| Literature DB >> 27517731 |
Katie J Trella1,2, Jun Li3, Eleni Stylianou4, Vincent M Wang2,5, Jonathan M Frank1, Jorge Galante1, John D Sandy6, Anna Plaas3,6, Robert Wysocki1.
Abstract
We have used a murine Achilles tendinopathy model to investigate whether tissue changes (such as collagen disorganization, chondroid metaplasia, and loss of tensile properties) which are broadly characteristic of human tendinopathies, are accompanied by changes in the expression of chromatin-modifying enzymes and the methylation status of promoter regions of tendon cell DNA. Tendinopathy was induced by two intra-tendinous TGF-β1 injections followed by cage activity or treadmill running for up to 28 days. Activation of DNA methyltransferases occurred at 3 days after the TGF-β1 injections and also at 14 days, but only with treadmill activity. Genome-wide Methyl Mini-Seq™ analysis identified 19 genes with differentially methylated promoters, five of which perform functions with an apparent direct relevance to tendinopathy (Leprel2, Foxf1, Mmp25, Igfbp6, and Peg12). The functions of the genes identified included collagen fiber assembly and pericellular interactions, therefore their perturbation could play a role in the characteristic disorganization of fibers in affected tendons. We postulate that a study of the functional genomics of these genes in animal and human tendon could further delineate the pathogenesis of this multi-factorial complex disease.Entities:
Keywords: chromatin-modifying enzymes; gene expression; methylome; promoter methylation; tendinopathy
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27517731 PMCID: PMC5303683 DOI: 10.1002/jor.23393
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Orthop Res ISSN: 0736-0266 Impact factor: 3.494