Ataxin-1 controls the expression of specific noncoding RNAs in B cells upon autoimmune demyelination.
Qin MaAlessandro DidonnaPublished in: Immunology and cell biology (2023)
B cells play a key mechanistic role in the pathogenesis of multiple sclerosis (MS), a chronic neurological disease of the central nervous system with an autoimmune etiology. B cells contribute to disease initiation and progression by acting as professional antigen-presenting cells as well as via secreting autoantibodies and proinflammatory cytokines. We have recently shown that the polyglutamine protein ataxin-1, which was first linked to the movement disorder spinocerebellar ataxia type 1, also acts as a master regulator of B-cell functions in the context of central nervous system autoimmunity. In fact, ataxin-1-deficient mice display an aggravated manifestation of the MS disease model experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis along with aberrant B-cell functions. Consistent with this scenario, transcriptomic analysis of Atxn1-null B cells highlighted distinct genetic signatures involved in cell activation, proliferation and antigen presentation. To further characterize the role of ataxin-1, we profiled the noncoding transcriptome controlled by ataxin-1 in the B-cell compartment upon an encephalitogenic challenge. We show that two specific classes of noncoding RNAs, namely, processed pseudogenes and intergenic long noncoding RNAs, are differentially regulated along disease. Furthermore, pathway and protein network analyses on their putative protein-coding gene targets found a significant enrichment in ontologies related to cell mitosis, together with molecular processes relevant to MS such as chitin metabolism. Altogether, these findings shed light on the possible contribution of noncoding RNAs to B-cell biology and MS pathogenesis, and further establish the immunomodulatory role of ataxin-1 in autoimmune demyelination.
Keyphrases
- multiple sclerosis
- mass spectrometry
- single cell
- ms ms
- genome wide
- binding protein
- transcription factor
- white matter
- cell therapy
- induced apoptosis
- signaling pathway
- poor prognosis
- rna seq
- stem cells
- protein protein
- long non coding rna
- copy number
- case report
- dna methylation
- mesenchymal stem cells
- oxidative stress
- cerebrospinal fluid
- blood brain barrier
- cell proliferation
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- pi k akt