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Cellular Expression of Smarca4 (Brg1)-regulated Genes in Zebrafish Retinas

BACKGROUND: In a recent genomic study, Leung et al. used a factorial microarray analysis to identify Smarca4 (Brg1)-regulated genes in micro-dissected zebrafish retinas. Two hundred and fifty nine genes were grouped in three-way ANOVA models which carried the most specific retinal change. To validat...

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Autores principales: Hensley, Monica R, Emran, Farida, Bonilla, Sylvia, Zhang, Liyun, Zhong, Wenxuan, Grosu, Paul, Dowling, John E, Leung, Yuk Fai
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3155967/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21756345
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-213X-11-45
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author Hensley, Monica R
Emran, Farida
Bonilla, Sylvia
Zhang, Liyun
Zhong, Wenxuan
Grosu, Paul
Dowling, John E
Leung, Yuk Fai
author_facet Hensley, Monica R
Emran, Farida
Bonilla, Sylvia
Zhang, Liyun
Zhong, Wenxuan
Grosu, Paul
Dowling, John E
Leung, Yuk Fai
author_sort Hensley, Monica R
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: In a recent genomic study, Leung et al. used a factorial microarray analysis to identify Smarca4 (Brg1)-regulated genes in micro-dissected zebrafish retinas. Two hundred and fifty nine genes were grouped in three-way ANOVA models which carried the most specific retinal change. To validate the microarray results and to elucidate cellular expression patterns of the significant genes for further characterization, 32 known genes were randomly selected from this group. In situ hybridization of these genes was performed on the same types of samples (wild-type (WT) and smarca4(a50/a50 )(yng) mutant) at the same stages (36 and 52 hours post-fertilization (hpf)) as in the microarray study. RESULTS: Thirty out of 32 riboprobes showed a positive in situ staining signal. Twenty seven out of these 30 genes were originally further classified as Smarca4-regulated retinal genes, while the remaining three as retinal-specific expression independent of Smarca4 regulation. It was found that 90.32% of the significant microarray comparisons that were used to identify Smarca4-regulated retinal genes had a corresponding qualitative expression change in the in situ hybridization comparisons. This is highly concordant with the theoretical true discovery rate of 95%. Hierarchical clustering was used to investigate the similarity of the cellular expression patterns of 25 out of the 27 Smarca4-regulated retinal genes that had a sufficiently high expression signal for an unambiguous identification of retinal expression domains. Three broad groups of expression pattern were identified; including 1) photoreceptor layer/outer nuclear layer specific expression at 52 hpf, 2) ganglion cell layer (GCL) and/or inner nuclear layer (INL) specific expression at both 36 & 52 hpf, and 3) GCL and/or INL specific expression at 52 hpf only. Some of these genes have recently been demonstrated to play key roles in retinal cell-type specification, differentiation and lamination. For the remaining three retinal-specific genes that are independent of Smarca4 regulation, they all had a subtle expression difference between WT and smarca4(a50/a50 )retinas as detected by in situ hybridization. This subtle expression difference was also detected by the original microarray analysis. However, the difference was lower than the fold change cut-off used in that study and hence these genes were not inferred as Smarca4-regulated retinal genes. CONCLUSIONS: This study has successfully investigated the expression pattern of 32 genes identified from the original factorial microarray analysis. The results have demonstrated that the true discovery rate for identifying Smarca4-regulated retinal genes is 90.3%. Hence, the significant genes from the microarray study are good candidates for cell-type specific markers and will aid further investigation of retinal differentiation.
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spelling pubmed-31559672011-08-16 Cellular Expression of Smarca4 (Brg1)-regulated Genes in Zebrafish Retinas Hensley, Monica R Emran, Farida Bonilla, Sylvia Zhang, Liyun Zhong, Wenxuan Grosu, Paul Dowling, John E Leung, Yuk Fai BMC Dev Biol Research Article BACKGROUND: In a recent genomic study, Leung et al. used a factorial microarray analysis to identify Smarca4 (Brg1)-regulated genes in micro-dissected zebrafish retinas. Two hundred and fifty nine genes were grouped in three-way ANOVA models which carried the most specific retinal change. To validate the microarray results and to elucidate cellular expression patterns of the significant genes for further characterization, 32 known genes were randomly selected from this group. In situ hybridization of these genes was performed on the same types of samples (wild-type (WT) and smarca4(a50/a50 )(yng) mutant) at the same stages (36 and 52 hours post-fertilization (hpf)) as in the microarray study. RESULTS: Thirty out of 32 riboprobes showed a positive in situ staining signal. Twenty seven out of these 30 genes were originally further classified as Smarca4-regulated retinal genes, while the remaining three as retinal-specific expression independent of Smarca4 regulation. It was found that 90.32% of the significant microarray comparisons that were used to identify Smarca4-regulated retinal genes had a corresponding qualitative expression change in the in situ hybridization comparisons. This is highly concordant with the theoretical true discovery rate of 95%. Hierarchical clustering was used to investigate the similarity of the cellular expression patterns of 25 out of the 27 Smarca4-regulated retinal genes that had a sufficiently high expression signal for an unambiguous identification of retinal expression domains. Three broad groups of expression pattern were identified; including 1) photoreceptor layer/outer nuclear layer specific expression at 52 hpf, 2) ganglion cell layer (GCL) and/or inner nuclear layer (INL) specific expression at both 36 & 52 hpf, and 3) GCL and/or INL specific expression at 52 hpf only. Some of these genes have recently been demonstrated to play key roles in retinal cell-type specification, differentiation and lamination. For the remaining three retinal-specific genes that are independent of Smarca4 regulation, they all had a subtle expression difference between WT and smarca4(a50/a50 )retinas as detected by in situ hybridization. This subtle expression difference was also detected by the original microarray analysis. However, the difference was lower than the fold change cut-off used in that study and hence these genes were not inferred as Smarca4-regulated retinal genes. CONCLUSIONS: This study has successfully investigated the expression pattern of 32 genes identified from the original factorial microarray analysis. The results have demonstrated that the true discovery rate for identifying Smarca4-regulated retinal genes is 90.3%. Hence, the significant genes from the microarray study are good candidates for cell-type specific markers and will aid further investigation of retinal differentiation. BioMed Central 2011-07-14 /pmc/articles/PMC3155967/ /pubmed/21756345 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-213X-11-45 Text en Copyright ©2011 Hensley et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Hensley, Monica R
Emran, Farida
Bonilla, Sylvia
Zhang, Liyun
Zhong, Wenxuan
Grosu, Paul
Dowling, John E
Leung, Yuk Fai
Cellular Expression of Smarca4 (Brg1)-regulated Genes in Zebrafish Retinas
title Cellular Expression of Smarca4 (Brg1)-regulated Genes in Zebrafish Retinas
title_full Cellular Expression of Smarca4 (Brg1)-regulated Genes in Zebrafish Retinas
title_fullStr Cellular Expression of Smarca4 (Brg1)-regulated Genes in Zebrafish Retinas
title_full_unstemmed Cellular Expression of Smarca4 (Brg1)-regulated Genes in Zebrafish Retinas
title_short Cellular Expression of Smarca4 (Brg1)-regulated Genes in Zebrafish Retinas
title_sort cellular expression of smarca4 (brg1)-regulated genes in zebrafish retinas
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3155967/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21756345
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-213X-11-45
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