Ventricular Septal Defect (VSD), the most common congenital heart defect, is characterized by a hole in the septum between the right and left ventricles. The pathogenesis of VSD is unknown in most clinical cases. There is a paucity of data relevant to epigenetic changes in VSD. The placenta is a fetal tissue crucial in cardiac development and a potentially useful surrogate for evaluating the development of heart tissue. To understand epigenetic mechanisms that may play a role in the development of VSD, genome-wide DNA methylation assay on placentas of 8 term subjects with isolated VSD and no known or suspected genetic syndromes and 10 unaffected controls was performed using the Illumina HumanMethylation450 BeadChip assay. We identified a total of 80 highly accurate potential CpGs in 80 genes for detection of VSD; area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC ROC) 1.0 with significant 95% CI (FDR) p-values < 0.05 for each individual locus. The biological processes and functions for many of these differentially methylated genes are previously known to be associated with heart development or disease, including cardiac ventricle development (HEY2, ISL1), heart looping (SRF), cardiac muscle cell differentiation (ACTC1, HEY2), cardiac septum development (ISL1), heart morphogenesis (SRF, HEY2, ISL1, HEYL), Notch signaling pathway (HEY2, HEYL), cardiac chamber development (ISL1), and cardiac muscle tissue development (ACTC1, ISL1). In addition, we identified 8 microRNAs that have the potential to be biomarkers for the detection of VSD including: miR-191, miR-548F1, miR-148A, miR-423, miR-92B, miR-611, miR-2110, and miR-548H4. To our knowledge this is the first report in which placental analysis has been used for determining the pathogenesis of and predicting VSD.
Animal behaviours are demonstrably governed by sensory stimulation, previous experience and internal states like hunger. With increasing hunger, priorities shift towards foraging and feeding. During foraging, flies are known to employ efficient path integration strategies. However, general long-term activity patterns for both hungry and satiated flies in conditions of foraging remain to be better understood. Similarly, little is known about how permanent contact chemosensory stimulation affects locomotion. To address these questions, we have developed a novel, simplistic fly activity tracking setup—the Panopticon. Using a 3D-printed Petri dish inset, our assay allows recording of walking behaviour, of several flies in parallel, with all arena surfaces covered by a uniform substrate layer. We tested two constellations of providing food: (i) in single patches and (ii) omnipresent within the substrate layer. Fly tracking is done with FIJI, further assessment, analysis and presentation is done with a custom-built MATLAB analysis framework. We find that starvation history leads to a long-lasting reduction in locomotion, as well as a delayed place preference for food patches which seems to be not driven by immediate hunger motivation.
Evolutionarily conserved genes usually have a critical role to play during organismal aging and longevity. Here, we show that a previously uncharacterized Class III metallophosphoesterase in Drosophila, an ortholog of the MPPED1 and MPPED2 proteins in mammals, is necessary for optimal lifespan. dMPPED is the product of the gene CG16717 and hydrolyzed a variety of phosphodiester substrates in a metal-dependent manner. dMPPED was expressed widely during development and in the adult fly. Deletion of the gene in flies dramatically reduced lifespan, without affecting development or fecundity. Longevity was restored on ubiquitous expression of the protein, and neuronal expression of both wild type and the catalytically inactive form of dMPPED was also able to restore normal lifespan. Overexpression of the protein, both ubiquitously and neuronally in wild type flies extended lifespan by ~ 20%. RNA-seq analysis of dMPPED KO flies revealed mis-regulation of innate immune pathways, a number of transcription factors and genes earlier reported to affect aging and lifespan.Importantly, neuronal expression of mammalian MPPED2 was able to rescue lifespan in dMPPED KO flies, but not extend lifespan in wild type flies. This reports the first description of the biological role of an evolutionarily conserved metallophosphoesterase that may serve as a scaffolding protein in diverse signaling pathways to modulate longevity in the fly.
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