Liquid biopsy recently became a very promising diagnostic method that has several advantages over conventional invasive methods. Liquid biopsy may serve as a source of several important biomarkers including cell-free nucleic acids (cf-NAs). Cf-DNA is widely used in prenatal testing in order to characterize fetal genetic disorders. Analysis of cf-DNA may provide information about the mutation profile of tumor cells, while cell-free non-coding RNAs are promising biomarker candidates in the diagnosis and prognosis of cancer. Many of these markers have the potential to help clinicians in therapy selection and in the follow-up of patients. Thus, cf-NA-based diagnostics represent a new path in personalized medicine. Although several reviews are available in the field, most of them focus on a limited number of cf-NA types. In this review, we give an overview about all known cf-NAs including cf-DNA, cf-mtDNA and cell-free non-coding RNA (miRNA, lncRNA, circRNA, piRNA, YRNA, and vtRNA) by discussing their biogenesis, biological function and potential as biomarker candidates in liquid biopsy. We also outline possible future directions in the field.
Megakaryocyte (MK)-derived miRNAs have been detected in platelets. Here, we analysed the expression of platelet and circulating miR-223, miR-26b, miR-126 and miR-140 that might be altered with their target mRNAs in type 2 diabetes mellitus (DM2). MiRNAs were isolated from leukocyte-depleted platelets and plasma samples obtained from 28 obese DM2, 19 non-DM obese and 23 healthy individuals. The effect of hyperglycaemia on miRNAs was also evaluated in MKs using MEG-01 and K562 cells under hyperglycaemic conditions after 8 hours up to four weeks. Quantitation of mature miRNA, pre-miRNAs and target mRNA levels (P2RY12 and SELP) were measured by RT-qPCR. To prove the association of miR-26b and miR-140 with SELP (P-selectin) mRNA level, overexpression or inhibition of these miRNAs in MEG-01 MKs was performed using mimics or anti-miRNAs, respectively. The contribution of calpain substrate Dicer to modulation of miRNAs was studied by calpain inhibition. Platelet activation was evaluated via surface P-selectin by flow cytometry. Mature and pre-forms of investigated miRNAs were significantly reduced in DM2, and platelet P2RY12 and SELP mRNA levels were elevated by two-fold at increased platelet activation compared to controls. Significantly blunted miRNA expressions were observed by hyperglycaemia in MEG-01 and K562-MK cells versus baseline values, while the manipulation of miR-26b and miR-140 expression affected SELP mRNA level. Calpeptin pretreatment restored miRNA levels in hyperglycaemic MKs. Overall, miR-223, miR-26b, miR-126 and miR-140 are expressed at a lower level in platelets and MKs in DM2 causing upregulation of P2RY12 and SELP mRNAs that may contribute to adverse platelet function.
Exposure to physiological estrogens or xenoestrogens (e.g., zearalenone or bisphenol A) increases the risk for cancer. However, little information is available on their significance in ovarian cancer. We present a comprehensive study on the effect of estradiol, zearalenone and bisphenol A on the phenotype, mRNA, intracellular and cell-free miRNA expression of human epithelial ovarian cell lines. Estrogens induced a comparable effect on the rate of cell proliferation and migration as well as on the expression of estrogen-responsive genes (GREB1, CA12, DEPTOR, RBBP8) in the estrogen receptor α (ERα)-expressing PEO1 cell line, which was not observable in the absence of this receptor (in A2780 cells). The basal intracellular and cell-free expression of miR200s and miR203a was higher in PEO1, which was accompanied with low ZEB1 and high E-cadherin expression. These miRNAs showed a rapid but intermittent upregulation in response to estrogens that was diminished by an ERα-specific antagonist. The role of ERα in the regulation of the MIR200B-MIR200A-MIR429 locus was further supported by publicly available ChIP-seq data. MiRNA expression of cell lysates correlated well with cell-free miRNA expression. We conclude that cell-free miR200s might be promising biomarkers to assess estrogen sensitivity of ovarian cells.
Mutants resistant to 3-aminobenzamide, a known inhibitor of ADP-ribosyltransferase, were obtained from Streptomyces coelicolor A3(2). One (strain 27) was analyzed in detail. Mutant 27 had a reduced ADP-ribosyltransferase activity, exhibited substantial changes from the wild type in ADP-ribosylated protein profile during cell aging, and was defective in producing aerial mycelium and antibiotics. A 92-kDa ADP-ribosylated protein disappeared at the onset of differentiation in the parent strain but was present in mutant 27. Four ADPribosylated proteins (39, 41, 43, and 46 kDa) appeared at the onset of differentiation in the parent strain but were missing in mutant 27. Failure to ADP-ribosylate these four proteins was detected when the parent strain was grown in the presence of subinhibitory amounts of 3-aminobenzamide. Genetic analysis showed that the mutation, named brgA, conferring resistance to 3-aminobenzamide, cosegregated with the altered phenotypes (i.e., defects in ADP-ribosylation and aerial mycelium formation) and was mapped to a new locus near uraA. The brgA mutants were nonconditionally deficient in producing aerial mycelium and antibiotics, as determined by using various media, and had a morphological and physiological phenotype quite different from that of a bldG mutant carrying a mutation which was previously mapped near uraA. Among the known bld mutants, bldA, bldD, and bldG mutants exhibited a ADP-ribosylated protein profile similar to that of the wild type, while like mutant 27, bldB, bldC, and bldH mutants failed to ADP-ribosylate certain proteins.The genus Streptomyces contains mycelial soil bacteria that are of interest because they produce antibiotics (physiological differentiation), usually in the process of aerial mycelium formation (morphological differentiation) when cultured on agar. Streptomyces griseus and S. coelicolor A3(2) are both well studied physiologically or genetically. The mechanism of coupling of morphological and physiological differentiation, however, remains to be clarified (for reviews, see references 2 and 3). The results of isolating and analyzing relaxed (relC) mutants of several Streptomyces spp. led Ochi (16) to propose that morphological differentiation results from a decrease in the GTP pool, whereas physiological differentiation results from a function of ppGpp (guanosine 5Ј-diphosphate 3Ј-diphosphate), whose synthesis depends on the rel gene function. More recently, Ochi et al. (19) stressed the potential significance of ADP-ribosylation of proteins in S. griseus differentiation.ADP-ribosylation is an enzymatic reaction by which the ADP-ribose moiety of NAD is covalently bound to specific acceptor proteins by ADP-ribosyltransferase (ADPRT) (reviewed in references 12, 22, and 24). ADP-ribosylation can be considered a mode of metabolic regulation along with phosphorylation, adenylylation, uridylation, and methylation; the ADP-ribosylated protein may lose its activity but may later be reactivated by enzymic de-ADP-ribosylation. A possible role of ADP-ribosylation du...
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