Project description:To study the potential tumorigenic effect of two activating mutations of hLHR identified in patients, we generated in vitro cell model using mouse Leydig MA-10 cells. The two mutations, Asp578His and Asp578Gly, were stably transfected to MA-10 cell to create MA-10-Asp578His and MA-10-Asp578Gly line. The profile of expressed genes in cells expressing the mutated hLHR was compared with that of control cells using cDNA microarrays with NIA mouse clone sets. Keywords: Genetic modification analysis
2007-03-08 | GSE6780 | GEO
Project description:Chlamydomonas incerta MA lines sequences
Project description:The recent discovery of N6-methyladenine (N6-mA) in mammalian genomes suggests that it may serve as an epigenetic regulatory mechanism. However, the biological role of N6-mA and the molecular pathways that exert its function remain unclear. Here we show that N6-mA has a key role in changing the epigenetic landscape during cell fate transitions in early development. We found that N6-mA is upregulated during the development of mouse trophoblast stem cells, specifically at regions of stress-induced DNA double helix destabilization (SIDD). Regions of SIDD are conducive to topological stress-induced unpairing of the double helix and have critical roles in organizing large-scale chromatin structures. We show that the presence of N6-mA reduces the in vitro interactions by more than 500-fold between SIDD and SATB1, a crucial chromatin organizer that interacts with SIDD regions. Deposition of N6-mA also antagonizes SATB1 function in vivo by preventing its binding to chromatin. Concordantly, N6-mA functions at the boundaries between euchromatin and heterochromatin to restrict the spread of euchromatin. Repression of SIDD–SATB1 interactions mediated by N6-mA is essential for gene regulation during trophoblast development in cell culture models and in vivo. Overall, our findings demonstrate an unexpected molecular mechanism for N6-mA function via SATB1, and reveal connections between DNA modification, DNA secondary structures and large chromatin domains in early embryonic development.
Project description:The recent discovery of N6-methyladenine (N6-mA) in mammalian genomes suggests that it may serve as an epigenetic regulatory mechanism. However, the biological role of N6-mA and the molecular pathways that exert its function remain unclear. Here we show that N6-mA has a key role in changing the epigenetic landscape during cell fate transitions in early development. We found that N6-mA is upregulated during the development of mouse trophoblast stem cells, specifically at regions of stress-induced DNA double helix destabilization (SIDD). Regions of SIDD are conducive to topological stress-induced unpairing of the double helix and have critical roles in organizing large-scale chromatin structures. We show that the presence of N6-mA reduces the in vitro interactions by more than 500-fold between SIDD and SATB1, a crucial chromatin organizer that interacts with SIDD regions. Deposition of N6-mA also antagonizes SATB1 function in vivo by preventing its binding to chromatin. Concordantly, N6-mA functions at the boundaries between euchromatin and heterochromatin to restrict the spread of euchromatin. Repression of SIDD–SATB1 interactions mediated by N6-mA is essential for gene regulation during trophoblast development in cell culture models and in vivo. Overall, our findings demonstrate an unexpected molecular mechanism for N6-mA function via SATB1, and reveal connections between DNA modification, DNA secondary structures and large chromatin domains in early embryonic development.
Project description:This group is studying the role of glycoproteins in embryo implantation and development of the maternal-fetal interface. The Aplin lab is developing an embryo implantation model in which blastocysts attach to human endometrial cells. The project aims to investigate the molecular interactions mediating attachment and subsequent events including trophoblast invasion and displacement of maternal cells. In the present phase of the project, the lab is using the Ishikawa (human endometrial) cell line with mouse embryos.
Project description:Liver tissues of Guangxi Ma chicken from 32-week old with m performance, 50-week old with high and low laying performance, and 72-week old with high and low laying performance were collected and sequenced in quadruplicate using RNA-seq. The sequences were double-ended sequenced on the DNBSEQ sequencing platform. The sequence reads were quality controlled and then aligned with genomic sequences using HISAT2 program, quantified by featureCounts program, and gene expression levels were verified by qRT-PCR with SYBR Green detection. The results will be helpful to explore the factors that affecting laying performance from the perspective of yolk synthesis and provide a theoretical basis for improving the egg production of Guangxi Ma chicken.
Project description:We conducted whole-genome bisulfite sequencing (WGBS) of Arabidopsis thaliana mutation accumulation (MA) lines under different temperature treatments over sucessive generations, and then we identified the global methylation in each MA line. Our result showed taht DNA methylation was observed more frequently at DNA mutation sites, indicating its contribution to the mutation process at elevated temperatures.
Project description:The purpose of this study was to identify differentially-expressed genes between WT MA-10 mouse tumor Leydig cells and MA-10 cells in which the steroidogenic acute regulatory protein (STAR) is knocked out.
Project description:Investigating the molecular basis and correlates of anxiety-related and depression-like behaviors, we generated a mouse model consisting of high (HAB), normal (NAB) and low (LAB) anxiety-related behavior mice. We utilized the elevated plus-maze for testing the genetic predisposition to anxiety-related behavior and, consequently, used this as selection criterion for the inbreeding of our animals. In depression-related tests, HAB mice display a more passive, depression-like coping strategy than LAB mice, resembling clinical comorbidity of anxiety and depression as observed in psychiatric patients. Using a microarray approach, the hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus (PVN), the basolateral (BLA) and central amygdala (CeA), the cingulate cortex (Cg) and the dentate gyrus (DG) – centers of the central nervous anxiety and fear circuitries – were investigated and screened for differences between HAB, NAB and LAB mice. Analysis was performed from four to six animals per line (HAB, NAB and LAB from generation 25, respectively) per brain region, giving a total of 78 individual arrays analyzed. The LAB mouse line is referred to as reference.