Genomics

Dataset Information

0

Nuclear Parkin Regulates Transcriptional Response during Hypoxia


ABSTRACT: Purpose: The E3 ubiquitin ligase Parkin is a well-characterized regulator of mitochondrial autophagy (mitophagy); however, it is becoming increasingly appreciated to perform additional roles in various compartments of the cell. Our laboratory confirmed the presence of Parkin in the nucleus of various tissues (biochemical fractionations) and cell types (immunofluorescent imaging). Hypoxia-induced nuclear translocation of Parkin occured independent of the mitophagy regulator PINK1, and Parkinson's disease-associated mutants were restricted from the nuclueus. Accordingly, we inserted a nuclear localization sequence (NLS) at the n-terminus of Parkin and overexpressed both NLS Parkin and the wild-type protein in HeLa cells cultured at normoxia and hypoxia. Next-generation RNA-sequencing (RNA-seq) was used to determine the effect of nuclear Parkin on cellular transcription. Methods: mCherry-tagged NLS and wild-type Parkin were overexpressed in HeLa cells. Differential expression analyses were performed on Parkin vs. mCherry control cells and NLS Parkin vs. mCherry control cells at normoxia and following 12hr of hypoxia (n=3/group/condition). Paired-end sequencing was performed using the HiSeq4000. FastQC v0.11.3 was used for quality control, Trimmomatic v0.36 was used to trim reads which were aligned to the human genome (GRCh37.p13) using the STAR aligner v2.5.3a. Read quantification was performed with RSEM v 1.3.0 and the Gencode release 19. The R BioConductor packages edgeR and limma were used to implement the limma-voom method for differential expression analysis. Results: During normoxia, Parkin had no effect on basal transcription; however, overexpression of NLS Parkin was associated with 168 differentially expressed genes (DEGs: fold-change

ORGANISM(S): Homo sapiens

PROVIDER: GSE139989 | GEO | 2019/11/06

REPOSITORIES: GEO

Similar Datasets

2022-09-29 | GSE207496 | GEO
| PRJNA587794 | ENA
2021-03-05 | GSE166790 | GEO
2015-10-31 | E-GEOD-74517 | biostudies-arrayexpress
2016-07-18 | E-GEOD-84484 | biostudies-arrayexpress
2016-06-14 | E-GEOD-83284 | biostudies-arrayexpress
2019-06-22 | GSE126910 | GEO
2022-06-29 | GSE203609 | GEO
2022-01-17 | PXD027586 | Pride
2014-05-01 | E-GEOD-56498 | biostudies-arrayexpress