Fraserwynn3882
Familial hypercholesterolemia (FH) is one of the most common monogenic diseases, leading to an increased risk of premature atherosclerosis and its cardiovascular complications due to its effect on plasma cholesterol levels. Variants of three genes (LDL-R, APOB and PCSK9) are the major causes of FH, but in some probands, the FH phenotype is associated with variants of other genes. Alternatively, the typical clinical picture of FH can result from the accumulation of common cholesterol-increasing alleles (polygenic FH). Although the Czech Republic is one of the most successful countries with respect to FH detection, approximately 80% of FH patients remain undiagnosed. The opportunities for international collaboration and experience sharing within international programs (e.g., EAS FHSC, ScreenPro FH, etc.) will improve the detection of FH patients in the future and enable even more accessible and accurate genetic diagnostics.
Some lung diseases are cell type-specific. It is essential to study the cellular anatomy of the normal human lung for exploring the cellular origin of lung disease and the cell development trajectory.
We used the Seurat R package for data quality control. The principal component analysis (PCA) was used for linear dimensionality reduction. UMAP and tSNE were used for dimensionality reduction. Muonocle2 was used to extract lung epithelial cells to analyze the subtypes of epithelial cells further and to study the development of these cell subtypes.
We showed a total of 20154 high quality of cells from human normal lung tissue. They were initially divided into 17 clusters cells and then identified as seven types of cells, namely macrophages, monocytes, CD8 + T cells, epithelial cells, endothelial cells, adipocytes, and NK cells. 4240 epithelial cells were extracted for further analysis and they were divided into seven clusters. The seven cell clusters include alveolar cell, alveolar endothelial progenitor, ciliated cell, secretory cell, ionocyte cell, and a group of cells that are not clear at present. We show the development track of these subtypes of epithelial cells, in which we speculate that alveolar epithelial progenitor (AEP) is a kind of progenitor cells that can develop into alveolar cells, and find six essential genes that determine the cell fate, including AGER, RPL10, RPL9, RPS18, RPS27, and SFTPB.
We provide a transcription map of human lung cells, especially the in-depth study on the development of epithelial cell subtypes, which will help us to study lung cell biology and lung diseases.
We provide a transcription map of human lung cells, especially the in-depth study on the development of epithelial cell subtypes, which will help us to study lung cell biology and lung diseases.Haemonchus contortus and Teladorsagia circumcincta are among the two most pathogenic internal parasitic nematodes infecting small ruminants, such as sheep and goats, and are a global animal health issue. Accurate identification and delineation of Haemonchidae species is essential for development of diagnostic and control strategies with high resolution for Trichostrongyloidea infection in ruminants. Here, we describe in detail and compare the complete mitochondrial (mt) genomes of the New Zealand H. contortus and T. circumcincta field strains to improve our understanding of species- and strain-level evolution in these closely related roundworms. In the present study, we performed extensive comparative bioinformatics analyses on the recently sequenced complete mt genomes of the New Zealand H. contortus NZ_Hco_NP and T. circumcincta NZ_Teci_NP field strains. Amino acid sequences inferred from individual genes of each of the two mt genomes were compared, concatenated and subjected to phylogenetic analysis using rain-level identification from different hosts and geographical regions with high resolution for future studies. The complete mt genomes of H. contortus NZ_Hco_NP and T. R-848 supplier circumcincta NZ_Teci_NP presented here provide useful novel markers for further studies of the meta-population connectivity and the genetic mechanisms driving evolution in nematode species.Our previous study suggested that the synapse-associated protein 97 (SAP97) gene rs3915512 polymorphism may influence neurocognition in schizophrenia patients. Neuroimaging studies have shown a possible association between cognitive function and brain activity/connectivity. Considering the poor understanding of whether the disease state and SAP97 rs3915512 polymorphism have interactive effects on brain activity/connectivity, 52 first-episode schizophrenia (FES) patients and 52 healthy controls were genotyped using blood DNA samples and underwent magnetic resonance imaging scanning. A two-way ANCOVA model was performed with rs3915512 genotypes and disease state as the between-subject factors. A significant disease × SAP97 interactive effect was found for the amplitude of low-frequency fluctuation (ALFF) in the right supplementary motor area, left rolandic opercularis area (ROC-L), and bilateral middle occipital gyrus (MOG). In addition, among auditory/visual-related brain areas, a significant interactive effect was found for resting-state functional connectivity (RSFC) between the MOG-L and bilateral superior temporal gyrus (STG) in the STG-L with ROC-R, right cuneus (Cu-R), left fusiform (Fu-L), and left lingual gyrus (LG-L). Positive correlations were found between ALFF in the ROC-L and motor speed scores, between RSFC in the STG-L and LG-L and between Brief Assessment of Cognition in Schizophrenia verbal memory scores in FES. The SAP97 rs3915512 polymorphism may affect neurocognitive function in patients with schizophrenia by changing the brain activity and connectivity of auditory/visual-related brain areas.Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) is generally incurable due to the late diagnosis and absence of markers that are concordant with expression in several sample sources (i.e., tissue, blood, plasma) and platforms (i.e., Microarray, sequencing). We optimized meta-analysis of 19 PDAC (tissue and blood) transcriptome studies from multiple platforms. The key biomarkers for PDAC diagnosis with secretory potential were identified and validated in different cohorts. Machine learning approach i.e., support vector machine supported by leave-one-out cross-validation was used to build and test the classifier. We identified a 9-gene panel (IFI27, ITGB5, CTSD, EFNA4, GGH, PLBD1, HTATIP2, IL1R2, CTSA) that achieved ∼0.92 average sensitivity and ∼0.90 average specificity in distinguishing PDAC from healthy samples in five training sets using cross-validation. These markers were also validated in proteomics and single-cell transcriptomics studies suggesting their prognostic role in the diagnosis of PDAC. Our 9-gene classifier can not only clearly discriminate between better and poor survivors but can also precisely discriminate PDAC from chronic pancreatitis (AUC = 0.95), early stages of progression [Stage I and II (AUC = 0.82), IPMA and IPMN (AUC = 1), and IPMC (AUC = 0.81)]. The 9-gene marker outperformed the previously known markers in blood studies particularly (AUC = 0.84). The discrimination of PDAC from early precursor lesions in non-malignant tissue (AUC > 0.81) and peripheral blood (AUC > 0.80) may assist in an early diagnosis of PDAC in blood samples and thus will also facilitate risk stratification upon validation in clinical trials.To reveal genetic factors or pathways involved in the pod degreening, we performed transcriptome and metabolome analyses using a yellow pod cultivar of the common bean "golden hook" ecotype and its green pod mutants yielded via gamma radiation. Transcriptional profiling showed that expression levels of red chlorophyll catabolite reductase (RCCR, Phvul.008G280300) involved in chlorophyll degradation was strongly enhanced at an early stage (2 cm long) in wild type but not in green pod mutants. The expression levels of genes involved in cellulose synthesis was inhibited by the pod degreening. Metabolomic profiling showed that the content of most flavonoid, flavones, and isoflavonoid was decreased during pod development, but the content of afzelechin, taxifolin, dihydrokaempferol, and cyanidin 3-O-rutinoside was remarkably increased in both wild type and green pod mutant. This study revealed that the pod degreening of the golden hook resulting from chlorophyll degradation could trigger changes in cellulose and flavonoids biosynthesis pathway, offering this cultivar a special color appearance and good flavor.Colorectal cancer (CRC) has been most extensively studied for characterizing genetic mutations along its development. However, we still have a poor understanding of CRC initiation due to limited measures of its observation and analysis. If we can unveil CRC initiation events, we might identify novel prognostic markers and therapeutic targets for early cancer detection and prevention. To tackle this problem, we establish the early CRC development model and perform transcriptome analysis of its single cell RNA-sequencing data. Interestingly, we find two subtypes, fast growing vs. slowly growing populations of distinct growth rate and gene signatures, and identify CCDC85B as a master regulator that can transform the cellular state of fast growing subtype cells into that of slowly growing subtype cells. We further validate this by in vitro experiments and suggest CCDC85B as a novel potential therapeutic target that may prevent malignant CRC development by suppressing stemness and uncontrolled cell proliferation.Melanoma is one of the most aggressive cancers. Hypoxic microenvironment affects multiple cellular pathways and contributes to tumor progression. The purpose of the research was to investigate the association between hypoxia and melanoma, and identify the prognostic value of hypoxia-related genes. Based on the GSVA algorithm, gene expression profile collected from The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) was used for calculating the hypoxia score. The Kaplan-Meier plot suggested that a high hypoxia score was correlated with the inferior survival of melanoma patients. Using differential gene expression analysis and WGCNA, a total of 337 overlapping genes associated with hypoxia were determined. Protein-protein interaction network and functional enrichment analysis were conducted, and Lasso Cox regression was performed to establish the prognostic gene signature. Lasso regression showed that seven genes displayed the best features. A novel seven-gene signature (including ABCA12, PTK6, FERMT1, GSDMC, KRT2, CSTA, and SPRR2F) was constructed for prognosis prediction. The ROC curve inferred good performance in both the TCGA cohort and validation cohorts. Therefore, our study determined the prognostic implication of the hypoxia score in melanoma and showed a novel seven-gene signature to predict prognosis, which may provide insights into the prognosis evaluation and clinical decision making.Somatic cell nuclear transfer or cytoplasm microinjection have been used to generate genome-edited farm animals; however, these methods have several drawbacks that reduce their efficiency. This study aimed to develop electroporation conditions that allow delivery of CRISPR/Cas9 system to bovine zygotes for efficient gene knock-out. We optimized electroporation conditions to deliver Cas9sgRNA ribonucleoproteins to bovine zygotes without compromising embryo development. Higher electroporation pulse voltage resulted in increased membrane permeability; however, voltages above 15 V/mm decreased embryo developmental potential. The zona pellucida of bovine embryos was not a barrier to efficient RNP electroporation. Using parameters optimized for maximal membrane permeability while maintaining developmental competence we achieved high rates of gene editing when targeting bovine OCT4, which resulted in absence of OCT4 protein in 100% of the evaluated embryos and the expected arrest of embryonic development at the morula stage.