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Defining cell-type specificity at the transcriptional level in human disease

Cell-lineage–specific transcripts are essential for differentiated tissue function, implicated in hereditary organ failure, and mediate acquired chronic diseases. However, experimental identification of cell-lineage–specific genes in a genome-scale manner is infeasible for most solid human tissues....

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Autores principales: Ju, Wenjun, Greene, Casey S., Eichinger, Felix, Nair, Viji, Hodgin, Jeffrey B., Bitzer, Markus, Lee, Young-suk, Zhu, Qian, Kehata, Masami, Li, Min, Jiang, Song, Rastaldi, Maria Pia, Cohen, Clemens D., Troyanskaya, Olga G., Kretzler, Matthias
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3814886/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23950145
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/gr.155697.113
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author Ju, Wenjun
Greene, Casey S.
Eichinger, Felix
Nair, Viji
Hodgin, Jeffrey B.
Bitzer, Markus
Lee, Young-suk
Zhu, Qian
Kehata, Masami
Li, Min
Jiang, Song
Rastaldi, Maria Pia
Cohen, Clemens D.
Troyanskaya, Olga G.
Kretzler, Matthias
author_facet Ju, Wenjun
Greene, Casey S.
Eichinger, Felix
Nair, Viji
Hodgin, Jeffrey B.
Bitzer, Markus
Lee, Young-suk
Zhu, Qian
Kehata, Masami
Li, Min
Jiang, Song
Rastaldi, Maria Pia
Cohen, Clemens D.
Troyanskaya, Olga G.
Kretzler, Matthias
author_sort Ju, Wenjun
collection PubMed
description Cell-lineage–specific transcripts are essential for differentiated tissue function, implicated in hereditary organ failure, and mediate acquired chronic diseases. However, experimental identification of cell-lineage–specific genes in a genome-scale manner is infeasible for most solid human tissues. We developed the first genome-scale method to identify genes with cell-lineage–specific expression, even in lineages not separable by experimental microdissection. Our machine-learning–based approach leverages high-throughput data from tissue homogenates in a novel iterative statistical framework. We applied this method to chronic kidney disease and identified transcripts specific to podocytes, key cells in the glomerular filter responsible for hereditary and most acquired glomerular kidney disease. In a systematic evaluation of our predictions by immunohistochemistry, our in silico approach was significantly more accurate (65% accuracy in human) than predictions based on direct measurement of in vivo fluorescence-tagged murine podocytes (23%). Our method identified genes implicated as causal in hereditary glomerular disease and involved in molecular pathways of acquired and chronic renal diseases. Furthermore, based on expression analysis of human kidney disease biopsies, we demonstrated that expression of the podocyte genes identified by our approach is significantly related to the degree of renal impairment in patients. Our approach is broadly applicable to define lineage specificity in both cell physiology and human disease contexts. We provide a user-friendly website that enables researchers to apply this method to any cell-lineage or tissue of interest. Identified cell-lineage–specific transcripts are expected to play essential tissue-specific roles in organogenesis and disease and can provide starting points for the development of organ-specific diagnostics and therapies.
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spelling pubmed-38148862014-05-01 Defining cell-type specificity at the transcriptional level in human disease Ju, Wenjun Greene, Casey S. Eichinger, Felix Nair, Viji Hodgin, Jeffrey B. Bitzer, Markus Lee, Young-suk Zhu, Qian Kehata, Masami Li, Min Jiang, Song Rastaldi, Maria Pia Cohen, Clemens D. Troyanskaya, Olga G. Kretzler, Matthias Genome Res Method Cell-lineage–specific transcripts are essential for differentiated tissue function, implicated in hereditary organ failure, and mediate acquired chronic diseases. However, experimental identification of cell-lineage–specific genes in a genome-scale manner is infeasible for most solid human tissues. We developed the first genome-scale method to identify genes with cell-lineage–specific expression, even in lineages not separable by experimental microdissection. Our machine-learning–based approach leverages high-throughput data from tissue homogenates in a novel iterative statistical framework. We applied this method to chronic kidney disease and identified transcripts specific to podocytes, key cells in the glomerular filter responsible for hereditary and most acquired glomerular kidney disease. In a systematic evaluation of our predictions by immunohistochemistry, our in silico approach was significantly more accurate (65% accuracy in human) than predictions based on direct measurement of in vivo fluorescence-tagged murine podocytes (23%). Our method identified genes implicated as causal in hereditary glomerular disease and involved in molecular pathways of acquired and chronic renal diseases. Furthermore, based on expression analysis of human kidney disease biopsies, we demonstrated that expression of the podocyte genes identified by our approach is significantly related to the degree of renal impairment in patients. Our approach is broadly applicable to define lineage specificity in both cell physiology and human disease contexts. We provide a user-friendly website that enables researchers to apply this method to any cell-lineage or tissue of interest. Identified cell-lineage–specific transcripts are expected to play essential tissue-specific roles in organogenesis and disease and can provide starting points for the development of organ-specific diagnostics and therapies. Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press 2013-11 /pmc/articles/PMC3814886/ /pubmed/23950145 http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/gr.155697.113 Text en © 2013 Ju et al.; Published by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/ This article is distributed exclusively by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press for the first six months after the full-issue publication date (see http://genome.cshlp.org/site/misc/terms.xhtml). After six months, it is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 Unported), as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/.
spellingShingle Method
Ju, Wenjun
Greene, Casey S.
Eichinger, Felix
Nair, Viji
Hodgin, Jeffrey B.
Bitzer, Markus
Lee, Young-suk
Zhu, Qian
Kehata, Masami
Li, Min
Jiang, Song
Rastaldi, Maria Pia
Cohen, Clemens D.
Troyanskaya, Olga G.
Kretzler, Matthias
Defining cell-type specificity at the transcriptional level in human disease
title Defining cell-type specificity at the transcriptional level in human disease
title_full Defining cell-type specificity at the transcriptional level in human disease
title_fullStr Defining cell-type specificity at the transcriptional level in human disease
title_full_unstemmed Defining cell-type specificity at the transcriptional level in human disease
title_short Defining cell-type specificity at the transcriptional level in human disease
title_sort defining cell-type specificity at the transcriptional level in human disease
topic Method
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3814886/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23950145
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/gr.155697.113
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