SUMMARY Genome-wide transcriptional profiling was used to characterize the molecular underpinnings of neocortical organization in rhesus macaque, including cortical areal specialization and laminar cell type diversity. Microarray analysis of individual cortical layers across sensorimotor and association cortices identified robust and specific molecular signatures for individual cortical layers and areas, prominently involving genes associated with specialized neuronal function. Overall, transcriptome-based relationships were related to spatial proximity, being strongest between neighboring cortical areas and between proximal layers. Primary visual cortex (V1) displayed the most distinctive gene expression compared to other cortical regions in rhesus and human, both in the specialized layer 4 as well as other layers. Laminar patterns were more similar between macaque and human compared to mouse, as was the unique V1 profile that was not observed in mouse. These data provide a unique resource detailing neocortical transcription patterns in a non-human primate with great similarity in gene expression to human.
The activities of the related Abl and Arg nonreceptor tyrosine kinases are kept under tight control in cells, but exposure to several different stimuli results in a two-to fivefold stimulation of kinase activity. Following the breakdown of inhibitory intramolecular interactions, Abl activation requires phosphorylation on several tyrosine residues, including a tyrosine in its activation loop. These activating phosphorylations have been proposed to occur either through autophosphorylation by Abl in trans or through phosphorylation of Abl by the Src nonreceptor tyrosine kinase. We show here that these two pathways mediate phosphorylation at distinct sites in Abl and Arg and have additive effects on Abl and Arg kinase activation. Abl and Arg autophosphorylate at several sites outside the activation loop, leading to 5.2-and 6.2-fold increases in kinase activity, respectively. We also find that the Src family kinase Hck phosphorylates the Abl and Arg activation loops, leading to an additional twofold stimulation of kinase activity. The autoactivation pathway may allow Abl family kinases to integrate or amplify cues relayed by Src family kinases from cell surface receptors.
Individual differences in behavioral effects of sleep deprivation are associated with differences in diurnal amplitude of gene expression for genes that show circadian rhythmicity.
BackgroundIn Alzheimer’s disease, there are striking changes in CSF composition that relate to altered choroid plexus (CP) function. Studying CP tissue gene expression at the blood–cerebrospinal fluid barrier could provide further insight into the epithelial and stromal responses to neurodegenerative disease states.MethodsTranscriptome-wide Affymetrix microarrays were used to determine disease-related changes in gene expression in human CP. RNA from post-mortem samples of the entire lateral ventricular choroid plexus was extracted from 6 healthy controls (Ctrl), 7 patients with advanced (Braak and Braak stage III–VI) Alzheimer’s disease (AD), 4 with frontotemporal dementia (FTD) and 3 with Huntington’s disease (HuD). Statistics and agglomerative clustering were accomplished with MathWorks, MatLab; and gene set annotations by comparing input sets to GeneGo (http://www.genego.com) and Ingenuity (http://www.ingenuity.com) pathway sets. Bonferroni-corrected hypergeometric p-values of < 0.1 were considered a significant overlap between sets.ResultsPronounced differences in gene expression occurred in CP of advanced AD patients vs. Ctrls. Metabolic and immune-related pathways including acute phase response, cytokine, cell adhesion, interferons, and JAK-STAT as well as mTOR were significantly enriched among the genes upregulated. Methionine degradation, claudin-5 and protein translation genes were downregulated. Many gene expression changes in AD patients were observed in FTD and HuD (e.g., claudin-5, tight junction downregulation), but there were significant differences between the disease groups. In AD and HuD (but not FTD), several neuroimmune-modulating interferons were significantly enriched (e.g., in AD: IFI-TM1, IFN-AR1, IFN-AR2, and IFN-GR2). AD-associated expression changes, but not those in HuD and FTD, were enriched for upregulation of VEGF signaling and immune response proteins, e.g., interleukins. HuD and FTD patients distinctively displayed upregulated cadherin-mediated adhesion.ConclusionsOur transcript data for human CP tissue provides genomic and mechanistic insight for differential expression in AD vs. FTD vs. HuD for stromal as well as epithelial components. These choroidal transcriptome characterizations elucidate immune activation, tissue functional resiliency, and CSF metabolic homeostasis. The BCSFB undergoes harmful, but also important functional and adaptive changes in neurodegenerative diseases; accordingly, the enriched JAK-STAT and mTOR pathways, respectively, likely help the CP in adaptive transcription and epithelial repair and/or replacement when harmed by neurodegeneration pathophysiology. We anticipate that these precise CP translational data will facilitate pharmacologic/transgenic therapies to alleviate dementia.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (10.1186/s12987-018-0102-9) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
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