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Androglobin gene expression patterns and FOXJ1-dependent regulation indicate its functional association with ciliogenesis

Androglobin (ADGB) represents the latest addition to the globin superfamily in metazoans. The chimeric protein comprises a calpain domain and a unique circularly permutated globin domain. ADGB expression levels are most abundant in mammalian testis, but its cell-type-specific expression, regulation,...

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Autores principales: Koay, Teng Wei, Osterhof, Carina, Orlando, Ilaria M.C., Keppner, Anna, Andre, Daniel, Yousefian, Schayan, Suárez Alonso, María, Correia, Miguel, Markworth, Robert, Schödel, Johannes, Hankeln, Thomas, Hoogewijs, David
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7949040/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33453283
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jbc.2021.100291
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author Koay, Teng Wei
Osterhof, Carina
Orlando, Ilaria M.C.
Keppner, Anna
Andre, Daniel
Yousefian, Schayan
Suárez Alonso, María
Correia, Miguel
Markworth, Robert
Schödel, Johannes
Hankeln, Thomas
Hoogewijs, David
author_facet Koay, Teng Wei
Osterhof, Carina
Orlando, Ilaria M.C.
Keppner, Anna
Andre, Daniel
Yousefian, Schayan
Suárez Alonso, María
Correia, Miguel
Markworth, Robert
Schödel, Johannes
Hankeln, Thomas
Hoogewijs, David
author_sort Koay, Teng Wei
collection PubMed
description Androglobin (ADGB) represents the latest addition to the globin superfamily in metazoans. The chimeric protein comprises a calpain domain and a unique circularly permutated globin domain. ADGB expression levels are most abundant in mammalian testis, but its cell-type-specific expression, regulation, and function have remained unexplored. Analyzing bulk and single-cell mRNA-Seq data from mammalian tissues, we found that—in addition to the testes—ADGB is prominently expressed in the female reproductive tract, lungs, and brain, specifically being associated with cell types forming motile cilia. Correlation analysis suggested coregulation of ADGB with FOXJ1, a crucial transcription factor of ciliogenesis. Investigating the transcriptional regulation of the ADGB gene, we characterized its promoter using epigenomic datasets, exogenous promoter-dependent luciferase assays, and CRISPR/dCas9-VPR-mediated activation approaches. Reporter gene assays revealed that FOXJ1 indeed substantially enhanced luciferase activity driven by the ADGB promoter. ChIP assays confirmed binding of FOXJ1 to the endogenous ADGB promoter region. We dissected the minimal sequence required for FOXJ1-dependent regulation and fine mapped the FOXJ1 binding site to two evolutionarily conserved regions within the ADGB promoter. FOXJ1 overexpression significantly increased endogenous ADGB mRNA levels in HEK293 and MCF-7 cells. Similar results were observed upon RFX2 overexpression, another key transcription factor in ciliogenesis. The complex transcriptional regulation of the ADGB locus was illustrated by identifying a distal enhancer, responsible for synergistic regulation by RFX2 and FOXJ1. Finally, cell culture studies indicated an ADGB-dependent increase in the number of ciliated cells upon overexpression of the full-length protein, confirming a ciliogenesis-associated role of ADGB in mammals.
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spelling pubmed-79490402021-03-19 Androglobin gene expression patterns and FOXJ1-dependent regulation indicate its functional association with ciliogenesis Koay, Teng Wei Osterhof, Carina Orlando, Ilaria M.C. Keppner, Anna Andre, Daniel Yousefian, Schayan Suárez Alonso, María Correia, Miguel Markworth, Robert Schödel, Johannes Hankeln, Thomas Hoogewijs, David J Biol Chem Research Article Androglobin (ADGB) represents the latest addition to the globin superfamily in metazoans. The chimeric protein comprises a calpain domain and a unique circularly permutated globin domain. ADGB expression levels are most abundant in mammalian testis, but its cell-type-specific expression, regulation, and function have remained unexplored. Analyzing bulk and single-cell mRNA-Seq data from mammalian tissues, we found that—in addition to the testes—ADGB is prominently expressed in the female reproductive tract, lungs, and brain, specifically being associated with cell types forming motile cilia. Correlation analysis suggested coregulation of ADGB with FOXJ1, a crucial transcription factor of ciliogenesis. Investigating the transcriptional regulation of the ADGB gene, we characterized its promoter using epigenomic datasets, exogenous promoter-dependent luciferase assays, and CRISPR/dCas9-VPR-mediated activation approaches. Reporter gene assays revealed that FOXJ1 indeed substantially enhanced luciferase activity driven by the ADGB promoter. ChIP assays confirmed binding of FOXJ1 to the endogenous ADGB promoter region. We dissected the minimal sequence required for FOXJ1-dependent regulation and fine mapped the FOXJ1 binding site to two evolutionarily conserved regions within the ADGB promoter. FOXJ1 overexpression significantly increased endogenous ADGB mRNA levels in HEK293 and MCF-7 cells. Similar results were observed upon RFX2 overexpression, another key transcription factor in ciliogenesis. The complex transcriptional regulation of the ADGB locus was illustrated by identifying a distal enhancer, responsible for synergistic regulation by RFX2 and FOXJ1. Finally, cell culture studies indicated an ADGB-dependent increase in the number of ciliated cells upon overexpression of the full-length protein, confirming a ciliogenesis-associated role of ADGB in mammals. American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology 2021-01-13 /pmc/articles/PMC7949040/ /pubmed/33453283 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jbc.2021.100291 Text en © 2021 The Authors https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Research Article
Koay, Teng Wei
Osterhof, Carina
Orlando, Ilaria M.C.
Keppner, Anna
Andre, Daniel
Yousefian, Schayan
Suárez Alonso, María
Correia, Miguel
Markworth, Robert
Schödel, Johannes
Hankeln, Thomas
Hoogewijs, David
Androglobin gene expression patterns and FOXJ1-dependent regulation indicate its functional association with ciliogenesis
title Androglobin gene expression patterns and FOXJ1-dependent regulation indicate its functional association with ciliogenesis
title_full Androglobin gene expression patterns and FOXJ1-dependent regulation indicate its functional association with ciliogenesis
title_fullStr Androglobin gene expression patterns and FOXJ1-dependent regulation indicate its functional association with ciliogenesis
title_full_unstemmed Androglobin gene expression patterns and FOXJ1-dependent regulation indicate its functional association with ciliogenesis
title_short Androglobin gene expression patterns and FOXJ1-dependent regulation indicate its functional association with ciliogenesis
title_sort androglobin gene expression patterns and foxj1-dependent regulation indicate its functional association with ciliogenesis
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7949040/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33453283
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jbc.2021.100291
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