth and development were characterized previously for the MR region formed before the salt stress exposure, identifying the importance of ABA in early growth arrest of postemerged LRs in response to salt stress (Duan et al., 2013). The effect of salt on LR emergence and initiation was found to differ for MR regions formed prior and subsequent to salinity exposure (Duan et al., 2013), consistent with LR patterning being determined at the root tip (Moreno-Risueno et al., 2010). Yet the effect of salt stress on the reprogramming of the entire RSA on a longer timescale remains elusive.Natural variation in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) is a great source for dissecting the genetic components underlying phenotypic diversity (Trontin et al., 2011; Weigel, 2012). Genes underlying phenotypic plasticity of RSA to environmental stimuli were also found to have high allelic variation leading to differences in root development between different Arabidopsis accessions (Rosas et al., 2013). Supposedly, genes responsible for phenotypic plasticity of the root morphology to different environmental conditions are under strong selection for adaptation to local environments. Various populations of Arabidopsis accessions were used to study natural variation in ion accumulation and salinity tolerance (Rus et al., 2006; Jha et al., 2010; Katori et al., 2010; Roy et al., 2013). In addition, a number of studies focusing on the natural variation in RSA have been published, identifying quantitative trait loci and allelic variation for genes involved in RSA development under control conditions (Mouchel et al., 2004; Meijón et al., 2014) and nutrient-deficient conditions (Chevalier et al., 2003; Gujas et al., 2012; Gifford et al., 2013; Kellermeier et al., 2013; Rosas et al., 2013). Exploring natural variation not only expands the knowledge of genes and molecular mechanisms underlying biological processes, but also provides insight on how plants adapt to challenging environmental conditions (Weigel, 2012) and whether the mechanisms are evolutionarily conserved. The early growth arrest of newly emerged LRs upon exposure to salt stress was observed to be conserved among the most commonly used Arabidopsis accessions Columbia-0 (Col-0), Landsberg erecta, and Wassilewskija (Ws; Duan et al., 2013). By studying salt stress responses of the entire RSA and a wider natural variation in root responses to stress, one could identify new morphological traits that are under environmental selection and possibly contribute to stress tolerance.In this work, we not only identify the RSA components that are responsive to salt stress, but we also describe the natural variation in dynamics of salt-induced changes leading to redistribution of root mass and different root morphology. The growth dynamics of MRs and LRs under different salt stress conditions were described by fitting a set of quadratic growth functions (root-fit) to individual RSA components. Studying salt-induced changes in RSA dynamics of 31 Arabidopsis accessions revealed four major strategies conserved among the accessions. Those four strategies were due to differences in salt stress sensitivity of individual RSA components (i.e. growth rates of MRs and LRs, and increases in the number of emerged LRs). This diversity in root morphology responses caused by salt stress was observed to be partially associated with differences in ABA, but not ethylene sensitivity. In addition, we observed that a number of accessions exhibiting a relatively strong inhibition of LR elongation showed a smaller increase in the Na+/K+ ratio in shoot tissue after exposure to salt stress. Our results imply that different RSA strategies identified in this study reflect diverse adaptations to different soil conditions and thus might contribute to efficient water extraction and ion compartmentalization in their native environments. 相似文献
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Peter van Galen Volker Hovestadt Marc H. Wadsworth II Travis K. Hughes Gabriel K. Griffin Sofia Battaglia Julia A. Verga Jason Stephansky Timothy J. Pastika Jennifer Lombardi Story Geraldine S. Pinkus Olga Pozdnyakova Ilene Galinsky Richard M. Stone Timothy A. Graubert Alex K. Shalek Jon C. Aster Andrew A. Lane Bradley E. Bernstein 《Cell》2019,176(6):1265-1281.e24
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《Cell cycle (Georgetown, Tex.)》2013,12(11):1394-1397
The existing models of cancer progression assume that a linear sequence of geneticand epigenetic events occurs during this process. In this representation every new event(either loss of a tumor-suppressor, or activation of a proto-oncogene) makes cells even moremalignant. The result is a “super” cell that can form metastases at the distant sites.Metastatic cells are believed to carry all genetic and epigenetic characteristics that arenecessary for metastasis formation. Recently, we have shown that cell-surface proteasehepsin causes disorganization of the basement membrane and promotes prostate cancerprogression and metastasis. In human prostate cancer hepsin is upregulated in theprecancerous lesions and this upregulation is maintained in the primary tumors. Remarkablyand completely unexpected for a metastasis-promoting gene, hepsin is expressed at lowlevels in metastatic lesions and the message is completely absent in metastasis-derivedprostate cancer cell lines. These results demonstrate that genes that play an important role inmetastatic process may exercise their role only at the specific fragments of cancerprogression pathway (for example, during initial invasion and tissue disorganization in theprimary organ) and may have no role in metastatic lesions. Future treatment of cancerpatients may rely heavily on monitoring of tumor progression, as treatment efficient inattenuation of initial tumor progression may be inefficient or even adverse at the advancestages of disease. 相似文献
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Characterization of Transcriptional Complexity during Berry Development in Vitis vinifera Using RNA-Seq 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
Sara Zenoni Alberto Ferrarini Enrico Giacomelli Luciano Xumerle Marianna Fasoli Giovanni Malerba Diana Bellin Mario Pezzotti Massimo Delledonne 《Plant physiology》2010,152(4):1787-1795
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