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1.
bioRxiv ; 2024 May 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38712187

RESUMO

Uterine fibroids are prevalent benign tumors in women that exhibit considerable heterogeneity in clinical presentation and molecular characteristics, necessitating a deeper understanding of their etiology and pathogenesis. HMGA2 overexpression has been associated with fibroid development, yet its precise role remains elusive. Mutations in fibroids are mutually exclusive and largely clonal, suggesting that tumors originate from a single mutant cell. We explored a possible role for HMGA2 overexpression in differentiated myometrial cells, hypothesizing its potential to induce a stem cell-like or dedifferentiating phenotype and drive fibroid development. Myometrial cells were immortalized and transduced with an HMGA2 lentivirus to produce HMGA2hi cells. In vitro stem cell assays were conducted and RNA from HMGA2hi and control cells and fibroid-free myometrial and HMGA2 fibroid (HMGA2F) tissues were submitted for RNA-sequencing. HMGA2hi cells have enhanced self-renewal capacity, decreased proliferation, and have a greater ability to differentiate into other mesenchymal cell types. HMGA2hi cells exhibit a stem cell-like signature and share transcriptomic similarities with HMGA2F. Moreover, dysregulated extracellular matrix pathways are observed in both HMGA2hi cells and HMGA2F. Our findings suggest that HMGA2 overexpression drives myometrial cells to dedifferentiate into a more plastic phenotype and underscore a pivotal role for HMGA2 in fibroid pathogenesis.

2.
Pathogens ; 11(1)2022 Jan 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35056052

RESUMO

Characterization of the bovine leukocyte antigen (BoLA) DRB3 gene has shown that specific alleles associate with susceptibility or resilience to the progression of bovine leukemia virus (BLV), measured by proviral load (PVL). Through surveillance of multi-farm BLV eradication field trials, we observed differential phenotypes within seropositive cows that persist from months to years. We sought to develop a multiplex next-generation sequencing workflow (NGS-SBT) capable of genotyping 384 samples per run to assess the relationship between BLV phenotype and two BoLA genes. We utilized longitudinal results from milk ELISA screening and subsequent blood collections on seropositive cows for PVL determination using a novel BLV proviral load multiplex qPCR assay to phenotype the cows. Repeated diagnostic observations defined two distinct phenotypes in our study population, ELISA-positive cows that do not harbor detectable levels of provirus and those who do have persistent proviral loads. In total, 565 cows from nine Midwest dairy farms were selected for NGS-SBT, with 558 cows: 168 BLV susceptible (ELISA-positive/PVL-positive) and 390 BLV resilient (ELISA-positive/PVL-negative) successfully genotyped. Three BoLA-DRB3 alleles, including one novel allele, were shown to associate with disease resilience, *009:02, *044:01, and *048:02 were found at rates of 97.5%, 86.5%, and 90.3%, respectively, within the phenotypically resilient population. Alternatively, DRB3*015:01 and *027:03, both known to associate with disease progression, were found at rates of 81.1% and 92.3%, respectively, within the susceptible population. This study helps solidify the immunogenetic relationship between BoLA-DRB3 alleles and BLV infection status of these two phenotypic groupings of US dairy cattle.

3.
Pathogens ; 10(9)2021 Sep 14.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34578223

RESUMO

Bovine leukemia virus (BLV) causes Enzootic Bovine Leukosis (EBL), a persistent life-long disease resulting in immune dysfunction and shortened lifespan in infected cattle, severely impacting the profitability of the US dairy industry. Our group has found that 94% of dairy farms in the United States are infected with BLV with an average in-herd prevalence of 46%. This is partly due to the lack of clinical presentation during the early stages of primary infection and the elusive nature of BLV transmission. This study sought to validate a near-complete genomic sequencing approach for reliability and accuracy before determining its efficacy in characterizing the sequence identity of BLV proviral genomes collected from a pilot study made up of 14 animals from one commercial dairy herd. These BLV-infected animals were comprised of seven adult dam/daughter pairs that tested positive by ELISA and qPCR. The results demonstrate sequence identity or divergence of the BLV genome from the same samples tested in two independent laboratories, suggesting both vertical and horizontal transmission in this dairy herd. This study supports the use of Oxford Nanopore sequencing for the identification of viral SNPs that can be used for retrospective genetic contact tracing of BLV transmission.

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